'Everything's happening so quickly' – Fraser-McGurk on his rapid rise to stardom

Jake Fraser-McGurk opens up on a whirlwind last 12 months where he has gone from the fringes of Australian domestic cricket to starring on IPL debut

Shashank Kishore16-Apr-20242:17

Jaffer: Delhi needed somebody like Jake Fraser-McGurk

Last month, at a golf course in Jaipur, Jake Fraser-McGurk spent an entire morning session clicking photographs of fans with David Warner at every hole. It was his first taste of seeing superstardom from close quarters.Those fans may have not realised then that the one clicking their pictures with Warner is a future Test superstar. At least Ricky Ponting thinks so. And he said it long before Fraser-McGurk was on the Delhi Capitals roster.In October last year, Fraser-McGurk shattered AB de Villiers’ record for the fastest List A century. He got there off 29 balls in a game for South Australia against Tasmania at Karen Rolton Oval in Adelaide. He smashed 10 fours and 13 sixes to finish on 125 off 38 balls.Related

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There are shades of a young Warner in his approach to batting: fun, fast and fearless, which you saw last week when he blasted a 35-ball 55 on IPL debut against Lucknow Super Giants.Fraser-McGurk smashed five sixes, to different areas, with different shots. But the fundamentals were similar. A solid base, a clean swing and tremendous bat speed, the very elements that had Glenn Maxwell bash out an appreciative tweet when Fraser-McGurk slammed seven sixes in his 23-ball 55 for Melbourne Renegades against Brisbane Heat last December.”His potential doesn’t have a ceiling,” Maxwell wrote.The spotlight has firmly been on him ever since, but it wasn’t this way twelve months ago.”I didn’t even have a state contract,” Fraser-McGurk tells ESPNcricinfo. He’d broken through as a 16-year-old prodigy at Victoria in 2019, hitting a half-century on first-class and List-A debut, but lack of consistency had pushed him down the pecking order.Ahead of the 2022-23 season, Fraser-McGurk moved to South Australia to start afresh. From being frustrated and full of self-doubt, he went on to become a fearsome ball-striker who added layers of consistency to his game.”I wasn’t going anywhere, I felt like I was falling behind a bit,” he says of his time with Victoria. “The rookie contract they offered me was a massive downgrade, I wouldn’t find myself even in the second team. That’s when I decided to pursue opportunities elsewhere and luckily South Australia came knocking. I couldn’t have said yes any quicker.”Jake Fraser-McGurk put on a show on IPL debut•Associated PressThat wasn’t the only ‘yes’ Fraser-McGurk has had to say in recent times. In February, he nearly fell off his seat as he turned his phone on upon landing in Hobart for a Sheffield Shield game. The reason: “Punter’s message,” he says with excitement.”He asked me if I’d like to come over to play for Delhi as a replacement! I said ‘yes’ quickly. It was a nerve-wracking few days. My manager had a lot of stress in getting the paperwork sorted for my visa.”Fraser-McGurk had gone unsold at the auction but had played for Dubai Capitals – run by the same IPL owners – in the ILT20. He had been earmarked then as a potential replacement. It was only when he received that message from Ponting did it sink in that he’d be playing in the IPL.In February, Fraser-McGurk’s whirlwind rise to stardom saw him usher in another chapter when he made his Australia debut during the ODIs against West Indies, which he celebrated with a bruising 18-ball 41. It came on the back of a breakout BBL season, where he hit 257 runs in eight innings at a strike rate of 158.64 for Renegades.”Everything’s happened so quickly,” Fraser-McGurk says. “I haven’t really had the time to reflect on it. It’s been an amazing journey so far this year, but cricket is a funny game. It can go back and forth, but as long as I’m learning and making my opportunities count, I can’t see anything bad happening.”In 2019, Fraser-McGurk was part of a development squad sent by Cricket Australia to train at the MRF Pace Foundation in Chennai. He’d enjoyed going out and about, soaking in the “madness for cricket” and the uniqueness the place offered with its heat, humidity and cuisine.

“Last night, I was hitting sixes with [Rishabh] Pant. We were having a bit of a competition with each other. He obviously won, but it’s just incredible how I can learn so much off him, and the others at 22. I couldn’t have dreamt of it long ago.”

Fraser-McGurk misses some of that freedom at the IPL, where there’s so much more than just cricket. There are endorsements, sponsor commitments, photo shoots, meet and greets – an ecosystem far different to the one he’s seen back home. Our chat too is on the sidelines of a photo shoot for which Fraser-McGurk has been woken up.”I’ve never looked at cricket as work, some kind of a chore,” he says.During his formative years, cricket was a massive part of his childhood. It helped that his parents were both sportspeople.”From when I was 10, maybe, cricket was always a massive part of me,” he says. “Mum was a netball player; dad was a semi-professional tennis player. He also played cricket in the summers. In fact, we played for the same club.”When I was 11 or 12, we both played in the same team. He opened the bowling, I kept wickets. I remember he picked up a five-for and I hit a fifty in the same game. Cricket was always fun. We’d finish matches, hop over to McDonalds for a burger. It was fun.”As he grew up, he’d spend hours imitating Michael Clarke’s step-out shots, the trademark chip down the track to flick and drive spinners against the turn.”I loved the way he played, the fluency, the shots, the way he’d work the ball around,” Fraser-McGurk says. “I watched Clarke for his fluency, Davey for his power and talent.”Being a young guy, growing up and watching him take the bowlers on, it probably helped me in the way I play now. What he’s done for cricket and personally for me, it’s amazing. I’ve been able to spend a lot of time with Davey in the IPL. I’m always having meals with him, playing golf with him, we’re always together.”The story of their friendship goes back a few years, long before he became a batting sensation.”I was running drinks during an ODI between Australia and England at the Adelaide Oval. I was one of the subs and I went in to give him drinks with my best friend Mackenzie Harvey. He was past a 100 or something and he said to Heady [Travis Head] – ‘it’s not often you get to bat with me when I’m on 100, make it count, mate’.”And I don’t know why but I started laughing. Davey cracked up as well and that day he came up to me and chatted quite a bit. And I wasn’t even like a squad member, just a sub called in to do drinks duties. From then on, he’s always looked out for me. He has time for everyone.”Jake Fraser-McGurk gave a glimpse of his potential•Getty ImagesUntil his move to South Australia at the start of the previous season, Fraser-McGurk was known as the guy whose Under-19 World Cup ended in rather bizarre circumstances. He pinches himself to believe how far he has come today.”We were at a nature reserve looking at all these different animals,” he says with a laugh as he remembers the incident. “We got to a place where everyone was feeding monkeys. I got too close to the cage and the monkey I was feeding ate all the food that was on my palm.”I was looking at him through the cage and then suddenly he scratched me in the eye and cut my bottom eye lid. I had to get various treatments which were safer in Melbourne, so I had to fly home.”By then, Australia were out of the running for the Under-19 World Cup. Fraser-McGurk had been run out in the quarter-final against India without facing a ball. As he made the long walk back, he wondered if that was the last time he’d be on an international stage.Apparently not.Fraser-McGurk has a child-like enthusiasm that comes through in his replies. He has a self-deprecating humour that also sets him apart. There’s also this glint in his eye at the prospect of training and learning from some of the world’s best.”It’s amazing to see them go to work in real life,” he says of working with the likes of Rishabh Pant and Ponting. “I’d seen it on social media. To see how they are in real life is different. It’s an amazing culture, how cricket brings everyone together in India.”Last night, I was hitting sixes with Pant. We were having a bit of a competition with each other. He obviously won, but it’s just incredible how I can learn so much off him, and the others at 22. I couldn’t have dreamt of it long ago.”There’s also a maturity to Fraser-McGurk that perhaps stems from his own brush with failure.”I don’t think about the future,” he says. “Even if I’m not playing, my mantra is what I can do to help the team. It’s important to have that team-first attitude and not worry too much about what the future holds. The rest will take care of itself.”

Buttler takes down KKR, Starc under fire, Rana denies Klaasen

ESPNcricinfo’s writers pick their favourite matches from IPL 2024

ESPNcricinfo staff28-May-2024KKR vs RR: Buttler soars solo at Eden Gardens
By Sidharth MongaThis match had a superb Sunil Narine century, a decent closing effort by the Rajasthan Royals bowlers to stay in the game, some excellent bowling from the Kolkata Knight Riders spinners before a comeback like no other from Jos Buttler. With 103 required, four wickets in hand and 46 balls to go, KKR were playing the perfect game only for a brief spell of individual brilliance from Buttler to make a mockery of it all. He scored 70 of those runs, kept strike for each of the last 18 balls, and hit five sixes and six fours in that period. To a casual T20 watcher, this was perverse joy; to fans of T20 cricket, such extreme possibility is where the appeal lies.
Could you have imagined Karn Sharma hitting Mitchell Starc for three sixes in the final overs?•BCCIKKR vs RCB: A blitz from the blue against Starc
By Karthik KrishnaswamyIt had everything. Twists, turns, controversy (more on this here), magnificent ball-striking, and most crucially an entirely unexpected protagonist starring in a pulsating finish. Karn Sharma’s T20 batting numbers give you no warning of the inspired things he can do from time to time. Back in 2014, he had hooked Mitchell Johnson, a man still fresh from his Ashes and South Africa exploits of 2013-14, over the stadium roof in Sharjah. Now he faced up to Mitchell Starc with Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) needing 21 to win off the last over, and carved his first ball over backward point for a flat six. And he wasn’t done. Two more sixes came in the next three balls, both thumped over the off side, and with three needed off two balls RCB were perhaps favourites. It wasn’t to be, though, and the game ended with two moments of glorious randomness: a low caught-and-bowled off a low full-toss, and a run-out, with Phil Salt’s athleticism rescuing an off-target throw from the deep that could have allowed RCB to steal a match-tying second run.Harshit Rana was the last-over hero in KKR’s thrilling win against SRH at Eden Gardens•BCCIKKR vs SRH: Rana denies KlaasenBy Alagappan MuthuRun-fests are fun but only they happen in proportions that have never been seen before. It’s why the 434 game is still legendary. But there was one more reason that game captured so many people’s imaginations. It retained suspense. The first clash between KKR and Sunrisers Hyderabad managed something similar. It refused to follow any script. KKR were 119 for 6. Then something happened (Hint: Andre Russell) and suddenly they were 208. SRH were 111 for 4. Then something happened (Hint: Heinrich Klaasen) and they needed 7 off 5 balls. That should’ve been that. But something happened again (Hint: Harshit Rana) and, for one last time, the game changed.

Awesome in Australia: Dravid's double in Adelaide vs Ashwin's mastery over the Aussies

Vote for the best individual Border-Gavaskar Trophy performance by an Indian in Australia since 2000

Alagappan Muthu21-Oct-2024Update: This poll has ended. Rahul Dravid’s performance goes into the quarter-finals. Check the other polls here.ESPNcricinfo LtdRahul Dravid celebrates a famous win at Adelaide Oval in 2003•AFP via Getty ImagesRahul Dravid – 233 and 72* in Adelaide, 2003India win by four wickets, lead series 1-0Long before Rahul Dravid was immortalised for revealing that he too had the ability to yell his head off, he was immortalised for having the ability to yell his head off and also punch the air. The image of him doing so as he hit the winning runs in Adelaide almost 20 years ago is part of Indian cricket history. It was only the fourth time they had ever won a Test match in Australia – and their first victory since 1981 – and they had to come from behind to do it. From way behind, 556 runs to be exact. But Dravid kept whittling away at it, wearing Australia down not once but twice. Finally, after 12 and a half hours at the crease, scoring more runs than he has ever done or will ever do in a single Test, it made perfect sense that he would be there at the end, soaking in the Adelaide sunshine, teeth gritted, arms up high, the personification of triumph.Dravid’s heroics in that match gave India a 1-0 lead, in a series they went on to draw in Australia for the first time since 1985.Watch the highlights of these performances on the Star Sports network at 10am, 1pm, 4pm and 7pm IST, from October 22 onwards.R Ashwin exerted incredible control over the Australian batters in Adelaide in 2018•AFP / Getty ImagesR Ashwin – 3-57 in 34 overs & 3-92 in 52.5 overs in Adelaide, 2018India win by 31 runs, lead series 1-0Until this Test, R Ashwin had bowled more than 300 overs in Australia for a mere 21 wickets. That can happen when you’re on tour and the conditions aren’t entirely in your favour. In Australia especially, a spinner’s job, as much as he is there to pick up wickets, is to hold an end up so that the quick bowlers can be kept fresh so that they can come charging in again and again. Ashwin found that balance in Adelaide. More than that, he tested the Australians’ defence: each of his three first-innings wickets the result of how his mastery of flight and dip alone was enough to cause problems. Ashwin bowled 86.5 overs in the Adelaide Test, going for less than two runs an over and giving Australia no way out.Five of his six wickets were of top-order batters and his performance was crucial to India taking a 1-0 lead in what would become their first ever Test series win in Australia.

ILT20 returns with new captains, India players, and an eye on developing Gulf cricket

The fourth edition of UAE’s T20 tournament is also beginning earlier than usual to avoid clashes with the BBL and SA20

Abhijato Sensarma01-Dec-2025When does it start?The finalists from last season – Dubai Capitals and Desert Vipers – meet in Dubai to kick off proceedings on December 2. Most of the fixtures begin at 6.30pm local time, with the afternoon fixtures – on double-header days – starting from 2pm.The last time these two teams met, Capitals chased down a target of 190 thanks to a 38-ball 63 from Rovman Powell, and a bruising 34 off 12 from Sikandar Raza, in a thrilling last-over finish.Sikandar Raza took Dubai Capitals to their maiden title win last year•ILT20Is there a clash with BBL and SA20 this time too?To avoid a major clash with these two tournaments, in fact, the ILT20 has decided to start this season earlier than the January window in which it has been previously played: the matches are being played between December 2 and January 4. This gives players more leeway to appear for the entire duration of the competition, before the new year brings around a hectic franchise calendar with it.Australia’s Big Bash League is starting on December 14, and a few players might leave the tournament midway through to fulfill their commitments down under. The SA20 starts on December 26 which means former MI Emirates captain Nicholas Pooran might head out, among others, to appear for the MI franchise on another continent.The tournament runs on for a total of 34 matches – 30 league games, followed by the knockouts. The teams that finish first and second will meet in Qualifier 1, in Abu Dhabi on December 30 – the winner of this encounter proceeds to the final. Then, the third- and fourth-placed teams from the group stage face off in the Eliminator, on January 1 in Dubai.Related

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The Eliminator’s winner then takes on the loser from the opening knockout match in Qualifier 2, on January 2 in Sharjah. The final will be played two days later.How are the teams shaping up this year?The same six teams as the previous season form the line-up for this edition: Abu Dhabi Knight Riders, Desert Vipers, Dubai Capitals, Gulf Giants, MI Emirates and Sharjah Warriorz.The tournament has had healthy competition so far: Gulf Giants won the inaugural title, MIE dominated during their second season run, and Capitals joined them as a third new winner during the competition’s first three years.Kieron Pollard will be MI Emirates’ new captain•ILT20And their captains?There’s been quite a shuffle this year, in fact: Kieron Pollard takes over from Pooran as MIE captain. Dasun Shanaka takes over from Sam Billings to lead defending champions Capitals, while Jason Holder takes over from Sunil Narine as the captain of Knight Riders.On the other hand, Lockie Ferguson continues as captain for Desert Vipers – he is on a comeback trail after an injury layoff, and his performances here will be crucial to his roadmap to playing for New Zealand in next year’s T20 World Cup. James Vince stays on as Gulf Giants’ captain too, while Tim Southee will continue leading Warriorz.Who are the other players to watch out for?ILT20 had its first player auction in October, and the squads are stacked with exciting talent. West Indies wicketkeeper-batter Andre Fletcher fetched a record bid of USD 260,000 from MIE, who retained him for a fourth successive season of explosive batting at the top of the order.Muhammad Waseem, Sikandar Raza, and Waqar Salamkheil pose with championship belts during the previous edition•ILT20Emirates opted to retain Muhammad Waseem too – he is a compulsive six-hitter from UAE, having hit 187 T20I sixes, trailing only Rohit Sharma (205).Pakistan-born UAE pacer, Junaid Siddique, was also part of a bidding war at the auction – Warriorz eventually snatched up a bowler who has been in great form, finishing as the third-highest wicket-taker at this year’s Asia Cup.Development players at ILT20

From Saudi Arabia: Usman Najeeb (Dubai Capitals), Abdul Salam Khan (Sharjah Warriorz), Zain Ul Abidin (MI Emirates), Abdul Manan Ali (Abu Dhabi Knight Riders), Faisal Khan (Desert Vipers) and Ishtiaq Ahmad (Gulf Giants)

From Kuwait: Mohamed Aslam (Sharjah Warriors), Mohamed Shafeeq (MI Emirates), Bilal Tahir (Desert Vipers), Meet Bhavsar (Gulf Giants), Adnan Idrees (Abu Dhabi Knight Riders), and Anudeep Chenthamara (Dubai Capitals)

Matheesha Pathirana was released by CSK last month, but this has freed him up to slot in as a replacement player for Warriorz. England batter Jordan Cox – who scored 367 runs at an average of 61.16, and an explosive strike-rate of 173.93 at The Hundred – will fly in to play for Capitals.Moeen Ali – will be turning out for Giants alongside Vince, while Sunil Narine and Andre Russell, who recently retired from the IPL, will continue to lend their services to Knight Riders in the ILT20.Jordan Cox has been in great T20 form this year•Getty ImagesWait… …R Ashwin isn’t playing?Nope, your notes are quite correct. He went unsold, as the only player with a base price in six figures at the auction. However, that doesn’t mean there is a dearth of Indian action at the tournament: Dinesh Karthik is the biggest name on this roster, heading to Sharjah Warriorz as their keeper-batter.Former Under-19 captain, and current USA player, Unmukt Chand will be turning out for Knight Riders. Piyush Chawla, meanwhile, was announced as a wildcard for Knight Riders.Anything else to keep in mind?Yes – Vipers bid for Pakistan players Fakhar Zaman, Naseem Shah, and Hasan Nawaz, but their availability for the tournament was in jeopardy after PCB declared that they would not be granting NOCs to their players for tournaments outside Pakistan. However, it is understood that PCB has granted the certificates to these three players, and they will now appear at the tournament.The ILT20 has started to expand its footprint in the Gulf and has cobbled tie-ups with the cricket associations in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Six young players each from each country were bought by the six ILT20 franchises as development players at the auction recently.

Luciano Spalletti's 'pure passion' will turn Juventus into Serie A title contenders, says Andrea Cambiaso

Juventus defender Andrea Cambiaso has praised newly appointed coach Luciano Spalletti for the passion he has brought to the the club since his appointment. The defender praised Spalletti's ability to communicate his ideas clearly to the group and believe the ex-Italy manager's passion and clear communication it can propel Juventus to the Scudetto.

Spalletti swoops in to salvage Serie A season

Spalletti replaced Igor Tudor as Juventus coach after a difficult spell that saw the team lose form and confidence. Tudor had started the season brightly, winning his first three matches, including a thrilling 4-3 victory over Inter in the Derby d’Italia. However, a chaotic 4-4 draw with Borussia Dortmund marked the beginning of a steep decline, as Juventus went on to draw five consecutive games. Things worsened with three straight defeats to Como, Real Madrid and Lazio, during which the team failed to score in their last four matches. These results led to Tudor’s dismissal. 

Spalletti’s arrival has already brought positive changes. Under his leadership, Juventus have registered one win and one draw, scoring three goals. Beyond results, Spalletti has revitalised the dressing room, instilling renewed energy, belief, and tactical clarity as Juventus look to rebuild confidence and return to their winning ways.

AdvertisementAFPCambiasso praises new manager

In an interview with , Cambiaso praised Spalletti’s passion and clarity in communicating his ideas to players. Cambiasso said: “Pure passion: a technician is this and much more. He gets into your head, he gets to you. Sometimes he can be original in what he says, but he always gets the point.

“In just a few days, he’s brought a lot of new things to the group. And compared to the man I knew in the national team, he’s changed a lot.”

Cambiaso also highlighted Spalletti’s meticulous attention to detail and his hands-on approach in preparing the team, saying: “Attention to detail in every moment of the job: from the goal kick to the throw-in to the kick-off.”

“He lives for football 24/7. I think he watches thousands of games. His method is a modern way of teaching football.”

Are Juventus contenders for the Serie A title?

Spalletti has urged Juventus to remain ambitious and not give up on their Scudetto hopes, insisting it is far too early to rule themselves out of the title race. The experienced coach, who took charge following Tudor’s dismissal, believes Juventus must rediscover their fighting spirit and consistency to climb back into contention. Spalletti has vowed to use his vast tactical knowledge and experience to help the team compete at the highest level once again. Earlier this week, striker Dusan Vlahovic called on his teammates to reflect deeply, noting that the club has already gone through three coaching changes in a short period. Spalletti echoed those sentiments, emphasising that true success comes from the players’ mentality and commitment on the pitch. He believes the squad possesses the quality needed to challenge for the title, provided they show greater unity, discipline, and belief in the months ahead.

Teun Koopmeiners says he is also reaping the benefits of Spalletti's arrival, as he feels he is finally being played in the correct position after struggling under previous coaches Thiago Motta and Tudor. Spalletti has moved the Netherlands international into the three-man defence, instead of pushing him further up the field where he has struggled to make an impact.

Cambiaso echoed Spalletti’s sentiments, emphasising how the team has fully embraced the coach’s leadership and shared ambition to chase the Scudetto. He said: “When he told us in the locker room at Continassa, we all followed his lead. Before Cremona, we were six points behind the leaders; after Cremona, we’re four. It’s a question of numbers.”

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Getty ImagesJuventus’ upcoming challenge

Juventus will aim to close the gap on league leaders Napoli but face a tough challenge against city rivals Torino in this season’s first Derby della Mole. Spalletti will be hoping to extend his side’s winning run in Serie A when Juventus take on Torino tomorrow

Colorado Rockies Terrible Defensive Play Actually Could Have Been Way Worse

Things have not gone well for the Colorado Rockies this season, as evidenced by the 21-71 record they carried into Wednesday night's game against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. They laid the groundwork for a 72nd loss right out of the gate as they struggled to corral a Jarren Duran liner to lead off the bottom of the first.

Pitcher Antonio Senzatela got the first crack at the ball, but was unable to snag it out of the air. Then shortstop Orlando Arcia booted it into right center, allowing Duran to turn toward second. Rockies rightfielder Yanquiel Fernandez raced in to get it only to overrun it, opening the door for Durran to scamper into third.

To look at a giant dark cloud and find a silver lining, it could have been worse. And it would have been worse had third baseman Ryan McMahon not made an extremely athletic play to prevent an errant throw from center turning this fiasco into a Little League home run. Which turned out to be huge as the Rockies were able to escape the first frame without giving up a run.

Of course, Boston went on to win 10-2.

Pollard-powered Knight Riders get past Kings after David dismissal sparks debate

It was Knight Riders’ second win in three games this season, and lifted them to third place on the points table

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Aug-2025It was one of those moments. Tim David, one of the best when it comes to smashing a lot of runs in not many balls, seemed to miss with a big swing against an over-pitched Mohammad Amir delivery. The Trinbago Knight Riders boys heard an edge. Nicholas Pooran reviewed. Replays showed a gap between bat and ball, but Snicko showed a spike.David had to go. That left St Lucia Kings at 113 for 4 in 14-and-a-half overs, their finisher gone in a chase of 184. Despite the best efforts from the remaining batters, they fell 18 short in their CPL 2025 game in Gros Islet.It would, however, be unfair to say Knight Riders weren’t deserving winners. Having won one and lost one that they might have won in their season so far, they came into this game determined to notch up another two points, none of them more than Kieron Pollard, who had fluffed his lines so badly in the previous game.Kieron Pollard smashed 65 off just 29 balls•CPL T20 via Getty ImagesAfter they were sent in, Knight Riders got an excellent start courtesy their form batter, Colin Munro, despite Alex Hales’s struggles. Hales was the first to go after scoring 10 in eight balls, but Munro made sure the opening wicket was worth 47 runs in 4.1 overs, and Knight Riders ended the powerplay with 58 on the board.Munro scored 43 in 30 balls, and Pooran chipped in with 34 in 30 balls, but it was really down to Pollard’s statement innings – 65 in 29 balls – that pushed Knight Riders to what eventually proved to be a winning total.Pollard walked out at 78 for 3 in the 11th over, hammered six sixes and four fours, with David Wiese, the opposition captain, picked for special treatment – 24 runs, including three sixes in a row in the 17th over the highlight. Though Pollard fell in the 19th, in a one-run over from Oshane Thomas against the run of play, he had done enough to give Knight Riders the advantage.Johnson Charles and Tim Seifert put together 74 for the first wicket•CPL T20 via Getty ImagesKings weren’t to be outdone just yet. Tim Seifert, with 35 in 24 balls, and Johnson Charles, with 47 in 37 balls, gave the chase a rollicking start. They scored 60 in the powerplay and motored along to 74 before Seifert fell in the ninth over.They needed someone to keep the momentum going, but Roston Chase wasn’t the man for the job on the day. David might have been but couldn’t be. In the end, the onus was on the lower-middle order to do the heavy lifting.Delano Potgieter and Ackeem Auguste did play handy cameos, but Kings needed someone to bat on and finish the game. They did not come close to the finish line by the time Russell had delivered the final over.The win lifted Knight Riders to third place, with four points from three games, the same as second-placed Guyana Amazon Warriors and fourth-placed St Kitts and Nevis Patriots, while Kings were at fifth.

Spanish newspaper drops bombshell on 'new Messi' amid possible offer from Man Utd

Manchester United have been boosted in their efforts to sign a player who has been compared to Lionel Messi, with an offer potentially incoming.

Neville hails Amorim's "best week" at Man Utd

A feeling of positivity has finally returned to Old Trafford, following three Premier League wins in a row, with Saturday’s 3-2 win at home to Brighton another big step in the right direction.

In fact, United legend Neville even believes that has been Ruben Amorim’s “best week” in charge, finding plenty of positives in the last three games.

“I think that it feels like his best week in the job. I think where we’ve all been with it, I wouldn’t have been surprised if we talked about him losing his job. I was thinking he was under massive pressure after going into the international break in October. I felt as though that change could be imminent.

“But the victory at Anfield shows you how things can turn around and then obviously this was so important today. He’s not out of the woods yet and it’s certainly not time to get carried away but I think Manchester United are now where they thought they probably would be.”

Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha, two of United’s most expensive signings of all time, are beginning to purr, and the Red Devils are now being linked with a move for an equally exciting attacking player.

Man Utd boosted in Kubo chase

A newspaper in Spain claims to have a “bombshell” update regarding the future of Real Sociedad winger Takefusa Kubo. They report he is expected to leave the Spanish club in 2026, with Manchester United in line to bid for him.

The Japanese starlet is also wanted by the likes of Tottenham and Everton, both of whom have shown an interest, and he may cost as little as £35m as Sociedad have decided to cash in for less than his release clause rather than risk his value plummeting any further after a run of bad form.

Kubo is a special talent who has even been dubbed the ‘new Messi’ in his homeland, while Zinedine Zidane also once spoke highly of him when was out on loan from Real Madrid, even though he failed to excel at the Santiago Bernabeu in the end.

Kubo is primarily a right winger, coming in onto his left foot like Mbeumo, and while fitting him into the team may not be easy, competition for places and elite squad depth can only bed a good thing for Amorim.

Forget Sesko: Man Utd have Van Persie 2.0 who's 'one of the best in the PL'

Manchester United have found their next Robin van Persie in this star, and it is not Benjamin Sesko.

ByDan Emery Oct 27, 2025

Still only 24, there is still so much more to come from the Japan star, and if United can pip others to his signature, they could have a future Old Trafford superstar on their hands, both on the pitch and in terms of marketing.

Will Konstas put an end to Australia's musical chairs at the top?

Australia have not found a replacement for Warner yet in Tests, and it’s not necessary the gap will be filled soon

Andrew McGlashan20-Dec-20241:33

Cummins: ‘Top three is a really hard place to bat’

A year that started with David Warner playing his final Test will draw to a close with Australia still searching for his long-term replacement, and a reality dawning that it might be sooner rather than later that they need another new opener as well.Rohit Sharma batted away suggestions that India had over-celebrated avoiding the follow-on at the Gabba and Pat Cummins said “can’t say I’ve ever been scared of momentum” when asked if the visitors took more from how that Test finished, but it feels like Australia have blinked first ahead of the crunch encounter at the MCG.Australia’s opening batting position was the major talking point heading into the series and whoever is selected in the role on Boxing Day – Sam Konstas is favourite but it may not be him – will mean that three players have had the job alongside Usman Khawaja, himself desperately short of runs this year, since the middle of January.Related

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Australia tried to manufacture openers out of Steven Smith and Nathan McSweeney with both being aborted. Josh Inglis has never opened in first-class cricket. Beau Webster has done it seven times, and scored 136 against New South Wales, but not since 2019. The door isn’t completely shut on someone else moving up.Konstas is a specialist opener and may yet prove to be the answer – it has felt like an inevitable path to international cricket and plenty of good judges have already anointed him – but the selectors didn’t think he was ready a month ago. He has, however, taken his opportunity to keep his name in lights in the last few weeks with a century for the Prime Minister’s XI against the Indians (minus Jasprit Bumrah), 88 against a good Western Australia attack and a dashing BBL debut, although caution needs to be used when assessing the latter.”What I can say is Sam has a self-confidence you don’t see in very many,” Sydney Thunder coach Trevor Bayliss said this week. “I’ve only seen it in a few over the years, and all of those players were outstanding Test players and international players, guys like [Michael] Clarke and [Brad] Haddin, Warner and Smith.”This decision will be picked apart a few days after former Australia coach Darren Lehmann said chair of selectors George Bailey was too close to the players and couldn’t make hard decisions. But it feels McSweeney, who had not opened before this season, has had the rough end of the deal having come up against Bumrah who is putting together one of the great series.His axing has come two Tests after his 39 in the first innings in Adelaide was lauded by team-mates as having been key in helping set up victory when he and Marnus Labuschagne survived the first evening under lights. He also came through a tricky opening day at the Gabba in the 13 overs sent down before the rain. However, perhaps crucially to his ambitions, he could not go on with either innings on the second day.1:37

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Whoever gets the nod at the MCG is effectively being asked to do something no one else in that position has been able to manage: keep out, and score runs off, Bumrah.There has been much talk of the success of enabling Travis Head to come in after the 30-over mark in the first innings of the last two Tests when he has flayed thrilling centuries, but today’s decision appears to signal a change of tact from purely soaking up deliveries. It’s unlikely to signal a switch to something close to Bazball, but perhaps Ronball is going to make a comeback. Bailey stressed the importance of a left-hander opening, so the similarities between McSweeney and Labuschagne in the top three may have proved too great for not enough output.While McSweeney is the one to have paid the price, the sense is that plenty of the top are now on notice. “If you look more broadly I don’t necessarily the top six as quite functioned to the level that we need in this series as a whole,” Bailey said.Head is flying and Smith’s century was very timely, but Khawaja, Labuschagne and, lower down, Mitchell Marsh have made 214 runs in the series between them at 14.26. All three have credit in the bank, but it will be starting to run low.It is true that the evidence backs up what is becoming a well-worn trope about batting having become harder in Australia since the altered Kookaburra was introduced, combined with more grass being left on pitches – the “perfect storm” as Smith termed it after his century – but KL Rahul has shown that it is possible to make runs as an opener in the first innings, while Yashasvi Jaiswal had to get through the new ball before he could compile 161 in Perth.Amid all this, regardless of what happens in the final two Tests against India – and if Australia don’t regain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy it will lead to a lot more questions being asked – there is likely to be plenty more movement at the top of the order in the next 12 months. Head is a good chance of opening in Sri Lanka, which is admittedly a very conditions-based call, and even if Khawaja gets his wish of finishing at next summer’s Ashes, it means we’ll be back here having another debate on replacements this time next year.Warner was joking when he said his phone was always on before this series began but, wherever anyone stands in their views of him, there can be no doubt the size of the task to filling those shoes. In a few days it will be someone else’s turn. Bumrah will be waiting.

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