Shafali's form, Renuka's return and other key questions for India's World Cup squad

The Neetu David-led selection committee will soon pick India’s 15-member squad for the World Cup starting September 30

Shashank Kishore18-Aug-2025India enter their final stretch of World Cup preparations with a settled squad. They are buoyed by a tri-series win in Sri Lanka (also involving South Africa), and a series win in England. According to India captain Harmanpreet Kaur, their settled outfit is the biggest point of difference from the lead-up to previous campaigns.On Tuesday, when the Neetu David-led selection committee meets to pick India’s 15-member squad for the World Cup starting September 30, one of their toughest decisions could be around Shafali Verma’s selection. Whether she is selected or not might be decisive to how India plan to balance consistency and explosive potential in the squad.There are also tough selection calls to be made on key players coming back from injury. Here is a quick look at the questions the selection committee will need to take a call on:The Shafali factorFour of the top six (Smriti Mandhana, Harmanpreet Kaur, Jemimah Rodrigues and Richa Ghosh) are certainties. As things stand, Pratika Rawal has made a compelling case to open with Mandhana, having notched up 703 runs in 14 innings at 54.07, while striking at 88.Similarly, Harleen Deol has added a touch of consistency to her game since her comeback from injury late last year. She struck a maiden ODI century against West Indies in December, and has been a regular in the ODI setup since. Occasionally, though, there have been question marks about her tendency to start slowly, even though there’s no threat to her place in the squad.Pratika Rawal has numbers on her side as India opener•BCCIWith Yastika Bhatia likely to be the second wicketkeeper, the team management also has a reserve batter in the mix. This makes the call to select Shafali – or not – tricky, even though there are no doubts about her experience and track record at the international level.What she currently lacks, however, is form, which is evident from her recent returns for India A in Australia: scores of 52, 4, and 36 in three one-dayers, and 41, 3, and 3 in the T20s that preceded them.Amanjot the allrounder balances the team, but is she fully fit?During Pooja Vastrakar’s absence from the side due to a long-standing stress injury, the team management found an able back-up in Amanjot Kaur.The allrounder was used as the second seamer during the T20I leg of the England tour, which India won 3-2. In that series, apart from bowling her seam-ups and picking three wickets across 13 overs, she also struck an incredible, match-winning 63 not out to shore up a floundering innings.Amanjot Kaur has been a valuable addition to the side•ECB/Getty ImagesHowever, the flaring up of a back injury during the ODI leg of the tour has raised some concerns. At the time, Harmanpreet termed her exclusion as rest, but it is understood that the team management has been concerned over her injury status and treated her with utmost caution.While her scans are believed to have cleared her of a major issue, the selectors will need to assess if she can handle dual responsibilities of being a second seamer, which gives the team management the luxury of being spin-heavy, like they’ve tended to in recent times.If Amanjot makes the cut, it is likely India may not need a third specialist seamer. In this case, someone like Arundhati Reddy could miss out. The selector then might have to make a case for selecting either Shafali, or a genuine wrist spinner – which they’ve lacked lately – like Prema Rawat, who had a breakout India A tour in Australia.There is no question over their other two allrounders, who are near certainties in the squad as well: Deepti Sharma and Radha Yadav, who impressed in England as well with her captaincy stint on the A tour of Australia. While Deepti offers bowling utility and finishing prowess, Radha is an outstanding fielder and has rediscovered herself as a left-arm spinner.Deepti Sharma and Radha Yadav are in line to be guaranteed selections•BCCIWill selectors punt on undercooked Renuka?Much will depend on whether Renuka Singh, pace spearhead until recently, is fully fit after recovering from a stress fracture. If she isn’t, Arundhati will be a straight shoo-in. But for now, indications are that Renuka is on the right track to make the cut, even though there is the risk of her being undercooked. She has not played any form of cricket since the WPL, and the Australia ODIs in the lead-up to the World Cup could be her final chance at getting into her groove.Kranti Goud, the Madhya Pradesh pacer, has climbed through the selection ladder with her bristling energy and ability to hustle batters, as was seen during her match-winning 6 for 52 to seal the ODI series in England. Goud’s excellent early initiation may put her ahead of Arundhati in the queue, especially if Amanjot is fit.Sneh Rana, who made an excellent comeback during the Sri Lanka tri-series, and N Shree Charani are the two other specialist spinners in the mix, along with Deepti and Radha. Shreyanka Patil and Minnu Mani are also off-spinning allrounders who could be discussed.India (likely squad): Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), Smriti Mandhana (vice-captain), Pratika Rawal, Harleen Deol, Jemimah Rodrigues, Richa Ghosh (wk), Yastika Bhatia (wk), Deepti Sharma, Amanjot Kaur, Radha Yadav, Sneh Rana, N Shree Charani, Renuka Singh/Arundhati Reddy, Kranti Goud, Shafali Verma/Prema Rawat

Shami to Stokes: Ten balls from hell

The contest produced nine dots and a wicket seemingly born of desperation. Was it a bad shot, though?

Matt Roller29-Oct-20231:25

Harmison: ‘England didn’t throw a single punch back’

That was the plea Ben Stokes made to “everyone watching cricket” in the , eight days before this summer’s Ashes. “The shot choice is only ever bad when it’s out,” he said. “You might try the same exact shot at another ball, catch it sweetly and it sails over the rope for a four or six, and then no one will say anything.”Related

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Stokes’ analysis was clear. Cricket, he argued, is an outcome-oriented sport, where the difference between positivity and recklessness can be infinitesimally small. There is nothing more debilitating for a player than fear of getting out in the ‘wrong’ way. And dismissals are analysed in isolation, when they tend to be the product of everything that has come before.What had come before Stokes walked out to bat on Sunday evening in Lucknow was: England were 30 for 2 in pursuit of 230, having just lost two wickets in as many balls to Jasprit Bumrah. Their bright start briefly sucked the life out of the crowd, but the wickets reinvigorated all 46,000 of them – of whom around 45,900 seemed to be wearing India’s royal blue.This was a slow pitch, one which had been used once already in this World Cup and proved demanding for batters on both sides. England’s route to victory – one that would only be a consolation – was for one of their top order to bat for a prolonged period of time, as Rohit Sharma had done in the first innings, and hope that the dew made life tricky for India at the back end.Bumrah’s brilliance had already accounted for two of the top order: Dawid Malan and Joe Root. If England had any opportunity to score runs, any hope of maximising the five overs remaining before the field spread, it was against bowlers from the South End. With Mohammed Siraj struggling with his ankle, Mohammed Shami became Stokes’ target.Ben Stokes’ World Cup so far: 48 runs in three games, three catches, zero balls bowled•ESPNcricinfo LtdFor Shami, this was a simple game. England’s seamers had shown that the most effective way to bowl with the new balls on this surface was by hitting a good length, and erring shorter rather than fuller. For the first time in the tournament, India’s seamers were bowling with the new ball at dusk, when the ball seems to deviate even more; if not, perhaps batters struggle to read movement as well under floodlights.Shami’s first ball to Stokes pitched on a good length, and was left alone. His second was near-identical, and Stokes charged down the pitch, giving himself room to try and crash an early boundary through the off side. The ball nipped away off the seam, past Stokes’ outside edge and into KL Rahul’s gloves. Shami put his hands on his head.Shami dragged his length back, just a fraction, and Stokes shaped to steer him away through point. He played and missed, inducing a grimace from Shami in his follow-through. The final ball of Shami’s first over – Bairstow had flicked the first for two, then steered the second for a single – skidded into Stokes’ pad as he shaped to work leg-side. Four balls, no runs.Stokes watched from the non-striker’s end as Bairstow played out a maiden from Bumrah: England’s 30 for 0 after 4.4 overs had become 33 for 2 after seven. The outfield was covered in dew; a single boundary could be enough to prevent the ball from swinging. But Shami was relentless, refusing to budge from that good length.The first ball of Shami’s second over hardly moved, but shaped away just enough from around the wicket to beat Stokes’ defence. And so Stokes decided it was time to take control: to the second, he skipped down again, flinging his bat at another good-length ball. He was shaping through extra cover, but found mid-off with a mistimed flash.Mohammed Shami bowled an irresistible spell after coming on as first change•Associated PressThe charge down the track has become Stokes’ default response in Test cricket, not least since he became captain. When it works, it can throw bowlers off their length, transfer pressure from one team to another, and turn the feel of a game altogether; when it doesn’t, it can look impulsive and rash.Stokes made contact with the third ball of Shami’s over, punching to cover from a slightly shorter length, but not the fourth. Shami put his hands on his head as another immaculate, good-length ball angled in, seamed away, and beat Stokes on the outside edge. The fifth was Shami’s only fuller ball to Stokes, targeting the stumps. He worked it calmly to mid-on.Nine balls, nine dots, no runs. Five balls on a good length, three a fraction shorter and one a little fuller. One leave, two charges, three balls that connected with Stokes’ bat. Fifteen balls since England last scored a run. 197 to win in 42.1 overs, eight wickets in hand. Six games, five defeats, two points. 32 nights since England’s players left home, 14 more until they are finally put out of their misery.Which of those numbers passed through Stokes’ head when he made the calculation that the final ball of Shami’s second over had to go? Maybe none; maybe so many that his mind was scrambled. Stokes planted his front foot outside leg stump, looking to make room to force the ball through the off side for four. The ball nipped in off the seam, skidded through off the pitch and clattered into his middle and leg stumps.Shami punched the air and roared, along with the rest of a stadium with the size to overawe. Stokes trudged off, his contribution to England’s World Cup since he reversed his ODI retirement reading 48 runs in three appearances, three catches, and no balls bowled. Pressure can create diamonds, and burst pipes. A bad shot? Perhaps that should be left for Stokes to decide.

Shane Warne gave us so much and he had so much more to give

He was cricket and he was rock ‘n roll too; he was the best of sport and he was the stuff dreams are made of

Mark Nicholas07-Mar-2022

– Bruce Springsteen, “One Minute You’re Here”, from

There was something elemental about Warnie – like the wind and the rain, or the sun. He could be a wild and unpredictable ride and he could be a warm and kindly neighbour. He brought things into our lives that were unique and he illuminated the spaces we occupied; none of us would suggest that we were anything but lucky to stand in that light. It wasn’t quite exclusively his world in which we lived, but it wasn’t far from it.Shane loved Springsteen’s music and especially that most recent album, Letter to You. It finishes with a song called “I’ll See You in My Dreams”, which is a eulogy of sorts to a friend who has passed, and which Shane said made him cry. Now the tears are ours, for the loss of an irreplaceable brother-in-arms.Related

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He loved rock music in general: thus the heading of each chapter of his autobiography with titles such as “Satisfaction”, “Imagine”, “Heroes” and “The Rising”. He would turn up the volume at home, by the pool or in the car and pound it out, singing the choruses as if he were in the crowd at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the stadium that was his spiritual home. Mostly, he was a man of popular culture but his take on it was rooted in the tradition and memories of the past. No one had better manners nor offered more polite answers to seemingly endless requests – appearances, autographs, selfies, interviews and functions – while always guarding cricket’s history and conscience.The outpouring since the news of his death has stretched far and wide and is still doing so. The Times of London gave him 14 pages but he was front cover in Malaysia too. He was cricket and he was rock ‘n roll too; he was the best of sport and he was the core of aspirational dreams. He fed us the oxygen of the game in the most engaging and fascinating ways, changing perception, inviting debate, encouraging enthusiasm, breathing hope and never surrendering. We owe him so much.”What’s the key to being a good legspinner, Warnie,” was the question. “A lot of love,” came the answer. “What’s the art of legspin, Warnie?” To which he would reply, “The creation of something that isn’t there, mate.”It was my privilege to know him well and to frequently stay with him in Melbourne, in the various houses he loved to trade – up, and down, I should add. I was with him at home in December 2003 during the ban for the diuretic pill he took just prior to the World Cup in South Africa earlier that year. After the first night, I woke early but there was no sign of him. He walked through the door at 7.30-ish, clad in tracksuit and trainers.Everybody loves Shane: Warne and Ricky Ponting are welcomed with rose petals in Lahore ahead of the 1996 World Cup final•Zafar Ahmed/Associated Press”Been for a run?””No mate, been having a bowl at an indoor school out on the edge of town.””But you’re not allowed to.””I know. Wanna come with me tomorrow and have a hit?””Sure.”Later that day, after tennis, at which he was damn good, by the way, I asked him about these early mornings. He said he knew the fella who ran the indoor school and talked him into opening up at 6am so he could bowl for an hour a couple of times a week before anyone else in Melbourne had put the kettle on. The place was locked up again by seven and first arrivals weren’t till eight. For one period of his life, at least, he flew under the radar; albeit reluctantly, for it was during this forced sabbatical that Kerry Packer told him to lie low awhile and sell the red Ferrari. So he did. And bought a blue one.”Did you sell the red Ferrari, son?””I did, Kerry.”Anyway, back to the indoor school. A handkerchief to aim at was okay but a batter was better, and by great good fortune, that man with the willow was me. I borrowed his kit and padded up. As I write, I’m trying to imagine myself there – more than 18 years ago – nervous as a kitten. When Hampshire played the Australians in 1993, he was rested (well, he wasn’t at the game!), so I had never faced him.The first thing that struck me was the aura, even at the start of his eight-pace shuffle and approach. I remember the rhythm of the approach, the power of the delivery stride and the symmetry of the action. I remember the flight of the ball and the hardness as it hit the bat or body: they say some seamers bowl a “heavy” ball, so did Warne. I remember the revolutions, the high bounce off the hard synthetic surface and the need to react quickly and definitively. I was surprised at how fast he bowled and how, when he bowled “up” (above the eyeline), the ball dipped at the last second and panicked the response. It didn’t spin so much off that surface so I asked if it was like bowling at the WACA in Perth. Not really, he said, the ball skids off the WACA pitch, so it’s easier to bat against me there than in here: “In here, Markie, the bounce will getcha…”The King and I: the author with Warne on duty for Channel 9 in 2014•Scott Barbour/Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesThe ball hit the splice a lot and sent a fizzing sensation up the handle and into the bottom hand, so I adapted at each session by playing softer and softer, later and later. I found it very difficult to get down the pitch and meet the ball as it landed and so persuaded myself to play back more. It occurred to me that a better player would manage the shimmy down the pitch with more skill and faster footwork, and that the good sweepers would have to take him on in the way that Kevin Pietersen managed so successfully on occasions.He hit the pad so often it was a joke – that slider! He even tried a few flippers, the stuff of gold. But no wrong’uns – aka googlies – because of his shoulder. On the second morning I goaded him into bowling one and he winced in pain. I mainly blocked because there were so few bad balls, occasionally slogged over wide mid-on and cut backward of point a bit. One or two drives, straight and through mid-off, were highlights. This was a kingdom of days, Warne and me, cutting it as the dawn broke in his home town.I remember thinking how good the really good players must be, the few who made big runs against him – Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, specifically. I was barely getting a hint of the overall show – just a little side spin, no wear in the pitch or footmarks, no close fielders (though he did set an imaginary field, but of course, fiction is fiction), no mind games, no crowd, no abuse, no TV or radio, no snappers, no reports the next morning, no pressure on the outcome, no representation of your team or country, no backstory, no scoreboard threat, no behind-the-game panic, no Ian Healy or Adam Gilchrist in your ear and so forth.And I very well remember marvelling at the level of skill in what he did and the power with which he did it. I saw at first hand how the 10,000-hour theory rolled out. He was astonishingly gifted at something extremely difficult – and he knew it – and he practised relentlessly to perfect it and rejoiced in taking it to the world.Confuse ’em, control ’em: Warne bowls to Dwayne Bravo in Hobart in 2005•Mark Baker/Associated PressHere is a passage from his autobiography, No Spin, which I wrote with him:

“The art of leg-spin is creating something that is not really there. It is a magic trick, surrounded by mystery and aura. What is coming and how will it get there? At what speed, trajectory and with what sound? How much flight swerve, dip and spin and which way? Where will it land and what will happen? There is no bowler in the history of the game that a decent batsman couldn’t pick if he watched the hand, so a leg-spinner must unsettle that batsman. Every leg-spinner gives the batsmen a clue, some just disguise it better than others. Leg-spinners cannot create physical fear, in the way fast bowlers can, so leg-spinners look to confuse and deceive.

There is, however, an intimidation factor in leg-spin that comes from the batsman’s ignorance and fear of embarrassment. Few batsmen, if any, truly know what I do, so to maintain that mystery I look to develop an atmosphere of uncertainty and, if possible, chaos. It is all about being in control, about winning the psychological battle.”

And there you have it. The reason why, during a year-long ban from all cricket, the master was at work on his craft. Be damned, he said to himself, I love what I do and I’ll do what I love. And when the time comes, I’ll be ready.Goodness, there is so much else we will miss. He was very funny, and great fun. He was naughty but in the best sense, and smart, in the streetwise sense. He made people happy, which is a gift, and he made people stronger with his support and counsel. He was generous and would put himself up for auction at charity events – “An hour’s coaching at Lord’s with Shane Warne for ten people” – and it would sell for a shedload and he’d meet the buyers, charm them utterly, and do double the time with the group they sent along, often longer if they were enthusiastic kids.The artist, the mentor: Warne showing kids the art of spin in London, 2006•Sang Tan/Associated PressHe had friends in high places and friends from the sticks. He learnt to play tennis on the court in Bob Hawke’s backyard and, years later, fired up the pizza oven for Chris Martin and Ed Sheeran to have chill nights in his own backyard; Michael Parkinson and Tim Rice took him out for lunch at The Ivy; Coldplay called him on stage to sing with them during a sellout concert in Melbourne. At Sunningdale Golf Club one day, Sean Connery heard Warnie was putting out on the 17th green and stayed behind an extra 15 minutes just to meet him. He hung out with Dannii Minogue, Jemima Khan and became engaged to Elizabeth Hurley. On Twitter, Mick Jagger mourned his passing.He completely adored his parents – Keith and Brigitte – was a loyal brother and friend to Jason and doted on his three children. The girls – Brooke and Summer – are heartbroken their dad won’t be walking them down the aisle one day. Jackson, his son and closest mate, is in denial, sure that his father will walk through the door tomorrow. Wonderful husband he may not have been, wonderful father he truly was. The Warnes are a fine family. It hurts deeply to think of their pain.There is a place in the story for Simone, his ex-wife, who lived it hard with him and is now living it hard in shock. She is the mother of the children who held him in raptures and was the girl he asked to marry while rowing round in circles on a quick trip to the Lake District in northern England in 1993. The longer he rowed so hopelessly, the funnier it got. And she said yes.Frankly, he has left a lot of folk in pain. He gave so much and had so much more to give. Bloody hell, how we will miss him.So will the tables. He played high-level poker, risked high-level stakes at the roulette wheel, and liked nothing more than a punchy unit or two on the golf course. Each year, his great joy was an invitation to the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship in Scotland, and this last early October he had a run of birdies that saw him fall only a shot short of winning the amateur event with his professional partner Ryan Fox. I promise that had he done so, he would have regarded it as a pinnacle alongside the Ashes.He touched us all: an artist works on a painting of Warne on a Mumbai sidewalk after his death•Rajanish Kakade/Associated PressHe had become a terrific commentator, listening and learning from others and applying his remarkable cricketing intelligence to the stories he was telling. He liked cricket kept simple; he loved the game to fizz and to sparkle, and he believed implicitly that attack was the ultimate answer to defence.He spread a gospel of spirit and enterprise, trusted his intuition, raged against the dullards and refused to believe that anything was beyond him or the teams for which he played. He lived off the “blame the messenger and always get ahead of yourself” mantra that, when you think about it, is how he managed pretty much every situation in which he found himself.He made cricket cool and he made those around him happy. Sure, he had the odd blind spot but, hey, in this portfolio of achievement we can forgive a little stubbornness. So it is that we have come to an end. It seems barely believable that the Warne smile is no more. By 52 years of age, he’d had a hell of a run, living five, maybe ten, lives or more. Every day, in every place, the magic appeared in one form or another and you just had to be lucky enough to be there and have it rub off on you. It’s gone now but better to have loved and lost than not to have known him at all. There will never be another.

Ten Incredible Stats From the 2025 MLB Season

The 2025 MLB regular season has ended, and focus has shifted to the opening round of the postseason. Before we do that, it's time to reflect on what has been an incredible 162-game campaign over the last six months.

We've been looking inside the numbers all season, so here's a final look at the most incredible stats from the 2025 season.

204 — Aaron Judge's wRC+, which was 32 points better than any other qualified hitter. Shohei Ohtani came in second at 172, leading the National League. That means Judge was a 32% better hitter than Ohtani this year. Wild. For comparison, it was his second-best wRC+ ever, with 2024's 220 still leading the way.

210 — George Springer's wRC+ after the All-Star break, the best in baseball. A's rookie slugger Nick Kurtz finished second at 199. The 36-year-old Springer discovered that the Fountain of Youth exists somewhere near the Rogers Centre and had his best season since 2019. He notched career highs in batting average (.309) and on-base percentage (.399), and slugged .560 with 32 home runs, 84 RBIs, and 106 runs. Springer ranked third in baseball behind Judge and Ohtani with a career-best wRC+ of 166. His OPS (.959) jumped an 285 points this season in his mid-30s. I'll have what he's having.

38 — Stolen bases by Juan Soto to tie for the NL lead with Oneil Cruz … Yeah, you read that right. Not Elly De La Cruz, Trea Turner or Corbin Carroll, but . Even crazier? The $765 million man swiped 27 bags after the All-Star break to lead all of baseball. Soto had 34 stolen bases over the past three seasons combined entering 2025.

6.1 — Fernando Tatis Jr.'s fWAR, which was sixth in the NL, one spot ahead of Soto, who slashed .263/.396/.525 with 43 home runs, 105 RBIs, and 120 runs. By comparison, Tatis went .268/.368/.446 with 25 home runs, 71 RBIs, and 111 runs scored. The difference? Defense. Tatis was seventh in the NL with 15 defensive runs saved, while Soto finished at -7.

6.6 — Tarik Skubal's fWAR, best among MLB pitchers, edging Paul Skenes by 0.1. Skubal will undoubtedly repeat as the AL's Cy Young winner after going 13–6 with a 2.21 ERA, 0.89 WHIP, 2.45 FIP and 241 strikeouts against 33 walks in 195 1/3 innings. He's still the best in the business.

10 — Wins for Skenes despite an MLB-best 1.97 ERA. The likely NL Cy Young winner finished the season 10–10 with a 2.36 FIP and 216 strikeouts against 42 walks in 187 2/3 innings. It's a crime that the Pirates aren't better when he's on the mound.

25.2 — Launch angle for Cal Raleigh, highest in baseball by 2.1 degrees and a career-high by 2.7. Raleigh was also fourth in barrel% (19.5), so it's not hard to see how he was able to blast an MLB-high 60 home runs. The Big Dumper became a national star in 2025.

45.1 — Hard-hit percentage for Kyle Schwarber this season, a career high. The man who made himself more money than anyone in baseball during the 2025 season led the NL in the stat and finished 0.5% behind Aaron Judge. The 32-year-old slugger also notched career-highs in home runs (56), RBIs (132), wRC+ (152), slugging (.563), and fWAR (4.9). A big performance in a contract year.

99.4 — Hunter Greene's average fastball velocity, tops in baseball among starting pitchers. It was a strong season for Reds starter as he went 7–4 with a 2.76 ERA. Health is the only thing standing between him and ace status. Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski came in second at 99.0 mph. Not surprisingly, Mason Miller's fastball led all qualified relievers at 101.2 mph.

-424 — The Rockies' run differential, which was the worst MLB has seen since the 1899 Cleveland Spiders. The modern era began in 1900, so we'll just say it's the worst ever. The previous record of -349 was held by the 1932 Boston Red Sox, so Colorado “beat” it by runs! The Rockies lost 119 games, which was two fewer than the record-setting 2024 Chicago White Sox, but they were arguably a worse team. Colorado has lost 100-plus games in three straight years and has a .356 winning percentage (231–417) over the past four years. The team's ownership group should be stripped of the team at this point.

Bonus Number

.409 — Any guesses on this one? That's the Mets' winning percentage after having the best record in baseball on June 12. New York was 45–24 on that date and went an excruciating 38–55 over the rest of the season to fall out of the postseason picture. Despite a $323 million payroll, the Mets were eliminated on the final day of the season and will spend a long offseason dwelling on it.

São Paulo se posiciona após polêmica sobre uso de 'caneta emagrecedora'; entenda

MatériaMais Notícias

O São Paulo se posicionou após a notícia envolvendo o uso da caneta emagrecedora “Mounjaro” em dois atletas do elenco. Em apuração do “UOL”, o assunto surgiu após algumas polêmicas e divergências envolvendo o departamento médico do Tricolor – um dos principais assuntos da temporada.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasSão PauloPochettino na mira do São Paulo? O que se sabe sobre o assuntoSão Paulo12/12/2025São PauloSão Paulo: Pablo Maia entra na mira da Europa e RússiaSão Paulo12/12/2025

Ao todo, 70 casos de problemas físicos entre atletas do elenco acometeram o ano do clube. Entre um dos assuntos, informado pela reportagem do portal, estaria a prescrição da caneta para membros do time, o que teria causado uma certa divergência entre membros do departamento médico do clube.

O Lance! confirmou que o medicamento foi prescrito apenas para dois atletas, após avaliações clínicas individuais. O Tricolor enviou ao L! um posicionamento oficial sobre o caso.

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➡️São Paulo: Pablo Maia entra na mira da Europa e Rússia

O medicamento teria sido receitado por Eduardo Rauen, nutrólogo renomado da área esportiva e que estava acompanhando alguns casos no SuperCT. O doutor também atende em clínica particular, localizada no Cidade Jardim, em São Paulo.

➡️Tudo sobre o Tricolor agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! São Paulo

Veja o posicionamento do São Paulo sobre o uso de Mounjaro

A respeito da falsa polêmica sobre uso do medicamento Mounjaro, o São Paulo esclarece que: -Foram realizados tratamentos médicos individualizados, indicados de forma pontual após avaliações clínicas criteriosas em apenas dois atletas do time profissional, e não de maneira generalizada, contínua e indiscriminada.

Sendo, no mínimo, desonesto apontar a medicação como motivo do alto número de lesões na temporada.

-O Mounjaro é um medicamento regularizado e autorizado pela Anvisa, fabricado pelo laboratório Eli Lilly, um dos maiores e mais respeitados do mundo.

Não há qualquer irregularidade no uso do produto, desde que seja de procedência de fabricação original e, como no caso, com indicação, acompanhamento e prescrição médica.

– O Clube preza pela saúde de seus atletas em todas as categorias e, por isso, busca sempre a excelência profissional em todos os departamentos de saúde.

– Qualquer conduta na área de saúde praticada por profissionais no clube, sejam prestadores, consultores ou colaboradores, é feita dentro de todas as normas e regulamentações exigidas pela ética profissional e pela legislação vigente.

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Robinson aids Smith's Ashes prep as Stokes steps up bowling return

Former England seamer makes surprise appearance in NSW nets during Sydney grade-cricket stint

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Nov-20257:23

Will Joe Root finally score his first hundred in Australia?

England’s Ollie Robinson has emerged as an unlikely figure in Australia’s Ashes preparation after bowling to his former Sussex team-mate Steven Smith in the New South Wales nets on Thursday.Robinson has taken 21 wickets in seven Ashes Tests but has not featured for England since February 2024, falling out of favour after his body let him down in one match too many. He took 39 wickets at 24.74 for Sussex in the County Championship this year, but never appeared in serious contention for a Test recall and was also overlooked by England Lions.

Instead, he has signed for Sydney University for a stint in grade cricket and was seen bowling at NSW batters at the SCG on Thursday ahead of their Sheffield Shield game against Victoria. The reported that Robinson bowled for “about 45 minutes” to batters including Smith and Sam Konstas, and later spoke at length to NSW coach Greg Shipperd.While Robinson was bowling in Sydney, the first arrivals among England’s Ashes squad trained at Lilac Hill in Perth. They included Ben Stokes, England’s captain, who has not played competitively since sustaining an injury to a shoulder muscle against India in July but is confident of playing a full role in the first Test at Optus Stadium on November 21.Related

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Stokes was welcomed to Australia by a front-page story in the which dubbed him “England’s Cocky Captain Complainer”, and the same newspaper reported that he had bowled in training on Thursday. Stokes stopped off in New Zealand to visit family before arriving in Australia, where he trained in the nets at Lincoln, Christchurch.Around half of England’s 16-man squad have already arrived in Perth, with the remainder due to follow this weekend. England’s only warm-up fixture – a three-day match against England Lions – starts on Thursday at Lilac Hill.

موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة برشلونة وألافيس اليوم في الدوري الإسباني.. والمعلق

يستعد فريق برشلونة، بقيادة المدرب هانز فليك، لخوض مباراته مساء السبت في إطار منافسات بطولة الدوري الإسباني لكرة القدم، ضد نظيره ديبورتيفو ألافيس.

ويستضيف ملعب “كامب نو” مباراة فريقي برشلونة وألافيس، في خضم منافسات الجولة الرابعة عشر من بطولة الدوري الإسباني، موسم 2025/26.

ويحتل برشلونة المركز الثاني في جدول الدوري الإسباني برصيد 31 نقطة، في حين أن ألافيس لديه 15 نقطة ويحتل المركز الرابع عشر.

ويأمل برشلونة مصالحة جماهيره بعدما تعرض لهزيمة على يد تشيلسي، في الجولة الماضية من دوري أبطال أوروبا يوم الأربعاء، بثلاثة أهداف دون رد. موعد مباراة برشلونة وألافيس اليوم في الدوري الإسباني

تنطلق المباراة في تمام الساعة 5:15 مساءً بتوقيت القاهرة، 6:15 بتوقيت السعودية. القناة الناقلة لمباراة برشلونة وألافيس اليوم في الدوري الإسباني

تُذاع المباراة عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 1. معلق مباراة برشلونة وألافيس اليوم في الدوري الإسباني

سيعلق عامر الخوذيري على أحداث مباراة اليوم.

ويُمكنكم متابعة أحداث مباريات اليوم لحظة بلحظة من مركز المباريات من هنـــا

Columnist Rips A's Owner John Fisher for 'Reign of Error'

The Athletics' time in Oakland has come to an unceremonious end. As the franchise prepares to make its move to Las Vegas in 2028, it will take up residence in Sacramento. Though separated by just 80 miles, it's difficult to envision the Oakland faithful making the trek to Sacramento to support the team, as ownership has largely fallen out of favor with the local fanbase that supported it to four World Series titles in the '70s and '80s.

One local columnist, Scott Olster of the , pulled no punches talking about John Fisher, the owner of the team in an appearance on the show.

"There have been people, almost literally standing in line to buy that team for years. And I'm talking about legitimate people like Joe Lacob and other people, backed by Reggie Jackson, had a group. There have been three or four groups that would right now step up and buy the team. So to say that John Fisher is a victim of being stuck in a terrible ballpark in Oakland [that] is not his fault, well it is his fault because other people believe they could've made a go of that."

Lacob is the owner of the Golden State Warriors, who play locally, having just recently moved from Oakland to San Francisco. The team has won four championships under his oversight.

"To me, it's a reign of error. It's been a long time suffering under John Fisher," Olster later said. "I really think, you know, people in Oakland feel bad. I actually feel good for them that they're out from under the burden of having to try to support or coexist with a John Fisher team."

Olster also cast skepticism on the idea that the Athletics will get to Vegas by 2028, when they're currently scheduled to relocate.

Du Plooy, Williamson provide base for Middlesex win over Gloucestershire

Debutant Sebastian Morgan shines as home side win battle of South Group stragglers

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay11-Jul-2025

Kane Williamson’s fifty helped Middlesex to a winning total•Getty Images

Half-centuries for Kane Williamson and skipper Leus du Plooy helped Middlesex to a 23-run win over Gloucestershire at Merchant Taylors’ School – only their fifth ever victory over the west country men in the Vitality Blast.Williamson’s 50 came in 28 balls with two sixes and six fours while du Plooy produced two maximums of his own, the pair sharing a stand of 92 as the hosts totaled 189 for 5.Australian left-hander D’Arcy Short hit 64 in 46 in reply, supported by Jack Taylor’s 41, but two wickets for debutant Sebastian Morgan and Noah Cornwell’s 1 for 20 meant they finished on 166-7.Two bowlers on the night, Marchant de Lange and Luke Hollman, found themselves on hat-tricks but neither managed to complete the feat.The hosts found early impetus as Stephen Eskinazi and Ben Geddes cleared the ropes in the powerplay, but both departed in quick succession. Du Plooy picked up the mantle, but Williamson was strangely subdued until badly dropped on 13 at deep mid-off by Graeme van Buuren, Oliver Price the unlucky bowler.The reprieve released the shackles with the former New Zealand skipper scoring 39 from his next 15 deliveries, van Buuren left to rue his spill as Williamson struck him for a glorious straight six. He departed immediately afterwards caught at short fine from the spin of Short, to end the stand of 92.Du Plooy would also make it to 50 from 35 balls, but was one of two wickets in successive balls in a fabulously hostile spell from de Lange and it needed some long handle from Ryan Higgins to get the Seaxes to 189.Morgan made a dream start ball in hand with the wicket of Miles Hammond in his opening over courtesy of a wonderful over the shoulder catch by du Plooy.Short initially struggled for rhythm but a sumptuous straight six off Higgins got the reply up and running and an uppercut over the wicketkeeper raised the 50 from the last ball of the powerplay. The 50-partnership came in 29 balls, but Cameron Bancroft spooned a catch to Williamson at deep square off Hollman and the legspinner became the second bowler in the match to take two in two when Tom Helm held another good catch at short fine to dismiss Price first ball.Short though remained and lofted Hollman for six in his next over to emphasise the point and Taylor caught the mood with successive fours from the otherwise frugal Cornwell. Short’s seventh four took him to 50 and with Taylor clearing the ropes the 50 partnership rattled up in 31 balls.Even so, a tight over from Higgins meant 52 were needed from the last four overs and that task got tougher when Short gloved one from Cornwell through to wicketkeeper Joe Cracknell. And when Taylor became Morgan’s second victim in the next over, the task became too much.

Bat down, hunger up: Smith ready for Lord's after American reset

Smith, who turned 36 last week, stayed away from cricket for three months till very recently

Andrew McGlashan08-Jun-20252:58

Finch: Australia’s batting gives them the edge over SA

Some players were at the IPL. Others were in county cricket. Those at home trained in Brisbane. Steven Smith, meanwhile, spent time in New York and picked up a bat for the first time in three months just a few days ago. Then he promptly walked out of his first net session and told head coach Andrew McDonald: “Can we play tomorrow, I’m ready to go.”The Australia set-up allows players to tailor preparation to what they want and when you’ve scored over 10,000 Test runs you can be trusted to know what’s best. But for a batting obsessive like Smith, not picking up the willow for so long still went against the grain as they didn’t see the light of day while he was in America where he worked extensively on a fitness regime with a new personal trainer. Smith, who turned 36 last week, said he probably hasn’t been as strong since 2014 and that improved mobility in his hips could aid him in the slips.”I’d normally have a bat laying around the house somewhere and just pick it up and do a bit of shadow batting and stuff,” he said. “But I made a conscious decision to try and just let it go for a while. It was good.Related

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“I hadn’t hit a ball since I missed a full toss off Mohammed Shami in the Champions Trophy. Fortunately, everything sort of clicked into place immediately. I feel like I’m moving really well, I feel strong and just ready to get into it now.”Normally how it works is my first hit’s good, my second hit’s awful, and then I’d get better from there. But both hits were just really good and I was like, hopefully it doesn’t turn around now and I don’t have to spend hours in the nets the next couple of days.”It helps that Smith excels batting in England where he has a Test average of 55.00. In the 2023 World Test Championship final against India he made 121. At Lord’s, his average is 58.33 and in his last Test at the ground he made a century.Smith noted the extra bounce that was on offer from the centre wicket at Beckenham where Australia had their initial training block – “almost felt like we were playing at Perth stadium,” he said – and expecting something a little different when preparations shift to Lord’s on Sunday.”I play a lot of back foot shots here, I don’t tend to get too far forward to the ball. I try and score really square of the wicket,” he said. “It kind of just suits me in a way. Hopefully can kick off where I left off the last couple of Tests that we played [in Sri Lanka].”After his century at Lord’s in the 2023 Ashes, Smith went 23 innings until the next, the longest wait of his career, which included his brief time as an opener. Then he went on a surge against India and Sri Lanka with four centuries in eight innings with some of his best batting since the golden 2019 Ashes in England. He admitted that the Adelaide Test against India last year, which preceded that return to form, was a rare moment where he felt the scrutiny.”I feel like I’ve been in the team for a while and I haven’t felt under a great deal of pressure,” he said. “Maybe a little bit after Adelaide last year was the most I’ve felt. And maybe [that’s] why I came out the next game and was really, really hungry to get a good score in Brisbane. But that was external talk and things cross my desk all the time. People send me things that people are saying. So I don’t know, maybe something clicked in me and I wanted to get back to the position of being a bit more comfortable again.”Smith scored 110 and 34 the last time he played at Lord’s•PA Images via Getty Images

By then, Smith had already started taking a less-is-more approach to training, something that was further crystalised by a conversation with Michael Hussey early in that same India series.”We’re a bit older, we’ve hit a lot of balls,” he said. “It’s about having that mental side as switched on as it can be for the big moments. And you don’t want to use up all your energy in the nets. There’s a fine balance, of course. I’m someone that needs to feel really prepared. And I don’t want to leave any stone unturned in my preparation so that when I go to the middle, I’m ready to play.”But I’ve also got to realise that the older you get, the mental side I think probably wears a little bit thinner on you. And you’ve got to try and be in the best space you can be in the middle to bat for long periods of time. Sometimes I might get the balance wrong. But when you’re hitting the ball well, you can sort of do what you want in terms of your preparation in a way. You can just let it be and trust that when you get to the middle, it’s all going to be okay.”There continues to be intrigue over how the closing chapter of Smith’s storied career will play out. He has retired from ODI cricket to create space for more T20 leagues – he could play two MLC games between the WTC final and Australia’s first Test in West Indies – and reiterated his desire to feature in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. After the South Africa decider, Australia’s next visit to England for Test cricket is the 2027 Ashes, part of a bumper year that also includes five Tests in India.”I’m definitely not looking that far ahead,” he said. “I’m kind of taking it day by day. While I’m enjoying it, while I’m batting nicely and feeling like I’m contributing to the team, I’m pretty happy. But that [2027] is a while away.”Which all means this could be Smith’s last Test appearance at Lord’s. “I think it’s probably, outside of Sydney, my favourite ground to play at,” he said. “The history, the surface itself. It always takes a few balls just to get used to that slope. One end you feel like you’re standing really tall, the other end you feel like you’re falling over a little bit. But the ball races away, both up the hill and down the hill.”And then the lunch is fabulous. They always say it’s a great place to miss out so you can enjoy your lunch. Fortunately, or unfortunately, the last few years I’ve done really well there, so I haven’t been able to cash in on that.”If Smith has to forego a big lunch again, that could spell bad news for South Africa.

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