Ramón Diaz, após derrota do Vasco: 'Complicado que quem decida no VAR seja uma mulher'

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da 888: O técnico do Vasco, Ramón Diaz, fez comentário machista ao reclamar da arbitragem após a derrota do Vasco para o Bragantino, por 2 a 1, nesta quarta-feira, fora de casa, pela segunda rodada do Brasileirão. O técnico argentino disse que é “complicado que quem decida no VAR seja uma mulher”, em referência à partida do último domingo, contra o Grêmio.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasFora de CampoRizek dispara contra declaração machista de Ramón Díaz: ‘Foi a única que teve algum bom senso’Fora de Campo17/04/2024VascoRamón Diaz, após derrota do Vasco: ‘Complicado que quem decida no VAR seja uma mulher’Vasco17/04/2024Fora de CampoEx-jogador analisa derrota do Vasco e crava: ‘Resultado mais justo seria o empate’Fora de Campo17/04/2024

da supremo: ➡️ Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Com respeito aos árbitros, não podemos falar muito. Na última partida, o VAR foi uma senhorita, uma mulher, e foi pênalti. Me parece complicado que no VAR quem tenha que decidir seja uma mulher. Porque o futebol é tão dinâmico, com ações tão rápidas. Hoje não sei se o árbitro também não viu o lance, que me pareceu pênalti. O Vasco está crescendo, competimos


disse Ramón Díaz.

No lance reclamado por Ramón, Galdames teria sofrido pênalti do zagueiro Rodrigo Ely, do Grêmio. A responsável pelo VAR na partida, Daiane Muniz, inicialmente recomendou a marcação da falta, mas voltou atrás.

TÉCNICO E VASCO SE DESCULPAM
Antes de deixar o estádio, o treinador reuniu os jornalistas para se retratar. O argentino afirmou que foi mal interpretado.

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– Quero pedir desculpas, mas me pareceu que o que quis dizer é que uma só pessoa não pode decidir e ter uma decisão tão importante para o futebol como é o VAR. Se interpretaram mal, peço desculpas, mas não foi minha intenção – corrigiu.

Horas depois, foi a vez do Vasco se manifestar. O clube lamentou a declaração e garantiu que reforçará “medidas e diretrizes educativas”.

🎙️ MAIS RESPOSTAS DE RAMÓN DÍAZ:

ANÁLISE DO JOGO
– O primeiro gol foi um gol meio de sorte deles, não com muita criação, mas um gol meio raro, meio difícil. Mas depois o Vasco reagiu, tivemos uma atitude incrível. Nós fomos buscar, pressionamos, atacamos bem, criamos situações. Inclusive chegamos ao gol com jogada muito boa, boa criação. Eu acho que estamos analisando bem que o Vasco vai crescer. Está crescendo, está crescendo em sua forma, em seu estilo. Nós estamos felizes porque nós competimos muito bem.

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– No segundo gol deles, recuamos e não pressionamos. Ele teve muita facilidade para finalizar. Se tivéssemos feito Temos coisas que temos que melhorar. E em relação à arbitragem, já falei, é difícil. Porque o VAR toma decisões. Na última rodada, foram muitos erros de arbitragem. Isso tem que melhorar.

TRANQUILIDADE DA EQUIPE
– Falta a equipe jogar mais tranquila, a nossa equipe deve jogar mais tranquila, mais relaxada, jogar competindo mais. Temos muito caminho pela frente, mas temos que conseguir pontos. Não gosto de perder, gosto de conseguir os resultados. Principalmente na largada do campeonato. Temos que conseguir os resultados do início.

JOVENS DA BASE
– Agora incorporamos alguns jovens e com certeza vai ajudar muito. Estamos trabalhando com muitos jovens e o time tem a possibilidade também de provar alguns jogadores. Rayan, Adson, todos os garotos jovens que estão fazendo sua experiência e vêm bem também para o futuro. Com certeza estou muito feliz porque, por mais que seja numa derrota, se analisarmos bem os dois gols, fomos bastante azarados. Principalmente no segundo gol, Maicon pega na cabeça, se desvia e vai para o gol. Não é que eles tenham criado situações para ganhar e acho que era o momento melhor do Vasco no jogo.

RAYAN
– Nós vimos que íamos ter vantagem e tínhamos que ser mais profundos tanto na direita quanto na esquerda. O Lucas Piton estava muito bem, o Paulo Henrique também, cruzamos muito hoje, tínhamos muitas situações. E pedi que ele (Rayan) ficasse de ponta porque precisávamos, na recuperação que tínhamos, ser profundo e chegar ao gol. Por isso os jogadores ficaram felizes, nós também. A lástima foi no final. No final, depois do gol, o Vasco tinha que seguir insistindo, buscar o gol, não retroceder tanto, ter um pouco mais de força no meio. Todas essas coisas nós vamos corrigir.

JOÃO VICTOR
– Tomou golpe forte no joelho e era momento em que não poderíamos arriscar. Temos que ter o jogador com 100%, com tudo, para que possamos seguir no jogo. Mas está bem.

HUGO MOURA
– É um jogador de meio de campo. Tivemos a lesão de Paulinho e de Jair. Necessitamos reforçar ali no meio. Estamos felizes porque ele veio e seguramente nos vai ajudar. Ele vai ter que se adaptar ao nosso estilo, à nossa forma de trabalho. Ele é um jogador de características que nós gostamos. Então, nos vamos ajudar para que ele renda e faça um bom campeonato.

Tudo sobre

Ramón DíazVasco

Prithvi Shaw leaves Mumbai ahead of next domestic season

Shaw was dropped from the Ranji Trophy side last year on grounds of poor fitness and lack of discipline

Edited PTI copy23-Jun-2025

Prithvi Shaw last played for Mumbai in December 2024•PTI

Prithvi Shaw has parted ways with Mumbai after getting a no-objection certificate from the state association to play for another team in the next domestic season.”At this juncture in my career, I have been presented with a promising opportunity to play professional cricket under another State Association, which I believe will further contribute to my growth and development as a cricketer,” Shaw said in his letter to the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA). “In light of this, I kindly request you to issue me a no-objection certificate (NOC) that will enable me to officially represent the new state association in the upcoming domestic season.”I would like to take this opportunity to sincerely thank the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) for the valuable opportunities and unwavering support extended to me during my time representing the association. It has truly been an honor and a privilege to be part of the MCA set-up, and I am deeply grateful for the exposure and experience I have gained here.”Related

Prithvi Shaw joins Maharashtra ahead of 2025-26 domestic season

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MCA secretary Abhay Hadap confirmed the board’s decision to grant Shaw the NOC.Shaw, 25, was dropped from the Mumbai Ranji Trophy side last year due to poor fitness and lack of discipline. He last played for Mumbai in the final of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy against Madhya Pradesh on December 14, 2024, which his side won by five wickets.His fitness and discipline issues, however, have made more headlines than his performances in recent months and Shaw was unsold in the IPL 2025 mega auction too.”He needs to get his work ethics right, and if he does that, the sky is the limit for him,” Mumbai captain Shreyas Iyer had told reporters in Bengaluru after that Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy final last year. “We can’t babysit anyone, right? Every professional who is playing at this level, they need to know what they should be doing. And he has also done it in the past; it’s not that he hasn’t. He has to focus, he has to sit back, put a thinking cap on, and then figure out himself. He will get the answer by himself.”

أسامة فيصل: رئيس الزمالك هددني إذا رفضت الرحيل.. ولم أحصل على حقي

تحدث أسامة فيصل لاعب الزمالك السابق والبنك الأهلي الحالي، عن كواليس رحيله عن القلعة البيضاء، مشيراً إلى أن حسين لبيب رئيس النادي قام بتهديده في حالة عدم رحيله.

وقال أسامة فيصل في تصريحات تليفزيونية عبر قناة “أون تايم سبورتس” عن شعوره بالظلم لرحيله عن الزمالك: “لا أحب كلمة اتظلمت ولكن لم أحصل على حقي”.

وتابع: “عندما كان الزمالك يريد خروجي للإعارة ذهبت لحسين لبيب قلت له لا أريد الخروج من النادي، قال لي لو لم تذهب لنادي كذا ستنزل للناشئين مرة أخرى”.

طالع أيضاً.. أحمد أبو مسلم: مودرن سبورت ولد كبيرا.. واستغلينا اندفاع الزمالك

وأتم: “ذهبت للبنك الأهلي ولم أتوقع أنهم محترمون جدًا وشعرت أنني كنت متواجدًا في الزمالك، ووقفوا بجانبي بسبب كثرة الإصابات”.

The view from the bottom

The Affiliates have to work the hardest, for the least amount of money, to keep the game alive in their countries. Their stories are also the most heartwarming

Sharda Ugra01-Aug-2011At the ICC’s annual conference in Hong Kong in June, the skies were always grey and rumours rumbled on. Cold vibes seeped out through closed doors, and plenty of gritted teeth were seen after changes in rules and formats. But one afternoon there came a story that floated up and above past everything – the soaring glass frontage of the W hotel, the driving rain outside over Kowloon, the bickering, the egos and power struggles, past jadedness and cynicism.It came from a patch of land in a suburb called Kicukiro on the outskirts of Kigali, the capital of Rwanda.Seventeen years ago the Ecole Technique Officielle (ETO) was a place of refuge during Rwanda’s 100 days of genocide in 1994. For a few months the ETO, the country’s lone technical college, sheltered thousands, watched over by UN peacekeeping soldiers. Until the day the Belgian peacekeepers pulled out after 10 of their own were killed in Kigali. A militia mob, wielding swords, clubs and machetes, stormed the campus. More than 5000 people gathered in the ETO compound were killed, either on the premises or after being moved to a neighbouring location.Kicukiro joined a long list of places – Jalianwala Bagh, My Lai, Tiananmen Square, Srebrenica – whose names carry the smell of death. Except now, the ETO has been renamed the College of Technology; one part of its killing fields has been cleaned, swept, smoothed and turned into a cricket ground. It is the only one in Rwanda, given to Rwanda Cricket as its headquarters. Play began there in 2002 and in January this year, there was much to celebrate, when Rwanda won its first trophy, the Africa Premier League T20 tournament held in Ghana.Rwanda Cricket has just marked the tenth year and it is one of the ICC’s 59 Affiliate Members, countries on the bottom of cricket’s food chain. Their resources and manpower are limited, their circumstances far from ideal. But like the best stories about cricket everywhere, they stir the heart.The ICC’s Affiliates are diverse and distant nations where cricket is played, pushed and promoted with evangelical enthusiasm. They are all clubbed together well behind the teams the elite of the game consider the “minnows”, who themselves are only worthy of sniggering and debate after their bad days at a World Cup.To the Affiliates, Ireland, Kenya, UAE, Namibia, Scotland, Canada are at dizzy heights in cricket’s hierarchy, with greater powers in the ICC (one vote per nation, as against five Affiliate nations mustering a single vote) and greater access to the ICC’s cash. The Affiliates are far removed from the multi-million dollar ecosystem but understand the worth of every dollar; they know it is the commercial ecosystem that sustains the ICC’s development programmes that reach them.It is worth realising that the smallest teams can be reminders of the game’s simplest beauties, as well as of the beautiful simplicity of what may seem a complicated pursuit.The story about Rwanda came from Dipankar Sengupta, a representative of Africa’s 13 Affiliate nations and the CEO of the Mozambique Cricket Association. Four other such representatives attend the ICC’s annual conferences on behalf of the other zones – Europe, South America, Asia and East Asia-Pacific (EAP).The Affiliates must promote the game in what are cricket’s new territories: usually countries without traditions belonging to a British colonial past. Their representatives must fight the good fight: sell a culturally alien sport that is far from simple to teach, with few coaches, fewer grounds, and participants who need to be kept interested and regularly egged on and rewarded.What matters most are the intent and capabilities of the hands that rest on the tiller. Many are British and South Asian expatriates, while on the Pacific rim, Polynesians, who took to cricket in either neighbouring New Zealand or in Australia, have been drawn to spreading their gospel.East Asia-Pacific Affiliate representative, the Samoan Sebastian Kohlhase, played club cricket in New Zealand and represented Auckland and Northern Districts in the 1960s. His own country plays an open-ended 20-a-side-social sport called Kirikiti, a derivative of the sport missionaries tried to teach the islanders. The formal version was seen as too costly and took too long. Men like Kohlhase are in effect starting over.The Andes mountains provide a backdrop for a cricket match•International Cricket CouncilFor the Affiliates genuinely trying to take cricket across mystified lands, the involvement of the local populations is vital to give cricket breathing space beyond expatriate cliques. Of the 800 players registered in Oman’s national league, says Asia representative Pankaj Khimji, there are 100 ethnic players. Club teams are required to have at least one Omani player in the playing XI (at least three per squad), who must not bat lower than No. 5 in the side. Clubs are required by regulation to go out into the local population to open up the sport and spread it as widely as they can.One hundred years ago British missionaries and soldiers taught the game to various tracts of their Empire. It is why cricket can still be sighted on the island of Corfu, just off Greece. It is how the game began in South Asia. It is the template the ICC is now using to push the mantra of genuine globalisation. It moves beyond merely handing out ODI and Twenty20 status: globalisation in cricket, men like Sengupta and Kolhase will say, is very hard but satisfying work. It begins, they know, with children. And Twenty20, which at the Affiliate level is where everything begins.Kohlhase says playing numbers in Samoa have tripled over the last year; in the EAP region South Korea had their first international victory when they beat Indonesia; the Philippines team reached the final at the East Asia-Pacific Division regional competition. The fastest-growing cricket-playing population in pure numbers in EAP, is Indonesia’s, approximately 186,000, he says. Cricket in Jakarta may sound like fiction, but it is happening.In Samoa the primary schools development project involves boys and girls, and Kohlhase’s mission is to seek out not the top athletes in the 12-14 age group, but those who, he says, “will stick with cricket”. Cricket cannot compete with rugby in Polynesia, he says, but can expand the population of its loyal supporters. Samoans, he says, can watch international cricket on TV, with the government giving the country’s majority farming population free ESPN. His eyes sparkling, Kolhase says, “A Samoan [Ross Taylor] is now captain of New Zealand – we did good development work,” and laughs.The region’s biggest drawback is the absence of turf wickets, a mandatory requirement to move up to Associate status. Cricket in the EAP is played mostly on matting. “We cannot afford turf, it costs more to put a turf pitch than the whole development programme,” Kohlhase says. The EAP’s struggle is: “We can develop, but we can’t sustain.”What keeps the work meaningful, he says, is the camaraderie he sees cricket generate among those who compete.Surely there’s sledging? Indonesians having a go at Filipinos or Samoans at Cook Islanders? Not much, he says, but the ripple effect of television can be felt. Besides, he laughs, “All wicketkeepers sledge, always, everywhere.”

The Affiliates must promote the game in countries without traditions belonging to a British colonial past. Their representatives must fight the good fight: sell a culturally alien sport that is far from simple to teach, with few coaches, fewer grounds, and participants who need to be kept interested and regularly egged on and rewarded

In Africa cricket is being pushed in schools, much like schools in the developing world push education itself. Some of the 13 African Affiliates send cricket officials to government schools to invite Under-13 kids into training. They offer three extras other sports do not: bus fare to the training ground, free medicines in case of illness or injury, and an egg sandwich every day after training. In countries where income is less than US$2 a day, that’s enough for parents to pack kids off to cricket. As they progress. the training programme holds out greater incentives: shoes and t-shirts.Sengupta’s experience with Mozambique has made him a passionate and outspoken advocate for the Affiliates. Africa’s stories are some of the game’s most moving: Sierra Leone’s team in the 2006 World Cricket League African regional competition held in South Africa featured two rebel fighters from its bloody 11-year civil war. South African officials understood the situation, ensured that the boys were issued visas and could travel across borders to play their cricket. They still do and their identities are still secret.Morocco scouts its cricketers from those athletes who fall through the gaps of the country’s elite middle-distance running cadres. Mozambique began its cricket with expats asking for backing from the ministry of education in exchange for supplying equipment and organisation. When the programme began, a number of bats and stumps were turned into firewood before it was decided that the playing equipment had better be left in the school.Eight of the 13 African affiliates have access to cricket on community television, on video, or seen live. When children see big men in yellow, blue, red, green, play the game they play, cheered on by thousands, it widens their eyes and their worlds, and can lift their ambitions.That is why, Sengupta says, he pushed for Mozambique’s U-15s to go to their first international event in Namibia in 2005, even though his colleagues worried about their results. Sengupta believed the experience itself would be the result. Fifteen boys, accompanied by two teachers, pulled on Mozambique’s national colours, and for the first time in their lives travelled by air, lived in swanky hotels and played the game they had just started learning.They won one of 11 matches, but when they returned, Sengupta says, they walked in their neighbourhoods like kings. “We didn’t look back from that day. Those boys are our best advertisements.” The U-15s have grown up into senior cricketers now, and their parents still drop by to invite the Mozambique cricket people to family celebrations and festivals.Central to the Affiliates’ health, apart from the energy and drive of men like Sengupta and Kohlhase is the ICC’s funding. Direct cash grants between $15,000 and $70,000 are available every year. How much is directly dependant on performance and results.Should an Affiliate nation, like Afghanistan did a year ago, enjoy a breakthrough performance, they are given High Performance Programme Status and access to additional funding of between $350,000 and $650,000.The ICC’s development programme also involves central and regional support to Affiliates, helping them conduct tournaments, education courses for coaches and administrators, and support of equipment and facilities.In Europe, while there are charming French and German translations of cricket terms, (Frenchmen who may play the sport call the googly a Bosanquet, and the German for lbw is a very logical “” or “standing in front” and an over is “wechsel” or “change”), the Affiliates’ struggles go beyond vocabulary.In Finland, laughs Affiliates representative Andrew Armitage, cricket is a curiosity. The natives ask: how could it possibly be a sport – “they never sweat”. Over 50% of Finland’s cricketers, says Armitage, are local Finns; the other half belong to the expatriate communities of 18 countries that play in Finland’s 20-club 40-over two-division tournament and an eight-team Twenty20 tournament. The country’s first permanent cricket ground, with grass outfield and artificial turf wicket, has just been set up in Kerava.Brazil women play a Twenty20 against Argentina•International Cricket CouncilThe Affiliates ought to inspire a David Attenborough-style documentary, with the narrator travelling to their outposts, and saying ever so often, “And even here…” slight pause, “there is cricket.”That holds for Brazil, in its own version, the Taco or the Lato or Betes – a street sport that has set of three short stumps marked with a circle around them. The players stand facing each other at a distance of 15 yards. The bowling is underarm, and batsmen must tap their bats as they cross each other. It is believed that the game is a leftover from the English, who built the railway lines or owned mines in Brazil.The Americas Affiliate representative, Matt Featherstone, from the almost antithetical-sounding Cricket Brazil (Associacao Brasileira de Cricket), says the major difficulty in the region is “not a lack of enthusiasm for cricket but rather, staffing”. Finding and training personnel who can teach cricket, and finding those from the local population, as opposed to expatriates, who when they up and leave, “the whole system breaks down in that area”. At the moment there are two native Brazilians who can teach cricket, a man and a woman. The player numbers, though, have risen. As late as 2006, there were only two native Brazilians in the national squad; today it is 11 out of 14. In an international South American women’s affiliate tournament, no player was an expat.”Twenty20 has been great for us – people see what it looks like on television through videos we show them, and they like the razzmatazz, the carnival-style supporters.” The pitches in Brazil are either of coconut matting or artificial astro-turf surfaces. There are two turf wickets in the country. Cricket Brazil aims to fill in the gaps in school sport where children usually have only two options: football or volleyball. Six hundred Brazilian children between the ages of 7 and 14 are being exposed to cricket. Brazil Cricket has even roped in a sponsor, an Indian sugar company called Renuka.The next step, according to Featherstone, is the push for beach cricket to follow on from a social six-a-side event that takes place at the Vina Del Mar in Chile every year. What about international teams coming in for some pre-season training in Peru? After all, Featherstone has just said there’s a turf wicket in Lima and “it doesn’t rain in Peru”. He laughs at the very idea.At the ICC conference, officials from Australia, South Africa, India, England met and talked in tight, closed groups. As appreciative and grateful as he was to the ICC for its support to the Affiliates, Featherstone observed, “They live in one world and we live in another one.”The Affiliates’ world is far from glamorous or lucrative. For anyone involved in cricket, however, it is a place of discovery, humility, and of the pure happiness of possibility.

Após 50 anos, Cruzeiro pode voltar a ter um treinador argentino

MatériaMais Notícias

da dobrowin: Com os ex-jogadores argentinos Gabriel Milito e Fernando Gago como opções para comandar o Cruzeiro em 2024, o clube poderá ter primeira vez em mais de 50 anos um treinador da Argentina.

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da heads bet: Na terça-feira (12), segundo o “ge”, Fernando Gago recebeu uma proposta da Raposa. O último e único treinador da Argentina a comandar a equipe foi Filpo Núñez.

➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Filpo treinou o Cruzeiro nos anos de 1955 e 1970. Na década de 50, o argentino comandou a equipe por apenas uma partida, sendo derrotado pelo maior rival, o Atlético-MG, por 2 a 1.

➡️Cruzeiro busca contratar técnico argentino para comandar equipe em 2024; Milito e Gago são os alvos

A segunda passagem, nos anos 70, foi mais longa, porém não vitoriosa. Filpo comandou a equipe por nove jogos e conseguiu apenas duas vitórias, além de quatro empates e três derrotas.

Agora, após 53 anos, o Cruzeiro poderá contar com um técnico argentino em campo. Fernando Gago estreou como treinador em 2021, no Aldosivi, da Argentina. Desde então, Gago esteve no Racing por 116 jogos, com 55 vitórias, 34 empates e 27 derrotas.

A new low for Sri Lanka

Stats highlights from Sri Lanka’s remarkable collapse on the final day of the first Test

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan30-May-2011In an extraordinary finish to a rain-affected game, England pulled off an innings victory when it seemed that a draw was a foregone conclusion. When Sri Lanka started their second innings trailing England by 96 runs, only 51 overs were left in the game. Incredibly, they didn’t even survive half that many, losing six wickets for 19 at one stage to slump to an utterly demoralising defeat. The stats highlights from their innings won’t make pleasant reading for their fans.

  • Sri Lanka faced only 24.4 overs in their second innings and were bowled out for 82 to lose by an innings and 14 runs. It is the lowest number of deliveries faced by Sri Lanka in a completed innings in Tests. Their previous lowest was 24.5 overs against Pakistan in 2006, when they were bowled out 73.
  • The 24.4 overs is also the least number of overs in which England have bowled out any team since they bowled India out for 42 in 17 overs at Lord’s in 1974. It’s also 14th in the overall list of least deliveries faced by a team which has been bowled out in their second innings.
  • Sri Lanka’s total is their fourth-lowest score in Tests and their ninth score below 100. It is also their second-lowest score against England, after the 81 in Colombo in 2001. Their lowest score in Tests is 71 against Pakistan in 1994.
  • The innings defeat is Sri Lanka’s 28th in Tests, their 22nd overseas, and only their second against England. The previous innings defeat against England came in 2002 when they lost by an innings and 111 runs in Birmingham.
  • Sri Lanka’s innings had four ducks, which is one short of their record. Only twice have they had more in an innings: against India in Chandigarh in 1990 and against New Zealand in Wellington in 2006-07.
  • This became only the fourth instance of Sri Lanka losing after scoring 400 or more runs in the first innings. The last such instance came against India at Colombo SSC in 2010 when they lost after scoring 425.
  • For the first time, three English batsmen scored a century in a single innings in a Test against Sri Lanka. Their overall record is four, against Australia at Nottingham in 1938 and against West Indies at Lord’s in 2007.
  • Graeme Swann’s 4 for 16 is his best bowling against Sri Lanka in Tests, surpassing his 3 for 78 in the first innings. It is also the sixth-best performance by an English spinner against Sri Lanka.

Devine takes break from cricket, set to miss WPL 2025 for RCB

New Zealand captain and allrounder Sophie Devine is set to miss the WPL 2025, where she is part of Royal Challengers Bengaluru, to “prioritise her well-being” after receiving professional advice. She will also miss the remainder of the ongoing domestic season and return home.An NZC release also said the decision on Devine’s playing future “will be announced in due course”, adding that the NZC, Cricket Wellington, and RCB supported her decision to take a break. The RCB are yet to name a replacement.Devine has been playing the ongoing Super Smash for Wellington, where she has scored 38 runs and taken eight wickets in five games. She last played on Friday against Canterbury in Christchurch, picking up a match-winning 5 for 13.Related

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“Player well-being is paramount to us – it takes precedence over everything else,” Liz Green, NZC’s head of women’s high performance development, said. “Sophie’s had excellent support from the New Zealand Cricket Players Association and from our own high performance unit staff, and everyone agrees this is the best option available.”The most important thing for NZC is that Sophie has a decent break, receives good support and care, and is fit and well before returning to professional cricket”.Since winning the T20 World Cup with New Zealand in October 2024, Devine has been part of the ODIs against India, played in the WBBL for Perth Scorchers, and also played the ODI series against Australia in late December.Devine, part of RCB’s title-winning campaign in 2024, was retained ahead of the 2025 auction. In the 2024 season, she scored 136 runs and took six wickets in ten matches. RCB are set to kick off the 2025 season on February 15 against Gujarat Giants at the newly built BCA stadium in Vadodara.

Men's state squads for 2020-21 Australia domestic season

After confirmation of the early rounds of the Sheffield Shield, a reminder of each states’ list

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Sep-2020With confirmation of the fixture list for the first four rounds of the Sheffield Shield, here is a reminder of the men’s state squads for the 2020-21 season*= CA state contract
R= Rookie contract
IPL= currently in the UAENew South WalesDaniel Hughes plays through the off side•Getty Images

Sean Abbott, Harry Conway, Trent Copeland, Pat Cummins* (IPL), Oliver Davies (R), Ben Dwarshuis, Jack Edwards, Mickey Edwards, Matthew Gilkes, Ryan Hackney, Ryan Hadley (R), Liam Hatcher, Josh Hazlewood* (IPL), Lachlan Hearne (R), Moises Henriques, Baxter Holt (R), Daniel Hughes, Nick Larkin, Nathan Lyon*, Nathan McAndrew, Arjun Nair (R), Peter Nevill, Kurtis Patterson, Daniel Sams (IPL), Jason Sangha, Tanveer Sangha (R), Steven Smith* (IPL), Daniel Solway, Mitchell Starc*, Chris Tremain, David Warner* (IPL), Adam Zampa* (IPL)QueenslandJoe Burns plays square of the wicket•Getty Images

Xavier Bartlett, Max Bryant, Joe Burns*, Jack Clayton (R), Brendan Doggett, Blake Edwards, Benji Floros (R), Sam Heazlett, Corey Hunter (R), Usman Khawaja, Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne*, Nathan McSweeney, Michael Neser, Lachlan Pfeffer, Jimmy Peirson, Matt Renshaw, Billy Stanlake (IPL), Mark Steketee, Bryce Street, Connor Sully (R), Mitch Swepson, Jack Wildermuth, Matthew Willans (R), Jack WoodSouth AustraliaWes Agar celebrates•Getty Images

Wes Agar, Will Bosisto, Alex Carey* (IPL), Tom Cooper, Brad Davis, Jacob Dickman (R), Daniel Drew, Callum Ferguson, David Grant, Travis Head*, Henry Hunt, Corey Kelly (R), Thomas Kelly (R), Jake Lehmann, Conor McInerney, Joe Mennie, Harry Nielsen, Tim Oakley (R), Lloyd Pope, Kane Richardson*, Luke Robins, Chadd Sayers, Liam Scott (R), Cameron Valente, Jake Weatherald, Nick Winter, Daniel WorrallTasmaniaTim Paine works through the leg side•AFP

Tom Andrews, Gabe Bell, Jackson Bird, Alex Doolan, Jake Doran, Nathan Ellis, Caleb Jewell, Ben McDermott, Riley Meredith, Lawrence Neil-Smith, Tim Paine*, Alex Pyecroft, Sam Rainbird, Tom Rogers, Peter Siddle, Jordan Silk, Matthew Wade*, Charlie Wakim, Beau Webster, Mac Wright.VictoriaMarcus Harris drives through cover•Getty Images

Scott Boland, Xavier Crone, Brody Crouch (R), Travis Dean, Sam Elliott (R), Zak Evans, Aaron Finch* (IPL), Jake Fraser-McGurk, Sebastian Gotch, Peter Handscomb, Sam Harper, Marcus Harris, Mackenzie Harvey, Jon Holland, Tom Jackson (R), Nic Maddinson, Glenn Maxwell* (IPL), Cameron McClure (R), Jonathan Merlo, Todd Murphy (R), Tom O’Connell, Wil Parker, James Pattinson* (IPL), Mitch Perry, Will Pucovski, Patrick Rowe (R), Matthew Short, Will SutherlandWestern AustraliaCameron Green driving down the ground•Getty Images

Ashton Agar*, Cameron Bancroft, Jason Behrendorff, Jake Carder, Hilton Cartwright, Sam Fanning (R), Cameron Gannon, Cameron Green, Liam Guthrie, Aaron Hardie, Bradley Hope (R), Josh Inglis, Matthew Kelly, Mitchell Marsh* (IPL), Shaun Marsh, David Moody, Lance Morris, Liam O’Connor, Joel Paris, Josh Philippe (IPL), Jhye Richardson*, Corey Rocchiccioli (R), D’Arcy Short, Marcus Stoinis (IPL), Ashton Turner, Sam Whiteman

Kings XI Punjab co-owner Ness Wadia wants strict control of IPL bio-bubble

“We need to ensure only those who are really required to be with the players are part of the bubble”

PTI03-Sep-2020

Ness Wadia believes IPL 2020 is not under threat despite the Covid-19 cases in the CSK camp•Getty Images

Kings XI Punjab co-owner Ness Wadia on Thursday said the Covid-19 positive cases in the Chennai Super Kings contingent could have hit any of the eight franchises and wants only those people in the IPL bio-bubble who are “really required” to be with the players. Thirteen members of the CSK contingent, including two players, tested positive for the virus last week, raising safety concerns for the tournament taking place in the UAE amid the pandemic.”The CSK incident has taught us that it can happen to anyone even when the best of precautions are taken and therefore we must be more compliant and rigid on the bio-bubble protocols. We need to ensure only those who are really required to be with the players are part of the bubble,” Wadia told .The franchisees’ non-player and non-coaching staff includes team operations manager, and social media specialists. The cricketers are also required to spend time with the marketing staff during photo shoots which will be held closer to the IPL beginning September 19. The CEOs and owners, most of whom are yet to reach the UAE, are also allowed in the bio-bubble but any violation of the BCCI’s Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) will send them into a seven-day quarantine.”The number of staff outside of the teams and their support staff and the match officials should be limited to the absolute minimum,” the BCCI SOPs say.When asked if he would be travelling for the tournament, Wadia said: “I have not finalised my plans but I normally don’t interact a lot with the players. I have spoken to Anil Kumble (head coach) twice so far just to check what is going on. I am very comfortable interacting on Zoom and other [online communication platforms].”Wadia asserted that there is nothing to worry about in the wake of developments at Super Kings as positive cases have also been found in major European football leagues on resumption. Even NBA players have tested positive.”The BCCI has put internationally established protocols in place,” Wadia said. “If you look at the football leagues, there were cases in the beginning and the highest of precautions were taken. There are so many variables [in the current situation]. I don’t think people need to worry at all. Things will get better and smoother as we go forward.”The teams will have to cope with a financial hit as their share from the BCCI central revenue pool stands reduced after new title sponsor Dream11 paid nearly half (INR 222 crore) of what Vivo was paying. The teams will also lose out on the gate money with the tournament held overseas and in front of empty stadiums. Delhi Capitals chairman Parth Jindal has predicted a 30% drop in teams’ revenues in case the BCCI doesn’t compensate them.Wadia said his team too is seeking compensation from the board but he also chose to look at the brighter side.”Every problem is an opportunity for someone else. So now everyone (potential sponsors) is trying to take advantage of the situation,” Wadia said. “We do hope that BCCI compensates in some form or manner. Be it this year or next year for the hit we are taking. But I would rather look at glass half full than half empty. At the least, the IPL is happening after all that we have gone through this year.”

South Africa Women not to tour England in September 2020

CSA made the decision due to the travel restrictions currently in place for South African national teams

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Aug-2020

Marizanne Kapp of South Africa celebrates after taking the wicket of Amy Jones•Getty Images

South Africa Women have declined the ECB’s invitation for a tour of the UK in September 2020. CSA made the decision due to the travel restrictions currently in place for South African national teams in the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic.”It is frustrating that another opportunity for our Momentum Proteas to play against top quality opposition has again had to be cancelled but as always the safety of our players and support staff is the prime consideration, ” CSA director of cricket, Graeme Smith, said.England had been hoping to host five women’s ODIs and two T20Is in September, after plans for a tri-series also featuring India fell through. England’s women returned to training last month and have been playing intra-squad matches in a bio-secure bubble in Derby.The news is a blow to the ECB’s hopes of staging women’s international cricket this summer. Managing director of women’s cricket, Clare Connor, said she was “immensely disappointed” with the news but has not given up hope of staging some fixtures, with West Indies Women reportedly potential tourists.”We have been committed from the outset to deliver the same bio-secure standards for both men’s and women’s international cricket, an investment that included exclusive hotel use for teams, chartered flights and medical provisions,” Connor said. “An ECB team, with support from the Incora County Ground, Derby, has created a dedicated behind closed doors environment to host all of our women’s internationals.”Women’s and girls’ cricket is a huge part of the ECB strategy and despite the devastating impact of COVID-19, this ambition has not waned. We continue to explore all options to see England Women play competitively this summer.”South Africa’s borders are currently closed for international travel, although repatriation flights are allowed to land and business travel is permitted if government approved.A 24-woman squad had been preparing for the tour, and was expected to convene at South Africa’s high performance centre in Pretoria on Sunday. However, they will now continue with one-to-one training programmes with their provinces.Speaking before the news of the cancellation, Smith said: “We’ve been engaging with the ECB for a period of time now for this women’s tour. It’s something we would love to get done. I must commend the ECB on the money they are investing in trying to get our ladies over there, looking to charter planes and then putting them into bio-bubbles. That’s are great sign for the women’s game. We want to get our women to the forefront. We are working with government to open up and see if we can get some travel going even on a private charter.”There’s a lot of new challenges that we are considering and trying to use science and debating with people going forward. Sharing is also such a key thing now and it’s been great to work with member bodies around the world – England are playing international series now – and sharing their thoughts and experiences is going to be key.”

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