A potential new dawn for cricket in Europe

A potential new dawn for cricket in Europe
Paul Stirling and Curtis Campher in action for Ireland. (X/@cricketireland)
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A potential new dawn for cricket in Europe

A potential new dawn for cricket in Europe
  • The ICC has sanctioned the Abhishek Bachchan-backed European T20 Premier League which will launch in July this year

Into the existing global jigsaw of T20 franchise tournaments, in which the pieces do not quite fit together, another piece has been added. The International Cricket Council has sanctioned a league in Europe, to be known as the European T20 Premier League. It is made up of a partnership between the national cricket boards of Ireland, Scotland and the Netherlands.

The first edition of the event will be held between July 15 and Aug. 3, 2025. This fits between the Major Cricket League in the USA, which is scheduled to run between mid-June and mid-July, and The Hundred, which runs between Aug. 5 and 31. It also avoids the 13th edition of the men's Caribbean Premier League which will be held between Aug. 14 and Sept. 21, but slightly overlaps with the Lanka Premier League, which will be played between July 1 and 21. The T20 Blast in England and Wales sprawls from the end of May until mid-September, excluding August. Four days of that schedule will clash with the ETPL in July. 

The concept of a European League has been long in the making. In March 2019, Cricket Scotland, Cricket Ireland and the Royal Dutch Cricket Association announced the Euro T20 Slam for six teams. A player draft was held but, apparently, financial difficulties were encountered and the COVID19 outbreak ended the ambitions of the organisers. They were also responsible for the Canadian Global T20 tournament, which will enter its fourth edition in 2025. Last year, it ran from July 25 to Aug. 11. 

There is no association between those who were behind the Euro T20 Slam and those who are investing and planning the ETPL. As soon ICC approval was granted, none other than Abhishek Bachchan was revealed as a co-owner.

Indians will need no introduction to one of Hindi/Indian cinema’s leading stars and the son of legendary actor Amitabh Bachchan. Previously, Abhishek’s involvement in sport focused on kabaddi and football, rather than cricket. In an interview with him I asked him why he had added cricket to his sporting portfolio and why in Europe rather than India.

Bachchan explained that, because he was sent to boarding school in Switzerland when he was nine, he did not have the exposure to cricket that most children of his age experienced. Later, when opportunities to invest in cricket arose, he felt that he did not have the “bandwidth”. His time was fully occupied by his acting career, his investment in the Jaipur Pink Panthers in the Indian Pro Kabaddi League, plus co-ownership of Chennaiyin FC in the Indian Super League. This is not to say that he has no interest in cricket — far from it. He is a huge fan of the IPL and the Mumbai Indians, a side he will watch if filming commitments allow. 

Now, Bachchan believes that the time is right for him to invest in cricket. He believes that passion is required to spark investment interest, along with an opportunity to make an impact. This is what he feels about ETPL. A chance meeting opened up the opportunity to stir interest in a region that has not yet been able to tap into the explosion of T20 franchise cricket.

He regards T20 as the new frontier of cricket and was amazed at the amounts of money spent, not just by Indians, in buying stakes in The Hundred last week. Cricket had got to the stage where it needed private money invested in it, otherwise the game was in danger of stagnating.

In cricket’s ecosystem, the privately-owned ETPL will have a unique feature through its partnership with three cricketing nations. In the ICC’s T20 rankings. Ireland is in 11th place, Scotland is 13th and the Netherlands 14th. All three are ambitious to improve — Ireland is already a full member and a Test-playing nation. However, all three need additional funds to pursue their respective ambitions. A number of their players feature on the global franchise circuit. A European tournament will provide a platform for the leading talent from these three countries, playing alongside some of the best talent from around the world.

During the initial phase of the tournament’s development, an interim working group has been established to guide decision-making and oversee resourcing. It is chaired by the CEO of Cricket Ireland and comprises representatives from the three cricket boards and from strategic partner, Rules Sport Tech. This is a private limited company, headquartered in Haryana, India, and set up by Bachchan, Priyanka Kaul, Dhiraj Malhotra and Saurav Banerjee. They were present at the time of my interview with Bachchan, contributing additional information about their plans for the ETPL.

They have their work cut out. There are five months to go until the league opens. Without naming names, for obvious reasons, it was clear that discussions with players and their agents are underway, as are those with potential franchisees and investors.

I asked if any of the IPL franchise owners who did not secure a stake in The Hundred have expressed interest. The answer was a warm smile from Bachchan. His involvement will no doubt help in raising exposure in India and enhancing prospects of securing media coverage. This is not to say that the plan is to bankroll the league wholly with Indian funds. There is a clear will to have local involvement.

It seems likely that the league will be based in six cities — Dublin, Belfast, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Amsterdam and Rotterdam. The format, along with other details, is due to be revealed at some stage in the near future. Bachchan spoke enthusiastically about the prospect of the league developing world class local talent. Success for him lies in that ambition as well as in profitability.

He is confident that the business model which they have in place will enable franchises to be earning profits by the end of Year 5. He pointed out that eight to 10 years is common in franchise cricket. If Bachchan’s positivity and belief are the lodestone for the ETPL, then it has a good chance of creating a legacy in Europe, a part of the world that is home to 34 of 108 ICC member countries but has struggled to establish cricket as a major sport.  


Pakistan fined for slow over-rate in New Zealand defeat

Pakistan fined for slow over-rate in New Zealand defeat
Updated 2 min 51 sec ago
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Pakistan fined for slow over-rate in New Zealand defeat

Pakistan fined for slow over-rate in New Zealand defeat
  • ICC referees panel says skipper Mohammad Rizwan pleads guilty to offense
  • Pakistan lost to New Zealand by 60 runs in Champions Trophy 2025 opener 

DUBAI: The International Cricket Council on Thursday fined Pakistan five percent of their players’ match fee for a slow over-rate in the Champions Trophy defeat to New Zealand in Karachi.

New Zealand smashed 320-5 in their 50 overs with Pakistan bowled out for 260 in 47. 5 overs, losing by 60 runs on Wednesday.
“Pakistan have been fined five percent of their match fee for maintaining a slow over-rate against New Zealand,” said an ICC statement.

Andy Pycroft of the ICC Elite Panel of Match Referees imposed the sanction after Mohammad Rizwan’s side was ruled to be one over short of the target after time allowances were taken into consideration.

Rizwan pleaded guilty to the offense and accepted the proposed sanction, so there was no need for a formal hearing, the ICC said.
“On-field umpires Richard Kettleborough and Sharfuddoula, third umpire Joel Wilson and fourth umpire Alex Wharf levelled the charge,” the ICC added.

Pakistan now face arch rivals India in Dubai in a must win game on Sunday to keep their semifinal hopes alive from Group A.
Bangladesh are the other team in the group while Australia, England, South Africa and Afghanistan are in Group B.

The top two teams from each group will qualify for the semifinals.

The Champions Trophy runs until March 9 in Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates.


Towhid hits ton as Bangladesh reach 228 after 35-5 against India

Towhid hits ton as Bangladesh reach 228 after 35-5 against India
Updated 20 February 2025
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Towhid hits ton as Bangladesh reach 228 after 35-5 against India

Towhid hits ton as Bangladesh reach 228 after 35-5 against India
  • Indian pace spearhead Mohammed Shami takes five wickets in Dubai 
  • Towhid, Jaker put on solid partnership of 154 to lead Bangladesh fightback 

DUBAI: Towhid Hridoy struck his first ODI century and with Jaker Ali helped Bangladesh reach 228 from 35-5 against India as the two teams opened their Champions Trophy campaign on Thursday in Dubai.
India’s pace spearhead Mohammed Shami returned figures of 5-53 after Bangladesh elected to bat first but lost half their side in the ninth over.
Towhid, who made 100, and Jaker, who hit 68, put on 154 runs to boost the total, albeit with some assistance from sloppy Indian fielding including two dropped catches.
Towhid, who faced cramps later in his knock, raised his hundred and acknowledged the cheers of the fans at a largely empty stadium before he departed and the innings folded in 49.4 overs.
Shami struck in the first over to get left-handed Soumya Sarkar caught behind for a five-ball duck.
Harshit Rana combined from the other end to get skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto caught at cover-point for a duck with Virat Kohli taking a good catch over his head.
Mehidy Hasan Miraz could not last long as Shami struck for the second time as Shubman Gill took a sharp catch at slip.
Shami’s return from injury in India’s white-ball triumph over England at home boosted the team in the absence of Jasprit Bumrah, who was ruled out of this eight-nation tournament with a back injury.
Bangladesh lost half their side in the ninth over when left-arm spinner Axar Patel struck twice in two balls to send Tanzid Hasan, for 25, and Mushfiqur Rahim, for zero, trudging back to the pavilion.
It could have been six down and Axar with a hat-trick had skipper Rohit Sharma not dropped a catch at first slip to hand Jaker Ali a reprieve on nought.
Rohit slapped his hand on the grass and stood up with a wry smile to apologize to Axar for the slip.
Jaker, who survived another reprieve on 24 when wicketkeeper KL Rahul missed a stumping, and Towhid, who was dropped on 23 by Hardik Pandya at mid-off, combined to thwart the Indian charge.
Jaker reached his second ODI fifty and Towhid raised his half ton with a boundary.
Jaker finally fell to Shami but Towhid kept up the fight until his 118-ball knock ended with six fours and two sixes.
India remain title favorites and have Pakistan and New Zealand as the other two teams in Group A.


Spanish court sentences ex-soccer boss Rubiales to pay fine over kiss without consent

Spanish court sentences ex-soccer boss Rubiales to pay fine over kiss without consent
Updated 20 February 2025
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Spanish court sentences ex-soccer boss Rubiales to pay fine over kiss without consent

Spanish court sentences ex-soccer boss Rubiales to pay fine over kiss without consent
  • Prosecutors had sought a prison sentence for Rubiales
  • “The ruling bans Rubiales from going within a 200-meter radius of Hermoso,” the court said

MADRID: Spain’s High Court said on Thursday it had found former soccer federation boss Luis Rubiales guilty of sexual assault for kissing player Jenni Hermoso without her consent, and set a fine of over 10,000 euros ($10,434.00), but acquitted him of coercion.
Prosecutors had sought a prison sentence for Rubiales in a case that sparked a debate in Spain about sexism in women’s football and wider Spanish society.
“The ruling bans Rubiales from going within a 200-meter radius of Hermoso and from communicating with her for one year,” the court said in a statement.
Rubiales, 47, was accused of sexual assault for kissing Hermoso on the mouth. He was also accused — along with three other former soccer federation officials — of attempting to then coerce her into saying the kiss, at the 2023 World Cup awards ceremony in Sydney, was consensual.
A lawyer for Hermoso was not immediately available for comment.


Pakistan’s hopes dashed by New Zealand in ICC Champions Trophy opener

Pakistan’s hopes dashed by New Zealand in ICC Champions Trophy opener
Updated 20 February 2025
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Pakistan’s hopes dashed by New Zealand in ICC Champions Trophy opener

Pakistan’s hopes dashed by New Zealand in ICC Champions Trophy opener
  • New Zealand pull off 60-run win in Karachi despite missing key players Ferguson, Ravindra
  • Pakistan face must-win situation as they head to Dubai for India encounter on February 23

KARACHI: Pakistan’s 29-year wait to host an International Cricket Council ended in disappointment when New Zealand handed the hosts a comprehensive 60-run defeat at Karachi's National Bank Stadium.

The ICC Champions Trophy opener, which began with such promise for Pakistan after they won the toss and opted to field, quickly unraveled.

The day’s first turning point came just two balls into the match when Fakhar Zaman injured himself during a chase to the boundary. This would have far-reaching consequences for Pakistan later.

Understandably, both teams started tentatively before Pakistan reduced New Zealand to 73 for three. This was Pakistan’s moment to grab the game, but a lack of frontline spin options to support Abrar began to tell as Will Young and Tom Latham built a match-defining partnership.

Young, who always seems to be on the edge of the team and might not have played had Rachin Ravindra been fit, crafted a brilliant 107 off 113 balls. He got through testing spells from Naseem Shah and the mystery spin of Abrar early in his innings to provide the perfect platform for an assault in the last 10 overs.

Latham looked assured from the first ball he received and got the correct balance between the need to rebuild the innings and being positive. He ended the innings unbeaten with 118 off 104 balls, in which he used the sweep shot to good effect. Fifty-two of his runs came square or behind square on the leg side.

The final flourish came from Glenn Phillips, who at one stage was 10 off 18 balls before reaching his 50 off the next 16 deliveries. His explosive 61 off 39 balls, including consecutive sixes off Shaheen Shah Afridi, helped New Zealand plunder 113 runs in the final 10 overs. Pakistan’s bowling, usually their strength, struggled to achieve control. Naseem Shah with 2 for 63 was the most economical, but Shaheen, no wicket for 68 and Haris Rauf, 2 for 83, had days to forget.

Pakistan’s chase was compromised before it began. Fakhar’s injury-enforced absence from the opening position led to a makeshift solution in Saud Shakeel, who fell early to Will O’Rourke for six. When Fakhar eventually batted at number four, he was visibly hampered, managing just 24 off 41 balls before falling to Michael Bracewell.

The story of Pakistan’s innings was one of no intent or game awareness. Babar Azam’s 64 came at a pace that hurt rather than helped, taking 81 balls to reach his fifty. The spinners, particularly Mitchell Santner, with 3 for 66 and Bracewell, dominated the middle overs on a pitch offering turn and variable bounce.

Salman Ali Agha tried to throw a few punches with smart, low-risk options for his 42 off 28 balls before Khushdil Shah showed real intent, his 69 off 49 balls providing some late entertainment before Pakistan were bowled out for 260.

The defeat puts Pakistan in a precarious position in a format that offers little margin for error. With just three group matches per team, they now face a must-win situation as they head to Dubai for their encounter with India on Feb. 23.

The prospect of an early exit from a tournament they are co-hosting looms large — a scenario that would be particularly bitter given the 29-year wait to bring ICC events back to Pakistani soil. The pressure will be immense in Dubai, where anything less than victory will see the team all but eliminated from their home tournament after only two matches. The passionate Karachi crowd which witnessed the setback against New Zealand will hope their team can summon the resilience that has become their trademark in recent years.

New Zealand’s victory, achieved despite missing key players such as Lockie Ferguson and Rachin Ravindra, sets them up perfectly in a tournament where fast starts are crucial. They will face India and Bangladesh in their other group matches.


Afghanistan cricket team can ignore boycott calls, says skipper Shahidi

Afghanistan cricket team can ignore boycott calls, says skipper Shahidi
Updated 20 February 2025
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Afghanistan cricket team can ignore boycott calls, says skipper Shahidi

Afghanistan cricket team can ignore boycott calls, says skipper Shahidi
  • British, South African politicians have called for boycotting Afghanistan over Taliban’s treatment of women 
  • Champions Trophy, the first global event hosted by Pakistan in three decades, opened on Wednesday in Karachi

KARACHI: Afghanistan skipper Hashmatullah Shahidi on Thursday said calls from other nations for a boycott of their matches because of the treatment of women by the ruling Taliban did not effect his team.

Afghanistan open their Group B campaign in the Champions Trophy against South Africa in Karachi on Friday.

Last month South Africa Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie backed demands from British politicians for a playing boycott of Afghanistan.

The England and Wales Cricket Board resisted the demand to boycott their Champions Trophy group game, but said they would not host Afghanistan in a bilateral series.

Australia, also in Group B, have canceled a Twenty20 international series and a Test against Afghanistan in the last two years, but plan to play their trophy game.

Shahidi said he was unperturbed.

“We only control things inside the ground, that’s our job,” Shahidi said in a press conference in Karachi on Thursday. “The other things cannot put us under pressure.”

Afghanistan face England in Lahore on February 26 and Australia at the same venue two days later.

“The whole world knows that we are playing well, especially in the last three years so we are focused on our play and here also we do the control things,” Shahidi said.

Having learnt most of their cricket in the refugee camps in Pakistan during the Soviet invasion of their country in 1970s, the Afghanistan team have risen by leaps and bounds.

They shocked three former champions — England, Pakistan and Sri Lanka — at the 2023 one-day World Cup in India. They were the losing semifinalists in the Twenty20 World Cup last year, held in the United States and the West Indies.

Shahidi said his team was not overawed by South Africa.

“We have recently beaten South Africa in Sharjah so we have that confidence with us and we are not under any pressure,” said Shahidi of his team’s 2-1 win last year.

Afghanistan skipper vowed his team wants to win the Trophy.

“We are doing very good so we are here to win the final and not just to participate. We are definitely hundred percent looking to win this event.”

Afghanistan boast quality spinners with Rashid Khan, ranked second in the world in one-day internationals, leading the attack.

They also have hard hitting batters in Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Ibrahim Zadran and Mohammad Nabi.

The Champions Trophy — the first global event hosted by Pakistan in three decades — opened on Wednesday with New Zealand beating the host country by 60 runs in Group A.

India and Bangladesh are the other two teams in the Group. Top-two teams from each Group will qualify for the semifinals.