Alice Davidson-Richards stars as Superchargers brush past Phoenix

Phoebe Litchfield scores unbeaten 42 to see home side to victory in low-scorer

Ciara Fearn03-Aug-2023Northern Superchargers 112 for 3 (Litchfield 42*) beat Birmingham Phoenix 110 for 8 (Devine 46, Davidson-Richards 3-20) by seven wickets England allrounder Alice Davidson-Richards stole the show for Northern Superchargers as they beat Birmingham Phoenix by seven wickets to get their Hundred campaign off to the perfect start.Davidson-Richards took three wickets for just 11 runs from her 20 balls as well as taking two catches and claiming a brilliant run-out in an excellent team display from Superchargers, as they restricted Birmingham Phoenix to a total of 110 for 8 off their 100 balls.Australian Phoebe Litchfield top-scored for the home team with an unbeaten 42 as they eased their way to victory with 22 balls to spare with Marie Kelly also adding a valuable 24 at the top of the order.The visitors had got off to a flying start with New Zealand veteran Sophie Devine hitting England’s Kate Cross for two boundaries from her first set of five balls. But Superchargers quickly pulled things back with Cross claiming the wicket of Eve Jones for 10 before England wicketkeeper Amy Jones became Davidson-Richard’s first victim when she holed out to Leah Dobson on the square leg boundary for 13.Devine took centre stage throughout the Phoenix innings scoring an entertaining 46 runs off 36 balls before she was superbly run out by Davidson-Richards’ direct hit from mid-off. The Phoenix middle-order failed to offer any meaningful support to Devine with Erin Burns, Tess Flintoff and Emily Arlott all falling cheaply with Georgia Wareham’s caught-and-bowled dismissal of Burns a particular highlight.The hosts were brilliant in the field with Phoenix reliant on late-order runs from Abigail Freeborn and Issy Wong to get them up over the 100 mark, Wong hitting a mighty six into the crowd at one point before she became Linsey Smith’s one wicket.Kelly and Jemimah Rodrigues gave Superchargers an ideal start with a partnership of 23 for the first wicket. Rodrigues’ knock of 16 consisted of four boundaries before she was trapped in front by Wong.Kelly was bowled reverse sweeping by Katie Levick for 24 but Litchfield quickly took charge of the innings as she steered Superchargers home with an unbeaten 42 off 29 balls including seven fours. But this was Davidson-Richards’ day and she completed the win with a towering straight six off Hannah Baker to end an excellent showing by Superchargers.

More debuts, more goals, and more Rose Lavelle: Five keys as Emma Hayes prepares the USWNT to take on Ireland – again

Historically, when Hayes plays an opponent twice, she switches up the starting XI – expect more of the same against Ireland

The U.S. women's national team opened their three-match summer journey with a commanding 4-0 victory over the Republic of Ireland on Thursday night in Colorado. With high altitude and a packed house, the USWNT continued their undefeated streak against Ireland, having now outscored them 55-1 in 16 meetings.

Emma Hayes' side will play Ireland once more in this three-match window, however this time the game will be played Sunday in Rose Lavelle's hometown of Cincinnati. The USWNT will then play Canada on Wednesday.

The USWNT have just two days to recover in between games, and – after a strong showing that included a first-ever international goal from Houston Dash defender Avery Patterson, a first cap in goal from Seattle Reign's Claudia Dickey, plus a senior team debut and assist out of Gotham FC's Lilly Reale – there were many positives on which to build.

Historically, when Hayes plays an opponent twice, she switches up the starting XI pretty drastically. She did that against Brazil – for better or for worse, as the U.S. lost the second match – earlier this year, but it is all part of her plan to get the best picture of the player pool leading up into the 2027 World Cup.

On Thursday, the USWNT clearly showed they can dominate Ireland, even without the superpower of Lindsey Heaps in the midfield, and the attacking force of Sophia Wilson, Mallory Swanson and Trinity Rodman.

Hayes will likely experiment with some new faces in the midfield, backline and attack, as she has the luxury of a fruitful roster of the NWSL's best players. It's a toss up whether or not she gives Dickey another opportunity in goal, as Thursday's match was her debut – and she didn't even record one save. No fault to Dickey, as Ireland had very few chances in the final-third.

GOAL takes a look at five keys as the USWNT play the second of two friendlies against Ireland.

Getty ImagesKeeper shake-up?

Dickey earned her cap and, having little-to-no action in goal, earned the clean sheet. In this camp, all three goalkeepers – Mandy McGlynn, Dickey and Angelina Anderson – earned their first call-ups this year.

McGlynn has the most caps, with three. Will Hayes shake up the keeper position on Sunday? It's possible. Ireland won't pose a massive threat to whoever is in goal, so will Hayes even be able see much from the keeper?

She is really keen on a keeper with good footwork. Hayes wants to make sure that the goalkeeper can add to the build up, distribute the ball, and play quickly with her feet. Dickey was able to get some reps on that front on Thursday, and made some strong passes and very few errors.

The Americans have kept clean sheets in 13 consecutive meetings with Ireland, the longest run of shutouts against one team in the program's history. Will that continue on Sunday?

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMore minutes for Lavelle?

Rose Lavelle made her return to the USWNT and did so in the most fashion, scoring and chipping in an assist in her first game back since December. Lavelle managed to play 60 minutes for Hayes' side, and brought a newfound energy to the midfield.

Her ability to move off of playmakers such as Sam Coffey and Claire Hutton was profound, plus she plays high up the field which just adds another dimension to the attacking line.

Since the USWNT are playing in Lavelle's backyard, chances are we'll see more minutes from her. Lavelle's performance – which included a goal in the 53rd minute – made her the 19th player in USWNT history with 25-plus goals and 25-plus assists.

Lavelle's energy and personality were clearly missed both on the field and off, and before Thursday's game, Lavelle's new teammate, Michelle Cooper, spoke about how excited she was to get to finally play alongside her, and not against her.

"I'm excited to build a connection there," Cooper said. "On the field, but off the field, too. She's a great person and I'm just really excited to see her energy and her personality translate on the field and in the locker room."

Getty ImagesThe No .9 experimentation

With Wilson out of the lineup, Hayes has been experimenting with others in that No. 9. So far, she's had Catarina Macario, Lynn Biyendolo, Lo'eau LaBonta and, most recently Ally Sentnor take a stab at it.

It's a tricky position, because most of the game your back is to the goal, but you're expected to score – or be in a scoring position. Hayes tried Sentnor out there, say she naturally has a nose for scoring. The U.S. Soccer Young Female Player of the Year does have four goals already for the senior team.

While Sentnor did manage to chip in an assist on Thursday, she struggled to hold the ball up for the USWNT, something Macario has certainly improved on over time. Sentnor offered a very dynamic, interchangeable No. 9, which was fun to watch, but not necessarily conventional.

On Sunday, it would be nice to see Sentnor again slotted in as the No. 9, but it could also be Tara Mckeown in that role. Pretty unlikely, but an entertaining scenario nonetheless.

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Getty ImagesMore debuts

During Hayes' leadership, she has given 27 players their first USWNT call-ups. On Thursday, Hayes gave two players their first caps and starts – defender Lilly Reale and Dickey – while 18-year-old center-back Jordyn Bugg also came into the game in the second half, becoming the 280th player in the USWNT history to earn a cap.

Blending experience with and youth, Hayes will probably mix in Izzy Rodriguez and Sam Meza, to give more newcomers their first caps. Rodriguez is a defender, while Meza is a midfielder, so Hayes may see how they do in the rotation.

Angel City goalkeeper Angelina Anderson did not dress on Thursday, so she's another question mark in the starting XI for Hayes. Anderson hasn't earned a cap for the USWNT as of yet, and against a team like Ireland, this could be a way in to get experience without a ton of pressure.

Yorkshire set Derbyshire loftiest of targets

Matthew Revis ton leads charge as visitors are asked to post 571 for victory

ECB Reporters Network05-Sep-2023Yorkshire set Derbyshire a completely out-of-the-question target of 571 to win the ongoing LV= Insurance County Championship match at Scarborough, which heads into its final day tomorrow.The home side are chasing the season’s double over Leus du Plooy and company and have dominated this Division Two affair from very early during day one.Day three was no different, with Yorkshire – they led by 50 on first innings – advancing their second innings from 179 for 2 overnight to 520 for 9 declared just after tea.Five players went beyond fifty, including all-rounder Matthew Revis as the only centurion. His 106 off 142 balls represented his second first-class century of the season and of his career.Captain Shan Masood also completed a morning 86 against his former county, who closed the day on 65 for 1 from 26 overs of their ‘chase’.After lunch, young Derbyshire batter Mitch Wagstaff, who was bowling leg-spin, claimed two wickets in his first over in first-class cricket. He is the first player in his county’s history to achieve that feat in this format of the game.For certainly the second half of the afternoon session, maybe even longer, Yorkshire’s progress with the bat was nothing more than a training exercise.Realistically, they had enough of a lead at lunch, where they reached at 324 for 5 and 374 ahead. Derbyshire’s record chase in first-class cricket is 371 in a one-wicket win over a touring Australian side including the likes of Warne and Gillespie in 1997.It was understandable that Yorkshire wanted a few more than that. A target of 450 was sufficient. They certainly did not require anything approaching 600, even though this North Marine Road pitch is slower than usual because of recent wet weather.Revis’s progress towards a century was potentially a reason why they batted on until after tea. Another likely reason would have been that they will have been targeting a number of overs to bowl rather than an amount of runs to defend.They have a seam bowling department including a couple of key seam bowling assets with recent injury issues in Ben Coad and England fringe quick Matthew Fisher, and managing their workloads will be a significant consideration. Incidentally, Fisher did not take the field for much of the evening.Derbyshire rattled through their overs in a bid to improve their over-rate, with off-spinner Alex Thomson finishing with five for 190 from 38.5.That including a stunning one-handed return catch low to his right to dismiss Masood before lunch, leaving the hosts at 238 for 4. The Pakistani left-hander had completed a fourth-wicket partnership of 107 with James Wharton (38).After opener Fin Bean made 64 late on day two, four others went beyond 50 today, including Revis and Masood. All-rounders George Hill and Jordan Thompson made 79 and 64 respectively.Wagstaff had Hill caught at slip and Dom Bess, for nought, caught at cover early in the afternoon as Yorkshire fell to 366 for seven after 75 overs.Revis and Thompson then shared 125, a Yorkshire eighth-wicket record in first-class matches between these two counties. While 21-year-old Revis was measured, Thompson slog-swept or heaved four sixes over midwicket or long-on.Revis reached tea on 98 not out. Surely, Yorkshire would not have batted on into the evening had he reached his century late in the afternoon. But they did so for 10 balls afterwards to allow a player they rate incredibly highly to achieve another landmark in a career which promises so much. He fell caught at long-on off Thomson to bring about the declaration.Bess then claimed the only wicket of Derbyshire’s second innings, getting opener Wagstaff lbw to leave the score at 24 for 1 in the 10th over – the former England off-spinner’s first over of the match.But the other opener, Harry Came, led visiting resistance through to close with an unbeaten 33. He will be hoping to make Yorkshire regret batting on too long.

Controversial Lea Schuller strike sees Germany close in on Euro 2025 quarter-finals and leaves Denmark on the brink of elimination after VAR-dominated encounter

Germany came from behind to record a vital win over Denmark in the European Championship group stages, albeit in controversial circumstances.

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Schuller scored winner Denmark appealed for a head injury stoppageGermany as good as throughFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱TELL ME MORE

Germany all but secured their qualification for the European Championship knockout stages as they came from behind to beat Denmark 2-1 in a tense, entertaining game that was dominated by VAR on Tuesday evening.

Christian Wuck's side thought they had the lead after 17 minutes, as Klara Buhl fired a low effort through a group of players, but VAR ruled that Sjoeke Nusken touched the ball from an offside position as it flew into the back of the net, and it was subsequently ruled out.

And within eight minutes, Denmark left Germany reeling by taking the lead thanks to a brilliant strike from Amalie Vangsgaard; capitalising on a loose touch in the defensive third, she unleashed a rasping drive from the edge of the box that found the bottom corner.

Amazingly, in the 39th minute, VAR again intervened, to deny Die Nationalelf a penalty. The referee had initially given it for a handball after a cross struck the hand of Frederikke Thogersen, but the replays showed that the contact took place outside of the box, and a free-kick was awarded instead.

After the restart, Germany finally had VAR go their way, as Linda Dallmann went down in the box under a challenge from Katrine Veje. A review followed, and after sending the referee to the screen, a penalty was given. Nusken stepped up and finished from 12 yards.

They kept their foot on the accelerator, and had the lead in the 66th minute. Denmark attempted to clear, but ended up firing the ball into the face of Emma Snerle, who went down with a head injury. Germany played on, and Jule Brand found Lea Schuller, who finished coolly to give her side a controversial lead.

Germany stayed solid thereafter, limiting Denmark to a handful of attacks, as they saw out a vital victory.

AdvertisementGettyTHE MVP

Nusken was at the centre of absolutely everything good for Germany. She scored a pressure penalty, and ran her heart out in central midfield, all the while geeing up her team-mates and dragging them along when Denmark had the upper hand. A terrific midfield performance.

Getty Images SportTHE BIG LOSER

Snerle was so unfortunate to be struck by the ball as she was, given Denmark were attempting to clear their lines, but it directly led to Germany's winner. The referee should have stopped the game because it was a head injury, but because she didn't, it is the only selection we can make. She will hope to recover in time to play a role in the final group game but, without her injury, maybe the Danes take a vital point. Football really is a cruel sport.

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WHAT COMES NEXT?

Germany are as good as though and will face Sweden in their final group game on Saturday. Denmark will face Poland on the same day, although they could be out by the time that game is played, if Sweden beat Poland in their fixture on Tuesday evening.

Boult all but leads New Zealand into semi-finals; SL's Champions Trophy hopes fade

Trent boult found some form to lead the dismantling of Sri Lanka in Bengaluru

Madushka Balasuriya09-Nov-20231:30

Harmison: Excellent display of fast bowling from Boult, Southee

New Zealand all but booked their place in the World Cup semi-final against India with a dominant five-wicket win – with 160 balls to spare – against Sri Lanka in Bengaluru. The result took them to ten points, and a net run rate (NRR) of 0.743, leaving Pakistan needing to beat England by 287 runs, while Afghanistan need an even more fantastical 438-run win over South Africa, if they are to surpass New Zealand’s NRR.If Pakistan were to chase, they would have no chance of qualifying.As for Sri Lanka, the margin of defeat against New Zealand left them languishing in ninth place, thus out of qualification for the 2025 Champions Trophy. They now need one of England or Bangladesh to suffer defeats – while Netherlands also need to lose to India – to the extent that their respective NRRs drop below Sri Lanka’s.New Zealand’s win was the product of an all-round performance with bat and ball. While the threat of rain in Bengaluru ultimately proved to be a red herring, winning the toss and putting Sri Lanka in seemed to be the most prudent way to ensure both an NRR-boosting victory as well as hedge against any rain interruptions and DLS interventions.And so it proved. Despite the loss of some late wickets, Sri Lanka’s total of 171 was comfortably dealt with, as Devon Conway, Rachin Ravindra and Daryl Mitchell all pitched in with forties.On a pitch that proved even better to bat on under lights, Ravindra and Conway put on 86 to break open the chase, before Mitchell’s 43 off just 31 balls rammed home the result. All three fell before the finish, but the win was never in doubt.Kusal Perera counterattacked for Sri Lanka amid plenty of early blows•AFP/Getty ImagesThat it was so easy in the end was down to a solid bowling effort and a haphazard outing with the bat for Sri Lanka. New Zealand shared the wickets around, with Lockie Ferguson, Mitchell Santner and Ravindra picking up two apiece, though Trent Boult’s 3 for 37 was what had set his side up at the top of Sri Lanka’s innings – and earned him the Player-of-the-Match award.Such was New Zealand’s dominance that they won so comfortably despite dropping three catches. The first was of Kusal Perera without scoring, as Tom Latham grassed a straightforward caught behind. Latham got his shot at redemption a ball later though, with Pathum Nissanka nicking through for an even more simple chance.Kusal Mendis fell a few overs later, splicing a leading edge to deep third while looking to hit over midwicket, with Sadeera Samarawickrama following soon after edging through to Mitchell at first slip. Both those wickets were grabbed by the excellent Boult, taking him past 50 wickets in World Cups – he ended the game with that tally on 52.But even as wickets fell at one end, Perera functioned as a one-man army, finding boundaries all around the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and punishing New Zealand for that early drop. Two picked-up sixes over long-on off Tim Southee were the highlights of some belligerent ball striking, as he brought up his 50 off just 22 deliveries – the joint second-fastest by a Sri Lankan in ODI World Cups.Trent Boult went past 50 World Cup wickets•ICC/Getty ImagesAn over later, though, Charith Asalanka was adjudged lbw off Boult after a well-taken review, before Perera fell a few deliveries later, getting under a delivery from Ferguson that was not full enough to drive and slicing it to cover.Sri Lanka were in free fall at 70 for 5 in the tenth over, before Angelo Mathews and Dhananjaya de Silva put up mild resistance. Dhananjaya was reprieved too, courtesy Latham’s second drop of the game, a tough chance off Santner during that stand of 34. Santner’s guile, control and subtle variations in pace, however, were eventually too good for the pair.Mathews was the first to go in what might have been his last World Cup innings – perhaps even ODI innings – lunging forward at one that was floated up and then dipped. He failed to get to the pitch, and the bounce and turn did the rest, grazing the outside edge to Mitchell at slip. It was a similar story for Dhananjaya, after another flighted delivery with some added bounce found its way into Mitchell’s hands.Maheesh Theekshana batted for 91 deliveries•ICC/Getty ImagesChamika Karunaratne, making just his second appearance at this World Cup, did not fare any better, edging behind Ferguson. A swift end to the innings seemed imminent but Maheesh Theekshana, in partnerships with Dushmantha Chameera and Dilshan Madushanka, showed the resistance that was lacking throughout the rest of the innings.In facing 91 deliveries, Theekshana played more balls than all of Sri Lanka’s frontline batters combined. Even Madushanka’s 48 balls were more than what any other batter faced apart from Theekshana.Theekshana remained unbeaten on 38 – the second-highest scorer of the innings – as the ninth and tenth wicket stands, despite only contributing 58 runs, spanned 139 deliveries. Sri Lanka lost their eighth wicket in the 24th over, but it wasn’t until the 47th that New Zealand dismissed them, with Ravindra finding Madushanka’s edge for Latham to complete a sharp take.It took a while for New Zealand to get there, after winning their first four matches and then losing their next four, but this victory has all but ensured a fifth consecutive ODI World Cup semi-final.

Stead: Bangladesh series an opportunity to look at 'potential faces for the future'

NZ coach wants the regulars, who are rested for ODIs, to be “mentally fresh” since there’s “lots of cricket coming up”

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Dec-2023New Zealand head coach Gary Stead said the reason behind picking a new-look squad for the Bangladesh ODIs, including three uncapped players, was with one eye on resting some of the regulars who have been on tour with the national team for a long time and another on starting preparations for the next ODI World Cup in 2027. The three-match series begins on Sunday in Dunedin.”Look, the guys who have been rested have been away for a long period of time. If you look back, it’s anything up to three to four months away on the road. So for us, finding that balance between playing series and looking at the health and physical wellbeing of these players is really important,” Stead said at a press conference. “We’ve got a huge summer in front of us with a lot of cricket coming up. So it’s really having conversations with the guys that when they are playing, they are mentally fresh and ready to go.”It’s also the start of an ICC cycle. So this is the first ODI games when we prepare for 2027 in South Africa,” Stead said. “And whilst that might seem a long time away, we don’t actually play any other ODIs for another nine or ten months after this. So it’s an opportunity to look at some potential faces for the future.”Related

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Will O’Rourke, Josh Clarkson and Adithya Ashok are all uncapped, while Ben Sears last played for New Zealand in a T20I in 2022 and might make his ODI debut.”The reason they’ve been selected is we’ve seen things we like in their game. So it’s really about coming in and just being themselves,” Stead said. “We try and put them in roles similar to what they play in domestic games. Sometimes it’s slightly different, so it’s just making sure they’re nice and clear on what their roles are and what we expect of them.”But really, it’s about being themselves and coming in and enjoying the environment.”Fast bowler Sears has been picked for the first ODI but is currently not in the squad for the second and third games. However, with Kyle Jamieson unlikely to take part in this series after returning from the Bangladesh Test tour with a stiff hamstring, Sears could end up being retained for the whole series, Stead said.

“Josh Clarkson is one of the hardest hitters in New Zealand and certainly puts bowlers on notice if they miss.”Stead on the uncapped batter in the squad

Stead also heaped praise on Sears, saying that he brings something different from the other fast bowlers in the squad.”The other three bowlers we look at in that squad right now are new-ball bowlers and can bowl, I guess, more up front. Ben gives us that option of having genuine pace through the middle overs. So it’s exciting,” he said. “We’ve had Ben in the past. He’s had a bit of an injury run for a while, but he’s back bowling fast again, and we like the look of the way he’s going.”Stead also said he is excited to see O’Rourke and Clarkson in action.”We’ve had a couple of trainings out there. Will O’Rourke certainly troubled a number of our batsmen yesterday. It was spicy and new ball doing plenty, that was encouraging to see. He gets good bounce off the wicket, which is nice.””Josh Clarkson is one of the hardest hitters in New Zealand and certainly puts bowlers on notice if they miss,” Stead said. “It’s exciting to see the skillsets that they bring. I think when you have new and inexperienced people at the international level that come to it, it brings that added excitement to the group as well, so that’s always nice to see.”

Rebel United: Misunderstood genius or incorrigible rogue? The eternal mystery of Mario Balotelli

In GOAL's new series, we focus on the players who, despite their unbelievable talent, choose to swim against the tide of popular opinion

It's May 2025. With a rather casual nonchalance, Mario Balotelli announced the end of his journey in European football with a smile, during a wonderful interview with Italian state television . "I'm a little tired of everything that happens around European football," he said. Asked where he'd be heading next, he announced: "America. I would like to play for another two or three years before I stop."

It sounded less like a departure and more a quiet retreat. Perhaps this really was the last dance for a player who, for most of his football career, had been battling with the world, as well as demons within himself. Balotelli, soon to be 35 years old, was, at one stage of his career, considered to be most interesting personality within the entire sport. And at the same time, he was viewed by many as being an unruly rogue who made far too little of his talent.

Rebel United brings you the story of one of football's most talented, and highly-strung, enigmas.

Getty ImagesThe end for Super Mario?

A striker blessed with strength, a sleek elegance, and an inimitable goal-scoring instinct. A natural contender for the Ballon d’Or, and this at a time when Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi were in their absolute prime. The child of refugees, regarded as a symbol of a new, more diverse Italy, although large parts of the European nation did not want him. A boy with a lot of mischief in his head, but selected by in 2013 as one of the 100 most influential people of the year, alongside Barack Obama, Jay-Z, Steven Spielberg and Beyonce.

At that time Balotelli was a 22-year-old forward with bags of potential, turning out for Manchester City and the Italy national team. A terror for his coaches and, in his prime, for defenders as well. Creator of the first global football meme and a never-silent voice against racism in our world.

This latest decision, to turn his back on Europe, comes after another failed stint in his homeland at Genoa, where he failed to score in six appearances in 2024-2025. The lack of output? According to Balotelli, that was the result of his coach, Patrick Vieira, being jealous of him. It again posed the question that has frequently followed the striker during his career – is this towering figure with kind eyes and yet often a grim look a rebellious free spirit? An eternal fighter against authorities and injustices, a misunderstood genius that does things his way? Or is he an incorrigible rogue who lacks discipline and maturity? Should he finally take some responsibility and place the blame on himself?

AdvertisementGetty ImagesA labyrinth of contradictions

The lines between rebel and ruffian are fluid for many people, and the older Balotelli gets – with his performances on the field also waning – the less inclined people are to appreciate those special aspects of him that landed him on the cover of .

Balotelli's story is a labyrinth of contradictions: a forward who can caress the ball like few other players of his stature, but who can also smash it into the top corner with brute force, making you fear for the net. A boy who often had mischief in mind but never smiled after scoring the most beautiful goals. A man who became a global symbol against racism while simultaneously throwing darts at youth players. A son of African immigrants who became a hero for Italy yet was mocked with monkey chants by his own supporters. A child who repeatedly underwent intestinal surgery and was adopted by a wealthy Italian foster family on the advice of the authorities. He spent a lot of time his adopted Balotelli family but would also see the Barwuahs – his parents and his siblings – on weekends.

And yet: the feeling of having been abandoned never left Balotelli. It is the theme of his life. Him against the rest of the world. Why always me?

AFPThe night Balotelli became a meme

There are moments in sports that transcend the mundane outcome. Players become icons, cultural symbols that point far beyond the game itself. June 28, 2012, saw the birth of such a moment, and it belonged to Mario Balotelli. In the semi-final of the European Championship in Warsaw, Italy faced a Germany team that were considered the overwhelming favourite. Unbeaten and dominant, Germany had their Golden Generation that would become world champions two years later. The Azzurri, meanwhile, had the almost ageless Gigi Buffon, the king of swagged in Andrea Pirlo, and the unpredictable maverick Balotelli, who was just 21 years old at the time. In this game, he produced a performance of brutal efficiency and breathtaking beauty. This was Balotelli's coming of age.

For the first goal, in the 20th minute, Antonio Cassano, another lovable madman of world football, maneuvered past two German defenders at the left edge of the penalty area and crossed the ball into the box. There, Balotelli rose with force, shrugged off his markers and headed an unstoppable effort into the net. But it was the second goal of the night that would make him world-famous, an immortal meme.

In the 36th minute, Riccardo Montolivo sent a long, high ball from his own half into Balotelli's path. His control to cushion the ball was gentle, before he embarked on an unstoppable sprint towards the goal. Philipp Lahm ran after him, but he didn't have the slightest chance of catching up to Balotelli. And then the finish: a shot of such power and precision, it sounded like the crack of a whip as the ball smashed under the crossbar into the net. Manuel Neuer, probably the best goalkeeper in the world at the time, didn’t even move.

Yet what happened after this goal would become even more noteworthy than Balotelli's performance. The Italian forward tore off his shirt, stood motionless and then flexed every muscle in his upper body, staring into the distance. There was no hint of joy on his face, only a grim, relentless intensity. It was reminiscent of the Incredible Hulk. Balotelli himself later said he wanted to show the liberation from slavery, the breaking of chains. There he was, the rebel delivering a message. wrote of the celebration: "'Here is my black Italian skin,' he seemed to say, an Italian hero, black and proud, inviting all of Italy to embrace him – and with him a different concept of the boundaries of Italian identity".

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The enigma of Balotelli summed up in one moment

At that moment, Balotelli also became the canvas for a global projection. The pose became the first worldwide football meme. Balotelli as Hulk, Balotelli as a ballerina, Balotelli on the moon, Balotelli on the Titanic, Balotelli as a construction worker – "Balo everywhere". He had transformed from a football star to a phenomenon of pop culture. This one pose, this one moment, perfectly encapsulates the entire enigma of Balotelli. It combines all facets of his personality into a single, indelible image.

Without the brilliance of the goal that preceded the celebration, it couldn't have happened. Only a moment of such class could justify such a reaction. It appeared in political interpretation, his conscious, or unconscious, rebellion against the racism he was incessantly exposed to. And of course, there was something disrespectful in the celebration, his opponents must have felt humiliated, first by the shot and then by the pose. The global spectacle was finally reflected in the meme culture, which captured his complex gesture, stripped it of its deep meaning, and turned it into an easily consumable joke. In that moment, genius, rebel, rogue, and icon all met and became one.

It was the pinnacle of Balotelli's career. But for a player to reach their peak at just 21, they're going to have to work incredibly hard from that moment on to avoid a decline. Balotelli, though, was not willing to do so.

Suzie Bates, all-round Amelia Kerr power NZ to DLS victory

Pakistan, who had already wrapped up the series, were restricted to 137 in their 20 overs

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Dec-2023Amelia Kerr shone with both bat and ball, while Suzie Bates chipped in with a half-century, as New Zealand took the third women’s T20I against Pakistan by six runs via DLS method.Pakistan, having been inserted to bat, began with a steady opening partnership of 64 inside ten overs. But Kerr provided the breakthrough to dismiss Muneeba Ali, as New Zealand wrested the advantage, and Pakistan proceeded to lose 4 for 31. Sidra Ameen, with 43, was Pakistan’s top scorer, while their captain Nida Dar also contributed a handy 25. But regular strikes from Kerr (3 for 11) and Eden Carson (2 for 20) meant the visitors were restricted to just 137 for 5.New Zealand, having already lost the series, began the chase well, as Bates provided a strong foundation. While her opening partner Bernadine Bezuidenhout fell cheaply for 4, Bates blazed her way to an unbeaten 51 off just 42 balls, stroking five fours. Bates also had able support from Kerr, who smashed a 31-ball 35, as the pair added 63 for the second wicket.Kerr eventually fell in the tenth over, before rain in Queenstown brought the game to a premature end after only 15 overs of the New Zealand innings, with the hosts six runs ahead according to DLS.

John Textor won't give up! Lyon miss out on signing Nottingham Forest star amid financial woes but American investor launches plot to bring him to Botafogo

Lyon's financial restrictions have ended their push for Danilo, as John Textor now targets a move to bring the Nottingham Forest star to Botafogo.

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Lyon drop Danilo pursuit due to financial limitsTextor shifts transfer plan to Botafogo Botafogo in active talks with Nottingham Forest Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to FogaoNet, Lyon have dropped out of the race to sign Forest midfielder Danilo after intervention from the DNCG, France's financial watchdog. The Ligue 1 club, under financial restrictions, was forced to pause transfer activity despite initial interest in the 24-year-old. With Lyon sidelined, club owner Textor has shifted focus to Botafogo, another team under his ownership, and has initiated direct contact with Forest over a possible deal.

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Danilo had emerged as a top target for Lyon to reinforce their midfield this summer. However, the DNCG's financial restrictions, despite Lyon’s successful appeal to stay in Ligue 1, have disrupted their transfer plans. Textor, determined to keep the player within his football portfolio, is now looking to reroute the transfer to Botafogo, with an estimated fee of €25 million (£21.1m/$27.2m) under discussion with Forest.

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Danilo joined Nottingham Forest in January 2023 from Palmeiras and has made over 62 appearances for the club with six goals and four assists. Despite adapting well to English football, Forest are reportedly open to offers in the current window as they look to balance their squad and finances.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR BOTAFOGO?

Botafogo are expected to continue negotiations with Forest in the coming days. The Brazilian club is pushing to complete the transfer swiftly, pending agreement on payment terms and player conditions. Lyon, meanwhile, must await DNCG clearance before making any further transfer moves.

Can shell-shocked India even the odds vs Bazball?

India have been in this kind of position many times before and gotten themselves out of trouble, but England will be no pushovers

Karthik Krishnaswamy01-Feb-20242:39

Manjrekar: ‘Selecting Sarfaraz over Patidar would be an over-reaction’

Big pictureIt’s happened before, you know? It’s even happened against England; the last time they were here, in fact.It’s happened before. India have gone 1-0 down at home, and India have bounced back. This is what India will be telling themselves: ‘We’ve been here before. We trust ourselves to find our way out of this. We trust our methods.’It’s what they should tell themselves too. Change is a fact of life, a constant that India aren’t blind to – note their efforts to embrace the sweep and all its variants in the lead-up to Visakhapatnam – but there’s a reason why they’ve been so successful in their own conditions for such a long time: their methods work, and work exceedingly well, most of the time.Hyderabad was one of those exceptions, rare and freakish. India have experienced something very much like it too – Dinesh Chandimal, an almost stroke-for-stroke precursor to Ollie Pope – and they came back to win that series as well.Related

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Patidar vs Sarfaraz takes centre stage at India nets

India have been there, and India have done it. They will trust that they can do it again. And for all of the shockwaves they set off in Hyderabad, England will know coming to Visakhapatam that they will most likely need to keep doing freakish things to repeat that result. Having won the first Test with a frontline spin attack with the collective experience of 36 Tests, they now go into the second with one that’s played a combined three Tests. Three. It’s quite likely that Joe Root will once again bowl more overs than at least one of their theoretically main spinners.For all that, though, have England had a better chance in India than this one since their triumphant 2012-13 tour? India were a team in transition in those late-Tendulkar days, and if they aren’t already in another full-blown transition now, the number of absences they’re dealing with has left them in a not-too-dissimilar situation.Who among Sarfaraz Khan and Rajat Patidar will feature in Visakhapatnam?•Getty ImagesThey’ve already felt the effects of losing experienced batters. Bowlers win Test matches, it’s true, but batters can lose them, in ways that aren’t immediately apparent. India came away from Hyderabad with the impression that they lost that Test match on day two, when their batters, one after another, fell while attempting boundary hits. Eight of their top nine got past 20, and three of them got into the 80s, but none of them got to three figures. The aggression that cost them their wickets also brought them their runs, yes, but you could easily imagine Virat Kohli, in the same conditions and against the same attack, going at a not-dissimilar clip while hitting nothing in the air, and piling up what may have seemed to him a double-hundred for the taking.In Visakhapatnam, India will miss not just Kohli but also KL Rahul and Ravindra Jadeja, two of their three most experienced batters from the first Test.And the loss of Jadeja, needless to say, will leave them without half of one of the greatest spin-bowling duos in history. It’s a massive blow, particularly since India are already without Mohammed Shami, whose absence in Hyderabad left them without a supreme wicket-taker in Indian conditions while also – given their seeming lack of faith in Mohammed Siraj – piling extra overs onto their spinners’ shoulders.It’s a reflection of how good India are that Jadeja’s likely replacement is Kuldeep Yadav, a bowler who’d probably be part of England’s first-choice attack in every Test match, home and away, if they could magically change his nationality. Even so, as good as they are, India are not as good as they could be, and in this lies England’s greatest chance.Form guideIndia LWLDW (last five Tests, most recent first)
England WWDWLIn the spotlightHe averages 21.55, has taken three five-fors in just 14 innings, and was Player of the Match in his most recent Test match, but he’s an Indian spinner in the time of R Ashwin and Jadeja. Kuldeep Yadav has missed 56 of India’s 64 Tests since his debut in 2017, and he’s waited patiently for opportunities like this one. Along the way he’s made himself a more resilient bowler, quicker and harder to sit on the back foot against, while remaining just as deceptive in the air and off the pitch. In some ways he might be just the bowler India need against an England line-up prepared to sweep and reverse sweep everything in its path: a bit more dip, a bit more bounce, and the threat of the ball going in unexpected directions.He sent down 48 overs in Hyderabad, the most he’s ever bowled in a Test match, and there’s every chance he’ll have to go through a similar workload again. Can Joe Root cope with it? And what effect will it have on his batting?Team newsIndia have decisions to make with Rahul and Jadeja out. Kuldeep’s wicket-taking ability or Washington Sundar’s all-round utility? Rajat Patidar’s standing in the hierarchy or Sarfaraz Khan’s unorthodox methods? Is there, perhaps, even a case for Sundar Kuldeep, with either a batter or a fast bowler – Siraj – missing out?India (possible): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 3 Shubman Gill, 4 Shreyas Iyer, 5 Rajat Patidar, 6 Axar Patel, 7 KS Bharat (wk), 8 R Ashwin, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Mohammed Siraj.1:32

Miller: Bashir debut another ‘no fear’ pick from England

England are going 3-1 again, with James Anderson and Shoaib Bashir coming in for Mark Wood and the injured Jack Leach.England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Rehan Ahmed, 9 Tom Hartley, 10 Shoaib Bashir, 11 James Anderson.Pitch and conditionsOn the eve of the match, Ben Stokes suggested the Visakhapatnam pitch might offer a little less turn initially than the one in Hyderabad did, before “footholes and stuff like that […] come into play the further the Test goes”. The sun will bake down, though, so it may not take too much time for the pitch to begin showing wear.Spinners will bowl the bulk of the overs, but don’t be surprised if the quicks make an impact. Reverse swing came into the picture the last time England played here – Anderson, Stuart Broad and Stokes took 10 of the 20 Indian wickets that fell – and three years later Shami was India’s fourth-innings destroyer against South Africa, taking 5 for 35 on a wearing pitch where the ball frequently kept low.Shoaib Bashir was named in England’s XI for the second Test•Getty ImagesStats and trivia Ashwin is four wickets away from becoming the second India bowler to reach the 500 mark in Test cricket. Ashwin (95) is just one wicket behind Bhagwath Chandrasekhar, India’s leading Test wicket-taker against England. Anderson (139) is a distant first on the England-India Test wicket-takers’ list. Jasprit Bumrah, meanwhile, needs four wickets to get to 150 in Tests. Rohit Sharma made centuries in both innings the last time India played a Test in Visakhapatnam. A similar Test this time will help him go past 4000 Test runs. He currently has 3800. Root (11,477) has more Test runs than India’s entire squad in Visakhapatnam (10,702). Anderson is set to play his 14th Test match in India, joining Keith Fletcher, Gordon Greenidge, Clive Lloyd and Ricky Ponting in joint third place in the overseas players’ list, with only Viv Richards (15) and Derek Underwood (16) ahead of them. Anderson is also 10 wickets away from joining Muthiah Muralidaran and Shane Warne in the 700 club. Stokes is unlikely to bowl, but if he does, he’ll know he’s three wickets away from the 200 mark in Tests.Rohit Sharma plots India’s comeback•Getty ImagesQuotes”Playing in India, we play a lot of cricket on these tracks. It’s not that we don’t know how to reverse sweep or sweep or paddle. On that particular day, depending upon the situation of the team, we as batters take our calls. And it’s very clear to us to bat with freedom. We’ve also practised some reverse in the first game as well, but then, yes, playing out in the centre is a batter’s individual plan, and if the team demands us to play in a certain way we are definitely up for it.”
“The way in which they set the tone for everybody else but also the way they put the bowlers under a serious amount of pressure with a new ball. A new ball is always the most difficult period, but you know, consistently not only are they able to negate that but they’re also able to get the scoreboard rolling at a very, very good rate, which is a huge thing for our dressing room and our batting line-up as well. And I think it’s pretty obvious [there’s] a difference in height between the both of them and I think they complement each other very, very well. Balls that Zak plays on the front foot, Ducky plays on the back foot. So it’s very tough, I think, for bowlers to settle into a rhythm and settle into a line and length against those two. One’s left-handed, one’s right. So the way in which they complement each other is brilliant. And yes, they get us get us off to a great start and just sort of set the tone for us in a Test.”

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