Aimee Maguire, Gaby Lewis star as Ireland cling on in thriller

Hosts prevail in thrilling finish despite Mady Villiers’ heroic final over

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Sep-2024Ireland 155 for 7 (Lewis 72) beat England 153 (Beaumont 52, A Maguire 5-19) by three wickets (DLS)Ireland’s women held their nerve in an exhilarating finish to their ODI series in Belfast, as Alana Dalzell overcame a team hat-trick in Mady Villiers’ final over to strike a last-ball four, and seal her team’s first victory over England since 2001.The winning moment was aided by a terrible misfield from Hollie Armitage at long-on, who ran past her attempted gather while looking into the sun, with nothing less than a boundary needed for victory.Up until that moment, Ireland’s cruise towards victory had seemingly been derailed by a collapse of five for 13 in 22 balls – including three in three, as Villiers bowled both Alice Tector and Jane Maguire for first-ball ducks after Una Raymond-Hoey had been run out coming for a second run.And yet, Ireland’s result was richly deserved, not least after the efforts of Aimee Maguire, who landed a five-wicket haul just two days after her 18th birthday, and Gaby Lewis, who top-scored with 72 from 56 balls, and whose dismissal at 137 for 3 was the cue for her team’s jitters.After a four-and-a-half-hour rain delay, the skies cleared sufficiently for a 25-over contest, which was then reduced to 22 a side after a further interruption early in England’s innings.As it transpired, Ireland needed only 20.5 overs to roll England aside for 153, with Maguire – the left-arm spinner – claiming career-best figures of 5 for 19 in 3.5 overs.England had won very comfortably in the opening two fixtures, with their senior pros, Kate Cross and Tammy Beaumont, the stand-out performers with 6 for 30 and 150 not out respectively.And though Beaumont was once again England’s stand-out batter, with 52 from 42 balls, the support proved to be lacking from the rest of the order, and Maguire was primed to take advantage.Emma Lamb was the first wicket to fall, brilliantly caught by Maguire’s sister, Jane, at cover, to end a disappointing series with scores of 4, 18 and now 11. Hollie Armitage then over-reached on a sweep to be caught behind for 15 (65 for 2), but England still seemed well placed when Beaumont reached her fifty from 39 balls, the fastest of her career.However, Jane Maguire made the key breakthrough three balls later, as Beaumont holed out to deep midwicket, before her sister launched her killer spell with the first-ball dismissal of Freya Kemp, who ran past a slog to be stumped for 3.Paige Scholfield had been badly dropped in the deep on 16, but Orla Prendergast’s error was not costly, as Aimee Maguire lured her into a big swipe across the line to be bowled for 21. Freya Sargent continued the spin dominance as Bess Heath top-edged to short fine leg, and the collapse had reached crisis proportions at 118 for 7 as Cross dragged on for 3 to give Aimee Maguire her third.Ryana Macdonald-Gay stopped the rot with a cameo of 17 from 13 before falling to Prendergast, whereupon Aimee Maguire picked off Mady Villiers and Lauren Filer in the space of five balls to complete her superb spell.In reply, Lewis set the tempo in emphatic fashion, dominating the powerplay with five early boundaries to set Ireland on their way. Aimee Hunter contributed a run-a-ball 18 before she was bowled by Kemp at 51 for 1 after 6.2 overs, and though Prendergast was kept to 11 from 14 before falling lbw to Villiers, Lewis’ 41-ball half-century had her side in total command going into the back-end of the innings.When she was caught behind off the extra pace of Filer, however, the rest of the chase didn’t prove quite so straightforward.

Talks open: Arsenal submit offer to sign "standout" 17 y/o after Zubimendi

After officially announcing the arrival of Martin Zubimendi, Arsenal have reportedly submitted an opening offer to sign an impressive young gem for Mikel Arteta.

Zubimendi: Arsenal move a "huge moment" for career

Stealing the headlines as the biggest signing of Arsenal’s so far, Zubimendi has finally arrived in North London to hand Arteta an instant boost. The Spaniard has seemed destined for the Premier League for some time and after rejecting Liverpool one year ago, he is now set to star at The Emirates next season.

After officially putting pen to paper, the £51m midfielder told Arsenal’s website: “This is a huge moment in my career. It’s the move I was looking for and one I wanted to make. As soon as you set foot here, you realise how big this club and this team are.

“I set my sights on Arsenal because their style of play is a good fit for me. They have shown their potential recently and the best is yet to come.”

Equally delighted to welcome Zubimendi, Arteta then went on to welcome his new signing by saying: “Martin is a player who will bring a huge amount of quality and football intelligence to our team. He will fit in really well and he has all the attributes to be a key player for us.

Arsenal manager MikelArtetalooks dejected after the match

“The standard he has consistently performed at over the last few seasons for both club and country is exactly why we are so excited to have him with us. We all welcome Martin and his family to the club.”

The Gunners aren’t done there, however. Far from it. Amid rumours that they’re now chasing a deal to sign Noni Madueke, those in North London have also reportedly submitted an offer to sign another English gem.

Arsenal submit opening offer to sign Tyjon

Whilst Zubimendi will provide Arteta with an instant boost this summer, the Spanish manager has also set his sights on future stars in North London. According to Alan Nixon via his Patreon, Arsenal have now submitted an opening offer worth £1m to sign Igor Tyjon from Blackburn Rovers, who have, in turn, rejected that offer.

The Championship club reportedly want over £1m to sell their 17-year-old talent and, with talks ongoing, they may just get their wish. Of course, compared to the likes of Madueke and the aforementioned Zubimendi, Tyjon won’t steal the same headlines but there’s no denying his talent.

Personal terms agreed: Arsenal ready talks to sign "fearless" £50m target

The Gunners are pushing on with their deal.

ByTom Cunningham Jul 6, 2025

After making his debut for Blackburn at just 16 years old last September, the centre-forward earned impressive praise from former manager John Eustace, who told reporters: “Igor has been a standout young player since I have been at the football club.

“He had a fantastic pre-season. He’s just played for England in the week. I was delighted to give him his debut today. He has worked, very, very hard. He’s a 16-year-old boy and we have to remember that. He is certainly one for the future.”

After Reijnders: Man City now set to sign a new version of Phil Foden

Manchester City mean business at this summer’s Club World Cup.

On Wednesday, the Citizens announced their squad for this summer’s tournament in the United States and it is certainly star-studded, featuring new recruits Rayan Cherki, Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Aït-Nouri.

The Sky Blues commence their campaign against Wydad Casablanca on Wednesday, before also taking on Al Ain and then Juventus in the group phase, with many backing Pep Guardiola’s team to go all the way.

Meantime, back home, as they turn their attention to the future, are Man City about to secure the services of the “exceptional” next Phil Foden?

Manchester City's spending spree continues

Man City can no longer register any new players for the group stages of the Club World Cup, but that doesn’t mean transfer activity doesn’t continue behind the scenes.

The Citizens have already splashed out around £30m on Cherki, while spending bigger fees of £46.5m on Reijnders and £31m on Ait-Nouri. Their next move could be a great deal cheaper.

Rayan Cherki

Indeed, according to a report by David Ornstein and Jordan Campbell of the Athletic, Manchester City are ‘close to reaching an agreement’ as they seek to sign Sverre Nypan from Rosenborg.

Subject to personal terms being complete, it will be a record fee for a player from the Norwegian top-flight, said to be around £17m according to previous reports.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The plan is for Nypan to spend next season on loan at La Liga side Girona, also part of the City Football Group network of course, so it’ll be a little while before we see him donning a sky blue shirt, but Man City supporters should still be excited.

How Sverre Nypan compares to Man City's current midfield star

Despite being just 18 years old, having made only 70 appearances for Eliteserien side Rosenborg, scoring 14 goals, Nypan is one of the most highly sought-after young players in the world.

Seb Stafford-Bloor of the Athletic documents his ‘remarkable’ rise, labelling him a ‘mighty prospect’, outlining that he is predominantly a number eight, but can also be deployed as a number ten.

Nypan is Rosenborg’s youngest-ever player, debuting at the age of just 15 years and 322 days back in November 2022, before also becoming the Troillongan’s youngest-ever goalscorer, netting against champions Bodø/Glimt in the Arctic Circle the following May.

​​​​​​​

As part of the Guardian’s Next Generation of 2023 series, Michael Yokhin praised Nypan’s “superb ability to read the game and vision”, analyst Ben Mattinson believes he is an “exceptional talent”, while Jacek Kulig from Football Talent Scout asserts that he has a “huge future ahead”.

So, let’s assess his statistics.

Minutes

2,106

64th

Goals

8

15th

Assists

6

6th

Big chances created

7

22nd

Shots per 90

2

18th

Key passes per 90

1.4

25th

Successful dribbles per 90

1.4

12th

Average SofaScore rating

7.28

18th

As the table outlines, Nypan is the creative hub of Rosenborg’s team, ranking very highly for all metrics included, which is very impressive for an 18-year-old, especially when considering that, according to Global Football Rankings, the Eliteserien is the 26th strongest league in the world.

Right now, Man City’s creator in chief, following the departure of Kevin De Bruyne, is likely to be Phil Foden.

Manchester City star Phil Foden

The England international was sensational in 2023/24, picking up every individual accolade going, as the numbers below highlight.

Statistics

Foden

Man City rank

Minutes

4,114

2nd

Goals

26

2nd

Assists

13

2nd

Shots

154

2nd

Shot-creating actions

182

2nd

Goal-creating actions

31

1st

Attempted take-ons

118

2nd

Carries into final third

92

2nd

At his best, Foden is the heartbeat of this Man City side, ranking incredibly highly for every attacking metric, something Nypan is replicating, albeit of course at a lower level for now.

Stefan Bienkowski of Transfermarkt praises Nypan’s ‘exceptionally high football IQ’, adding that he handles the ball very well, much like Foden.

Thus, it is clear that the teenager is a high-potential player, surely making him a Man City star of the not-too-distant future.

Bid incoming: £67m star is now finished at Man City after Cherki arrival

With Rayan Cherki having arrived at Manchester City, as part of the Sky Blues’ big spending spree, one star could be on his way to a PL rival.

ByBen Gray Jun 11, 2025

Man Utd's "outrageously good" flop has been better than McTominay in 24/25

Since leaving Ruben Amorim’s Manchester United side, Marcus Rashford and Antony have played important roles for high-performing sides on the European scene.

Rashford hasn’t been at his rip-roaring best with Aston Villa, but the game-changing winger has still played his part for a side that sit on the cusp of a return to the Champions League, victory at Old Trafford this afternoon standing in his way. He’s scored four goals and provided six assists from 17 games for the Villans.

At Real Betis, Antony looks not like a man reborn but a different player altogether. The right-sided forward became something of a whipping boy for his struggles at the Theatre of Dreams after joining from Ajax in an £86m deal, but has hit nine goals and five assists since moving to Spain in January.

However, these aren’t the only former Red Devils, those having toiled in existing memory at Old Trafford, who have been remade elsewhere, with Scott McTominay forging an incredible campaign for himself over in Italy.

Scott McTominay's Serie A season

Less than a year after leaving Man United and joining Napoli in a £25m deal, McTominay has won the Scudetto and been crowned the Serie A MVP.

It’s been quite the year for the Scotland international, who has long played the bit part at Old Trafford but has been reborn as a bona fide superstar in Naples, the architect of their second league title in three years.

Scott McTominay – Past Six Seasons (league stats)

Season

Apps (starts)

Goals

Assists

24/25 – Napoli

34 (33)

12

6

23/24 – Man Utd

32 (18)

7

1

22/23 – Man Utd

24 (10)

1

0

21/22 – Man Utd

30 (28)

1

1

20/21 – Man Utd

32 (24)

4

1

19/20 – Man Utd

27 (20)

4

1

Stats via Transfermarkt

The 28-year-old never quite brought it all together in the Premier League, but he’s channelled his innate goalscoring ability and reinforced his underlying metrics, averaging 6.1 successful duels and 4.2 ball recoveries per game, as per Sofascore.

It’s exactly the type of midfield robustness that has been lacking for the Red Devils this term, and McTominay’s success will not have been lost on INEOS and Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

However, he’s not the only former Manchester United star performing under Antonio Conte’s wing right now, and you could stake an argument for Romelu Lukaku having been even better than his Scottish teammate.

Romelu Lukaku has been outrageously good

Lukaku first moved to Italian football in August 2019, signing for Inter Milan in a deal worth £74m, leaving Man United.

Romelu Lukaku for Manchester United

He didn’t have a terrible spell at Old Trafford by any stretch, but the 32-year-old, then 25, failed to capture the magic of his time with Everton, who the Glazers paid an initial £75m (rising to £90m), two years earlier.

Scoring 42 goals and adding 15 more assists across 96 matches, Lukaku made inroads in his first year but struggled across the 2018/19 season, only bagging 15 goals from 45 fixtures in all competitions.

He’s been something of a nomad across his storied career, but who can say Lukaku hasn’t left an indelible mark on so many of his clubs?

Now, Napoli have been added to that list, with the number nine’s return of 14 goals and ten assists across the league campaign proving instrumental in the title-winning success. This means that he produced more goals and more assists than the Scottish midfielder, which is why he was even more influential and even better for the Italian outfit.

Football writer Muhammad Butt even took the time to draw praise to Lukaku amid the effusions directed McTominay’s way, hailing the “outrageously good” Belgian for his talismanic role across the campaign, bagging his second Serie A title after winning the 2020/21 edition with Inter Milan.

His goal against Cagliari on Friday night, following McTominay’s acrobatic opener, was certainly ‘outrageous’, and a reminder that he’s not just a poacher.

Here is one of the finest centre-forwards of his generation, and he underscored his legacy with a stunning season under Conte’s wing, a manager who has fallen in love with the nine and sought to make use of his talents across a number of different environments.

McTominay might have won the MVP, but Lukaku will no doubt feel that his prolific season may have warranted the vote angling his way. Ah well, the title will soften that so-called blow.

Not just Garnacho: Amorim must sell Man Utd dud who's a "serious problem"

Manchester United are in need of a serious overhaul this summer, with numerous players needing to be sold.

1 ByEthan Lamb May 24, 2025

Jamie O'Hara thrilled by "brilliant" new manager Tottenham could appoint

Pundit Jamie O’Hara has given his approval as Tottenham Hotspur set their eyes on a new managerial target, with current head coach Ange Postecoglou growing more and more likely to be dismissed at the end of the season.

Tottenham shortlist to replace Ange Postecoglou as sack gains traction

As per reliable media sources, like The Telegraph, it is increasingly likely that Postecoglou will leave Spurs this summer, even if the Lilywhites end up winning the Europa League.

Levy set for "big decision" as Tottenham look at hiring "master" £8m manager

Ange Postecoglou is increasingly likely to leave at the end of 24/25.

3

By
Emilio Galantini

Apr 23, 2025

Tottenham face Bodo/Glimt in the Europa semi-finals next Thursday, right after their tough journey to Anfield, where Liverpool could be officially crowned Premier League champions by defeating Postecoglou’s side.

Even a draw would be enough to clinch Liverpool this year’s domestic crown and begin their trophy celebrations, so Arne Slot’s men are likely to be in top form against a Spurs side who have suffered 18 defeats in the league this season.

Tottenham’s next five Premier League fixtures

Date

Liverpool (away)

April 27th

West Ham (away)

May 3rd

Crystal Palace (home)

May 10th

Aston Villa (away)

May 18th

Brighton (home)

May 25th

A loss on Merseyside would also equal the record for most Premier League defeats in a single campaign for Tottenham, a record which Postecoglou will be extremely keen to avoid, but one which highlights why the 59-year-old could soon part company.

If Tottenham opt to hand the former Celtic boss his P45, there are a number of potential candidates linked with the hot seat.

Spurs’ rumoured managerial shortlist includes the likes of Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola, Fulham’s Marco Silva, Crystal Palace boss Oliver Glasner and Brentford’s Thomas Frank – a list which underwhelms some critics given the four tacticians have just one major trophy between them.

Inter Milan boss Simone Inzaghi has admirers within Tottenham, after he guided the Serie A champions to a Champions League final in 2023 and is currently just in pole position to win a second consecutive Scudetto.

However, it is highly unlikely the Nerrazzuri would be willing to let their most successful manager in years go so easily, and Inzaghi will have watched fellow big-name managers like Antonio Conte and José Mourinho fall short in N17.

Jamie O'Hara thrilled as Tottenham eye Burnley boss Scott Parker

The Mail reported this week that Tottenham are also targeting Burnley boss Scott Parker, and while he isn’t exactly a name in the ilk of Inzaghi, pundit O’Hara told talkSPORT why the 44-year-old could be a great appointment.

“Now, this is interesting, it says Ange is set for a summer exit as Spurs keep tabs on Parker,” O’Hara said.

scott-parker-leeds-united-manager-gossip-live-updates-daniel-farke-49ers

“I think I’d like Scott Parker. I think I’d like Scott Parker at Tottenham. There’s something about him, I’ve worked with Scott, I’ve been in the dressing room with Scott, he’s a top bloke, a brilliant captain, his football I like, his identity I like. Is it a step too far early doors? Maybe, but maybe he needs a platform like Tottenham.

“I think he’d be alright, I wouldn’t mind it.”

The Englishman clinched promotion to the Premier League with both Fulham and Burnley, with Pep Guardiola once endorsing him as one of England’s most exciting young coaches.

However, the jury is out on whether Parker is ready to manage a huge club like Spurs, regardless of his connection.

Dogged Karun Nair does his bit for Vidarbha's Mission Impossible

Mumbai still hold all the cards, but Nair’s resistance ensured Vidarbha lived to fight another day

Hemant Brar13-Mar-2024Before his famed 303 not out against England, Karun Nair had scored another triple-hundred.It was the 2014-15 Ranji Trophy final at the Wankhede. Bowling first, Karnataka had skittled out Tamil Nadu for 134. But when Nair walked in, Karnataka were 16 for 3, which soon became 84 for 5. From there, Nair scored 328 – the highest individual score in a Ranji Trophy final – to help his side win their second successive title.Nine years later, Nair was once again at the Wankhede, playing yet another Ranji Trophy final. This time as a professional for Vidarbha. His team was in an even worse situation. Chasing an unprecedented 538 against Mumbai, they were 64 for 2, having lost their openers in a space of three balls.To keep alive the little hope they had, Vidarbha needed Nair to repeat his 2014-15 heroics.Related

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Nair had moved to Vidarbha after Karnataka dropped him across formats for the 2022-23 season. But before joining them, he had a short stint with Northamptonshire in the County Championship. In his three innings there, he scored 78, 150 and 21.”I didn’t play for a year, so that was quite hard – to sit at home and watch others play,” Nair said on Wednesday. “But that [runs in county cricket] gave me a lot of confidence before coming here. If I could score runs at The Oval, score a 150 when the conditions are much tougher, I could score runs anywhere.”Nair carried that confidence and form into the Ranji Trophy as well. Coming into the final, he was the leading run-scorer for his team, with a tally of 616 at an average of 41.07. But now, on the fourth day of the final, he had his work cut out.Offspinner Tanush Kotian had just bowled Dhruv Shorey with a delivery that turned square. Nair was welcomed in the same manner. Only that Kotian got his line slightly wrong this time and the ball thudded into the batter’s pad.Soon after, Kotian bowled a similar-looking delivery around off stump. Nair played for the turn only for the ball to hold its line and take the outside edge. But wicketkeeper Hardik Tamore grassed the chance.To counter Kotian, Nair tried the reverse sweep, but it did not help. He looked more comfortable against the left-arm spin of Shams Mulani. But the runs were hard to come by. After facing 42 balls, Nair had scored only 9.Akshay Wadkar and Karun Nair added 90 for the fifth wicket•PTI At one stage it looked like even if Vidarbha batted for two full days, they might not reach their target. Having conceded a first-innings lead, a draw was not an option for them, but Nair felt that was the best approach.”I could have taken many, many chances but at the cost of what? It was not an easy wicket to score runs on. So the thought process was to not give them any chances. To keep batting and score the runs that they give you rather than trying to convert things. To bat as long as possible and you never know.”That’s exactly what Nair did.When Mulani’s spell ended, Ajinkya Rahane brought on Musheer Khan, another left-arm spinner. He troubled Nair even more than the other two spinners.In his second over, Musheer got one to turn past Nair’s outside edge and hit the back leg. Nair was saved by the turn.After lunch, Musheer beat his inside edge and hit the front pad. This time the umpire raised his finger. But Nair got the decision reversed on review, as Hawk-Eye showed the ball would have missed leg stump.Musheer then decided to go over the wicket. Turning the ball from the rough around leg stump, he beat Nair’s outside edge repeatedly but could not dislodge him.When Nair reached his fifty, off 174 balls, he hardly celebrated. After all, it was not even 10% of Vidarbha’s target.Akshay Wadkar was far more positive at the other end, which meant Vidarbha at last made some perceivable progress.Karun Nair’s wagon wheel during his 74•Getty ImagesWith the pitch slowing down and no reverse swing on offer, Mumbai took the second new ball as soon as it was available. Dhawal Kulkarni bowled a couple of overs with it but with nothing happening, Rahane turned to Tushar Deshpande for what the latter described as “the short-ball therapy”.All six deliveries of Deshpande’s over were short. Nair ducked under or swayed away the first four times. On the fifth occasion, Deshpande erred down the leg side and Nair pulled it fine for four.Nair and Wadkar had added 90 for the fifth wicket. But with 20-odd minutes left in the day’s play, Musheer finally got his man when Nair edged one to the keeper.Nair’s 74 contained only three fours. But his innings was more about the shots he did not play, the restraint he showed. During his 220-ball vigil, he did not score a single run in the V.When asked about it, Nair said: “The ball was turning from very close to the bat, so it was not easy. I could have tried but it could have gone either way. So I was just waiting for something really full or short to score runs.”At stumps, Wadkar was unbeaten on 56. But Vidarbha are not even halfway to their target. They need another 290 with five wickets in hand. Nair was asked if they still had hope.”We need to be realistic that it’s a tough task,” he said. “But if I can say anything about this team, it’s that they never give up. You never know what can happen. I would have loved to be batting overnight and then I could have given you a better answer.”Vidarbha, too, would have loved that.

The Test hundreds may not be there, but Bavuma is close to being SA's best batter right now

Since January 2021, the Test vice-captain is the only South African to hold a 50-plus batting average

Firdose Moonda22-Feb-2022It used to be one of the most talked-about issues in South African cricket: when will Temba Bavuma score a second Test century?After his breakthrough hundred in January 2016, six Tests into his career, Bavuma has scored 16 fifties, but has routinely run out of time or partners to convert. A critical analysis of his batting is that he scores too slowly and his career strike rate of under 48 for the first three-and-half-years underpinned that. Since then, South Africans have come to accept that maybe a batters’ value, especially at home, can’t be measured in centuries.In the last eight Tests in South Africa, dating back to January 2020, there have only been two hundreds scored by their batters. And in that time, Bavuma holds the highest average by a South African player – 46. Since January 2021, he is the only South African to average 50 and thus, even though the likes of Herschelle Gibbs are still not convinced, Bavuma has earned his stripes at this level.”It’s helped that I’ve played a fair number of Tests, so there’s an acceptance that there will be good days and there will be bad days,” Bavuma said, after two days off following South Africa’s innings defeat to New Zealand in the first Test. “I’m at peace with my role in the team, how I fit in. It’s not just about the batting and the currency of runs, but also my presence in the team and how I contribute towards building the culture and environment. That’s helped me be more at ease with where I fit into the team. It’s not the case of every game is my last opportunity to cement my position.”

“I understand his vision as a captain and what he would like to achieve. I back it 100%. I back him as a leader and as a player. For me, it’s about trying to help and serve him as best I can so he can execute his vision for the team”Bavuma on working as Dean Elgar’s deputy

Instead, Bavuma has concentrated on things like scoring quicker. This year, though the sample size is small at three Tests, his strike rate has improved to 57. He has been part of some of the most important partnerships in the South African cause, like the match-winning 82 and 68 with Dean Elgar and Keegan Petersen respectively at the Wanderers against India, and he has often stood man-alone in collapses. He was the only South African to score more than 30 in an innings in Christchurch.But Bavuma knows better than to celebrate his form keeping in mind the inconsistency from the line-up that continues to sparkle and then stutter as it finds its feet. “It’s hard to separate the team cause from your individual cause, especially after a performance like that [in the first Test],” he said. “Where I am with my game, I think there are more positives than anything. I’m not down and out, I’m not disappointed in myself. But the team is in a space where we need someone to put up their hand. My form has been decent over the last while, but while it’s still a bit of a concern for the team, I won’t be fully happy with myself.”South Africa slumped to their second-biggest-ever defeat in the first Test against New Zealand and looked far from the team that chased successfully against India twice last month. No-one, not coach Mark Boucher or captain Dean Elgar, has been able to explain their lack of intensity and energy, and Bavuma wasn’t even going to try. “It wasn’t good enough,” he said. “That’s not the standard we pride ourselves on. We know we have to improve in all three disciplines.”Related

Temba Bavuma: 'I understand I have a voice, and the influence to make things better around me'

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SA's batting rebuild will take time

Bavuma outlines difficulties of leading SA amid off-field issues

His bluntness may be a result of his growing closeness with captain Elgar, for whom Bavuma deputises. The pair has adopted a no-nonsense approach to leadership, which they both advocate. “Our relationship has been built on honesty and not any bull***t,” Bavuma said. “Dean’s a very blunt type of person. If you stray, he’ll call you out, and if you’re good he’ll let you know as well. That resonates with me.”While Elgar does not shy away from telling his players when he thinks socks need to be pulled up – Kagiso Rabada after the Boxing Day Test, for example – Bavuma plays good cop and keeps things cool, hoping that their contrasting personas will take South Africa forward in all formats.”Being Dean’s vice-captain, I’m trying to be his calming voice. Dean can be emotional at times,” Bavuma said. “We work hand-in-hand with each other. I understand his vision as a captain and what he would like to achieve. I back it 100%. I back him as a leader and as a player. For me, it’s about trying to help and serve him as best I can so he can execute his vision for the team. We’d like to bring respect to the Proteas badge. We’d like to leave the Proteas in a much better state than they’re in, or than they were when we came in. We’re there to support each other. We’re in this fight together. His success is my success, and vice versa.”So far, South Africa have had no success in New Zealand. Of the seven sessions that made up the first Test, they won none, but Elgar and Bavuma don’t believe that makes them a team in trouble. “You don’t become a bad player because you haven’t scored runs in a certain game,” Bavuma argued.Bavuma was the only South African to cross 30 in Christchurch•AFP/Getty ImagesIf that were the case, both Elgar and Bavuma would have been labelled bad players many times, and the numbers show they are not. They are the best South Africa have got. For Bavuma, it comes down to playing with more responsibility but also knowing he occupies a senior place in the XI. “I remember as a new player coming in, the main thing you wanted was to be accepted by everybody and the best way to do that is through your performances,” he said. “I’m at a point where I truly believe I’m accepted and valued in the team. That’s probably the reason my performances have been good over the last while.”Now, it’s for the rest of the batters to feel the same way. Sarel Erwee, who debuted in the first Test, won’t because he doesn’t know if he will keep the opening berth, or if it will be given back to Aiden Markram once Petersen is back. And Markram doesn’t know if he is going to be dropped after averaging 9.7 in his last ten innings. Kyle Verreynne doesn’t know if he will keep the wicketkeeper-batter’s spot or it will go to Ryan Rickelton, who averages over 100 this season. Zubayr Hamza doesn’t know if he will play as a sixth specialist batter or lose the spot to Rickelton or be benched in favour of an allrounder or spinner.South Africa’s selection decisions remain a mystery with Boucher only explaining that they do things as they “feel they need to be”, with selection convener Victor Mpitsang providing answers that directly contradict what insiders at the organisation say. In South Africa’s top seven, only Elgar, Bavuma and Rassie van der Dussen are secure and it’s no surprise that they are the most consistent run-scorers.So the questions over when next Elgar will score a hundred – he hasn’t done so in eight Tests – to if Bavuma will ever score another, to if van der Dussen will touch three figures in Tests are not nearly as important as what South Africa can do to solidify their line-up and give it long-term structure and shape. That’s what they need to start answering in the second Test, and maybe the hundreds will come.

Three Takeways From Brewers' Redemptive Win to Eliminate Rival Cubs

The Brewers' dream to win the first World Series in franchise history is still alive.

Behind four strong innings from Jacob Misiorowski and three homers from three different players, Milwaukee defeated the Cubs 3–1 in Game 5 of the NLDS on Saturday night at American Family Field.

Milwaukee is heading to the NLCS for the first time since 2018.

All four runs scored in this game came on solo homers. William Contreras gave Milwaukee a 1–0 lead in the first inning, and Cubs outfielder Seiya Suzuki tied it up with one of his own in the second. Andrew Vaughn broke the tie in the fourth with a big swing to make it 2–1, and Brice Turang gave the Brewers an insurance run with a solo homer in the seventh for good measure.

As is custom in Milwaukee, the pitching was more of the story. The 23-year-old Misiorowski, pitching in his first postseason, allowed just one run across four innings to earn the win. Perhaps the most impressive outing of the night belonged to Chad Patrick, who got the Brewers out of a jam in the sixth and fanned the side in the seventh.

For the first time in seven years, Brewers fans at American Family Field are going home happy after watching their team win an elimination game.

Up next? The Dodgers. But first, here are three things we learned from the Brewers' big win:

No more heartbreak in Milwaukee

Brewers pitcher Chad Patrick after striking out the side in the seventh inning of Game 5. / Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

Playoff baseball in Milwaukee has mostly been synonymous with pain over the last decade.

In 2018, the Brewers were one win away from the World Series when they lost 5–1 to the Dodgers in Game 7 of the NLCS. Since then, the franchise has made five playoff appearances but hadn't won a single elimination game.

In 2019, the Brewers lost in heartbreaking fashion to the Nationals—who went on to win the whole thing—in the wild-card game. In '20, the Brewers were swept by the Dodgers. The following year brought a 3–1 series loss to the Braves in the NLDS, followed by another wild-card round sweep by the Diamondbacks in '23. In '24, the Brewers were literally two outs away from advancing before the Mets' Pete Alonso mashed a go-ahead three-run homer in the top of the ninth, crushing Milwaukee's postseason dreams.

Game 5, however, was finally a different story. The Brewers are moving on.

An unlikely hero

Brewers first baseman Andrew Vaughn celebrates after hitting a solo home run against the Cubs in the fourth inning of Game 5. / Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

Perhaps nobody embodies the story of the 2025 Brewers more than Andrew Vaughn, a former first-round pick who sputtered out over four-plus seasons with the lowly White Sox.

Acquired in June in exchange for Aaron Civale and cash, Vaughn wasted no time getting comfortable in Milwaukee—and that carried into the playoffs. After batting .189/.218/.314 with Chicago earlier this year, Vaughn transformed the Brewers' offense and hit .308/.375/.493 in 64 games.

Vaughn smacked a three-run homer in the Brewers' 7–3 win in Game 2, and his bat showed up again Saturday night, clobbering a 3–2 pitch from Colin Rea over the left-field wall for a 2–1 lead in the fourth inning.

Brewers get their revenge on Craig Counsell

Cubs manager Craig Counsell looks on during Game 1 of the NLDS at American Family Field. / Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

The heart and soul of the Brewers organization will always be the late, great Bob Uecker. But for the better part of a decade, the face of baseball in Milwaukee was current Cubs manager Craig Counsell.

A native of Whitefish Bay, Wis., Counsell grew up rooting for the Brewers. He ended up playing more games for the Brewers (711) than any other team across 16 years in the big leagues, and after retiring following the 2011 season, Counsell was named Milwaukee's manager in '15.

Over nine seasons from 2015 to '23, Counsell took the Brewers—a franchise which had made a total of four playoff appearances in its history when he was hired—to the postseason five times. He's the all-time franchise leader in managerial wins. So it was beyond shocking in November 2023 when he packed his bags and left Milwaukee—not for the Mets, as many expected, with former Brewers president of baseball operations David Stearns—but for the archrival Cubs, located just 90 miles south on I-94.

There's still plenty of respect between Counsell and the Brewers, and in fact, he and Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy are good pals. But so far, it appears the Brewers have won the breakup. That was certainly the case Saturday night.

Rest or runs? Hurricanes and Scorchers take contrasting roads to WBBL final

The hosts were the standout side in the regular season but have not played a full game since December 1

AAP12-Dec-2025Time off or matches under the belt heading into a final?It’s a perennial question and a situation acutely felt by Hobart Hurricanes and Perth Scorchers ahead of Saturday night’s WBBL decider.Hurricanes, who earned top spot on the ladder and direct passage to a home final, haven’t taken to the field since December 5 – a no-result against Adelaide Strikers.Related

WBBL match abandoned due to hole in the pitch

Mooney, King book Perth Scorchers' spot in WBBL final

Scorchers, meanwhile, have played three games in two states in the past week, including an elimination win over Sydney Sixers in Sydney on Thursday night.”If you sit back and think about what is the perfect preparation, I don’t think anyone has the answer,” Hurricanes captain Elyse Villani said. “[But] it was great we were able to have a few days of rest. We’ve had a lot of people play a lot of games.”If it doesn’t go our way … it doesn’t come down to anything that we haven’t done. I feel like we’re in a really positive space to make the best of it.”Scorchers skipper Sophie Devine travelled to Hobart ahead of the rest of the squad in order to make Friday’s early afternoon media commitment.”You can look at it both ways. Some will say having a rest is positive, some are going to say playing cricket will prepare you best,” she said. “Either way you look at it, both teams are going to go into it really ready.”Scorchers have won six of their past seven games, the only loss coming when Hurricanes pulled off the highest run chase in WBBL history.Devine said Scorchers, who are aiming to lift the silverware for a second time, weren’t fussed by either chasing or setting a target.Hurricanes are yet to win a WBBL title and are in their first final, with 36-year-old veteran Villani finishing runner-up in three attempts elsewhere.”My record is worse than what I thought. It would be a dream come true [to win] to be honest,” she said. “I’ve been going at this 11 seasons and I’ve been very jealous every single year of the people who have been able to lift that trophy.”Villani said Hurricanes were drawing inspiration from their male counterparts who broke through for a maiden BBL title last season in front of a home crowd.Scorchers opener Beth Mooney, the season’s leading run-scorer, is in a rich vein of form and spinner Alana King has come to life with nine wickets in her past four games.Villani said her chargers would back their experience – their top six has all played international cricket.”I think that will play into our favour but anything can happen in T20,” she said.Hobart Hurricanes (probable) 1 Lizelle Lee (wk), 2 Danni Wyatt-Hodge, 3 Nat Sciver-Brunt, 4 Nicola Carey, 5 Elyse Villani (capt), 6 Heather Graham, 7 Rachel Trenaman, 8 Hayley Silver-Holmes, 9 Molly Strano, 10 Lauren Smith, 11 Linsey SmithPerth Scorchers (probable) 1 Beth Mooney (wk), 2 Katie Mack, 3 Sophie Devine (capt), 4 Maddy Darke, 5 Freya Kemp, 6 Paige Scholfield, 7 Chloe Ainsworth, 8 Alana King, 9 Lilly Mills, 10 Ruby Strange, 11 Amy Edgar

Their new McTominay: Man Utd in talks to sign £25m future "superstar"

Over the last couple of years, Manchester United have shifted their focus in the transfer market to landing young talents who can make an immediate and long-term impact at the club.

Such a strategy may prove to be a risky one, but the benefits massively outweigh the negatives, with the huge development and room for profit no doubt a real contributing factor.

Leny Yoro joined the Red Devils in a £52m deal from Lille last summer, with the Frenchman seen as a huge addition for the backline in their attempts for Premier League glory.

Manchester United defender Leny Yoro

At just 20, he’s racked up nearly half a century of appearances at Old Trafford and is likely to remain a key member of Ruben Amorim’s squad for the foreseeable future.

However, with January rapidly on the horizon, the hierarchy look set to make yet more additions, which could see numerous other youngsters take the jump to move to Manchester.

Man Utd’s hunt for new additions in January

Elliot Anderson is the player who has mostly been linked with a move to join United this winter, with the 23-year-old seen as the club’s marquee addition for the upcoming window.

However, his potential move to Old Trafford would likely be a club-record one for Amorim’s men, as current employers Nottingham Forest are currently demanding £100m for his signature.

Such a price tag is to be expected given his recent rise, which has seen him cement himself as a regular starter in Thomas Tuchel’s England squad in 2025.

However, he’s not the only youngster in their sights, with AZ Alkmaar midfielder Kees Smit another talent the hierarchy are considering, according to CaughtOffside.

Their report states that the Red Devils have already reached out to the Dutch outfit over a move for the 19-year-old star, with a £25m price tag currently being mooted for his services.

The article also claims that local rivals Liverpool are also interested in a move for the teenager, but it remains to be seen where the player himself would prefer to move.

How Smit compares to Scott McTominay

United’s academy setup has often produced numerous top-level talents, with midfielder Scott McTominay just one player who has placed himself in that bracket.

The Scottish international rose through the ranks at Old Trafford, before making himself known to the supporters in the first team ranks – subsequently racking up a total of 255 appearances for the club.

However, last summer, the hierarchy decided it was best to move him on and cash in on his services, with the club offloading him to Napoli in a deal worth a reported £25m.

Such a decision has massively backfired, with the midfielder scoring 13 times in all competitions last season, resulting in the 28-year-old winning the Serie A MVP award for 2024/25.

He’s carried his phenomenal form into his international career as of late, even scoring a remarkable bicycle kick against Denmark this week to secure Scotland’s place at the 2026 World Cup.

His move away from Old Trafford has made him an elite-level talent, but the club could be about to land their next version of the star with a move for Smit in the coming months.

The Dutch youngster has also made a name for himself in recent months, as he’s already registered six combined goals and assists in his 19 appearances across all competitions.

He’s become a box-crashing midfielder who likes to pop up with a goal or an assist, something which McTominay has done excellently since his transfer away from his boyhood club.

Smit, who possesses “superstar potential” according to Ben Mattinson, has also completed 88% of the passes he’s attempted – resulting in 2.1 chances created per 90 this campaign.

Games played

19

Goals & assists

6

Pass accuracy

88%

Chances created

2.1

Successful dribbles

1.2

Dribble success

50%

Recoveries made

6.3

Tackles in final third

0.9

Other figures, such as 1.2 successful dribbles per 90 and a 50% dribble success rate, further showcase his talent in possession, which makes him a huge threat in attacking areas.

Out of possession, the youngster has also thrived, subsequently making 6.3 recoveries per 90 and 0.9 tackles per 90 in the final third of the pitch – numbers which could add a new dimension to Amorim’s side.

£25m for a youngster with Smit’s quality and potential is an excellent deal, but the Red Devils board will need to act quickly to avoid missing out to Liverpool.

If he can replicate McTominay’s incredible nouse for goals and assists within the final third, it would be a phenomenal piece of business that could take the club to the next level in the years ahead.

Next Carrick: Man Utd want to sign "one of the best CMs in the PL" for £60m

Man United could enhance the quality of their midfield with the signing of another Michael Carrick.

ByJoe Nuttall Nov 19, 2025

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