MLB Fans Celebrate Return of Traditional Primary Uniforms at 2025 All-Star Game

Although Major League Baseball did release new uniforms for All-Star weekend in Atlanta, the league thrilled fans when they announced the jerseys would be worn for everything but the All-Star Game.

The MLB decided to revert its All-Star Game dress code back to a previous format where players would wear the uniforms of their respective teams, rather than donning the ASG-specific attire. Players wore the All-Star jerseys at other events over the festivities in Atlanta, including Monday night's Home Run Derby.

For the All-Star Game on Tuesday, National League players wore their home white uniforms at Truist Park, home of the Atlanta Braves, while American League players wore their road jerseys. Both squads did rock All-Star specific hats, though. With the traditional threads back in action for the Midsummer Classic, fans were thrilled at the league's aesthetically pleasing decision:

Tradition is back—and hopefully it's here to stay.

Man Utd now rivalling Liverpool to sign £87m forward who Klopp loves

Manchester United are now rivalling Liverpool for the signature of a “brilliant” forward, who has been in impressive form so far this season.

Man Utd eyeing new forward ahead of January

Man United’s recruitment has been questionable over the years, but Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha have certainly made promising starts to life at Old Trafford, with Paul Merson singling them out for high praise earlier this season.

The former Arsenal man said: “Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha look good. Dwight Yorke and Andy Cole used to be an unbelievable partnership and these two could become a success like that duo at Manchester United.”

“Mbeumo and Cunha will always create problems for opponents, it’s just that they have to do it consistently.”

With Ruben Amorim’s side looking to get back into Europe next season, however, they may need to bring in additional options in attack, and they are now looking to sign a Liverpool target.

That is according to a report from TEAMtalk, which states Man United have now joined the race for RB Leipzig forward Yan Diomande, who is being targeted by a whole host of Europe’s top clubs, and Jurgen Klopp is a big fan.

With Liverpool scouts pushing for FSG to get a deal done, United may have to move swiftly to secure his signature, and it could be very expensive, with the German club set to demand the full £87m release clause included in his contract.

A TEAMtalk source adds: “In terms of talent level, Red Bull has not experienced an interest like this since Erling Haaland. The ceiling for this kid is that high.”

“However, it has to be pointed out there is no for sale sign attached to him – Leipzig do not want to let him leave.”

Man Utd submit £24m bid for "powerful" midfielder with shades of Adam Wharton

United have now made an opening offer for a new midfielder.

ByDominic Lund Dec 4, 2025 "Brilliant" Diomande impressing for club and country

Scout Jacek Kulig was full of praise for the Ivorian earlier this season, praising the impact he has made for both club and country.

The 19-year-old is certainly making an impression in his first season in Germany, having already chipped in with eight goal contributions in all competitions, while he has also showcased his defensive qualities.

That said, £87m would be a huge fee to shell out on a player yet to prove himself over a sustained period of time, especially considering Man United are planning to shell out over £100m on a new midfielder.

Bangladesh target 2-0 while West Indies look for batting lift

Big picture – tackling spin top of teams’ agenda

How to bat on this Mirpur pitch is a question that might be baffling both Bangladesh and West Indies ahead of the second ODI, to be played on Tuesday. The Bangladesh batters spent a long time in the middle, visualising, the day before the game, all standing in a circle, with head coach Phil Simmons providing the sermon. West Indies have suggested that they picked up a clue or two by watching their opponents in the first ODI, which produced just 340 runs in 88.4 overs.What’s for certain is that Bangladesh will double down on their spin-to-win strategy after they added Nasum Ahmed to the ODI squad. The left-armer picked up five wickets in three T20Is against Afghanistan recently, a tally bettered only by Rashid Khan in that series. He will complement Tanvir Islam, Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Rishad Hossain, who took a six-wicket haul this weekend.Related

  • 'I stuck to my process' – Rishad makes light work of dark pitch

Bangladesh, however, are looking for improvement in the batting. They put up a modest 207 in the first ODI, with Towhid Hridoy the only half-century-maker. Newcomer Mahidul Islam also made an important contribution (46 off 76). But, overall, Bangladesh batted slowly. They are yet to get out of the habit of playing too many dot balls and finding too few boundaries.West Indies will also look for batting improvement after getting bowled out for 133. Brandon King and Alick Athanaze went after the spinners in the first game but both of them fell to Rishad, and that was followed by a collapse. There was not much resistance from even the likes of Shai Hope and Roston Chase, the only batters in the line-up to have previous experience of playing ODIs in Bangladesh.The bowlers therefore will once again have to keep West Indies in the contest. Jayden Seales took three wickets while Khary Pierre, playing his first ODI in five years, bowled well for just one wicket. But Chase and Gudakesh Motie have to get among the wickets, especially in these conditions.

Form guide

Bangladesh WLLLL
West Indies LWWLLRishad Hossain picked up six wickets in the first ODI•AFP/Getty Images

In the spotlight – Rishad Hossain and Brandon KingRishad Hossain coming to Bangladesh’s rescue both with the bat and the ball in the first ODI is exactly what is expected of him. Six wickets and a quick 26 would be too much to ask of him every day, but a legspinner has to provide breakthroughs where other bowlers fail. Another bag of wickets could bring the ODI series to a favourable end for his team.Brandon King was one of the few West Indies batters to show a positive mindset in the first ODI. He struck boundaries with ease until Rishad had him caught behind for 44 off 60. As long as King was at the crease, West Indies had hope. He added 51 runs for the opening stand with Athanaze, who also attacked the Bangladesh spinners while the ball was new. King, though, carried on for a bit more. The problem was King getting out after getting set, something he can’t afford to do.

Team news – WI lose Shamar, Blades to injuries

Bangladesh usually rotate their fast bowlers every game so Hasan Mahmud or Tanzim Hasan Sakib are likely call-ups.Bangladesh (probable): 1 Soumya Sarkar, 2 Saif Hassan, 3 Najmul Hossain Shanto, 4 Towhid Hridoy, 5 Mahidul Islam, 6 Mehidy Hasan Miraz (capt), 7 Nurul Hasan (wk), 8 Rishad Hossain, 9 Tanzim Hasan Sakib, 10 Tanvir Islam, 11 Mustafizur RahmanA day out from the game, West Indies appeared likely to trust the same batters to do better on this difficult Dhaka pitch. Can they cope with the injury-enforced absences of Shamar Joseph and Jediah Blades? Akeal Hosein and Ramon Simmonds have been added to the squad as their replacements for the remaining two ODIs.West Indies (probable): 1 Brandon King, 2 Alick Athanaze, 3 Keacy Carty, 4 Shai Hope (capt, wk), 5 Sherfane Rutherford, 6 Roston Chase, 7 Gudakesh Motie, 8 Justin Greaves, 9 Romario Shepherd, 10 Khary Pierre, 11 Jayden SealesKhary Pierre came away with figures of 10-2-19-1 on Saturday•AFP/Getty Images

Pitch and conditions – complexion of the pitch in focus

There is unlikely to be much change in the pitch, which looked unusually dark, for the second ODI. There is dry weather in the forecast.

Stats and trivia – Pierre returns after five years

  • Tanvir Islam bowled his most expensive over in international cricket in the first ODI, when he conceded 18 runs.
  • Bangladesh used just seven (of 39) overs of pace in the first ODI, only the fifth occasion they have bowled seven or fewer overs in a match that they won.
  • Khary Pierre returned to the West Indies playing XI after missing 73 ODIs since January 2020.

Quotes

“It is a lot of pressure if you don’t do well on these kind of surfaces. I just try to keep it simple and stick to my plans. I think once you put the ball in the right areas and do not go wicket-hunting, I think it will be the best suitable for the wicket. You can leak runs if you try to go wicket-hunting.”

ليفربول يراقب أحد مدربي الدوري الانجليزي لتعيينه خلفاً لـ سلوت

لا يزال مستقبل آرني سلوت مدرب ليفربول في تدريب الفريق محل خلاف في ظل سلسلة النتائج السيئة هذا الموسم الحالي.

ومن المتوقع أن يقود آرني سلوت ليفربول خلال مباراة وست هام يونايتد غداً، ولكن قد يتغير الأمر في حال خسارة الريدز في هذه المباراة.

وقد ترددت عدة أسماء لتحل محل المدرب آرني سلوت في تدريب ليفربول، بما في ذلك تشابي ألونسو مدرب ريال مدريد الحالي، ودعا مشجعو ليفربول بعد الخسارة أمام نوتينجهام فورست للتعاقد مع أوليفر جلاسنر.

أقرأ أيضاً.. بسبب لاعب ليفربول.. هنري يهاجم الدوري الألماني ويوضح الفارق بينه وبين البريميرليج

وتألق جلاسنر مع كريستال بالاس حيث قاد النادي للفوز بكأس الاتحاد الإنجليزي ضد مانشستر سيتي، قبل حصد لقب الدرع الخيرية على حساب الريدز في 2025.

ووفقاً لصحفي سكاي سبورت البريطانية “مارك يانكو” فقد ذكر :”ربما ينبغي على أوليفر جلاسنر أن يفتح هاتفه لأنني أتوقع أنه قد يتلقى اتصالاً قريباً”.

وقد انتقل المدرب صاحب الـ51 عاماً إلى سيلهرست بارك في فبراير 2024 وقاد الفريق منذ ذلك الوقت لتحقيق مسيرة تاريخية في الدوري الانجليزي، وخلال 82 مباراة فاز في 40 وتعادل في 23 وخسر 19 ويقود جلاسنر الفريق حالياً في دوري المؤتمر الأوروبي.

 

Novo CEO do Atlético-MG é apresentado e fala sobre investimentos e resultados esportivos

MatériaMais NotíciasVer Resumo da matéria por IANa manha desta segunda-feira (10), o Atlético apresentou Pedro Daniel, novo CEO do clube. Ele chega para substituir Bruno Muzzi, que ocupava o cargo desde 2022. Resumo supervisionado pelo jornalista!

Na manha desta segunda-feira (10), o Atlético apresentou Pedro Daniel, novo CEO do clube. Ele chega para substituir Bruno Muzzi, que ocupava o cargo desde 2022.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasAtlético MineiroDesempenho do Atlético-MG refletiu em público na Arena MRV: veja númerosAtlético Mineiro10/12/2025Atlético MineiroAtlético-MG desliga Éder Aleixo e outros profissionais do departamento de futebolAtlético Mineiro09/12/2025Atlético MineiroTorcida do Atlético-MG avalia Brasileirão e elege melhor jogador da equipeAtlético Mineiro09/12/2025

Com mais de 20 anos no setor esportivo, Pedro Daniel construiu carreira como consultor, gestor e executivo, especializado em governança, sustentabilidade financeira e reestruturação de instituições esportivas.

Antes de se tornar CEO da SAF do Atlético, foi diretor-executivo de esportes da Ernst & Young na América do Sul e atuou em projetos centrais do futebol brasileiro, como o Fair Play Financeiro, o licenciamento de clubes, o PROFUT e a legislação das SAFs. Sua experiência inclui trabalhos para clubes, FIFA, CONMEBOL e CBF.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Galo agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Atlético-MG

Equilíbrio financeiro, investimentos e resultados

Questionado sobre investimentos e resultados, Pedro Daniel foi direto, e disse que é preciso equilibrar a saúde financeira do clube sem faltar com os resultados.

“Vamos buscar esse equilíbrio em termos financeiros, ser sustentável, sem perder performance. Afinal de contas, aqui é um clube de futebol, a gente vive de resultado. Estamos fazendo diversas reuniões para para entender como é que a gente consegue ser o mais eficiente possível.

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E os aportes? O novo CEO do Atlético também falou sobre os novos investimentos, no entanto apontou que as dívidas e as taxas de juros impactam diretamente nos aportes, deixando em aberto as definições sobre o tema.

“Em termos de estrutura de capital, quando você fala de aporte, a gente está discutindo todas as alternativas possíveis, sabendo que a gente mora num país que a taxa de juros é de 15%. Então a dívida, ela pega muito forte quando a gente pensa em despesa financeira e ela tira o dinheiro do futebol, a gente acaba pagando juros e perde competitividade, perde performance. “

“Então nós estamos trabalhando muito forte para nesse primeiro semestre conseguir ajustar pelo menos essa parte, e para que o futebol seja o menos afetado possível.”

Tudo sobre

Atlético MineiroinvestimentoResultados

Laura Wolvaardt reckons home World Cup final will turn up the heat on India

“I think just holding on and staying calm is going to go a long way tomorrow,” the SA captain said

Sruthi Ravindranath01-Nov-20253:10

Wolvaardt: ‘Whoever stays calmest in final will come out on top’

South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt has said the weight of expectation will rest firmly on India when the two sides meet in the ODI World Cup final on Sunday, in front of what is expected to be a packed home crowd in Navi Mumbai. The message she has for her own team-mates ahead of this “tough” game is simple: “slow down, take a deep breath, and stay calm”.”I think [with] the whole crowd behind India, probably a sold-out stadium, it’s going to be a very exciting opportunity,” Wolvaardt said at the pre-match press conference. “But at the same time, I think it puts a lot of pressure on them as well. They have the whole country behind them, and sort of expect them to win. I think it sort of plays in our favour, hopefully. They’re a very good side. We’re going to have to play some really good cricket to beat them.”Mandla [Mashimbyi, South Africa head coach] normally does the really inspirational stuff, the ‘you’re carrying your country’ type of thing. And then I think I’d just come with a little ‘stay calm, girls’ at the end. There’s going to be a lot of noise, a lot happening, a lot of maybe different routines than you’re used to in a normal game. But at the end of the day, we’re going to have to do the basics for longer throughout the game, and hold the nerve for longer. I think just holding on and staying calm is going to go a long way tomorrow.”Related

Wolvaardt, Kapp sing South Africa's song of ice and fire

Women's cricket prepares to crown a new world champion

It's India's party, but the artistic hunters will come

Although they will be playing their first ever ODI World Cup final, South Africa have made it to the summit clash in each of the last two T20 World Cups. They haven’t been able to take home the silverware just yet but Wolvaardt said the team has learnt from those experiences.”I think for me, personally, I’m really trying not to think about the result,” she said. “I think in those finals – or the first time I was in the final – you automatically think about the trophy and think about winning, and sort of get excited. Now I’m just really trying to stay [in the] present. We still have a really big game ahead of us against a really quality side.1:36

WWC final – ‘The pressure is less on South Africa’

“I’m trying not to think too far ahead; just really sort of slow it down. I think the first time you’re in those finals, it feels like a really big, fast-paced event. We’re going to need to slow down and take a big breath, and hope we’re able to do that as a group.”South Africa’s path to the final has been far from smooth. After a 69 all out against England, they bounced back with five straight wins before another collapse of 97 all out against Australia. A superb comeback in the semi-final against England, where Wolvaardt scored 169 and Marizanne Kapp took a five-for, booked their spot in the final.”I think we don’t just lose our skill or gain our skill overnight. It’s definitely just a couple of games that we had to put behind us, and we were able to bounce back really well from those two games on both occasions,” Wolvaardt said. “I think if we focus too much on that, then it wouldn’t have been a good campaign for us. So I think we took the learnings, put it behind us, and just really focused on the next game that we needed to do well [in].”Wolvaardt believes a World Cup win would be a game-changer for women’s cricket in South Africa.”For us, I think it would just be really special for women’s cricket in the country. I can only imagine what something like a World Cup trophy would do back at home, and just the amount of girls that will be able to see it on TV, that’ll be able to hear that we’re a World Cup-winning nation,” she said. “It’s hopefully very inspirational.”I think we’ve already created quite a lot of noise back at home, and getting a lot of messages from different people who have sort of started watching women’s cricket because of this tournament. So that’s really cool.”

Shane Bond: 'If you ask any injured player if they're okay to play, they'll say yes'

The former New Zealand fast bowler, and current Rajasthan Royals bowling coach, talks about playing with and after injury

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi30-Mar-2025Ace former fast bowler Shane Bond, who has worked with Jasprit Bumrah at Mumbai Indians in the IPL, and who was no stranger to injury himself during a stop-start career for New Zealand, spoke to us during the Champions Trophy about Bumrah’s troubles with his back, and the challenges of managing bowling workloads effectively.Can you break down the biomechanics of Bumrah’s action and why it is unique?
His run-up’s an interesting one, isn’t it, because he sort of [starts in] fits and starts, but the last five metres, he accelerates through the crease, gains momentum. Obviously, he’s got those levers [long arms]. He has a very short delivery stride, so he gets his front foot down quickly, which means he has to then, all of a sudden, catch up with his arms. So he generates velocity through his arm speed, [and has] got a very strong locked front knee to increase that pace. And then he has an exceptional wrist on the back of it.It’s just one of those ones where the timing of when he releases everything is almost perfect. I look at someone like Hardik Pandya, who’s not a very big guy but he hits the ball enormously hard and a very long way because of the same thing: his kinetic chain, where he just releases all his energy – just the timing’s perfect and he smacks it, and that’s what Boom has.Related

  • Explainer: What is a stress fracture of the back and why does it happen? (2019)

  • Prasidh Krishna: 'As fast bowlers, you sign up for injuries and long days. It's part of our game'

  • Australia's fast-bowling injuries a reminder of the juggling act to come

  • 'I love Test cricket, but I'm also a realist' (2010)

  • Bond on Bumrah: 'I wouldn't want to be playing him in more than two Tests in a row'

Does the braced front knee, which bears all the weight, mean his back carries a lot of stress?
Yeah, I suppose. I can think of guys who I played with in New Zealand, [Jacob] Oram, [Kyle] Mills, [Chris] Cairns. They had [front] knees that just collapsed a little bit. And not that they didn’t have back injuries, but patellar tendons [the ligaments that connect the knee cap to the shin bone] were also a cause of concern because the load went through the knee.The force will go up the chain: through the calf, the hamstring, the glutes and the back. And so if you are not strong in those areas, the force will end up in the back at some point. So if you think of any top bowler, at some point in time when you have been bowling for a long time, your hamstrings, your calves, are going to fatigue and that force will get taken somewhere.

“If you go to the gym and want to do ten sets of ten and do that day after day after day after day without resting, you will probably break something. And it’s very similar in bowling”

So when you look at strength and conditioning, what you are trying to do is build the strength through the calf, through the hamstring, through the glutes, the core, so that the abs bear a lot of the force, and the sides. Being able to do that and sustain that for a period of time to take the pressure off the back.Everybody is different in terms of how much they can handle. So a big thing for me when I became a coach was working out how much a certain bowler could take. So I could look at a Tim Southee and a Trent Boult, they could comfortably operate at around 40 to 45 overs in a match, and Neil Wagner could probably handle 60, and Adam Milne was probably 30, so when he started to have back-to-back days, there were issues. That’s what you are trying to work out: what is the real risk area and where is the sort of sweet spot where they can sustain and stay on the park. The longer you play and you build that tolerance, the better it is.You look at the Australian bowlers, they have done a pretty good job. They walked out of that series [against India in Australia], they are all fit, but they still had injuries in other areas. They are all dealing now with niggles, they were out of the Champions Trophy. So they just had other stuff because of the sheer volume of overs they bowled. The top bowlers you talk to, particularly as you get older, they will talk about how they don’t want to stop bowling. They might take a week or two off to refresh and let some of those niggles settle, but they don’t want to take three or four months off because coming back, they have got to rebuild and that’s a big risk period again. They like to keep ticking over all year round.What is a stress fracture and why is it debilitating?

If you go to the gym and you lift weights, you sort of stretch the muscles and then they often say you take a day’s rest and the muscles repair and they grow and they expand, and that’s how you build big muscles. It’s a little bit like that with the bone. So every time you bowl, you cause a little bit of damage in the bone, it breaks up a little bit, and if you give it a rest, it’ll harden. And if you do that over a period of time, that bone in your back will firm up and become quite strong. So the more load you can put through it, especially if it’s gradual, you will actually build strength over a period of time. Now that’s called chronic load.Bond says not ramping up slowly to larger bowling loads – like going from bowling in T20s directly to a long Test series – increases the risk of back injuries•Mumbai IndiansWhen that bone’s breaking down, if you just put too much load on it, bang, bang, bang, it can break [develop tiny cracks], you can go all the way through the bone, or if you bowl day after day after day when that bone’s sort of breaking down and you hammer it, it can break. If you go to the gym and want to do ten sets of ten and do that day after day after day after day without resting, you will probably break something. And it’s very similar in bowling.There’s a lot of research around where the sweet spot is with bowling loads, but the bottom line is, if you look at all the techniques around the world, they are all very different. But you are dealing with super-professional athletes – the Boultys [Trent Boult], the Bumrahs, the Mitchell Johnsons, the Pat Cumminses, the Mitchell Starcs – all their actions are unique, but there seems to be a couple of things that stand out. If you bowl too much for too long… and I have to look at like a Booms – first time he had a stress fracture [2019], he came out of IPL and played Test cricket. So you are bowling 20 overs a week and all of a sudden you bowl 50 overs a week – stress fracture. Trent Boult was the same.So if you go too hard too early or with not enough load behind you, you are likely to break. And generally the top bowlers break when they either come back too quick and the [injury] recurs or they have been playing for a while and then that load just goes ba-boom! And that’s the real challenge [for] coaches when you are transitioning between T20, especially tournaments like the IPL, and then you go to the World Test Championship a month later, where you could be expected to bowl 50 overs, and then you walk into a Test series – danger! And it’s really hard with the scheduling to look after that because you just can’t get that volume of work in the IPL. It’s too hot, the travel schedule’s too busy to be able to bowl probably as much as you want to [to prepare for the Test series].There were times where I was really sore for a number of days, but generally what will happen is, if you have some pain, it will settle down quite quickly, and within two or three days you could feel completely normal. Except, as soon as you bowl a cricket ball, bang, that pain is instantaneous, it’ll come back and it will really hurt. So what Rowan [Dr Rowan Schouten, a Christchurch-based orthopaedic spine surgeon, who has operated on Jofra Archer and others] said to me is: a stress fracture or fracture in the vertebrae of your back is like having a broken arm. Imagine you have got a fractured arm. They put a cast on it to keep it steady, to protect it. You don’t do that with your back. So generally, when you get that stress fracture, you will have [to have] six weeks of doing absolutely nothing.

“Generally, if you have some pain, it will settle down, and within two or three days you could feel completely normal. Except, as soon as you bowl a cricket ball, bang, it’ll come back and it will really hurt”

So no running, just trying to stay as steady as you possibly can to let that heal. In the case of Bumrah, he’s now had that six-weeks period, maybe a little bit more, of rest, but of course then he has to build all that bowling load back up. We call it Level 1, 2, 3 -half a run-up, three quarters of a run-up, full run-up. Working through the intensities, getting up to that top intensity and then building some volume through that top intensity. In an ideal world that’ll take, I don’t know, six to ten weeks, which, obviously when you have got a busy playing schedule it’s very easy to want to rush a player back into the next tour, and that’s the danger. If you go too much too soon, you can have a recurrence of that injury.In Bumrah’s case, as we understand it, it is likely that it was more akin to a stress reaction?
When you get on a scan, it’s called bone edema [a build-up of fluid in the bone marrow]. That gets to a point where it is starting to get painful. And the next step after that is it actually fractures. So the pain’s kicking in and the bone’s on the borderline of cracking. For a stress fracture, you are sort of looking at [minimum] four months before you come back and start bowling. For a stress reaction, they will say six weeks and then you’d be wanting to re-scan, but conservatively eight, maybe. And that’s what that looks like with Booms. I’m sure they’ve re-scanned, that [stress] reaction probably cleared up, there’s no crack anymore, and then they can get on with it.What does surgery for a stress-related back injury involve? Bumrah has had one already, two years ago.
What happens is, they chisel into it and they stimulate the blood growth in the bone and they take some chips off your hip [bone] and they pack it all together with some wire to make it stronger to stimulate growth with a sort of binding around it. With all going well, it will completely re-heal and it should be stronger because you have got some bolts and screws holding all that in place.Kyle [Jamieson] and Jasprit now, I think, are the only couple [of fast bowlers] who have had a re-injury [stress-related]. Matt Henry had the surgery at 21 and he’s been going over ten years. I had another sort of six years when I played post-surgery. Kyle’s was the same. He came out of a T20 programme, went into a Test match, bowled [about] 40 overs, lots of bouncers, re-injured. Booms played five Test matches and bowled a heap of overs [in the Australia series], and the sheer volume just got them in the end.Kyle Jamieson had surgery for a stress fracture of the back in 2023, but suffered yet another one in 2024 that kept him out of the game for a year•Getty ImagesWhen I had my surgery, mate, I couldn’t bend for about four days, so I was completely straight. You imagine trying to go to the toilet when you are completely straight. Every day I just got a little bit more movement back. After six weeks I sort of got my training gear on and I went for a walk. When I saw Cameron Green – he is the last one who’s had back surgery, he had it just before Christmas [2024], and within two days he was up and around walking for 20 minutes. Like, sitting up normally.And by day four he had walked for about 40 minutes. He said it was too much, he got a bit sore, but you are progressing a lot more quickly now. Because I was the first guy to have the procedure done in terms of cricket, I was a little bit envious when I saw Cameron [be mobile so quickly].It is the first time Bumrah has been forced to sit out since his back surgery in 2023, when he was 29. You had back surgery when you were at a similar age and went on to play for a number of years. What is the challenge the first time the injury recurs or you feel discomfort in the same area?
Psychologically, it’s a challenge. I still had times when I played with my back really locked up, my muscles down my back would spasm. I called it a concrete back – I couldn’t move. So I played a couple of Test matches where I felt like I had no movement through my back and it was really sore, but I knew it wasn’t broken. So I had to be careful and I had glucose injections in my back and a long massage to make sure that I was loose.For me it was, yep, I know it’s been fixed, I know I’m okay, but it still doesn’t take away the lingering doubt. Every day I bowled was like, is today the day where it’s going to go pop? And I’m sure Kyle and Jasprit will be the same.I always tell my players, take a week at the front end and that could save you six months at the back end. Spend a little bit longer in your preparation and your build-up because it will give you a better chance to stay on the field. Obviously from a Rajasthan [Royals] standpoint, I don’t really want to see him [Bumrah] (), but I do want to see him back on the field. I do hope they take it conservatively to give him the best chance to come back and come back for the next however long he wants to play.Despite numerous injuries, and after back surgery, and various niggles in other parts of the body, you did not hold back. You told us in 2010, soon after you retired, that you saw the value you brought to New Zealand was that of an “Olympic” bowler. Do you have any advice to Bumrah in that regard?
That’s why I really enjoyed listening to Dale [Steyn, who the recently interviewed, alongside Bond]. What made Dale one of the all-time greats is his ability to lift the gears up – he could operate here () and then all of a sudden, lift his game to a different level (). Booms does that pretty well. In Australia it was just the sheer volume of overs that got him in the end – in those five Test matches his performance was ridiculous, and they leaned on him a lot and I think he might’ve bowled 50 overs in a Test match.

“You are not going to avoid an injury, you are just trying to avoid the really bad ones, and I’m hoping Bumrah can avoid another one of these”

And I suppose the lesson is, you can’t have him bowl that many overs again in a Test match. Forty-five might be the top, and we can’t risk it because he’s too valuable. And I’m sure they have got all those things considered around the bowling loads and they would have reflected on why he’s had that injury. He’s a professional, Boomsy, he does everything right. All you are trying to do is prevent that… you are not going to avoid an injury, you are just trying to avoid the really bad ones, and I’m hoping he can avoid another one of these.India play five Tests in England back to back in a matter of one and a half months later this year. While it’s for the bowler himself to take the call, what would be your advice?
See I would always go, no it’s not [the bowler’s call]. Because my experience with any player is, they will tell you that they are okay and that’s always the risk. If you give any player the option, it’s like, nah, I’m good to go. And I have seen players who want to play and they are injured and they will tell you they want to play and actually they have played probably sub-par, they are not really ready. That’s the coach’s role, to say, look, this is the plan for you. And it’s easy to have that plan when you are winning. When you are losing, it becomes, oh, are we going to throw that [away]?While he can’t remodel his action, would you ask someone like Bumrah to change something about his bowling?
I don’t think so. He had the [2023] surgery, but he played all that [Australia] Test series, performed unbelievably. At the end of the day, he just bowled too much over a one-month period. And it hasn’t cracked, he hasn’t got a fracture, he is on the borderline of a fracture. But what India would have learned is, if you then look at a five-Test match series in England and they do the same thing, they are probably going to get the same result. So you can’t do that. You need a squad of bowlers where you can sort of pick and choose.Because if you lose him, you have got T20 World Cups, you’ve got 50-overs World Cups and he’s an important member across all formats, IPL, all that sort of stuff.

Blue Jays Exploit Dodgers’ Biggest Weakness to Win World Series Game 1

TORONTO — In the end, the biggest ovation of the night might have come after an out. There had been so much to cheer already as the Blue Jays pecked away at the Dodgers’ lead, their bullpen and their sense of invincibility. Rogers Centre shook after the home runs. It roared at the run-scoring singles. It rocked at the walks and the great plays and the filthy pitches. And in an 11–4 romp over Los Angeles in Canada’s first World Series game in 32 years, there were plenty of those. But it was after Daulton Varsho flied to left field to end the six-hit, nine-run, game-deciding sixth inning that the sellout crowd of 44,353 rose to its feet as one and applauded. 

“The crowd was electric tonight,” said manager John Schneider. “This is a special place to play. Everyone here in this city here, in this building, and across the country, we feel it for sure.”

The fans appreciated what was happening in the first World Series game in Canada since Joe Carter hit the biggest home run in Fall Classic history in 1993, and the first World Series game played by the defending champion since the Phillies tried and failed to make it two straight in 2009. And they appreciated how it was happening, in classic Blue Jays fashion: at-bats that felt like a test of endurance, hard contact up the middle and then devastating slug. No one struck out in the inning (and the Jays were rung up just four times all game). Everyone but Ernie Clement—who drove in the first run of the inning but was erased on a fielder’s choice—scored. Addison Barger added the first pinch-hit grand slam in World Series history. It marked the most runs scored in a single Fall Classic inning since 1968. Carter is scheduled to throw out the first pitch of Game 2; they should have brought him out early and let him tee off against the Dodgers’ bullpen. 

“I think overall we just played our game,” said Varsho. “We didn’t try to do anything more. Honestly, we just showed everybody what we can do as a lineup.”

Amid sport-wide consternation over whether the Dodgers and their record $329 million payroll are ruining baseball, it was easy to miss just how good a baseball team the Blue Jays are. Sure, the Dodgers’ lineup begins with three Hall of Famers—two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani, self-made shortstop Mookie Betts and first baseman Freddie Freeman. (Ohtani is especially unpopular here because he spurned the Blue Jays and chose the Dodgers. This week Schneider jokingly asked him to return the Blue Jays cap and dog jacket the team had given him during the recruiting process.) But the guy hitting third in Toronto, first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr., had six home runs and three strikeouts in the first three weeks of October. DH George Springer hit perhaps the second most famous three-run homer in Blue Jays history last week to help the team capture the pennant. And as a group, no one struck out less this season than Toronto. 

The Blue Jays were also enjoying a return by one of their best players: At second base was Bo Bichette, the two-time All-Star shortstop who had not played since suffering a left knee sprain on Sept. 6 and had not played second since he got eight innings there at Triple A Buffalo in 2019. 

He fought furiously to return in time to contribute to this historic run before his free agency dawns this winter, and finally, on the eve of the World Series, he told Schneider he was ready. But in deference to how well his replacement, defensive wizard Andrés Giménez has played, Bichette offered to man second. 

Asked before the game if he could estimate how close to full health he was, Bichette demurred. “I don’t know about a percentage, but I know I’m good enough to play,” Bichette said. “And I feel good enough to produce. So that’s all that matters to me.” The verdict was in soon enough: He got the green light on a 3–0 pitch in the first and singled; he made a running, spinning grab of a grounder in the fourth; and it was his sixth-inning walk that keyed the rally. 

Bo Bichette (left) returned from injury to man second base behind Game 1 starter Trey Yesavage. / Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

The pitching was good enough to get them there. The Blue Jays joke about their gray-haired rotation—34-year-old Kevin Gausman, 30-year-old Shane Biever, 41-year-old Max Scherzer, 36-year-old Chris Bassitt and 31-year-old José Berríos combined for 78% of the team’s innings from starters—but on Friday it was the youngest man on the roster who took the ball. Trey Yesavage, a 22-year-old who spent more time this season with the Single A Dunedin Blue Jays than with the big club, entered October with 14 major league innings pitched. Toronto manager John Schneider vaguely remembered a “Hey, nice to meet you, kid. Welcome to the organization,” interaction in spring training; L.A. manager Dave Roberts hadn’t heard of the kid until he blanked the Yankees for 5 ⅓ innings in Game 2 of the ALDS. 

Yesavage allowed five runs in four innings against the Mariners in Game 2 of the ALCS and two in 5 ⅔ in Game 5, but Schneider liked that the Dodgers had never seen him before. Yesavage releases the ball from what feels like somewhere in the second deck—7.1 feet in the air compared to the major league average of 5.8 feet—and previous opponents lamented that it took time to adjust to the strange visual. 

It took the Dodgers an inning. Yesavage set down Ohtani, Betts and Freeman in order in the first, but Smith walked, Teoscar Hernández grounded out and Muncy singled to put runners on the corners. Kiké Hernández, as he so often does at this time of year, came through with a single up the middle to plate the first run. Schneider got the bullpen up, but Yesavage—who was navigating the most listless stuff of his young career—induced Ohtani to ground to first to end the threat. An inning later the Dodgers tacked on another on a Smith single. 

Meanwhile, Dodgers ace Blake Snell was making his own adjustments. After escaping a bases-loaded, two-out jam in the first, he tweaked his posture and filled up the strike zone. But in the fourth, he allowed a leadoff 328-foot single to the slow-footed Alejandro Kirk and a first-pitch blast to center by Daulton Varsho to tie the game. It was the first home run Snell had given up to a left-hander all season. 

It looked like it might set the stage for a classic, the sort of pitchers' duel both teams believe they are positioned to win. Instead Bichette opened the sixth inning with that walk, Kirk followed with a single and Snell hit Varsho with a pitch. Out came Roberts. 

All October, the theory had been that the Dodgers’ bullpen was its weakness. This season, the team got 3.2 WAR (ninth in baseball) from its starting pitchers. From the bullpen it got –6.4 WAR, second-worst. Almost no one tested the premise this postseason, though, because the starters pitched so exceptionally. In the two-game, 18-inning wild card series, Roberts called on his relief corps for only 4 ⅓ innings; in the four-game, 38-inning NLDS, that figure was 14 ⅓ (but five of them in Game 3, when they essentially punted); and in the four-game, 36-inning NLCS, just 7 ⅔. 

On Friday, the Blue Jays found out it was true. They handed Snell his worst outing in two years, and then they demolished everyone else who showed up. Emmet Sheehan got one out and gave up three runs. Anthony Banda got two outs and gave up three runs. Justin Wrobleski and Will Klein, the two lowest-leverage arms in the Los Angeles bullpen, each got through an inning mostly because everyone in Toronto seemed to understand that it was time to go home. Even Ohtani sprinted around the bases when he homered in the seventh. When he batted with two outs in the ninth and the game long decided, the fans serenaded him: "We don't need you."

It was true. Ohtani walked, but Betts struck out. The Dodgers will have to wait another day to ruin baseball. First they have to clean up their ruined bullpen. 

John Kennedy e mais três atletas do Fluminense são afastados por festa em concentração

MatériaMais Notícias

O Fluminense informou nesta terça-feira (23) que os atletas John Kennedy, Kauã Elias, Arthur e Aleksander foram afastados em razão de atos de indisciplina cometidos durante a concentração para o duelo diante do Vasco.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Tricolor agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Fluminense

Formados nas categorias de base do clube, os quatros jogadores não viajarão com o restante do elenco para o Paraguai, onde a equipe comandada pro Fernando Diniz encara o Cerro Portenõ, pela terceira rodada da fase de grupos da Copa Libertadores. Além disso, eles também estão fora do jogo contra o Corinthians, em São Paulo, pela quarta rodada do Brasileirão.

O quarteto convidou mulheres e organizou uma festa dentro da concentração. A movimentação incomodou algumas lideranças do elenco, que solicitaram a concentração justamente para evitar problemas extracampo. A informação foi inicialmente divulgada pelo Ge e confirmanda pelo Lance!.

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Com quatro pontos em duas partidas disputadas, o Fluminense lidera o grupo A da Libertadores. Na próxima quinta-feira (25), o Tricolor encara o Cerro Porteño às 19h (de Brasília), no Estádio La Nueva Olla, pela terceira rodada da fase de grupos da competição continental.

CONFIRA A NOTA DO FLUMINENSE

Os atletas John Kennedy, Kauã Elias, Arthur e Alexsander foram afastados em razão de atos de indisciplina cometidos na concentração do jogo contra o Vasco, e não viajarão hoje para a disputa da partida contra o Cerro Porteño, no Paraguai, e contra o Corinthians, em São Paulo.

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FluminenseFutebol NacionalJohn Kennedy

Tottenham strike partnership with Turkish company to become official hair transplant sponsor as wait for stadium deal continues

Tottenham Hotspur have secured a new sponsorship agreement with Elithair, a major Turkish hair transplant clinic, becoming the club’s official hair treatment partner at a time when the long-awaited stadium naming rights deal remains unresolved. Outside football, affordability in countries such as Turkey, where procedures are significantly cheaper, has accelerated demand, making the industry a commercial opportunity that Premier League clubs are increasingly willing to attach their brands to.

A treatment trend embedded in modern football culture

Spurs, like many top clubs, are no strangers to footballers undergoing the procedure. James Maddison is understood to have had a transplant, while former Tottenham players Christian Eriksen and Andros Townsend have both undergone similar treatments. Even Harry Kane, one of the club’s greatest-ever strikers, is rumoured to have made subtle improvements to his hairline. Around the Premier League and beyond, the list of players who have embraced surgical hair restoration continues to grow: Mohamed Salah, Arsenal’s Gabriel Magalhaes, David Silva, Cesc Fabregas, Joleon Lescott and even David Beckham have all either undergone or been strongly linked with cosmetic procedures. While no Tottenham players were used in the promotional launch, the club unveiled the partnership with a short film starring an actor playing a Spurs supporter whose transplant boosted his confidence.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportSpurs praise partnership with "world’s largest hair transplant clinic”

Ryan Norys, Tottenham’s chief revenue officer, hailed the new commercial tie-in. 

"We are proud to partner with Elithair, a brand that has demonstrated undisputed global leadership in its field," he said. "As the world’s largest hair transplant clinic, we could not have chosen a better partner than Elithair to engage our fanbase through a mission to inspire self-confidence and offer globally recognised clinical treatment practices."

Whereas, Dr. Abdulaziz Balwi, Co-Founder and Medical Director of Elithair, said: "Partnering with an iconic Premier League club like Tottenham Hotspur is a monumental step for Elithair. It demonstrates the trust and authority we have built through our world-class expertise and international facilities in Istanbul, the United Kingdom, Germany and Dubai. This collaboration allows us to bring the same level of commitment and excellence seen at a Premier League level to every patient in the UK."

Injury boost for Spurs ahead of North London derby

While Spurs were unveiling new commercial ventures off the pitch, Thomas Frank delivered a wave of positive injury news ahead of Sunday’s north London derby at the Emirates against Arsenal. The manager confirmed that Pape Matar Sarr, Lucas Bergvall and Randal Kolo Muani have all returned to training and are available to face Arsenal. All three endured disrupted international breaks as Sarr limped off for Senegal against Brazil, Bergvall withdrew from Sweden duty due to concussion symptoms, and Kolo Muani missed France’s qualifiers after a jaw issue picked up against Manchester United. 

"Pape trained today,” Frank said. "He's ready, available. Lucas trained today. Ready, available. Kolo Muani, yes. Trained today. Available, of course, has a mask [he] needs to play with."

Frank confirmed that Dominic Solanke remains unavailable as he continues to recover from a lingering ankle injury sustained in August.

On Solanke, Frank said: "Dom is not ready yet. I think he also had an article recently where he spoke about it. So we are very, as I said, the same. Very aware that when we put him out there, we want to be absolutely sure, as sure as we can be, that no setback going forward. So I'm comfortable he will soon be ready, but I will not put a timeframe on it."

Meanwhile, speaking about his injury struggles, Solanke told : "It’s been very difficult. At first, I didn’t think I would be out for too long but we didn’t really understand the extent of the injury. I was trying to get back as quickly as I could but it didn’t happen, so I had to have surgery. Since then, I have been working to get back.

"I’m not putting a timeline on it because I’ve been telling everyone ‘I’m going to be back soon’ for the last few months. I’m taking it day by day but hopefully I won’t be much longer."

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Getty Images SportA confusing contrast at Spurs

Tottenham enter the derby fifth in the Premier League after 11 games. But their campaign has been defined by a puzzling imbalance. Frank’s side possess the best away record in the league, yet only Wolves perform worse at home. The derby against Arsenal is away from their usual stomping ground, which is a positive omen for Spurs fans.

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