Curran comes in from the cold with several points to prove

Allrounder is back in favour after time in the wilderness and eager to become central to the team

Cameron Ponsonby19-Oct-2025In June of this year, it was the tenth anniversary of Sam Curran’s debut in professional cricket. Now 27 years old, he has played 471 professional cricket matches across his career. Stuart Broad managed 501.”I’ve played a lot of cricket,” Curran says, speaking from Christchurch. “This year I went back to Surrey [after getting dropped by England]. And I sit here now and I’m probably thankful for the reset. I’ve been non-stop since I was 17.”On that night at The Oval ten years ago, Curran’s Surrey captain was his current county coach Gareth Batty. A month later he claimed four wickets on his List A debut, and the teammate with whom he shared the new-ball duties, Jade Dernbach, is now his bowling coach in South London.”I went back to coaches that know me,” Curran explains, “I’ve obviously experienced such highs in my career and it was just about slowing down fractionally and getting back to enjoying it.”By all accounts, Curran took his omission from England’s white-ball squads earlier this year personally. Brendon McCullum had come in, and Curran had immediately gone out, as if confirming fears he’d aired a year earlier that he didn’t think his face fit in England’s Bazball era. He wasn’t six-foot-eight, and he wasn’t 90mph.”As a county player, it’s an interesting one,” he told talkSPORT at the time. “Because you’ve got to hope that you fit that mould right now.”This was the quiet part out loud – something that fans and journalists spoke about publicly, but rarely players.If the decision to drop him was hard to take, the message of how to get back in was simple. Become one of the best six white-ball batters in the country.Curran’s role as a seam-bowling allrounder has become integral to England’s tactics•Darren Staples/AFP via Getty Images”I actually really enjoyed the clarity of it,” Curran reflects. “It was so simple. In the past as an all-rounder I’ve played so many roles but now it was nice and clear.”Curran returned to Surrey a man possessed. Determined to win every match whether with bat, ball or in the field. He played 24 games across the Blast and Hundred, giving him the time to impress with the bat, and also the time to develop with the ball. The super-slower moon ball has been added to his arsenal and means he is now a genuine option to Harry Brook across all phases of a T20 innings. It is a delivery that is currently unique to him in world cricket.”I’m not going to give away any secrets,” he says with a laugh. “The grip is very similar and I want it to be similar so guys can’t really pick it. The game’s moving so fast you have to be adaptable.”From being a man outside the squad, Curran has a chance to nail his role and become one of the most important players in the XI. Brook’s preference for two spinners, wherever England play, makes the presence of a seam-bowling all-rounder imperative.”He’s a very, very, very good player,” Brook said of his friend after Curran’s 49 not out in the opening T20I of the series. “To have him back in the side, he’s a very valuable player to us.”Related

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Rain ruins Christchurch opener after Curran claws England to 153

In truth, Curran’s 49 in Christchurch was a poor example of his quality. There are lottery winners who would’ve blushed at the fortune he was afforded across his innings. Dropped twice, once badly and the second time atrociously, before later being reprieved on review for an LBW decision for which he’d already walked off the pitch. But, clichés exist for a reason: runs are runs and look in the book etc.The fact is, in returning to England’s white-ball squads, Curran has done the impossible. He has won back McCullum’s love. And that was achieved before his glorious (sketchy) 49 not out (for three).Across McCullum’s tenure in English cricket, no-one has made their way back in after being left out. Alex Lees got an English summer. Sam Cook got a Zimbabwean Test. And Keaton Jennings got a Pakistani net. Please call them. We don’t know where they are.Curran’s curse has always been the riches he bestows. Able to do everything and therefore expected to do anything. But to call him a jack-of-all-trades would be an insult. It is worth remembering just how prodigal Curran was and what exactly he has already accomplished.The story those at Surrey tell is of a Year 12 student arriving at the ground for T20s in his school uniform, removing his blazer and tie then walking out in front of 25,000 people to do his thing. On his first-class debut, again, as a Year 12 student, he opened the bowling and took a five-wicket haul. In his third first-class match a month later, he opened the bowling and batted at No.3.Those signs of promise translated into results as he was named as Player of the Series against India in 2018, his first summer as an international cricketer. Before he was later awarded Player of the Tournament in England’s World Cup win in 2022. He got an MBE for that.”Winning the World Cup for England’s definitely the highlight,” he says, “and there’s that drive to do it again. That’s the pinnacle and I guess on tough days you look at that as your ‘lift me up’. There’s another World Cup in 3-4 months time and it’s exciting.”It is in everyone’s interest that this time it works.

Glenn Maxwell is ready to tee off against Afghanistan's spinners

Having fallen off the back of a golf cart, the allrounder returned to action with big hits at the Wankhede nets

Vishal Dikshit06-Nov-2023Glenn Maxwell is standing diagonally behind the Australia team nets. Arms folded, his body straight, the cap worn backwards on the head, dark shades covering the eyes which are presumably fixed on what’s going on in the nets.He has watched Josh Inglis and Marcus Stoinis smash the ball around. He has seen enough of Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne take throwdowns. And the way he is holding his pose only a few steps away from the nets with a dead-pan straight face, it would seem as if he is barred from batting and has been punished further by watching his team-mates smother the ball in the nets, especially given the amount of runs that could again be on offer at the Wankhede Stadium on Tuesday.Soon comes Maxwell’s turn. Before you can say “Glenn”, he has turned around and padded up with the same rush with which you dress up when you come out of the shower in the winters.The net Maxwell enters is to face four local spinners. There are two right-arm legspinners, one left-arm wristspinner and one left-arm fingerspinner. They all don’t replicate the variety and threat of spin bowling Afghanistan’s spin attack will pose for Maxwell and Australia on Tuesday, but it’s decent preparation they can manage for a game in which they will face at least three spinners, maybe four, all of different kind.Mind you, Maxwell had already batted once in the nets roughly an hour earlier before he padded up again. It’s Maxwell after all, a man not in form but in uber-form this World Cup. And he has been away from action for over a week now because of an off-field concussion. He is itching to get back and dispatch the ball to different parts of the ground. He must still be high on the fastest World Cup hundred he smashed recently and he is also scoring runs quicker than anyone this tournament (minimum 80 balls faced).Related

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Afghanistan have themselves reached dizzying heights this World Cup especially because of their spin attack which is not heavily reliant on one or two individuals, and has collectively taken the second-most wickets as a unit this tournament, only behind table-toppers India.So out comes Maxwell under his helmet. The length ball from the left-arm wristspinner is a bit too full and Maxwell swoops low for a slog-sweep deep into the leg side of the ground from the left-most training pitch on the off side. The legspinner pitches one too short and Maxwell pounces on the pull with such force that by the time he has finished his follow through, his bat is behind him, his body twisted with his stance open, his legs facing deep square leg and his torso is turned towards long leg.Maxwell, we already know, defies the laws of physics while executing his outrageous shots. Have you seen him bat in the last 10 overs this World Cup? His strike rate is a whopping 220.33, and unless you are Aiden Markram or Quinton de Kock, you can’t score quicker than him. Come Tuesday, he could easily face a lot of spin in that phase because Afghanistan are bowling more spin than anyone this World Cup.Maxwell prepares for the next ball. It’s pitched up, doesn’t matter which arm the bowler has released it with, if he was a finger or wristspinner, bowled a wrong’un or stock ball. Maxwell packs so much power into it, before it can turn either way, to flay it down the ground that his body has twisted again because of his quick and whippy swing. The legs are alright this time, but the upper half has bent and run away to the off side, almost perpendicular to the bottom half with his head pointed towards deep point. The bat’s face is towards the leg side. The ball? It had vanished a while ago.Whether the subsequent balls were pitched up or short, outside off or in line with the stumps, Maxwell would only use hard hands combined with his open stance to swing big and dispatch the ball high and far from his net. The lofted drives on the up, the fierce scythe over point, the aerial reverse laps and reverse sweeps, the pull full of disdain, the slog sweep packed with force. There was only one way he was batting, and it seemed like that was the only way he would bat on Tuesday.4:10

How did he do it? Maxwell’s blow-by-blow account of the mayhem

It was only once earlier in the day during his first batting stint that Maxwell had looked a little different. He had warmed up with some defensive strokes and use of soft hands, naturally so because he is coming back from a concussion and missed one game. And it was only once that he was beaten completely, while attempting a reverse sweep against the left-arm fingerspinner, when he missed his swing and lost his off stump.Maxwell won’t worry about that though. One dismissal surrounded by countless lofted strokes doesn’t mean much, that too against a left-arm spinner which Afghanistan don’t have. What Afghanistan do have, though, among their four spinners is an offspinner in Mohammad Nabi, and Maxwell didn’t get to face an offspinner in the nets on Monday. That won’t worry him either because have you seen Maxwell’s match-up against Nabi in ODIs? It’s 42 runs off a mere 20 balls with just one dismissal, studded with four sixes and two fours. The sample size is small but it translates to a boundary every three balls or so.The way the Wankhede has dished out sixes more frequently than any other ground this World Cup (55 in three games) and the way it has been so unfavourable to spinners in recent times, Afghanistan will probably hope that Maxwell ends up bowling more spin than facing it on Tuesday.

One series win in 50 years: How the Caribbean remains England's final frontier

Since England’s victory in 1968, numerous generations have come a cropper in the West Indies

Andrew Miller07-Mar-2022England have toured the Caribbean on ten occasions in the past 50 years and, despite the recognition that West Indies’ standards are not what they were at the height of their hegemony in the 1980s and early 1990s, have emerged with a solitary series win in that period. Here is ESPNcricinfo’s overview of an unexpectedly one-sided rivalry1973-74 – Series drawn 1-1Garry Sobers played in his final Test series, against England in 1973-74•Getty ImagesTwo years before his crass “grovel” comments condemned his own team-mates to a summer-long diet of chin music, Tony Greig was front and centre of another lively campaign against West Indies – first with a moment of controversy, but ultimately with a touch of class.After bowling England out for 131 in the first Test of the series in Port of Spain, West Indies were already well on course for victory when Greig, fielding at silly point for the final ball of the day, pinged down the stumps at the non-striker’s end just as Alvin
Kallicharran, hitherto unbeaten on 142, began to walk towards the pavilion. Kallicharran was rightly given out by the letter of the law, but just as correctly reinstated overnight, as the two teams reached a common-sense agreement to guard against the prospect of crowd trouble.West Indies duly held onto their 1-0 series lead through the course of three high-scoring draws, with Dennis Amiss’s 262 not out at Sabina Park giving way to Lawrence Rowe’s 302 in Bridgetown. But when the series returned to Trinidad, Greig took his turn at the top of the bill. Using his full 6ft 7in frame to send down a spell of sharp-turning offbreaks, he derailed West Indies in both innings, first for career-best figures of 8 for 86, and then a further 5 for 70, as England defended a slender target of 226 to square the series.1980-81 – West Indies won 2-0Ian Botham and Viv Richards enjoy a drink or two in the dressing room during the 1981 series•Adrian Murrell/Getty ImagesIan Botham would prove to be ill-suited to the role of England Test captain, but truth be told, the itinerary for his year in charge never gave him a chance. Nine of his 12 winless Tests came against West Indies in their pomp, but when compared to the beatings that his successors would endure in the coming decade, he actually did well to emerge with six draws to his record.Botham’s solitary tour as captain, in 1980-81, could hardly have encountered more arduous circumstances. The grainy footage of Michael Holding’s legendary over to Geoff Boycott at Bridgetown endures as testimony to the on-field magnificence of Clive Lloyd’s team, but off the field there was tragedy and controversy to surmount as well.After a thumping defeat in the first Test in Trinidad, where Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes’s opening partnership was almost as many as England would make in either innings, the tour descended into acrimony following the mid-tour call-up of Robin Jackman, the Surrey seamer whose strong South African ties were unacceptable to the Guyana government.The second Test at Georgetown was duly cancelled, and though the third, in Barbados, went ahead as planned, the squad was plunged into shock with the mid-match death of Ken Barrington, England legend and hugely popular assistant manager. A grief-stricken Graham Gooch responded with an outstanding hundred, but not even his very best could avert another crushing loss.1985-86 – West Indies won 5-0Patrick Patterson was a fearsome prospect on the 1986 tour•Getty ImagesSpeaking on the Oval balcony after defeating Australia in the summer of 1985, David Gower declared – with tongue lodged firmly in cheek – that West Indies would be “quaking in their boots” at the prospect of facing his Ashes-winners in the new year. It wasn’t a faux pas to match Greig’s from a decade earlier, but if there was any quaking to be done, it certainly wasn’t by Viv Richards’ men.A TV blackout meant that the full horror of that 1986 campaign was never publicly transmitted, but from Mike Gatting’s graphically splatted nose (courtesy of a Malcolm Marshall bouncer in the ODIs) to the medal-like bruises on Phil Edmonds’ torso after a savage beating in the first Test in Jamaica, the scars of the campaign were palpable.Gooch conceded that Sabina Park Test was the only time he had been scared on the field of play, as the unheralded and terrifying Patrick Patterson ransacked seven wickets on debut. Joel Garner, Marshall and an ageing but still magnificent Holding ensured there would be no let-up at any stage of any session. By the fifth Test in Antigua, all resistance was futile. Enter Richards, in front of his home crowd, to put a personal seal on a triumphant maiden series as captain with a world-record 56-ball century.1989-90 – West Indies won 2-1Curtly Ambrose turned the series on its head in Bridgetown, after England’s stunning first-Test win•Ben Radford/Getty ImagesThere has surely never been a more shocking upset than England’s victory in the first Test in Kingston. England had lost 14 of their previous 15 Tests against West Indies, and had just emerged from the most comprehensive home Ashes rout in history. A rebel tour of South Africa, allied to the binning of Botham and Gower, underlined the sense that expectations had reached rock-bottom.But in Gooch, England at least had a leader with a proven ability to go toe-to-toe with West Indies’ quicks and, at Sabina Park, his quiet authority was writ large across a truly stunning performance. Devon Malcolm put the “raw” into raw pace with a thrillingly full-throttle display, including the extraction of Richards twice in the match, while Angus Fraser toppled the tail with the earliest flourishing of his trademark line and length.Allan Lamb then made it his business to ensure West Indies’ collapse to 164 would not go unpunished. The fifth of his six Test centuries against the greatest pace attack in history was surely the best of his career, as he and Robin Smith secured a lead of precisely 200, and not even the loss of the fourth day to rain could prevent a famous win.However, the fates had a series of cruel twists in store, as West Indies clawed back their hegemony by any means possible. Following a wash-out in Guyana, England could have been dormie-two after the third Test in Trinidad, as Malcolm’s ten-for and a gutsy 84 from Gooch set up a tantalising target of 151. Ezra Moseley, however, would end the captain’s campaign with a vividly broken hand, and as West Indies slowed their over rate to a crawl, England were ultimately forced to dig for the draw rather than gamble in fading light.From that moment on, England’s challenge resembled a Tour de France breakaway being reeled in by the peloton. Exhaustion began to overwhelm them in Bridgetown, where Curtly Ambrose’s matchwinning 8 for 45 included five wickets in as many overs, after Jack Russell’s defiance had been ended by an unplayable shooter. And then, in Antigua, the denouement was swift and brutal. Nevertheless, as West Indies celebrated the extension of their decade-long unbeaten record, they knew they’d been in a tussle for the ages.1993-94 – West Indies won 3-1Brian Lara gets on his knees to kiss the pitch after breaking the world record in 1994•PA PhotosFor the first time in more than a decade, there was the faintest glimmer of optimism as England set off for their latest Caribbean venture. They’d been creamed in the Ashes once again, but at least under their youthful new skipper Mike Atherton, had won the sixth Test at The Oval, and while West Indies were never less than daunting, there had been a marked changing of the guard since their previous visit, with the retirement of three of their very greatest – Richards, Marshall and Jeff Dujon.Unfortunately, two massive stumbling blocks still endured in Ambrose and Courtney Walsh, not to mention the coming of age of the Prince of Trinidad himself, Brian Lara. After England’s typically bruising defeat in the first Test in Jamaica, Lara found his range in Guyana with a matchwinning 167, before Ambrose responded to the fleeting threat of an England fightback in Trinidad with the most evocative rout of his career. Chasing an apparently obtainable 194 for a 2-1 series toehold, Ambrose tore in on the penultimate evening with six prime wickets in 7.5 overs, including Atherton to his first ball and a shell-shocked Graham Thorpe to his last. England closed on 40 for 8, eventually succumbing for 46 the next morning.Astonishingly, England bounced back with a remarkable win in Barbados – West Indies’ first defeat at the ground since 1935 – courtesy of Alec Stewart’s twin hundreds and Fraser’s then-career-best 8 for 75. But inevitably the last word would belong to Lara, who cashed in on a docile deck in Antigua to demolish Garry Sobers’ 36-year-old Test batting record. Resuming on 320 not out with the Caribbean expectant, Lara nervelessly raised the bar by ten runs to 375.1997-98 – West Indies won 3-1Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh were an insurmountable obstacle for England in the 1990s•PA Photos/Getty ImagesAnother tour in which England believed they had a chance, another emphatic slamming of the door as West Indies overcame that creeping sense of atrophy within their set-up to win the series at a canter, and make Atherton in particular regret staying on as captain for one
last tilt at an endlessly elusive prize.The first Test at Sabina Park was enough to make England’s batters question their life choices. It lasted just 10.1 overs before being called off due to a dangerously corrugated pitch – England lost three wickets in that time, including Mark Butcher to his first ball of the tour, a unplayable lifter that fizzed off his splice to gully – whereupon the schedule was hastily rejigged to accommodate a replacement Test in Trinidad.These back-to-back fixtures in Port-of-Spain were a pair of classics. West Indies won the first by three wickets, with Carl Hooper marshalling his lower-order to overcome an 11-wicket match haul from Fraser; a week later, England squared the series by the same margin, Fraser and Stewart again the heroes, as with their Barbados win four years earlier.Thereafter, however, England’s fortunes went south. They came a cropper at an unusually arid Guyana and though Mark Ramprakash’s long-awaited maiden Test century gave them the upper hand in the drawn fifth Test in Barbados, rain on the final day ended their series
hopes, and drained what remained of their resolve.The denouement in Antigua was a horror show. The contest was as good as over when England were rumbled for 127 in their first innings, whereupon Clayton Lambert and Philo Wallace – a pair of pinch-hitters with a disdain for line-and-length bowling – clobbered West Indies towards a first-innings lead of 373.Even then, the contest could have been saved as Nasser Hussain and Thorpe dug in for the draw. But on 106, Hussain was calamitously run out to re-open the floodgates. England’s final seven wickets duly tumbled for 26 runs, with Thorpe’s unbeaten 84 a teasing reminder of the unusually fine margins by which the campaign had been decided.2003-04 – England won 3-0Steve Harmison claimed 7 for 12 at Kingston in 2004•Getty ImagesIt had taken the best part of four decades, but England finally toppled West Indies on home soil, and they did so – fittingly enough – with a four-pronged pace attack that has arguably never been bettered in their history.The seeds of England’s 2005 Ashes triumph were sown in the Caribbean that month, as Steve Harmison, Andrew Flintoff, Simon Jones and Matthew Hoggard gelled with devastating effect for three misleadingly comprehensive wins – none more astonishing than the first Test in Kingston, where three days of punch and counterpunch gave way to one massive haymaker.As the fourth morning got underway, England’s lead was a slender 8. By lunch, they had won by ten wickets, after Harmison’s extraordinary haul of 7 for 12 routed West Indies for 47, their lowest total in Test history. His gangly splice-snagging methods struck again a week later in Trinidad, where his first-innings figures of 6 for 61 were joined in the second by Jones’ maiden Test five-for.One match later, Flintoff added his first five in the opening exchanges at Bridgetown, before Hoggard – not to be outdone – bagged a second-innings hat-trick to send Windies tumbling to 94 all out.The suddenness of these victory surges meant that the efforts of England’s batters went under-recognised. None of Hussain, Butcher or Thorpe would still be in the side come the 2005 Ashes, with England preferring fresh and fearless minds for that seismic tussle. Here, however, hard-bitten wisdom – in Hussain’s case, of four Caribbean tours – was exactly what the challenge demanded, as they withstood the eager threat of, especially, Fidel Edwards and Tino Best with a series of doughty displays, not least Thorpe’s exceptional Bridgetown hundred, where the next-best score was 17.Inevitably, however, that man Lara was lurking to swipe the batting plaudits in the final act of the series. A mere handful of months after losing his world record to Matthew Hayden, and ten years to the week after toppling Sobers’ mark at the ARG, Lara cashed in at the same venue, to surge to Test cricket’s first and only quadruple century. The majesty of his display merely served to underline how brilliantly England’s quicks had kept him quiet at the sharp end of the series.2008-09 – West Indies won 1-0England never recovered from a bruising defeat in the opening Test in 2009•Getty ImagesIf the circumstances of this latest campaign seem shambolic, then spare a thought for the class of 2009. The toxic fallout from Kevin Pietersen’s spat with Peter Moores had had no time to dissipate as the team jetted off for the Caribbean with a new captain, Andrew Strauss, and a reluctant stand-in coach, Andy Flower, who had yet to be convinced that he wanted his predecessor’s job full-time.But then came perhaps the most important defeat in England’s recent Test history. A pitiful collapse to 51 all out in Jamaica gave the new management an excuse to flex their muscles and demand better, or else. As if to reinforce his message, Strauss led from the front with three hefty first-innings centuries in the remaining three Tests (excluding the ten-ball farce in a sandpit in Antigua), to establish the authority with which he would lead England to Ashes victory that summer, and ultimately to the No. 1 Test ranking.However, England were unable to force victory in any of those games – West Indies clung on for dear life at the ARG and Port-of-Spain, while Ramnaresh Sarwan’s 291 was the dominant factor in the final Test at Bridgetown. The final throes of the campaign epitomised England’s missed opportunity, as a strokeless Denesh Ramdin and Edwards held firm at 114 for 8 in Trinidad, to win back the Wisden Trophy … albeit for barely two months.2014-15 – Series drawn 1-1Jermaine Blackwood was one of West Indies’ heroes in the 2015 series•Getty ImagesHot on the heels of an atrocious World Cup campaign, England’s Test squad set off for a tour of the Caribbean that could hardly have been less auspiciously timed. The build-up was overshadowed by the unguarded utterings of the ECB’s new chairman, Colin Graves, whose
declaration that West Indies were “mediocre” was precisely the team-talk that an already motivated opposition didn’t need.Ian Bell’s 22nd (and final) Test century gave England the upper hand in Antigua, only for Jason Holder’s maiden hundred to guide West Indies to a gleefully acclaimed draw – one that, in the process, stole back the thunder from James Anderson after he first equalled, then overtook, Botham’s long-held record as England’s leading wicket-taker.The second Test in Grenada went more according to England’s designated script, thanks largely to Joe Root, whose 184 was his fourth massive unbeaten hundred in the space of nine Tests – and in spite of the best efforts of Marlon Samuels, whose first-innings century was followed by an infamous navy-style salute as Ben Stokes left the crease – the ramping-up of a rivalry that would peak at the World T20 final the following year.But England’s inherent frailties could not be hidden for long, and the edifice came tumbling down in a dismal series-squaring defeat in Barbados. At least Alastair Cook found some timely form with his first Test century in almost two years, but of his team-mates only Moeen Ali (58) passed fifty in either innings. The most notable failure was the sadly out-of-sorts Jonathan Trott, whose scores of 0 and 9 confirmed there’d be no fairytale finish to his Test career, 18 months after his breakdown on the 2013-14 Ashes.2018-19 – West Indies won 2-1Jason Holder takes off after reaching his maiden Test double-hundred•Getty ImagesThis time, England arrived in the West Indies thinking they’d cracked it. With their white-ball revolution in full swing, the squad had embraced a radical new approach to Test cricket, packing their middle- and lower-order with a glut of counterattacking allrounders to mitigate
the long-term frailty of the top three. The approach paid rich dividends with a 4-1 home series win over India and an impressive 3-0 scoreline in Sri Lanka, but come the Caribbean, they got too clever by half.In Barbados, England dropped Stuart Broad in favour of Sam Curran, and were taught a two-part lesson in hubris – first when Kemar Roach showed the enduring value of backing your experienced quicks in the Caribbean by claiming 5 for 17 as England were routed for 77, and then when Holder rampaged through West Indies’ second innings with a stunning double-century – seizing on the threadbare nature of a line-up in which Curran’s medium-pace had been fatefully exposed. When Roston Chase twirled through the second innings with 8 for 60, their humiliation was complete.England’s fortunes would get worse before a marked improvement in St Lucia. In Antigua their batting flatlined once more with scores of 187 and 132, courtesy of Roach’s four wickets in each innings and heavy artillery back-up from Shannon Gabriel, Alzarri Joseph and Holder, all of whom put in performances worthy of their legendary forebears. And so it was that England’s penny finally dropped in Gros Islet, where Mark Wood was unleashed for one of the most ferocious fast-bowling displays in England’s history. It was enough for a consolation win, but it couldn’t deflect from the muddled thinking that had preceded it.

Every Player to Win MVP and World Series MVP in the Same Season

The Dodgers are looking to repeat as World Series champs in 2025, and if successful, Shohei Ohtani will have a chance to join a select group of players in MLB history.

Throughout MLB history, only five players have ever won their league's respective MVP award and gone on to win the World Series MVP in the same year. Ohtani is the runaway favorite to win the National League MVP this season for the second year in a row. If he can perform at his usual prolific level, he could very well be named World Series MVP.

Last year, Ohtani missed out on the award after a lackluster showing in the Fall Classic against the Yankees. Plagued by a shoulder injury, he had just two hits in the five-game series and didn't record a home run or RBI. Freddie Freeman was named World Series MVP in '24 after he launched four home runs and had 12 RBIs.

Should Ohtani claim the award as his own in '25, he'd be just the sixth player ever to win both the regular-season MVP and World Series MVP in the same year. Even more impressive, he would become just the second player to win all three of regular-season MVP, LCS MVP and World Series MVP.

Let's take a look at the esteemed company he'd be joining:

Player

Team

Season

Awards Won

Sandy Koufax

Dodgers

1963

NL MVP, World Series MVP

Frank Robinson

Orioles

1966

AL MVP, World Series MVP

Reggie Jackson

A’s

1973

AL MVP, World Series MVP

Willie Stargell

Pirates

1979

NL MVP, NLCS MVP, World Series MVP

Mike Schmidt

Phillies

1980

NL MVP, World Series MVP

Sandy Koufax won the Cy Young, NL MVP and World Series MVP in 1963, when he had a 1.88 ERA with 306 strikeouts during the regular season. He then pitched two complete games in the World Series, which lasted just four games in total.

In 1966, Frank Robinson was named MVP of the American League after launching 49 home runs and 122 RBIs. He was prolific in the Orioles' World Series win, too, logging a 1.232 OPS in a sweep of the Dodgers.

Reggie Jackson won the lone MVP award of his career in 1973, when he led MLB with 32 home runs and 117 RBIs. He won the first of his two World Series MVPs that same year, when he had nine hits and 6 RBIs in a seven-game series against the Mets.

The only player in MLB history to win the trifecta of the regular-season MVP, League Championship Series MVP and World Series MVP is Willie Stargell, who did so for the Pirates in 1979. That season, at the age of 39, Stargell hit 32 home runs in the regular season and had three home runs and 7 RBIs in a seven-game series against the Orioles. Pittsburgh, carried by Stargell's outstanding play, was able to erase a 3–1 deficit in the series.

Mike Schmidt was named NL MVP and World Series MVP for the Phillies in 1980. That year, he had 48 home runs and 121 RBIs with an OPS of 1.004 in the regular season, and followed it up with eight hits including two home runs in a six-game series against the Royals.

Ohtani won the NLCS MVP after the Dodgers swept the Brewers in four games. He capped off the series with a sensational Game 4 performance in which he hit three home runs and pitched six innings with 10 strikeouts. The historic performance saw him earn the series MVP award and now he'll be looking to complete the Triple Crown of MVPs.

Botafogo define data de reapresentação para 2026; veja planejamento

MatériaMais Notícias

De férias após o sexto lugar no Campeonato Brasileiro de 2025, o Botafogo já definiu seu planejamento de olho na próxima temporada. A SAF, que se movimenta no mercado em busca de peças, sabe que terá um calendário mais apertado que o normal para preparar bem o elenco.

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➡️ CBF amplia limite de jogos para transferências entre clubes da Série A

➡️ Botafogo renova com pilar da SAF de olho em novo ciclo do projeto

A estreia do Botafogo em 2026 está prevista para o dia 14 de janeiro, contra a Portuguesa-RJ, no Campeonato Carioca, fora de casa. Pensando nisso, e com o início das férias na última segunda-feira (8), a reapresentação do elenco está marcada para o dia 4 de janeiro, no CT Lonier. Um time alternativo deve ser mandado a campo nos primeiros compromissos.

Entre avaliações clínicas e trabalhos físicos, fica no planejamento da comissão técnica de Davide Ancelotti o espaço para uma pequena pré-temporada no Rio de Janeiro. O Brasileirão, vale lembrar, devido ao calendário cheio em 2026 com a pausa para a Copa do Mundo, terá início no dia 28 de janeiro.

continua após a publicidadeExpectativa do Botafogo

A campanha no Brasileirão deu ao time comandado por Davide Ancelotti uma vaga na Libertadores, mas a ser definida quanto a início na competição. Isso porque o Alvinegro, inicialmente, se classificou para a segunda fase prévia de mata-mata, mas pode ir direto à fase de grupos em caso de títulos de Cruzeiro ou Fluminense na Copa do Brasil — que ficaram entre os cinco nos pontos corridos e, com isso, abririam mais uma vaga direta.

A segunda fase da Libertadores tem como datas pré-definidas os dias 18 e 25 de fevereiro, cerca de 45 dias após a reapresentação, e a terceira nos dias 4 e 11 de março. A fase de grupos, por sua vez, só terá início no dia 18 de março.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Fogão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Botafogo

O Botafogo vive a expectativa pela vaga direta não só para poder mesclar o elenco nos primeiros momentos da temporada, como também para ter mais tempo no mercado da bola. O Glorioso já acertou a renovação com o lateral-esquerdo Marçal e encaminhou a contratação do atacante uruguaio Lucas Villalba, do Nacional-URU.

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BotafogoDavide AncelottiSAF

Azhar Ali resigns as PCB's selector and head of youth development

It’s understood Azhar felt the appointment of Sarfaraz Ahmed in a role that aligned closely with his own responsibilities led him to feel his position had become untenable

Danyal Rasool19-Nov-2025

Azhar Ali was first brought into the PCB as a member of the selection panel in October 2024•AFP/Getty Images

Azhar Ali has resigned from his position at the PCB as selector and head of youth development, ending a 12-month stint in that role. The departure, which was not publicly announced by either Azhar or the board, has been confirmed by ESPNcricinfo.ESPNcricinfo has learned Azhar’s departure came after an extended period of simmering differences in outlook between the former Pakistan captain and the board. Matters eventually came to a head after Sarfaraz Ahmed was reportedly appointed – though, again, not officially confirmed by the board – as the head of Pakistan Shaheens and Under-19 sides, with his remit extending to the organising and managing of tours, as well as conducting training camps.It is understood Azhar felt the appointment of Sarfaraz in a role that aligned closely with his own set of responsibilities led him to feel his position had become untenable. He sent in his letter of resignation earlier this week, which the PCB accepted.Azhar, who captained Pakistan in Tests and ODIs, was first brought into the PCB as a member of the selection panel for Pakistan’s men’s national side in October 2024. A month later, he had the role of youth development head tacked on, one which was publicly announced by the PCB at the time.The official announcement of his appointment on the PCB’s website stated that he had been “tasked with shaping the future of Pakistan cricket by designing and implementing comprehensive youth cricket strategies, establishing robust grassroots cricket structures and talent pathways, collaborating with regional cricket associations to strengthen age-group programmes, educating emerging cricketers under the PCB’s Pathways Programme, and organising seminars and clinics to build awareness of off-field development essentials for aspiring players”.The next major assignment for a Pakistan age-group side comes at the 2026 Under-19 World Cup, which runs from January 15 to February 6, and will take place in Zimbabwe and Namibia. Co-hosts Zimbabwe, Scotland and England are in Pakistan’s group at the competition, which Pakistan have won twice – in 2004 and 2006.

Rohl must bin Rangers flop who was even worse than Aarons vs Falkirk

Glasgow Rangers head coach Danny Rohl was understandably unhappy with how his team played in the 0-0 draw with Falkirk at Ibrox in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday.

In his post-match press conference, as relayed by the Heart & Hand podcast, the German boss cited decision making as one of the key reasons why his side failed to claim all three points.

Rohl also noted that too many of the players opted to turn back and slow the game down at times, which is why Max Aarons should be dropped from the starting line-up in the coming games.

Why Rangers should stop playing Max Aarons at left-back

The Bournemouth loanee did not put in a terrible performance against Falkirk at left-back, as he won six of his seven duels and both of his attempted tackles, per Sofascore.

However, Rangers will always have a problem when Aarons plays at left-back because he is a right-footed player who, naturally, wants to cut back onto his right foot where possible, which can slow down attacks and affect the fluidity of the team.

This heavily contributes to the problem that Rohl spoke about with too many players turning back to play negative passes, because he is not a left-footed full-back who can open up and bomb on down the flank.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Journalist Jonny McFarlane said at half-time that the “issue down left flank is glaring”, but it took until the 57th minute for Rohl to take Aarons off for Brentford loanee Jayden Meghoma.

That may be because the English youngster has been even worse than Aarons, despite being a natural left-back, and he should be replaced in January.

Why Rangers need to replace Meghoma in January

In his aforementioned comments, Rohl mentioned that he already has an idea of what he needs in the January transfer window, and a new left-back should be on the agenda.

In the summer, Kevin Thelwell sanctioned the sales of Ridvan Yilmaz and Jefte whilst only signing Meghoma as a natural left-back option, after he had played just 12 times on loan at Preston in the Championship last season as a teenager.

It was a big ask for the Brentford youngster to step in at Ibrox as the first and only choice natural left-back with his inexperience in the game, and his performances have looked like those of a player who is still learning and developing in senior football.

Vs Falkirk

Aarons

Meghoma

Minutes

57

33

Key passes

1

0

Shots

0

0

Crosses completed

1

0

Dribbles completed

2

0

Pass accuracy

84%

78%

Duels won

6/7

2/3

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Aarons, despite being right-footed, offered more to the team on the ball in his time on the pitch than Meghoma, as a natural left-footer, did after he came on in the second half.

On top of being even worse than Aarons in possession against Falkirk, the 19-year-old full-back’s overall defensive work this season has left a bit to be desired, as he has lost 77% of his aerial duels in the Premiership, per Sofascore.

His defending was also called into question against Brann in the Europa League in Rohl’s first game in charge, as Ally McCoist dubbed his failure to mark Jacob Sorensen from a set-piece as “remarkable” in that 3-0 loss.

Overall, Meghoma has failed to prove that he can be relied upon to start week-in-week-out for the Gers domestically or in Europe, which is why Rohl must replace him when the January transfer window opens for business by recruiting a senior and experienced left-back.

Rangers have a talent who could be sold for more than Igamane & Aribo

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ByDan Emery Nov 26, 2025

Bringing a natural left-back who can provide reliable performances for Rangers would allow Meghoma to learn his trade as a back-up, whilst it would also allow Aarons to compete with James Tavernier for a starting berth in his natural role at right-back.

Forget Potts: West Ham "game-changer" is looking like the modern-day Parker

This weekend might be the first one in a long time that West Ham United fans are actually looking forward to.

The East Londoners have been subjected to some terrible football and even worse results over the last year or so, but finally, the London Stadium was treated to an impressive win over Newcastle United last week.

It was Nuno Espírito Santo’s first win in charge, but he’s not got an altogether different challenge to face in Scott Parker’s Burnley.

The Clarets’ manager is still a firm fan favourite among West Ham fans, and it could be argued that one of their current players is now emulating him – and no, it’s not Freddie Potts.

West Ham's record against Burnley

West Ham’s game against Burnley this afternoon will be the 97th competitive meeting in all competitions.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The two claret and blue sides first met back in November 1923, in a league game that the Hammers sadly lost 5-1.

However, while their first meeting didn’t end well for the East Londoners, they have won 40 games, drawn 21 and lost 35.

Moreover, the last five meetings between the two teams have been more fruitful for the Irons, with them winning twice and sharing the spoils three times.

Their last meeting was a Premier League match on March 10th, 2024.

The game ended 2-2 courtesy of goals from Lucas Paqueta, Danny Ings, David Datro Fofana, and an own goal from Dinos Mavropanos.

While another draw wouldn’t be the end of the world, Nuno and Co. will be looking to make the most of last weekend’s win and go on something of a run.

While the whole team will have to play their part to make that happen, much of the goalscoring burden will fall on the player who’s something of a modern-day Parker for West Ham.

West Ham's modern-day Parker

Parker joined West Ham from the Toon in the summer of 2007, and while he had to deal with a number of injuries early on, he established himself as one of the team’s most important players.

In fact, he was so crucial that he was named Hammer of the Year for three consecutive seasons and was even named England’s Player of the Year in 2011.

Unfortunately, when the Irons were relegated at the end of the 11/12 season, he moved to Tottenham Hotspur to keep his place in the national side.

Now, when it comes to a modern player who could be talked about in a similar way, there is only one who comes to mind: Jarrod Bowen.

Yes, he plays in an entirely different position, but over the last few years, he has been just as, if not more, important to the club.

For example, in 249 appearances, totalling 19881 minutes, the incredible “game changer,” as dubbed by journalist Roshane Thomas, has scored 77 goals and provided 53 assists.

That comes out to a staggering average of a goal involvement every 1.91 games, or every 152.93 minutes, over a period of more than five years.

On top of that, he has also taken the responsibility of the captaincy, which, as things stand, must be a particularly heavy burden.

Finally, not only has he been a constant source of goals and assists for the club, but he is also the scorer of the goal that secured them their first European trophy.

Appearances

249

Minutes

19881′

Goals

77

Assists

53

Goal Involvements per Match

0.52

Minutes per Goal Involvement

152.93

Ultimately, while someone like Potts might come to resemble Parker’s style of play more, Bowen embodies his spirit and truly is the current Mr West Ham.

West Ham's "supreme" star is going to be their biggest talent since Kudus

The incredible talent will become more important to West Ham than Kudus ever was.

ByJack Salveson Holmes Nov 7, 2025

Scott Boras Clarifies What Juan Soto is Looking for in MLB Free Agency

Juan Soto is—by far—the biggest name to hit the open market this MLB offseason.

As teams prepare to break the bank for the 26-year-old superstar, agent Scott Boras outlined to reporters Wednesday exactly what Soto is looking for as he makes his decision this offseason.

"Juan Soto wants ownership that he knows is going to support an opportunity to win annually," Boras said. "His focus always was, 'I want to know who my owner is; I want to know that we're going to be able to win. And I want to know that, besides me, there's going to be a great number of support on part of the owner that he has the same desire to win that I do."

Soto is hitting the market for the first time after seven seasons in the big leagues in which he earned four All-Star nods, four Silver Sluggers and a World Series title with the Washington Nationals in 2019.

In 2024, Soto batted .288/.419/.569 with 41 home runs and 109 RBIs for the New York Yankees. He is expected to sign a massive long-term contract this winter north of $50 million per season for at least 10 years.

One of those teams expected to be in the mix to sign Soto are the Yankees, who finished just shy of their first World Series title since 2009 by falling to the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games.

"Playing in New York for Juan was really, really comfortable," Boras said. "He really, really enjoyed his teammates, the Yankees experience. Juan loves winning."

GIll, Rahul keep India alive and kicking through wicketless session

Gill went past 50 for the fourth time in the series as he and Rahul helped India recover from two early wickets

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Jul-2025

KL Rahul and Shubman Gill had a good partnership after two early wickets•Associated Press

Tea Shubman Gill and KL Rahul weathered a testing spell from England’s bowlers to produce a wicketless middle session on day four in Manchester, but it was perhaps the only thing that went India’s way after Ben Stokes’ century carried his team to a total of 669 and a lead of 311. Then Chris Woakes struck twice in the first over before India could score any runs to create incredible drama.India went to tea at 86 for 2, still 225 runs behind. They could easily have lost their captain for 46 had Liam Dawson been able to hold on to a tough catch at gully but Gill made the most of that generosity to continue his run-spree. He went past Virat Kohli’s 655 runs against England in 2016 and is chasing down Sunil Gavaskar’s record of most runs as an Indian captain in a Test series (732).Stokes did not bring himself to bowl any of the 29 overs so far, a sign of perhaps the workload he has already taken on. He is playing back to back Tests. He picked up a five-for in the first innings and backed it up with a century – a rare feat among players and even rarer among captains. In scoring 141, he broke a spell of 35 innings without a hundred and earned himself a spot among the best allrounders in the history of cricket. There were, prior to his efforts at Old Trafford, only two with 7000 runs and 200 wickets – Garry Sobers and Jacques Kallis.England’s innings reached incredible heights – 669 was their fifth-highest total in Tests – and it ended with 15 minutes for their bowlers to target India before lunch. Woakes produced a beauty from around the wicket to trap Yashasvi Jaiswal for a duck – angled in, seaming away, taking the leading edge to first slip. Then Sai Sudharsan made a mistake born out of spending 157 overs in the field, fatigue resulting in him misjudging a ball that was short and wide. In the end, he ended up getting caught at second slip trying to play the leave.

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