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Shubman Gill, the ‘Prince’ who is now India’s new cricket king

Shubman Gill, the ‘Prince’ who is now India’s new cricket king
India's captain Shubman Gill celebrates after scoring a century during day four of the second cricket test match between England and India at Edgbaston in Birmingham, Britain, on July 5, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 July 2025

Shubman Gill, the ‘Prince’ who is now India’s new cricket king

Shubman Gill, the ‘Prince’ who is now India’s new cricket king
  • Gill becomes first batter in 148 years of Test history to make scores of 250, 150 in same match
  • He succeeded Rohit Sharma as India captain after the latter announced Test retirement in May

Birmingham, United Kingdom: India captain Shubman Gill continued to give fresh meaning to the phrase “leading from the front” with a stunning innings of 161 in the ongoing second Test against England at Edgbaston on Saturday.

The 25-year-old’s second century of the match took his overall tally for the game to 430 runs, a figure bettered by India great Sachin Tendulkar, Test cricket’s all-time leading run-scorer, just three times in a series, let alone a match, during his celebrated career.

Following his commanding 269 in the first innings, Gill also became the first batsman in 148 years of Test history to make score of 250 and 150 in the same match.

All that came after Gill’s 147 in his first Test as captain, India’s five-wicket loss in last week’s series opener at Headingley.

But beyond the statistics, it is the way Gill has played that has impressed seasoned observers.
In the first innings at Edgbaston, he batted in near flawless-fashion for eight-and-a-half hours, with his offside driving standing comparison with cricket’s most elegant batsmen.

But in the second innings, with quick runs required to set up a declaration, Gill made 161 off just 162 balls, including 13 fours and eight sixes.

India are now well-placed given England, with seven wickets standing, still need a mammoth 536 more runs on Sunday’s final day to achieve what would be a Test record fourth-innings victory chase of 608.

“Gill is outrageous,” England fast-bowling great Stuart Broad, well used to working out world-class batsmen during a career that yielded 604 Test wickets, told Sky Sports after Saturday’s close.

“As a bowler, I’d be looking for technical things so I could expose him, but he’s not shown any obvious signs of dismissal and he’s played stylishly. He’s played with huge responsibility, under big pressure.

“It’s breathtaking... He deserves all the applause he will get.”

Gill was drafted into India’s under-19 side as for their victorious 2018 World Cup campaign, shortly after scoring a century for Punjab in just his second first-class Ranji Trophy match.

He made his one-day international debut in 2019, but it was in his first Test series, in Australia in 2020/21, that he came to the fore, notably with a fluent 91 in India’s thrilling series-clinching win at the Gabba.

His first Test hundred came a year later, in Chattogram. A month later, aged 23, he became the youngest to make an ODI double-century, smashing 208 off 149 balls against New Zealand.

Born in Fazilka, near the border with Pakistan, before moving to Mohali aged eight to be nearer better cricket facilities, the nickname ‘Prince’ has clung to Gill to the extent of sometimes appearing on his bat-stickers.

An opener and then a number three, Gill now occupies the number four position held by childhood hero Virat Kohli, with his 269 surpassing Kohli’s unbeaten 254 against South Africa in Pune in 2019 as the highest score by an India Test captain.

As a boy, Gill wanted to know what Kohli’s scores and achievements were when he was his age.

And when Kohli first saw Gill in the nets in New Zealand in 2019/20, he said he didn’t even have 10 percent of the talent when he was Gill’s age.

Yet last year, when England went 1-0 up in Hyderabad, a second-innings duck saw Gill’s Test average fall below 30 for the first time.

But then India coach Rahul Dravid, himself an outstanding batsman, resisted the temptation to drop Gill, who then made a second-innings century in a 106-run win in Visakhapatnam and another, in Dharamshala, during a series India won 4-1.

Gill succeeded Rohit Sharma as India captain after the latter announced his retirement from Test cricket in May, with ‘King’ Kohli calling time on his Test career just a few days later.

A few months ago, when asked about potential leaders, Rohit said “the boys aren’t ready yet.”

But Gill, who started this series with a modest Test average of under 36, looks as if he might be now.


Saudi Pro League renews media deal with IMG to boost global reach

Saudi Pro League renewed its partnership with IMG. credit: social media
Updated 19 sec ago

Saudi Pro League renews media deal with IMG to boost global reach

Saudi Pro League renewed its partnership with IMG. credit: social media
  • 4-year pact aims to reach younger audience, says marketing firm
  • Broadcasters from Africa, Europe, Americas and Caribbean included

LONDON: The Saudi Pro League has renewed its partnership with sports marketing firm IMG for another four years, as part of a plan to extend the reach of the local game globally.

The extension for the Roshn Saudi League marks a continued collaboration that has elevated the competition since IMG first took over media rights responsibilities in 2023.

Over the past season, matches from the Kingdom’s top-flight football league were broadcast in more than 184 countries across 43 international platforms.

Key broadcast partners secured under the partnership include ESPN (Africa), DAZN (France and DACH region), FOX Sports (US, Mexico, Latin America, Central America, and the Caribbean), Movistar (Spain), Globo (Brazil), and Sportitalia (Italy).

Additionally, the SPL has partnered with French streaming platform ComoTV and popular content creator Zack Nani, as part of a strategy to reach younger and more digitally engaged audiences.

Roland Nikolaou, vice president of football in the Middle East North Africa region for IMG, said the deal reflects the SPL’s rapid growth and increasing international prominence.

“The Saudi Pro League has grown rapidly in recent years and continues to push the boundaries for football in the region,” said Nikolaou in a press release issued on Thursday.

“Through our work together across media rights distribution, as well as production and storytelling, the league has significantly enhanced its reach and global appeal.

“We’re excited to extend this partnership to support the league’s next phase of growth and continue bringing world-class Saudi Pro League football to fans around the world.”

In 2024, IMG also signed a five-year production agreement covering the RSL, King Cup, and Saudi Super Cup. As a part of that deal, IMG has deployed cutting-edge technologies, including advanced remote production capabilities operated from its Stockley Park studios in the UK.

IMG has media rights for leading competitions including CONMEBOL, the Eredivisie, the Arabian Gulf Cup, and Football Australia.

It also produces content for the Premier League, English Football League, Major League Soccer, and CBS Sports’ coverage of the UEFA Champions League and Europa League.

The renewed deal underscores ֱ’s commitment to enhancing its football ecosystem and expanding the international footprint of the Roshn Saudi League — a key component of the Kingdom’s wider Vision 2030 transformation agenda.


American cricket in jeopardy, a victim of poor governance

American cricket in jeopardy, a victim of poor governance
Updated 22 min 12 sec ago

American cricket in jeopardy, a victim of poor governance

American cricket in jeopardy, a victim of poor governance
  • Termination of USAC’s deal with ACE has plunged the game across the country into disarray and an uncertain future

On occasions, this column has expressed its concerns about governance standards in cricket. Sadly, another occasion has arisen. On Aug. 21, following a board meeting, USA Cricket announced the termination of its commercial agreement with American Cricket Enterprises, citing “multiple material breaches of the term sheet signed between the parties in May 2019.” 

The agreement was set for 50 years. It granted ACE the exclusive rights to own and operate Major League Cricket, the top-tier T20 league in the US, along with the Minor Cricket League. The deal also covered commercialization of the national teams and plans to develop cricket infrastructure in the US with dedicated facilities.

The move has plunged cricket in the US into disarray and an uncertain future, with potentially serious and damaging consequences. At stake is not only the future of cricket’s growth, development and investment in the US, the future of USAC and the administration of the sport, but also cricket’s place at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. USAC and ACE have been in open dispute for some months, while USAC’s governing board has been subject to demands for its removal and replacement. The calls have been rejected by a majority of the board.

The US Olympic and Paralympic Committee requires that a properly functioning, compliant and constituted national governing body is in place since, without one, teams cannot take part in the Olympics. At the end of June, the USOPC communicated its desire for USAC board’s membership to be renewed. Administratively, amendments to USAC’s constitution, designed to ensure compliance with USOPC’s strict demands regarding board composition, were approved by USAC’s membership in June 2025. This step in the right direction is now overshadowed by the latest contretemps.

Reaction is also awaited from the International Cricket Council. It is well aware that USAC has been plagued by persistent governance and legal issues for years. At its AGM in July 2024, the ICC issued a suspension notice to USAC, requiring it to undertake comprehensive governance reforms, which included the completion of free and fair elections. These had not been implemented by the time of the ICC’s 2025 AGM on July 20, when, in a move which surprised observers, it extended the period of notice by a further three months. USAC remains on notice, with the ICC reserving the right to take such actions as it deems appropriate. The extension comes hard on the heels of the ICC’s issuance of a six-stage “road map” designed to “restore regulatory compliance and functional integrity” to USAC.

The duration of the extension appears to something of a halfway house. USAC has a number of vital tasks to complete by the end of 2026. A key one is the reconstitution of its board. In part, this is required to fulfill USPOC’s 33 percent athlete representation rule. The overall number of board members will increase from 10 to 12, with four being athletes, elected by US international players. A new Athletes Advisory Council will be created to give athletes a stronger voice and the authority to appoint athlete representatives across USA Cricket committees.

Election of the other board members will be by full members. This has been another source of controversy, with allegations that the voting list had been manipulated in the past to exclude certain people. USAC’s CEO, Johnathan Atkeison, has admitted that improvements need to be made to increase confidence. He also confirmed that there will be a near complete turnover of the board in the December 2025 elections. These will be based on a newly refreshed membership eligibility process, which could lead to a larger and more inclusive voting base.

It was independent director, Venu Pisike, currently serving as chair, who proposed that ACE’s contract should be terminated. He was supported by four allies, who outvoted four other directors. It is understood that the CEO and legal counsel warned of the consequences of such a decision, which may not pass arbitration.

There are also financial pitfalls. First, the ICC suspension notice means that ICC funds remain under its control. Secondly, ACE has provided USA Cricket with an estimated $10 million via quarterly payments. There is no immediate alternative to this income. Thirdly, if ACE challenges the termination in arbitration to protect its investment, legal costs will be beyond USAC’s fragile financial resources.

A lack of cashflow and pressures on capital will affect USAC’s ability to support national teams. The US men’s team has qualified for the 2026 T20 World Cup and needs to prepare. Clearly, the situation is a mess. It begs the question as to why Pisike has adopted his high-risk stance. His tenure as USAC director expires at the end of 2025. The main points of contention for USAC appear to be over ACE’s failures to pay minimum guarantees, build a high-performance center to agreed standards, construct six ICC-standard stadiums by 2024, provide direct funding for national teams and carve out a 5 percent revenue share for USAC. On the surface, these do not appear to be sufficient grounds for USAC’s drastic action.

ACE is in public denial, saying that it “is disappointed that USAC has selfishly chosen, on the eve of the 2025 MiLC season, to wrongfully terminate its agreement. The decision undermines the hard work of players, staff and team personnel, and jeopardizes MiLC, national team activities and preparations for the LA28 Olympics.” The backers of ACE are Sameer Mehta and Vijay Srinivasan, founders of Willow TV; and Satyan Gajwani and Vineet Jain, the principals of The Times Group, publisher of The Times of India. Willow TV is the largest cricket broadcaster in the US and is owned by the Times Internet. These are powerful players, with extreme financial clout. It may be considered a bold move to take on an organization on which the USAC is financially dependent. This does not make sense under normal conditions.

Why would USAC or, at least its chair and his allies, decide that the relationship with ACE cannot continue as before and seek to reset it, at the same time that the ICC and USOPC are seeking to reset the USAC board? The ball has been thrown into ACE’s court. There are nine months until MLC 2026, giving time to renegotiate the agreement, if ACE chooses to take this path. Alternatively, it could choose to litigate, disputing the grounds for termination and putting USAC under severe financial pressure. Already, it has rejected USAC’s claims that it has not met certain contractual obligations.

The situation is, to say the least, puzzling. USAC’s dramatic decision to escalate a contractual dispute can be regarded as either reckless and foolhardy or courageous, but it risks denying Olympic certification, and has surely further damaged its relationship with both the ICC and USOPC, not to mention its own standing and image, domestically and internationally. It did not make sense.

Then, news broke on Aug. 27 that a US congressman has requested the US Department of Justice to investigate ACE on the basis of anti-trust and immigration practices. If these were known to USAC and the ICC it would explain the former’s preparedness to take extreme risk and the latter’s more circumspect approach. What appeared to be an internal conflict is now a crisis, with cricket’s future in the US now in jeopardy, a victim of poor governance.


LIV Golf adds a summer 2026 event in New Orleans with Louisiana putting up $7.2 million

LIV Golf adds a summer 2026 event in New Orleans with Louisiana putting up $7.2 million
Updated 28 August 2025

LIV Golf adds a summer 2026 event in New Orleans with Louisiana putting up $7.2 million

LIV Golf adds a summer 2026 event in New Orleans with Louisiana putting up $7.2 million
  • Gov. Jeff Landry: What an unbelievable opportunity to announce this on the 20th-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
  • LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil declined to get into specifics about how the $5 million Louisiana is paying to host an event compares to the amount of public funding for events held elsewhere

NEW ORLEANS: The LIV Golf League has added a summer tournament in New Orleans for 2026 after Louisiana agreed to pay the Saudi-backed tour $5 million and spend an additional $2.2 million on improvements to the Bayou Oaks course in City Park.

“What an unbelievable opportunity to announce this on the 20th-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina,” Gov. Jeff Landry said at an announcement alongside LIV Golf officials and LIV player Bubba Watson.

New Orleans already has a long-running PGA Tour stop with the Zurich Classic at TPC Louisiana. Watson — who grew up about three hours away in Pensacola, Florida — won the Zurich in 2011 and hailed his opportunity to play professionally in New Orleans again.

“I’m from the Gulf Coast and this is part my home,” Watson said, drawing laughs when he joked about attending many New Orleans Pelicans games wanting to see often-injured NBA star Zion Williamson play. “I still hope for that day.”

Watson sounded unconcerned about the tournament dates in late June, when heat adviseries and thunderstorms are common. June also falls within hurricane season, albeit closer to the beginning. The Zurich usually takes place in April.

“This is the first year of it, so the date can always be changed if it does come here multiple years,” Watson said. “It’s going to be hot in a lot of places in the summer. ... I’ve grown up in the South; I know about heat. We just prepare for it.”

This season, a LIV Golf tournament was held in Dallas in late June, when daytime temperatures hovered around 90 degrees.

“We’re going to try it out and then we’ll see,” Landry said. “Whether we’ve got to adjust the dates after this go-around, we’ll see. But my objective is to have this be LIV’s home.”

Louisiana this year provided economic development funding of about $650,000 for marketing and operations to the Zurich Classic. TPC Louisiana also periodically receives state subsidies for course and facility improvements.

LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil declined to get into specifics about how the $5 million Louisiana is paying to host an event compares to the amount of public funding for events held elsewhere.

“All the markets are unique,” O’Neil said. “They all come with their unique challenges and opportunities.”

Organizers said the event is expected to add about $40 million in economic activity to the local economy.

Landry said the New Orleans agreement “gives us an opportunity to invest” in the course and the over-170-year-old, 1,300-acre City Park — of the largest urban parks in the United States.

“This is a public piece of property,” Landry said. “This area needs revitalization.”

Landry doesn’t play golf and said he generally has not attended professional tournaments, in part because fans often are expected to be quiet. LIV encourages a livelier fan experience at most tournaments than its rival PGA Tour.

“That’s just not me,” Landry said. “That’s why I love LIV Golf. No ‘quiet’ signs. It’s a party.”

Landry dismissed concerns about whether New Orleans, which has a metro-area population of just more than 1 million and few corporate headquarters, could adequately support both a PGA Tour and LIV Golf event.

“I don’t think those events compete against each other,” Landry said. “This is an opportunity to bring a different group of people on another course.”


Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup

Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup
Updated 28 August 2025

Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup

Benfica edge past Mourinho’s Fenerbahce to complete 36-team Champions League lineup
  • Club Brugge, Copenhagen and Qarabag of Azerbaijan also advanced to complete the 36-team lineup for the league phase, with the draw being made Thursday
  • The 71st edition of the European Cup or Champions League will include 14 different former champions with a combined 50 titles, including holders Paris Saint-Germain

MONACO: Jose Mourinho and Fenerbahce fell short of returning to the Champions League on Wednesday, losing 1-0 at Benfica in the qualifying playoffs on Wednesday.

Benfica — the first club Mourinho coached — had two goals disallowed on video review in the first half before its Turkish forward Kerem Akturkoglu scored with a rising shot in the 35th minute for the only goal over the two legs.

Club Brugge, Copenhagen and Qarabag of Azerbaijan also advanced to complete the 36-team lineup for the league phase, with the draw being made Thursday.

Mourinho is a two-time Champions League winner but has not coached in the main stage of the marquee competition for six seasons. Fenerbahce’s absence now stretches to 17 seasons.

Brugge routed Rangers 6-0 for an aggregate score of 9-1. The Belgian side already had an early lead before Rangers defender Max Aarons was sent off in the eighth minute.

Qarabag are back in the Champions League eight years after their debut campaign, winning 5-4 on aggregate over Ferencvaros despite a 3-2 loss in Baku on Wednesday.

Copenhagen won 2-0 at home to Basel to advance 3-1 on aggregate.

The draw ceremony starts 6 p.m. local time (1600 GMT) Thursday at a beachside concert hall and conference venue in Monaco.

Who are in the Champions League draw?

A record six teams from England are in the competition this year. More than half — 19 in total — are from the four highest-ranked countries: England, Italy, Spain and Germany.

Newcomers in the main phase are Bodo/Glimt of Norway, Kairat Almaty of Kazakhstan, Pafos of Cyprus and Union Saint-Gilloise of Belgium.

The Champions League will go further north than ever before, with Bodo located inside the Arctic Circle, and further east, to Almaty, near Kazakhstan’s border with China. Pafos, the Russian-owned champion of Cyprus, was created just 11 years ago in a merger of two clubs.

Athletic Bilbao head the teams returning after a long absence. The emblematic team from Spain’s Basque region last played in the 2014-15 group stage.

Olympiakos missed four editions and Villarreal return after losing in the semifinals to Liverpool in 2022.

There is no team from Ukraine for the first time in 20 years. In that period, Shakhtar Donetsk featured 17 times and Dynamo Kyiv 10. Russian teams are banned from all European competitions for the fourth straight season since the full military invasion of Ukraine.

Former winners

The 71st edition of the European Cup or Champions League will include 14 different former champions with a combined 50 titles, including holders Paris Saint-Germain.

Now that five-time winning coach Carlo Ancelotti left Real Madrid to coach Brazil, Pep Guardiola is the leading coach in this edition. Guardiola has won three Champions League titles, with Barcelona in 2009 and 2011 and his current team Manchester City in 2023.

The other previous title-winning coaches are Luis Enrique, with Barcelona in 2015 and PSG last season, and Barcelona’s Hansi Flick, who won with Bayern Munich in 2020.

Schedule and format

This is the second season of the league phase format with 36 teams playing eight different opponents and ranked in a single-standings table.

The weighted schedule gives each team two opponents drawn from each of the four seeding pots Thursday in Monaco. Teams are seeded based on their ranking over five seasons of results in UEFA competitions.

Games start on Sept. 16 and the final matchday is Jan. 28. Bodo/Glimt should play one home game in January on its heated artificial turf in the Norwegian offseason.

The top eight teams in the final standings advance to the round of 16 in March. Teams ranked ninth to 24th go to the round of two-legged knockout playoffs in February.

The final at the Puskas Arena in Budapest is on May 30. Just 12 days later the World Cup starts in Mexico City.

Prize money

UEFA has allocated €2.47 billion ($2.88 billion) in prize money from total commercial revenue of €4.4 billion ($5.1 billion) across all its European club competitions this season.

The lowest-ranked team, Kairat, are guaranteed at least €20 million ($23 million) from UEFA. High-ranked teams Real Madrid and PSG will get at least €60 million ($69 million). Teams earn more for each win and for advancing to the knockout rounds.

The title winner should receive about €150 million ($175 million) in prize money.


Afghanistan seen as favorites in T20 tri-series with Pakistan, UAE starting this week

Afghanistan seen as favorites in T20 tri-series with Pakistan, UAE starting this week
Updated 28 August 2025

Afghanistan seen as favorites in T20 tri-series with Pakistan, UAE starting this week

Afghanistan seen as favorites in T20 tri-series with Pakistan, UAE starting this week
  • Rashid Khan’s spin-heavy squad suited to Sharjah’s slow pitches
  • Pakistan experimenting with new lineup under coach Mike Hesson

It’s time for Rashid Khan and his Afghanistan lineup to be favorites in a Twenty20 international cricket tournament.

Afghanistan has a formidable, spin-heavy squad for the tri-series that starts Friday and also features Pakistan and the host United Arab Emirates. It’s a tune-up for next month’s Asian Cup, which is also being staged in the UAE.

Last year Afghanistan reached the T20 World Cup semifinals before losing to South Africa, a run to the last four that underlined its strength in the shortest format of international cricket.

Seven T20 games over the next 10 days at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium will involve the teams competing against each other twice before the top two qualify for the Sept. 7 final.

The slow pitches of Sharjah Cricket Stadium are unlikely to produce any big scores — the 200-run mark has been crossed only four times in 41 T20 internationals at the 16,000-capacity stadium.
Afghanistan’s advantage

The slow nature of the pitches has encouraged Afghanistan to pack its squad with five spinners, including the uncapped AM Ghazanfar. Rashid Khan and mystery spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman have conceded fewer than six runs per over in a combined 23 T20s at Sharjah, while picking up 43 wickets.

Experienced allrounder Mohammad Nabi, who also bowls offspin, is rich with experience from playing in 25 T20s for Afghanistan at Sharjah, where he’s taken 16 wickets at an impressive economy rate of 6.49.

Left-arm spinner Noor Ahmad had some impressive performances in IPL this season while representing Chennai Super Kings. The spin bowling attack is expected to pose some serious challenges to the rival batters.
Pakistan’s prospects

Pakistan has its spin bases covered. Specialist spinners Abrar Ahmed and Sufiyan Muqeem are backed up by off-spinners Saim Ayub and captain Salman Ali Agha and left-armer Mohammad Nawaz. They’re all capable of bowling a full quota of four overs in a T20 game, if the conditions favors slow bowling.

Pakistan’s new limited-overs coach Mike Hesson has yet again ignored experienced veterans Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan as he searches for batters with better strike-rates upfront.

Babar and Rizwan haven’t played a T20 international since December. Pakistan has instead given consistent chances to Sahibzada Farhan, Mohammad Haris and Saim Ayub to look out for quick runs in the batting powerplay as it builds a team for next year’s T20 World Cup.

Hesson wanted to see Babar not only improve his batting against spinners but also wanted him to score at a faster rate to regain his place in the T20 squad.

Pakistan has had mixed results over the last few months since Hesson was appointed coach. It started with Pakistan routing Bangladesh 3-0 at home before Bangladesh rallied to beat Pakistan 2-1 in the return series in Dhaka. Pakistan then won 2-1 against West Indies in Florida as Hesson experimented with batting and bowling combinations.

UAE aims for an upset

Uncapped left-handed batter Harshit Kaushik is among the four changes UAE has made after it lost to the hosts at the Pearl of Africa Cup in Uganda. Leg-spin allrounder Mohammad Farooq, who has nine wickets in 8 T20s, and fast bowlers Junaid Siddique and Mohammad Jawadullah are the others who’ve returned to the UAE squad.

Coach Lalchand Rajput believes that after winning a T20 series against Bangladesh at home in May, the UAE team has the ability to beat any other test playing nation in the shortest format.