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Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh

Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh
Baseball United founder Kash Shaikh (second left) credits the Dubai-based organization's progress to partnerships with some the games biggest names. (Supplied)
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Updated 30 August 2024

Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh

Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh
  • Dubai-based organization’s founder, CEO and chairman spoke to Arab News about 3 signature events and potential for regional success
  • Teams from ֱ, UAE and Palestine will take part in the Arab Classic alongside India and Pakistan in November

DUBAI: At times, the dream of bringing professional baseball to the region must have seemed like a mirage in a desert.

The harder the man behind Dubai-based organization Baseball United tried, the more this vision seemed to fade.

But now, for Kash Shaikh, founder, chairman and CEO of Baseball United, three years of logistical challenges are almost over.

“I’m just really excited for the fans. I’m really proud of our team, grateful for the opportunity that after three years of working and grinding and building and pushing, and falling and failing and picking ourselves up, and still finding a way, that we’ve finally been able to chart a course and a path forward for professional baseball in the region,” said Shaikh.

He announced that Dubai would be the home for baseball with three “signature” events “that we have a vision for conducting every year, and hopefully growing and making bigger each year.”

The first of the three events is the Arab Classic, bringing together the biggest national teams from the region to compete in Dubai from Nov. 7 to 10, 2024.

The Baseball United Cup, with each of the current four franchises featuring professional players, follows from Feb. 22 to March 1, 2025.

Baseball United’s first full season, featuring the Mumbai Cobras, Karachi Monarchs, Arabia Wolves, Mid East Falcons, and a new, yet-to-be-announced Riyadh-based team, will then launch on Oct. 23, 2025.

“Our season, which is something that we’ve dreamed about for a long time and it sometimes didn’t seem possible, but thanks to the partners we have on the ground and just really the resilience of our team, we’ve been able to make it happen.”

In the three, often difficult years, what kept the dream alive for Shaikh was the potential he saw for baseball to grow in the Middle East and Asia.

“No doubt, I really believe that this region for sure is not only the future of sport, but it is the future for baseball. It has all the elements, all the ingredients that are needed to build a sport from the ground up, which is exactly what we’re doing.

“We’re creating the whole ecosystem, from the fields and facilities to the teams and the rosters to the equipment, the seating that’s needed, the broadcast partnerships, the sponsorship channels.”

Baseball United’s first event, the Dubai Showcase last November at the International Cricket Stadium, drew in crowds of almost 5,000 on each of its two days. The response from fans was overwhelmingly positive, said Shaikh.

“A marker of that potential is the response we’ve gotten from fans. You know, 4.7 out of 5 stars out of our showcase last year in terms of fan response.

“Thousands of people here in the UAE and Dubai messaging us saying that they believe in what we’re doing, they want to be a part of what we’re doing.”

The Arab Cup promises to attract even more fans from the Middle East with the UAE, ֱ and Palestine joining India and Pakistan.

“Right now we’ve actually had 12 teams from around the region asking us to participate. We’re planning to focus on eight,” Shaikh said.

“So the hardest cut I’m going to have to make is taking that 12 teams down to eight. You know, there’s a chance we may expand it. But even if we don’t, we’ll have eight teams that truly represent the breadth and depth of this region.”

Shaikh believes that one of the highlights will be the clash between India and Pakistan, as it is often in any sporting field. Others will bring Arab teams under the spotlight.

“You’ve got teams that are representing the UAE and ֱ as well,” he added. “They’ve never played in a national team format in history. Saudi’s federation is the newest baseball federation, just formed in 2019.

“They’ve never played an official national team match game before. And now they get to here in the region. So it’s going to be a really big deal.”

“We’ve already been getting a lot of messages from embassies from each of these countries wanting to participate, wanting to get their local fans out there.”

The Arab Classic will be adopting World Baseball Classic rules and a format that sees two groups of four competing, with the top two in each advancing to the semifinals.

The Dubai Showcase last season fell on the same weekend as the Formula One Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, but Shaikh said fans can expect even more this year.

“One thing that was very important to me and our team is that no matter what we do, we know this is a long-term play, but we’ve got to do something for the fans in 2024. That to me was the biggest factor to say, let’s host this in November.”

“(The Arab Classic) will be a little bit less than a year from our last event. It’s a great, almost ceremonial next step for the game. Now we get to do it with national teams representing some of the biggest countries here, so it’s going to be very exciting.”

On the Baseball United Cup with the Mumbai Cobras, Karachi Monarchs, Arabia Wolves and Mid East Falcons, he said: “These teams are full of some of the best professional baseball players in the world, former Yankees and Dodgers and Red Sox.”

“We drafted these teams about a year ago, but nobody has seen them in their full, kitted-out uniforms with their full teams on the field. It’s going to be historic in a lot of ways. It’s going to be a smaller format, a round-robin format, plus playoffs.”

A total of 10 games will be played across eight days in February, in many ways a dress rehearsal for the launch of Baseball United’s inaugural season later in the year.

“This is the big thing from the beginning,” he said. “The season gives me goosebumps, because it’s something we’ve been dreaming about. And trying to figure out, you know, what are the right number of franchises.”

“What we decided on is five franchises. Our first four, Mumbai, Karachi, Arabia, and Mid East, plus a new Riyadh franchise that we’ll announce in early 2025, which I’m very excited about.”

Each team will play 12 games, and then after the regular season, the top two will play in a three-game series, to crown the champions. “Overall, it’s going to be 33 games in 32 days here in Dubai, so it’s a huge sprint,” said Shaikh.

“It’s a crazy, ambitious undertaking for us. It’s funny, on one end, for baseball it’s not a lot of games because 12 games per team for baseball is really just a blink.

“I mean, baseball is typically played every day for eight, nine months out of the year. Major League Baseball teams play 162 games each. So 12 games is small, but we’re a small, growing league.

“We wanted to create the right footprint, and honestly, we wanted to learn how and if and when, and to what extent we can get folks here in Dubai to come out to support.”

The next big challenge according to Shaikh is to create a product that fans will return to repeatedly, as opposed to showing up for a once-a-year marquee event or weekend.

“If we can, there’s a huge, huge potential and a huge trajectory for this league, for the community, for young kids, for development, for the ecosystem,” he said.

“Think about how many jobs something like this creates, how many opportunities. When we talk about baseball, we’re talking about grounds crew, facilities, coaches, umpires, statisticians, scorekeepers, broadcasters, equipment managers.”

“There’s so much medical staff, nutrition staff. We’re really building the whole infrastructure from a whole economic perspective. So it’s much more than the bottom line for us.”

One of things exciting Shaikh most will be the release of the teams’ merchandise, which he calls “iconic” and a part of “Americana culture.”

“When people see the Arabia Wolves gear, Mumbai Cobras, that’s when fans’ passion really starts to come to life. That’s how I fell in love with baseball.”

Shaikh believes Baseball United now has the “highest pedigree of ownership group” in terms of on-field play, in all of professional sports.

“Right now we have 20 of the best baseball players in history who’ve invested in Baseball United, who are co-owners of Baseball United, who’ve not only put their money, but their time, their energy, their resources, their social media accounts behind what we’re doing,” he said.

“I mean, in the early days when we started, it gave us instant credibility. Today, as we continue to grow, it creates instant fanfare for us.”

“There’s no way we’d be where we are without those guys,” he added. “They bring over 300 years of Major League Baseball knowledge and game play into the organization. And it’s just a huge blessing for us to work with them.”

Shaikh highlighted that a big part of Baseball United’s philosophy is the interaction of players with fans. This was shown at the Showcase last November when both rosters took time to sign autographs and pose for photos with young fans.

The former players are also involved in promoting the game at grassroots level. “They threw out the first pitch at Dubai Little League,” said Shaikh.

“It’s incredible, that doesn’t happen. But because of Baseball United and because these legends were able to offer fans that type of experience."


Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in first Sri Lanka Test

Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in first Sri Lanka Test
Updated 17 June 2025

Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in first Sri Lanka Test

Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in first Sri Lanka Test
  • Mushfiqur, the most capped Test player in Bangladesh history with 97 appearances, silenced his critics with a timely ton

GALLE, Sri Lanka: A record-breaking fourth-wicket partnership between captain Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mushfiqur Rahim put Bangladesh in control at 292-3 on day one of the first Test against Sri Lanka on Tuesday.

After a wobbly start at Galle, the pair stitched together 247 runs — the highest fourth-wicket stand for Bangladesh in Tests against Sri Lanka — steering the tourists to a commanding position at stumps.

Having elected to bat first, Bangladesh were reeling at 45-3 when the duo came together.

What followed was a gritty rescue act— a partnership built on sound temperament, clever shot selection and an unflinching resolve as they dug their team out of early trouble.

Mushfiqur, the most capped Test player in Bangladesh history with 97 appearances, silenced his critics with a timely ton.

The veteran, under the pump after a lean patch spanning 13 innings without a half-century, rolled back the years with a knock of poise and purpose.

The 38-year-old has fond memories of Galle, having struck a monumental double hundred there in 2013, and once again turned tormentor-in-chief for the Sri Lankan bowlers.

He did enjoy a slice of luck — a tough chance spilled by debutant Tharindu Rathnayake on 25 — but made it count, navigating a nervy passage in the 90s, before scampering a quick single to notch up his 12th Test hundred.

Shanto, positive from the outset, kept the scoreboard ticking with deft footwork and a keen eye for the loose ball.

He brought up his sixth Test century — and second against Sri Lanka — with a cheeky paddle sweep off Prabath Jayasuriya, marking his first ton since November 2023.

Sri Lanka made early inroads with right-arm quick Asitha Fernando drawing first blood, removing opener Anamul Haque for a duck.

Off-spinner Rathnayake, handed his Test cap on the back of a prolific domestic season, struck twice in quick succession.

But once the Shanto-Mushfiqur duo got their eye in, it was one-way traffic.

Sri Lanka also handed a debut to opening batter Lahiru Udara, another domestic heavyweight, while the hosts paused before the start of play to congratulate retiring stalwart Angelo Mathews.

The 38-year-old Mathews, playing his 119th and final Test, will hang up his boots with over 8,000 runs, behind only Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene in Sri Lanka’s all-time charts.

Mathews speaking before the start, said he was “extremely proud to have a wonderful journey, thankful for whoever was part of it.”

“Feeling quite special. Realizing that I have played over 100 Tests,” he added.

“Playing for the country was my dream; it has come true.”

The match is the first in the new two-year World Test Championship cycle.

The second Test begins in Colombo on June 25.


Scorching heat sparks welfare fears at Club World Cup

Scorching heat sparks welfare fears at Club World Cup
Updated 17 June 2025

Scorching heat sparks welfare fears at Club World Cup

Scorching heat sparks welfare fears at Club World Cup
  • The world players’ union FIFPRO has suggested FIFA should revise scheduling, if needed

MIAMI: Soaring temperatures and oppressive humidity at the Club World Cup are fueling concerns among players, coaches, and fans, with calls for additional cooling breaks and adjustments to match schedules.

Midday kickoff temperatures in Pasadena at the weekend approached 32° Celsius (89.6° Fahrenheit), forcing players in the Paris St. Germain vs. Atletico Madrid match to dig in early as the midday sun blazed on the Rose Bowl’s uncovered stands and pitch.

Atletico’s Marcos Llorente described the conditions as “terribly hot,” saying “my toes were sore, my nails were hurting... it’s incredible.”

Fans, too, voiced concern.

Attendees at the Rose Bowl complained of long queues in harsh heat, limited shaded areas and water restrictions at entry, with some leaving at halftime due to dehydration and fear of fainting.

Similar mid-afternoon kickoff conditions are planned for upcoming matches, stoking safety concerns for supporters and players.

Monday’s match in Pasadena was not an isolated incident. Miami and Los Angeles are experiencing temperatures north of 30° C (86° F), many rising above the 32° C heat-stress threshold, triggering warnings from player unions.

Tuesday’s game between Real Madrid and Al-Hilal is scheduled at 1500 local time with temperatures expected to reach 32°C with humidity set to hover around 70 percent.

The world players’ union FIFPRO has suggested FIFA should revise scheduling, if needed.

“FIFPRO has consistently advocated for comprehensive heat protection measures including mandatory cooling breaks, adjustments to kick-off times to avoid the most intense heat, and the postponement of matches when conditions pose a serious health risk to players,” FIFPRO said.

“With tournaments like the Club World Cup featuring dense match schedules and hot climates in locations such as Orlando and Miami, extreme heat is becoming an increasingly important health and safety issue in professional football.

“FIFPRO will closely monitor the situation in the coming weeks with a view to prioritising player welfare over other considerations.”

The current rules permit one mandatory break per half.

England coach Thomas Tuchel, observing the tournament as part of planning for next year’s World Cup in North America, warned the tournament schedule would resemble “suffering,” with players battling harsh midday conditions.

The heat represents one of many controversies plaguing the expanded 32-team format. FIFPRO and the PFA have launched legal action in Brussels, alleging FIFA overstepped by introducing an unsustainable four-week calendar, risking player burnout.

Critics say the added fixtures, combined with sweltering heat, could severely strain player welfare.

FIFA, however, maintains that the extended summer fixtures align with the broader International Match Calendar and that existing protocols are sufficient.


Mbappe doubtful for Real Madrid’s Club World Cup opener against Al-Hilal

Mbappe doubtful for Real Madrid’s Club World Cup opener against Al-Hilal
Updated 17 June 2025

Mbappe doubtful for Real Madrid’s Club World Cup opener against Al-Hilal

Mbappe doubtful for Real Madrid’s Club World Cup opener against Al-Hilal
Club sources told Reuters that Mbappe woke up with a high fever
Mbappe has been instrumental for Real Madrid this season

MIAMI: Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappe is a doubt for their opening Club World Cup match against ֱn side Al-Hilal on Wednesday, after missing training on Tuesday due to illness.

Club sources told Reuters that Mbappe woke up with a high fever. While he has not been officially ruled out, the source said his availability for the clash at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium was in “more than reasonable doubt”.

The potential absence of Mbappe leaves newly-appointed Real Madrid manager Xabi Alonso facing a selection dilemma, as the Frenchman is currently the only recognized center forward in the squad.

Brazilian teenager Endrick, who could have provided an alternative, was left out of the traveling party following a leg muscle injury sustained during Real’s LaLiga fixture at Sevilla last month.

Mbappe has been instrumental for Real Madrid this season, scoring 31 LaLiga goals since his high-profile summer move from Paris St. Germain.

Real Madrid enter the tournament as one of the favorites, having dominated European football over the last decade, winning five of the last 10 Champions League titles.

Al-Hilal secured their place in the competition by triumphing in the AFC Champions League in 2021 and will look to capitalize on any weakness in Madrid’s lineup.

Fluminense begin Club World Cup with goalless draw against Dortmund

Fluminense begin Club World Cup with goalless draw against Dortmund
Updated 17 June 2025

Fluminense begin Club World Cup with goalless draw against Dortmund

Fluminense begin Club World Cup with goalless draw against Dortmund
  • Fluminense were firmly in control against the Bundesliga side in the first half
  • Dortmund struggled to get a foothold in the match with no shots on goal in the first half

NEW JERSEY: Fluminense held Borussia Dortmund to a 0-0 draw in their Group F Club World Cup opener in New Jersey on Tuesday, as the Brazilian side were left to rue missed chances at MetLife Stadium.

Fluminense were firmly in control against the Bundesliga side in the first half but Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel produced a handful of superb saves to frustrate the Brazilian team in front of a crowd mostly in their favor.

After Dortmund struggled to get a foothold in the match with no shots on goal in the first half, Kobel did his part with a remarkable double-save midway through the second half and frantic late efforts from both sides went unrewarded.

Flag-waving Fluminense fans arrived early and cheered wildly as their team applied early pressure, with winger Jhon Arias’s shot toward the top corner saved by Kobel in the 17th minute.

Fluminense midfielder Martinelli missed by inches in the 34th minute and Kobel saved another fine attempt from Arias two minutes later.

Kobel kept out Fluminense striker Everaldo’s powerful shot from outside the box in the 69th minute and leapt to block a follow-up effort from midfielder Nonato moments later.

As scorching heat in the United States prompted concerns about welfare across the tournament, players were treated to overcast skies and mild temperatures in front of a modest crowd of 34,736 in the roughly 82,000 capacity NFL stadium.

Dortmund will next play Mamelodi Sundowns in Cincinnati, while Fluminense will return to MetLife to face Ulsan HD on Saturday.


Atmosphere for Chelsea’s Club World Cup opener a bit strange, says Maresca

Atmosphere for Chelsea’s Club World Cup opener a bit strange, says Maresca
Updated 17 June 2025

Atmosphere for Chelsea’s Club World Cup opener a bit strange, says Maresca

Atmosphere for Chelsea’s Club World Cup opener a bit strange, says Maresca
  • “It was a good match, a good performance,” Maresca told reporters
  • “I think the environment was a bit strange. The stadium was almost empty. Not full“

LOS ANGELES: Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca said the atmosphere at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta was “a bit strange” as his side began their Club World Cup campaign with a 2-0 win over Los Angeles FC in front of swathes of empty seats.

The multi-purpose stadium has a 71,000 capacity but Monday’s group stage match, which kicked-off at 3 p.m., attracted little over 22,000 spectators.

Atlanta is over 2,000 miles (3,220 km) away from Los Angeles, where Major League Soccer club LAFC are based.

“It was a good match, a good performance,” Maresca told reporters. “I think the environment was a bit strange. The stadium was almost empty. Not full.”

The Italian expected more fans to be in attendance when they take on Brazilian side Flamengo at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Friday.

“We prepared for this game also thinking that the environment was a bit different,” Maresca said.

“But no doubt that the next one will be a nice one because we know that the Brazilian team, they always bring many, many fans. So we will try to be ready for the next one.”

Maresca was asked about what impact he expects from forward Liam Delap, who joined the club for around 30 million pounds from Ipswich Town ($40.73 million) on a six-year deal.

Nicolas Jackson, Christopher Nkunku and Marc Guiu are already options for the number nine shirt at Chelsea but the 22-year-old Englishman wasted no time in showcasing his potential, setting up Enzo Fernandez for their second goal on Monday.

“I am curious to see how Nico reacts (to Delap),” said Maresca. “He competed with Guiu, who is very young, during the season. They are both good number nines.”

Chelsea are level with Flamengo at the top of the group after the Brazilians beat Esperance de Tunis 2-0.