Rays Acquire Relief Pitcher From AL East Rival Ahead of All-Star Break

The Tampa Bays Rays are bulking up their bullpen ahead of the MLB All-Star break.

As first reported by Robert Murray, the Baltimore Orioles are trading relief pitcher Bryan Baker to Tampa. They will receive the No. 37 overall pick (Competitive Balance, Round A) in next week's 2025 MLB draft in return.

With the O's set for a 12:05 p.m. EST first pitch against the Mets on Thursday, Baker was in the clubhouse—alongside reporters—as he learned of his departure. According to the Jacob Calvin Meyer, the reliever was "in shock".

“It’s been everything," Baker said of his time in Baltimore. "They gave me an opportunity to get established in the big leagues."

Baker has appeared in 42 games for the Orioles this season, sporting a 3.52 ERA over 38.1 innings pitched. He's also logged 49 strikeouts while walking just nine batters and allowing 15 earned runs.

The 30-year-old now heads to a Tampa Bay team who has won just three of their last 10 games as they fight for a Wild Card spot in the American League. The Rays begin a four-game series against the Red Sox in Boston on Thursday night.

Liverpool's Mo Salah replacement?! Reds eyeing Bradley Barcola swoop as they prepare to rival Arsenal for PSG ace

Liverpool are considering a move for PSG star Bradley Barcola as they eye up Mohamed Salah replacements. Salah heavily criticised Reds boss Arne Slot in the wake of Saturday's 3-3 draw at Leeds on Saturday night having been dropped to the bench for the third league game running. Rumours suggest that the Egypt international will now look to leave Anfield next month.

Getty Images SportSalah claims he's been 'thrown under the bus'

Salah only signed a two-year contract extension at Anfield earlier in the year after playing a starring role in Liverpool's title triumph. Indeed, the Egyptian forward scored 29 goals and provided 18 assists for the Reds last season, and was duly rewarded with a new deal.

However, Salah has struggled to match last season's exploits having scored four goals and provided two assists in his opening 13 league outings. And having started the last three games on the bench, the 33-year-old is now tipped to leave the club next month.

Salah was heavily critical of head coach Arne Slot in the wake of Saturday's 3-3 draw at Leeds having claimed he's been "thrown under the bus" and intends to say farewell to the club's fanbase when Liverpool face Brighton next weekend. "I can’t believe it, I’m very, very disappointed. I have done so much for this club down the years and especially last season," Salah said after the six-goal thriller at Elland Road.

"Now I’m sitting on the bench and I don’t know why. It seems like the club has thrown me under the bus. That is how I am feeling. I think it is very clear that someone wanted me to get all of the blame."

AdvertisementBarcola emerges as a target for Liverpool

And Liverpool are making contingency plans as they look to replace Salah in the New Year, with Bradley Barcola among those on the club's radar. Barcola has started nine of PSG's 15 league games this season, scoring five times in the process.

PSG are currently in the midst of handing out contract extensions for a number of first team stars, with the French winger among those to have been offered a new deal. Barcola, though, is yet to put pen to paper on a new contract, with Liverpool waiting in the wings as they consider a swoop for the 23-year-old.

However, the young France international is yet to commit his future to the Parisian powerhouse, despite offering Barcola a hefty pay rise, which would make him one of the club's highest earners. Indeed, Barcola isn't completely satisfied with his situation at the Parc des Princes with the forward behind the likes of Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Ousmane Dembele and Desire Doue in the pecking order under Luis Enrique when every player is available.

AFPArsenal to rival Liverpool for PSG forward

The impasse over talks has opened the door slightly for the Reds, who are now considering a January move for Barcola. Liverpool, though, wouldn't have a straight shot at Barcola, with Arsenal reportedly keen on the PSG star.

The Gunners enjoyed a hefty recruitment drive over the summer, bringing in the likes of Viktor Gyokeres, Noni Madueke and Eberechi Eze. However, with question marks over Gabriel Martinelli's future at the Emirates, Arsenal may look to Barcola as they consider bolstering their frontline in the New Year.

Arsenal saw their title push take another hit at the weekend as they fell to a 2-1 loss at Aston Villa on Saturday afternoon. Matty Cash had fired the Villans ahead with 10 minutes of the first half remining, but the Gunners were level shortly after the restart through Leandro Trossard. Villa, though, went on to claim all the spoils late on as Emiliano Buendia bagged a last-gasp winner, which means Mikel Arteta's men have now won only two of their last five league matches.

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Salah to link up with Egypt later this month

Salah's penultimate game for Liverpool could come in midweek when the Reds face Italian giants Inter in the Champions League on Tuesday night. Liverpool are then in action against Brighton on Saturday, in what could prove to be Salah's final match on Merseyside.

Salah will join up with the Egypt national team later this month for the Africa Cup of Nations. The competition gets underway in Morocco on Sunday, 21st December and concludes on Sunday, 18th January.

Egypt are one of the favourites to win a record setting eighth AFCON title in Morocco, which would see Salah miss six games for Slot's side should he still be a Liverpool player by the time the tournament draws to a close. The forward has been linked with a January switch to Turkish Super Lig giants Galatasaray, while a move to the Saudi Pro League has also been mooted.

The session when the cult of Bazball came alive

Smith and Brook went into trance mode and reintroduced a third result to the match when it seemed like England were out of it

Sidharth Monga04-Jul-2025

Jamie Smith was at his attacking best•ECB via Getty Images

Bazball never sounds more like a cult than when Jeetan Patel speaks about it. The press pack half-expected him to say, “we have got them where we wanted” in the press conference at the end of day two. The scores were India 587 vs England 77 for 3.Jeetan is self-aware, give that to him. He acknowledged “you keep laughing at me”. One of the lines Jeetan said might as well be a mantra for a cult: “That was yesterday; today is today; tomorrow will be another day.”The problem with cults usually is that while they can offer light and solace to those needing something to hold on to, their experiments, so to speak, aren’t backed by independent evidence. They need certain, erm, conditions for the believers to find nirvana.Related

Smith's a keeper, as epic innings goes where England predecessors could not

Siraj six-for hands India huge lead despite Smith and Brook hundreds

Smith hails belief to 'do what you feel is right in the moment'

Bazball’s conditions are flat pitches and the recently quick-to-go-soft Dukes balls. Not just flat pitches, but ones that don’t deteriorate, ones that result in progressively increasing averages over the innings of Tests in the Bazball era in England. There is no moisture left because typically on moist pitches the hard Dukes balls leave indentations, which result in uneven bounce over the course of a Test.Even so, at 84 for 5, Mohammed Siraj on a hat-trick in the second over of the day, England 503 behind India, was the ultimate test of this mad belief. England have had their bad days in this era, but they have never been so far behind so early in the game. In comes Jamie Smith, a “made” wicketkeeper, playing ahead of accomplished ones, selected for Bazballing reasons, to face the hat-trick ball. And he smashes it for four through mid-off.In a sensational assault on India in the rest of the session, Smith and Harry Brook reintroduced the third result to the match when it had seemed England were out of it. The fans in the Hollies Stand sang Oasis and “Sweet Caroline”, but the cricket was in keeping with the land of the birth of heavy metal. By two guys who look like they have never contemplated long hair let alone anything as rebellious as heavy metal.To watch that session was to just continuously head-bang for two hours. It was just believers in a trance. They really seemed like they were in a trance. Brook said they didn’t discuss any plans or match state. They just watched ball and hit ball. Brook might have fumbled his lines a little, but Smith went at a strike rate of bazillions with a control percentage of 90-plus.0:59

Brook: Was definitely hungry to get a hundred today

India played their part. They banged on the drums. The ball had gone soft, and they were willing to buy a wicket. Prasidh Krishna was sacrificed for the plan. He bowled two good overs of line and length, drawing an edge that flew through the sparsely populated slips, drew a rare miss from Smith, and then all of a sudden, he started to bang the ball into the middle of the pitch.Two fielders on the hook, Smith went in front of square. Another man went out, and he went over them. Another fielder back, and he went in front of mid-on. Then over mid-on. Not long ago, Bazball was killing Test cricket with lifeless pitches, but now it was reviving it with sensational batting.India had so many runs in the bag they didn’t need to bowl for control, but what do you do with opponents that keep coming at you and don’t seem to care about the match situation or the result? That fear of getting out is the bedrock of batting; it is what makes risk management necessary. No matter the pitches, Bazball is disrupting that fear.In the lunch break, though, India decided to use that bank of runs to their advantage and go hunting only with the second new ball. ODI fields and possibly tiring batters resulted in a slower session following which India struck back just as gloriously with the second new ball, but that one session of mad belief did leave them shaken.Just as well that the new ball created enough jeopardy to restore some balance for those not in on the cult. It still doesn’t seem to matter to the believers, though. There is a second innings to come as well.

Rangers Get Merrill Kelly From Diamondbacks in Surprise Move

Two years after pitching for the Arizona Diamondbacks in the World Series, pitcher Merrill Kelly is reportedly headed to the team that beat him there.

Kelly is being traded to the Texas Rangers, according to a Thursday afternoon report from ESPN's Jeff Passan.

The 36-year-old Houston native has spent his entire seven-year career with the Diamondbacks, who signed him out of the KBO League before the 2019 season. Evolving into a solid starter after leading the National League in losses his rookie year, Kelly won 62 games over seven seasons with Arizona.

This season, he's 9–6 with a 3.22 ERA and 121 strikeouts in 128 2/3 innings.

Kelly appears set to join a Texas Rangers team just barely hanging on to a tie with the Seattle Mariners for the American League's final wild-card spot. The Rangers are 57–52, and have recovered somewhat from a 78–84 dud after their 2023 World Series title.

The pitcher started Game 2 of that series, and beat Texas 9–1—striking out nine over seven innings.

One Player Worth Watching on MLB’s Bottom-Feeding Teams

As the season careens into its stretch run, there seems to be a pronounced lack of stakes to the proceedings. Sure, teams are still fighting for playoff spots, but how hostile are these races at the moment?

A Phillies-Mets knife fight for the NL East that we were hoping for a month ago has failed to develop, with New York floundering for months now. Likewise in both Central divisions, where the Tigers and Brewers hold 10- and six-game advantages, respectively. The Yankees, Red Sox, Mariners and Padres are all within striking distance of making their division races interesting, but even still, all four of those teams are very likely to make the postseason even if they fall short of first place.

As of this writing, FanGraphs currently gives 10 teams at least a 96% chance at making the postseason, with the Astros (90.7%) and Mariners (76.8%) rounding out the 12-team field. The team with the next-best odds? That would be the Rangers, who, despite being just 1.5 games out of the AL’s third wild-card spot, have just a 12.2% shot of crashing the field. Last year at this time, the Mets were the team outside the playoff picture with the best odds of making it (38.7%), and eventually did so as part of an inspired run to the NLCS. While the Rangers or another team could make a similar surge, it’s looking unlikely.

Rather than dwell on the absence of white-knuckle pennant races, let’s shift our attention to a different cohort of teams: the also-rans. FanGraphs currently assigns nine teams a whopping 0.0% chance at making the playoffs (the site is not quite ready to wave the white flag on behalf of the Angels, who own MLB’s longest active playoff drought and whose current odds are 0.1%). Though these clubs might be ready to flip the page to 2026, that doesn’t mean there aren’t reasons worth tuning in for their final few weeks’ worth of games.

Here’s a player on each of these teams that’s worth tuning in for over the last stretch of the regular season, playoff hopes be damned.

Los Angeles Angels: SS Zach Neto

Neto has been among the few bright spots for the Angels all season long. The 2022 first-round pick broke out last year, his first full season after being rushed to the majors in ‘23, and has taken his game up a level this year. Through 120 games, he has a 117 wRC+ with 25 homers and 24 stolen bases, giving him an outside shot at becoming just the seventh shortstop to record a 30–30 season.

Rogers rebounded from a disappointing few years in major fashion this season, posting a 1.39 ERA in 14 starts. / Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images
Baltimore Orioles: SP Trevor Rogers

Though Baltimore has long been out of the playoff hunt amid a deeply disappointing campaign, Rogers’s dominant run over the past couple months has been a windfall. After making the All-Star team with the Marlins in 2021, his age-23 season, Rogers posted a 5.09 ERA from ‘22 to ‘24 as he battled injuries. Through 14 starts this year, Rogers is 8–2 with a 1.39 ERA and 2.44 FIP over 90 1/3 innings. He’s allowed one or zero runs in 11 of those outings, with a career best 5.6% walk rate. If he can maintain anything close to this form next season, the Orioles will have their much-needed staff ace.

Minnesota Twins: 2B Luke Keaschall

Keaschall, one of Minnesota’s top prospects entering the year, burst onto the scene during his first week in the big leagues in mid-April, batting .368 with five stolen bases over his first seven games. That quick ascent was cut short after he was hit by a pitch and broke his forearm, keeping him out until Aug. 5, but he’s since returned and continued raking. He’s hit .296/.373/.490 with four homers and three stolen bases since coming off the IL, and looks to be a key part of the Twins’ core as they enter a new era following their trade deadline fire sale.

Chicago White Sox: SS Colson Montgomery

Montgomery, Chicago’s 2021 first-round pick, looked like one of the best prospects in all of baseball a couple of years ago before his pronounced swing-and-miss issues clouded his big-league forecast. Since debuting on July 4, those issues haven’t subsided—his 28.4% strikeout rate is the 18th-highest among 167 qualified hitters over that span—but they also haven’t stopped him from terrorizing opposing pitchers. Montgomery has launched 16 homers in 49 games, tied for the most among shortstops in that time frame. If he never adjusts, he’ll likely never run an average on-base percentage, but his power output and strong defensive skills at a premium position will more than make up for his deficiencies.

Athletics: C Shea Langeliers

Were it not for Cal Raleigh, we’d probably be talking a lot more about his fellow AL West backstop. The A’s catcher is one homer away from becoming just the fourth catcher in the past 20 years to hit 30 homers, joining Raleigh, Salvador Perez and Gary Sánchez. Since the All-Star break, only Kyle Schwarber (19) has more home runs than Langeliers (17).

Colorado Rockies: CF Brenton Doyle

Last year, Doyle looked to be one of the Rockies’ key building blocks after he won his second Gold Glove and hit 23 home runs with 30 stolen bases. He then spent the first half of the season looking completely lost, posting a .202/.254/.322 slash line (with Coors Field as his home field, mind you) through his first 82 games. Since the break, though, Doyle has been a new player. He’s batting .354/.382/.575 with seven home runs and six stolen bases in 37 games. Doyle’s defense remains elite (he’s seventh among all outfielders in Statcast’s outs above average), and if his offensive revival is here to stay, he looks like he could be an All-Star.

Pittsburgh Pirates: SP Paul Skenes

There’s no overthinking this pick: Skenes remains the draw in Pittsburgh. The 23-year-old leads the majors in ERA (2.05) and the NL in FIP (2.44), yet only has a 9–9 record to show for it. If the Pirates’ offense continues to let him down, Skenes could become the first starting pitcher to win the Cy Young Award with a losing record. The only other pitcher to earn that distinction is Eric Gagné, a closer who won the 2003 Cy Young Award with a 2–3 mark (and 55 saves).

Atlanta Braves: SP Hurston Waldrep

Waldrep got battered around in his cup of coffee last year, but Atlanta’s 2023 first-round pick has been stellar since getting called up on Aug. 2. In six starts, the righthander has allowed a total of four runs with 33 strikeouts. Last season, it was Spencer Schwellenbach who shined for Atlanta down the stretch to put himself in a position to be a rotation mainstay the following year. Perhaps Waldrep is heading for a similar trajectory.

Wood has gotten back on track at the plate after a cold streak coming out of the All-Star break. / Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images
Washington Nationals: LF James Wood

Wood has been the reason to keep tabs on the Nationals all year long, as the game’s former top prospect earned his first career All-Star nod in July. But Wood’s bat went ice cold immediately following the break, as he hit .183 with a near-40% strikeout rate and just one home run in a 28-game span starting July 18. He’s picked things back up of late, and it will be imperative for the Nats that Wood end the year strong to position himself to take another step forward in what the team hopes is a more successful ‘26 campaign.

Miami Marlins: CF Jakob Marsee

Looking at the league’s fWAR leaders since the start of August, most of the names likely won’t surprise you. That is, until you scan Marsee’s name among some of the game’s biggest stars:

Player

HR

SB

Slash

fWAR

Brice Turang

11

4

.360/.425/.746

2.4

Trea Turner

3

11

.343/.393/.530

2.1

Francisco Lindor

6

11

.331/.415/.543

2.1

Jakob Marsee

4

9

.333/.410/.581

2.0

Juan Soto

12

12

295/.452/.634

2.0

Corbin Carroll

8

10

.287/.373/.590

1.9

Bobby Witt Jr.

5

6

.321/.403/.536

1.9

Not bad for your first month in The Show.

Marsee was a sixth-round pick by the Padres in 2022 before getting traded to Miami as part of the Luis Arraez deal. He’s hit at every stop along the way at the minors, and has amassed 144 stolen bases over the past three seasons before getting called up on Aug. 1. His Baseball Savant page is a thing of beauty, and he runs a double-digit walk rate alongside manageable strikeout and whiff rates with a strong arm and plenty of range to stick in center field. 

Maintaining this type of pace over a full season’s worth of games would be a steep ask, but Marsee has the look of a cornerstone for a Miami organization that can use all the building blocks it can find.

Daily Dinger: Best MLB Home Run Picks Today (Yordan Alvarez a Home Run Candidate Again)

There are only three games across Major League Baseball on Monday, so let’s try and find a home run hitter in each!

It’s slim pickings in terms of volume, but it’s hard to ignore the power of Yordan Alvarez when discussing taking a home run prop bet in an Astros game. Further, James Wood of the Nationals is set to make his debut in the bigs, can he go yard? 

We discuss all that and more in Monday’s daily dinger. 

Best MLB Home Run Prop Bets for Monday, July 1stYordan Alvarez (+310)James Wood (+750)Ryan McMahon (+400)Yordan Alvarez

Alvarez is arguably the most dangerous hitter in baseball, posting .294/.371/.520 splits. 

However, the lefty only has 16 homers on the year. He is in the 97th percentile in terms of xSLG and 94th percentile in terms of average exit velocity, but hasn’t had the home run rate as some of the other big hitters in the bigs. 

Yariel Rodriguez of the Blue Jays’ is likely going to struggle against Alvarez, as will the Toronto bullpen. Rodriguez has been a victim of hard contact this season, below the big league average, making for an advantageous matchup for the bat of Alvarez.

James Wood

The Nationals’ No. 1 prospect makes his big league debut on Monday, so let’s shoot for a big outcome and take him to go deep. 

Wood is capable of hitting both lefties and righties, hitting over .325 against each type of pitcher. However, he has a staggering .674 slugging percentage in Triple-A this season against southpaws, which he will face in starter David Peterson. 

Ryan McMahon

Coors Field always suits hitters nicely with the altitude of Colorado playing a role, and Rockies All-Star candidate Ryan McMahon is no different. The second baseman is hitting .280 at home this season with a .469 slugging percentage and seven home runs. 

He’s my pick to go deep on Monday against the Brewers given his underlying metrics that indicate he is hitting even better than his numbers suggest. 

McMahon is in the 96th percentile in hard-hit percentage as well as exit velocity. He rarely strikes out, 12th percentile, meaning he is seeing plenty of pitches and making timely swings. 

Brewers Pull Jackson Chourio From Game 1 vs. Cubs With Apparent Injury

The Brewers loudly announced their arrival to the National League Division Series Saturday, jumping out to a 9–1 lead on their division rivals, the Cubs.

However, it came at a price. Milwaukee left fielder Jackson Chourio exited the game with an apparent injury beating out an infield single.

The apparent injury ended a spectacular—albeit short—day for the Venezuela native. Chourio went 3-for-3, driving in three runs and scoring one. That performance came on the heels of a terrific showing in last year's NL wild-card series; he slashed .455/.500/1.000 with two home runs and three RBIs against the Mets.

In 2025, Chourio landed unsettlingly close to his 2024 numbers—he slashed .270/.308/.463 a year after slashing .275/.327/.464; he hit 21 home runs again and fell one short of his '24 RBI total. However, he missed 31 games this year, with a hamstring injury costing him almost all of August.

The Brewers said that Chourio left the game with right hamstring tightness and will continue to be evaluated, according to Adam McCalvy of MLB.com. Game 2 is scheduled for Monday in prime time in Milwaukee.

Mission Jammu-Kashmir – when the 'champions' play, anything can happen

Their season appeared doomed at the start, now they have a shot at making the semi-finals for the first time

Shashank Kishore in Jammu19-Feb-2020In September 2019, Irfan Pathan handed copies of a letter he had signed to his young Jammu & Kashmir team-mates. In it was a line that read: “We will qualify for the knockouts in at least one format this season.”To make sure it wasn’t just words, mentor Irfan joined hands with close friend and former Baroda player Milap Mewada, the head coach of the side. At the outset of the Ranji Trophy season, Mewada gave a name to the team’s plan: JK’s Mission. Not mission, mind you. Jammu-Kashmir, a united force.Unfortunately for the mentor and the coach, the players’ minds were “elsewhere” as their season was in danger of never even getting on the rails.The Indian government’s decision to bifurcate Jammu & Kashmir into two union territories last August resulted in restricted access to the region from other parts of the country. Internet connectivity was withdrawn, telephone lines went blank, and private television channels were taken off air for a while. Government offices were empty, petrol stations dry, and food supplies were limited.In such an environment where everyday life was a struggle, there was little hope of assembling a squad together, let alone trying to compete or win against the best in the country. At the J&K Cricket Association office in Srinagar, there was a circular on the notice board that asked players to report for a camp on August 16. Except, there was no way for that information to go out. Only two weeks earlier, the players had been sent home.”For three weeks, we didn’t have contact. The season was approaching and we had to do something. I instructed the district police office to personally go to the homes of a many players and bring them safely to Jammu,” Syed Ashiq Bukhari, a former IPS office and current CEO of JKCA, says. “One of the players, when the police went to his house, started running away, thinking he had committed an offence. The police had to explain to the boy’s father and then he came. The other thing we did was to run tickers in our local TV channel asking for players to report in Jammu.”Yet, Parvez Rasool’s team has managed to cast aside all such distractions and focus on the cricket. This is only the second time they have entered the Ranji quarter-final in their 50-year history. A first-ever semi-final appearance is a step away. Irfan’s prophecy has come true, but he and Mewada, just like the rest of the squad, are hoping for something bigger, something historic. They have come a long way. They want to go further.Jammu & Kashmir have had a fantastic run through the group stage•ESPNcricinfo Ltd’Go back, go back, don’t take another step’
Mewada remembers August 6 as if it were just yesterday.”On one side, there were stone pelters. The other side, there were cops. A curfew had been called, and I was told to return to my hotel,” Mewada recalls his attempts to return home to his anxious family in Baroda. “The cop was shouting: ‘go back, go back, don’t take another step.’ I was stunned. We were told in no uncertain terms that ‘you get past us, and we can’t guarantee you anything’. I was scared, and told my driver to turn back.”Mewada was the lone guest at his hotel in Srinagar, sitting by himself with no contact to the outside world. The next day, he somehow made a dash to the airport only because his driver happened to show up unexpectedly. He had a printed copy of his ticket – luckily, because there was no internet. “Else, god knows how I would have travelled.”All along, he was anxious about his players’ safety. It had been 72 hours and he hadn’t heard from any of them. It would be that way for the rest of the month. Six weeks of intense preparation in the summer, Mewada feared, was on the verge of going to waste.Months before the domestic season had started, the team management had got a professional trainer in VP Sudarshan, who had the experience of working with the senior Indian team in the past. Yo-yo fitness was as important as the ability to bowl or bat. Fielding sessions were scheduled in the heat of the afternoon sun to test endurance. The focus was on specifics. Irfan even brought in a throwdown specialist in Pritesh Joshi, himself a club cricketer in Baroda with aspirations of being a fast bowler. They put the players through army-style fitness sessions to get them match ready.”We noticed the players had no concept of fitness and training during the off season,” Mewada says. “So every time they turned up from a break, they were carrying niggles or took a while to get back into shape. We wanted to change that before this season. But all the work we did was disturbed by the forced six-week break, where we didn’t have any contact at all.”

We always wanted to give Irfan a free hand. We knew someone of his experience can deliver only if he’s allowed the space and freedom. It’s fair to say we have managed to build on well from the previous season to this oneSyed Ashiq Bukhari, JKCA CEO

Meanwhile, even as Bukhari tried to assemble the squad in Jammu and take them elsewhere, the team had to pull out of the invitational Vizzy Trophy in Andhra Pradesh. Irfan then requested Samarjithsinh Gaekwad, scion of the royal family that owns the Moti Bagh Stadium in Vadodara, to help.Mewada remembers Gaekwad promising “all that you want”.Now they could get the team together at training, but a key hurdle remained.”The boys were down mentally,” Irfan says. “On the field, they were playing cricket. Then they were worried about selection, which I tried to insulate them from. I gave them confidence that you will be backed. But cricket aside, every now and then, you could see the bigger worry. They had left their families behind, and had no contact. While those from Jammu were slightly better off because at least landlines were working, the Kashmir boys were upset.”Mewada adds, “They needed a lot of emotional support. Some of them were very young. So apart from just training and shaping them for the season, we had to engage a sports psychologist. Things started improving, and we even beat a full-strength Baroda side in three 50-0ver games heading into the Vijay Hazare Trophy. The mood was slightly better towards the end of September.Team Donkey, Team Monkey
As much as the challenge was to ready them for on-field action, Mewada noticed something missing off it. He sensed a disconnect between certain players. He felt there were factions.To foster better understanding and team spirit, he split the team into four groups of four each, each group with a designated leader with whom the others fixed specific dinner plans which no other group was privy to. Then there were games, where each member of the groups was to reveal an unknown facet about his life to the other, and the quietest person in the camp would then reveal it to everyone else, on stage with a mic.Such gestures slowly brought the team together.Mountains, sunshine and water trickling down towards a dam to produce electricity…•ESPNcricinfo Ltd”The situation has changed now,” Mewada says. “We had senior players who didn’t get along. They are not part of the team now. The new generation doesn’t understand divisions. We give everyone a role and they are asked to perform that role. We want to imbibe a sense of leadership and responsibility.”Waseem Raza, for example, is our senior left-arm spinner, but he hasn’t got game time because we felt Abid Mushtaq was better equipped to certain conditions. When Abid got wickets, Waseem was the first to run up with a bottle of water or a hug. Such gestures create warmth and puts everyone in a good frame of mind.”The biggest eye-opener was the painting game the team played a day before their first game of the season. Each team had to come up with a painting. The theme was: ‘What you feel about the Jammu-Kashmir cricket team.’Team Donkey, led by fast bowler Ram Dayal, drew an axe, a few trees, and four logs, one on top of each other. Mewada explains: “With one axe, one log of wood can be chopped down, but the same can’t cut four logs bound on top of the other. This exhibited team work.”Team Monkey, led by Rasool, depicted mountains, sunshine and water trickling down towards a dam to produce electricity. “In between, they also depicted a few leaks,” Mewada says. “This was to suggest that water produces electricity, but the leaks are ensuring less production. To them, leaks signify a disconnect within the team. So then they said, ‘if we fix the leaks, we will be driven to be more powerful’.”Another team, led by Shubham Khajuria, came up with a drawing of a man – who they said was their coach and mentor. And then a goat, inside which they drew a tiger’s face. “The coach sees us, goats, like tigers,” Mewada explains. “He thinks we’re stronger than what we seem. That should be the way we think as well.”Such off-field activities have helped bring the fun element, while allowing the team to reconnect with each other, amid the hectic travel. Mewada and Irfan address the group as “champions”. Mewada is a believer in the power of the subconscious mind, and wants this thought to be firmly planted in their heads. To him, all of them are champions.A Match-winner for every situation
Like these, there are so many interwoven narratives. The off-field camaraderie has come together on the field too. For starters, players haven’t felt insecure because of the confidence the group has in Mewada, Irfan and the selectors. And in every game, they have found someone raising their hand. After all, winning six out of nine games is no joke.”We always wanted to give Irfan a free hand,” Bukhari says. “We knew someone of his experience can deliver only if he’s allowed the space and freedom. The management, the JKCA, everyone took a collective decision to change things this time around and see where it takes us. It’s fair to say we have managed to build on well from the previous season to this one.”Parvez Rasool shares some smiles with team-mates after yet another Jammu & Kashmir victory•PTI One of the examples of that free hand was the decision to hand Mujtaba Yousuf, the left-arm pacer, a debut in their last league game against Haryana. Until then, he was in the system, and being monitored.”I worked with him at different stages on developing an inswinger,” Irfan says. “I took examples from my own career and told him to avoid the mistakes I made. The learnings I had from my career, I passed on to him. We worked on his wrist position, follow-through and using of his crease better. When we were confident he had worked on these significantly, we played him and he got a six-for on debut.” Yousuf’s is just one example of the work put in resulting in performance.In the game against Services, Jammu & Kashmir were tottering after their top order was taken out inside the first hour. Rasool came in and hit 182 in the team’s total of 360 to drive the game forward. Rasool is their biggest name, the most popular player, and a performance from him went a long way in inspiring a young unit.Against Assam and Jharkhand, it was 18-year-old Abdul Samad, who proved he’s one worth investing in. Both his centuries – 103* and 128 – came at more than a run a ball. Until then, Samad was just known to be a talented young bat who could strike big and make destructive 30s or 40s. Interestingly, it took Irfan just one look at him at a district trial last year to ask for his statistics.”I saw him drive on the up like I hadn’t seen from any other batsman,” he remembers. “He was effortlessly making runs on an up-and-down surface. I fished out his scores and I saw consistent starts, but none higher than fifty. I took him aside and told him, he will be put in the probables, and we worked on the value of preserving his wicket. We set small goals for him, and today, there are a few results along the way. This was possible only because we didn’t go by the convention of simply looking at his numbers and dismissing him as a short-format player.”Then there’s the example of Umar Nazir, the fast bowler. He made a vow at the start of the season that he wouldn’t let off-field worries affect his cricket, and he’s stuck to his commitment. Nazir hasn’t been to his hometown in Pulwama since July. He hadn’t heard from his family, but found peace in ripping out middle stumps with yorkers and bowling quick bouncers. On a green deck in Pune, he had Maharashtra’s batsmen hopping around. He picked up a five-for in a match-winning effort then.The common theme here is match temperament and self-belief. Mewada made it clear at the start that this wouldn’t be about nine games, but 11, possibly 12. “The idea took a while to digest, but once they were convinced they are winners, it got stuck in their head,” he says. “There was a bit of silence early on, but once they knew I was serious, they all bought in to the idea.”It has been a team effort all right: four batsmen have over 400 runs (a fifth has 386), five bowlers have more than 20 wickets. The entire team has showed indomitable spirit.Often, when an underdog goes into uncharted territory, questions of sustainability crop up. Mewada is quick to point out that irrespective of where they go from here, this team will be work-in-progress for the next two years. Whether they can go one better, into the semi-finals and beyond, and replicate it next year is a debate for another day, but the very fact that they have made everyone sit up and take note of their on-field exploits when no one gave them a chance, says enough about their character.In two days’ time this united J&K team will lock horns with favorites and multiple-title winners Karnataka. But the players and their coaches remain undeterred. Mewada is a touch philosophical when asked if this is where the magic could end.”See, we’re champions, we have nothing to lose,” he says. “They don’t know our bowlers, our players. We knew each and everyone of them. We have plans. This team has fought through adversities. In front of all that, this is just a cricket match, and if they treat it as one, anything can happen.”

Asad Shafiq and Fawad Alam: A tale of intertwined destinies

They were born months apart and come from the same city, but their careers belong in different universes

Osman Samiuddin12-Aug-2020Azhar Ali’s designation as captain – rather than his batting form – means he will be the first name on a Pakistan team-sheet. But in reality, the first name on any Pakistan team-sheet is that of Asad Shafiq.He will be on that sheet for Southampton, his 71st Test in a row, just as we all live and we all die (but we don’t all pay taxes). It is easily a Pakistan record – before him Javed Miandad, with 53 Tests in a row – and it is also among the longest active streaks. Only Nathan Lyon, with 74 Tests, is ahead of him among current players.No questions asked, he will be there, gliding along far more comfortably than a specialist batsman averaging 38.89 after 75 Tests should. It wasn’t entirely his fault that he was run out at Old Trafford in the second innings, for 29, but it did come just when it appeared as if he might be getting a hold of this game. And that he didn’t has kind of become the point of him.He averages 37.43 since MisYou’s exits which perfectly represents that feeling that he’s going somewhere but not getting anywhere. It’s not bad. It’s not good. If you didn’t know better, you’d argue it’s an average designed specifically to escape scrutiny, sandwiched between the giddy rise of Babar Azam and the dizzy fall of Azhar. He’s never looked as poor as the latter, or as secure as the former.He has two hundreds and nine fifties in that time, which could have been more of one but at least he has a few of the latter, right? Especially as he’s got them in England, South Africa and Australia. But ultimately, all his scores – whatever they may actually be – in value have been like the second innings at Old Trafford.One hundred in a losing chase; in the other he was dismissed four balls after getting there, the second wicket in a collapse of seven for 62 which, ultimately cost Pakistan the game; there’s a 45 in which he fell last ball before lunch, which meant Pakistan hurtled from 130 for 3 and fell short in a chase of 176, losing by four runs; and there’s four 40s by the way, a spate of daddy non-fifties.As for those fifties in South Africa and Australia: one in a chase that was never going to happen; two in Australia where the Tests were as good as lost before he came in; a pristine 88 in Cape Town when he got out with Pakistan still 59 runs short of making South Africa chase, with seven wickets in hand; no runs are easy or pointless in Test cricket, but boy does Shafiq test that truism.There was a period when questions used to be asked about how he – and Azhar, always Azhar with whom his fate is intertwined – had not stepped up after Misbah and Younis left. Yes, yes, it is disappointing, used to come an answer. He needs to step up, but he’s a senior player, we need to back him. He’ll come good.But people have stopped asking, maybe stopped noticing that as Pakistan have now lost seven Tests in a row abroad over two years, he’s averaged 28.28 in them. It’s just assumed he will be there, that he will always be there, being beatifically unfulfilling like it’s a cause.In his stance becoming crabbier and his runs uglier, is Fawad Alam making some small protest about the undue weight given to pretty players?•Getty ImagesAs much as this is about Shafiq, it can’t help but also be a little bit about Fawad Alam. In theory Alam might be a name on the team-sheet on Thursday. There’s speculation about it. Nobody will be surprised if he’s not, though, and nobody needs a reason anymore to not select him. There’s actually a good chance that, at nearly 35, his best days are gone.Now it’s not like it’s Shafiq’s spot Alam has been fighting to get in on all these years, or that he’s competing for on this tour specifically. But you do wonder, in moments such Old Trafford and the last two years of Shafiq, about the stark contrast in how their careers have played out.They were born months apart and come from the same city but we’re talking different universes here. Shafiq made his Test debut exactly a year after Alam played his last Test, and he has coasted along since, through the ebullient promise of the first half with equal grace as through the swamp-water stagnation of the second.All the while Alam has been stewing away in the backwaters of the domestic scene, scoring mountains of runs: 7651 of them since Shafiq’s Test debut alone, at 56.25. He’s scored them when domestic pitches have been diabolically poor and when they’ve been featherbeds, against balls that do too much and balls that do too little, for departments, for regions, in whatever format domestic cricket has assumed that season, with moustache and without.Maybe, in his stance becoming crabbier and crabbier, his runs uglier and uglier, he’s making some small protest about the undue weight given to pretty players such as Shafiq who always look so good but end up so often meaning so little.What must he think of the way Shafiq’s career has played out, with no consequences whether he scores 37 one day or zero the next? Does he derive some perverse solace from it, knowing there is no real consequence to each and every run he scores either? Does he console himself in the knowledge that he has a better Test average?Or does he smile ruefully, put Shafiq’s 75 Tests against his own three, and muse about how unfulfillment has one meaning but can feel so, so different to two people?

Cheteshwar Pujara: 'You can punch me as long as you can. Then I'll punch back'

The India batsman recalls his dogged battle with Cummins and Hazlewood on the final day at the Gabba

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi29-Jan-2021Do you like watching boxing?
(Laughs). Not really. I am not a big fan of boxing, but I don’t mind watching it. Once in a while I watch stories of some boxers – the amount of pain they go through, the kind of sacrifices they are prepared to make, the way they train.On the final day at the Gabba, it looked like the Australian fast bowlers were treating you like a punching bag.
If I’m a boxer, I want to see how much another player can punch me. Once he is done, that’s when I want to start punching back. That is my game plan. You can punch me as long as you can. Then I’ll show my punches. That is how I planned it.We are often told that there is no glory without pain. Tell us about the pain you went through.
The first one hit me just below my shoulder. There was one on the ribs. And one more from [Josh] Hazlewood below the shoulder again. That’s when it started hurting a bit more because it was the same place.The blows on the helmet can look scary, but because you have protection, I wouldn’t call it a major hit. You start feeling a little bit of pain, but it wasn’t very painful.Related

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The most painful one was the ball that hit my finger, because I had already got hit on that finger during practice in Melbourne and had played the Sydney Test with that little bit of pain. I was a little concerned before the game started in Sydney, but things went really well. But the moment I got hit there again in Brisbane, I was in a lot of pain. I thought I had broken my finger.What exactly happened at practice in Melbourne?
I had to come out of the nets. The skin came off near the nail and there was a lot of bleeding. When I got hit in Brisbane, the ball got the same part of the index finger as in Melbourne, it was more on the bone. During the Sydney Test, the laceration on the skin was bothering me even though the impact had been on the bone. By the fourth Test, the skin had healed, but there was still little bit of pain in the bone. And that is where I got hit again.I couldn’t hold the bat and I couldn’t bat the way I wanted to after that blow. I had to hold the bat with four fingers, keeping the index finger off the handle.Girish TS/ESPNcricinfo LtdWhen you walked in to bat on day five, you had already faced 717 balls in the series and scored 215 runs. Clearly, you must have been confident about your role?
Yes, I was very confident that if we bat the entire day, we’ll end up getting the target, without any doubt. There was a possibility of a draw, but I was very confident that on that particular pitch, if we play 97 overs, we will chase it down. I knew that if we didn’t give away too many wickets in the first session, then the only team who can win from there would be India. The majority of overs will be bowled in that session, which was two-and-a-half-hours long, where you face more than 35 overs. So my game plan was very simple: I don’t want to get out in the first session.You left your second delivery and the bowler, Pat Cummins, went down on his knees, thinking it had been close to hitting off stump. The ball had moved in. When the pitch has a few cracks and the bowler is so good, how do you judge what balls to leave?
I told myself that if something happens after hitting the crack, I won’t call it an error of judgement. If I start worrying about the crack, then I’ll end up playing balls I should not be playing. So I told myself that I will just bat as if it’s a normal pitch.That pitch had decent pace and bounce throughout the game, even on the first four days, so I told myself to trust the pitch and bat accordingly.You got off the mark off the 22nd ball you faced. On average, you take half a dozen balls to get off the mark, but it’s not the first time you took a while to get going. In Jo’burg in 2017-18, you took 53 balls to get off the mark. Did not scoring play on your mind?
Not really. As a batsman, you want to get off the mark – the earlier the better. It’s just to get that rhythm, to have some runs on the board. If you are batting on 5 or 10, mentally you know you are calm. You know you have started well and now just have to move on from there. If you take too many balls, you might feel, yeah, it’s better if you get a single. But for someone like me, on day five, I won’t worry about when I’m scoring my first run, because my game plan was not to give away my wicket. As a team, we didn’t want to lose any wickets in the first session. I felt it was a very good pitch, apart from the variable bounce, and that too from one particular end. If you look at the balls that hit me, they were only from one end. I hardly remember getting hit from the other.In all, Pujara spent nearly 23 hours on the crease across eight innings in Australia•Chris Hyde/Cricket Australia/Getty Images The first major hit came on the 62nd delivery, when you were on 6. The ball hit the back of your front shoulder.
I think Cummins was looking to hit back of a length or maybe a little shorter. If the ball takes off from there, it’s good, but if it doesn’t, then he wants the batsman to play on the back foot. I just saw the ball coming at me and I had no other option but to take it on my body, because, on that pitch, it was risky to defend or to try to get on top of the ball. It could have hit my glove or it could have hit the bat and gone to short leg or gully. From the way [Steven] Smith got out in the first innings, I knew you can’t defend on the back foot.Ten balls later, it looked like you took your eye off the ball. You ducked, turned your head, and Cummins’ delivery hit the back of your helmet.
Ah, yes. Most of the times I try and look at the ball, but when it is following you, you tend to take your eyes off it. I knew it was a short-pitched delivery, but on that pitch, you don’t know how good the bounce will be. Sometimes, from the same length, balls were going above my helmet. But this ball didn’t bounce enough.In Cummins’ next over, you were hit on the chest. Michael Hussey, on commentary, thought you were taking your eye off the ball too early.
When you are looking on TV, you feel like I’m taking my eyes off the ball, but I’m actually seeing where he is trying to pitch it, what length it is – so I’m seeing the ball till it pitches. He was trying to bowl the inswinging bouncer repeatedly. After it pitches, I don’t know whether it was because of the crack or the pitch, whatever it was, the ball was following me, and it was very difficult for me to keep my eye on it.Sometimes, if I keep seeing the ball, I feel I end up playing it. If you see the ball well, you end up playing it and then you might glove it or you might try to get on top of it, which shouldn’t happen. So I was prepared to get hit because I knew that the moment it hits that length, even if it is following me, I have to keep my hands down.It was sustained short-pitched and high-pace bowling from the best fast bowler in Test cricket currently. Just before lunch, Cummins pitched it fuller. This time you were hit in the box and then the ribs.
The first one was pitched back of a length. It was little fuller than the other balls and just took off and nipped back in. I was looking to play and suddenly it bounced a bit more and hit the box. That was the ball where I had to be a little careful because there was a leg slip. If you are looking to get on top of the ball, there is a chance of hitting the glove, so I didn’t want to take my hands away from my body. If it’s hitting my ribs, that’s fine, because I’m not going to get caught at leg gully. I just made sure that I kept my hands close to my body.On getting hit on his injured finger: “I had to hold the bat with four fingers, keeping the index finger off the handle”•Tertius Pickard/Associated PressWhat did you do during the lunch break?
I was happy I was still at the crease. I knew that they bowled their heart out and now it will be my time. I was charged up. I knew this is now my session and I will start giving some punches back. That is how we started after lunch.You went to lunch with 8 off 90 balls. That did not bother you?
Not at all.Shortly after lunch, a Hazlewood delivery that didn’t rise much hit you above your left elbow. You walked away, grimacing. Did you call the physio, Nitin Patel?
I was expecting it to bounce a bit more, and usually Hazlewood gets that bounce. If you see a spell from the other end, when he was trying to bowl the same length, it was bouncing. My strategy was the same. I was very confident that as long as it is hitting my body, I’m fine. But this hit was more painful. I had to call the physio because I had already got hit there in the first session. I just needed a break to reduce the pain.And then after Shubman Gill’s dismissal, you got that painful blow on your finger. What conversation did you have with the physio?
As soon as he [Patel] walked in, I told him it feels like the finger is broken. He told me, see, if you want you can take a painkiller, but you have handled this pain pretty well even in the last Test, so don’t worry. You will still be able to bat because you have handled this pain. The only thing he wanted to check was if I wanted a painkiller or a strap.It was a drinks break, luckily, so there was a little bit of extra time to take a decision on how I wanted to approach the injury.Sometimes when I take a painkiller, I am not the same, like I don’t understand how I want to play further. It doesn’t suit me much. So I told Nitin, I’ll bear the pain and carry on playing, because my body was warm. Although there was pain, overall I was charged up.I knew it was an important time in the game, so there was no way I could back out from that situation. Even if it was a fracture, I didn’t want to get bothered about it or think about it. I just wanted to carry on batting. I have played with a fracture in the past. In fact, it happened against Australia in the home series in 2012-13, in Delhi. In Brisbane, we were not yet sure if it was a fracture or not, but I didn’t want to be bothered about it.”If I start worrying about the crack, then I’ll end up playing balls I should not be playing. So I told myself that I will just bat as if it’s a normal pitch”•David Kapernick/AFP/Getty ImagesTell us about that ball.
It was on a fuller length but it hit a crack before it hit my finger. This was the only ball that climbed from a slightly fuller length and I had to play it. I couldn’t control it at all.At one point, while Hazlewood was running in to bowl, you stopped him mid-stride as a butterfly distracted you. Some fans on Twitter said they heard Hazlewood ask you if your vision was impaired.
I don’t know what he said.He then bowled a 140.2kph delivery straight at your face. You lined up to duck it, but the ball hit your grill and the stem guard attached to the back of your helmet flew off. Hazlewood said: “Did ya see that one?” And you stared back at him.
Yeah, I heard that. I just wanted to make sure I make that eye contact [with Hazlewood]. I mean, most of the time, bowlers know the batsman is not rattled. And I wasn’t. I had got hit so many times before. This was maybe a little harder than the other balls, but getting hit on the body is not going to disturb me. That was the body language I wanted to communicate. I’m sure he saw that.Read part two of the interview with Cheteshwar Pujara

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