Category: Sports

  • Man Utd eye Barca left-back – Tuesday’s gossip

    Man Utd eye Barca left-back – Tuesday’s gossip

    Barcelona defender Alejandro Balde is a summer transfer target for Manchester United, with the Red Devils also battling Chelsea for Ipswich striker Liam Delap, while Newcastle eye PSV Eindhoven forward Johan Bakayoko.

    Manchester United are ready to submit a bid of £33.3m (40m euros) for Barcelona’s 21-year-old Spain left-back Alejandro Balde in the summer. (El Nacional – in Spanish), external

    Newcastle are planning a £33.3m (40m euros) summer bid for PSV Eindhoven’s 21-year-old Belgium forward Johan Bakayoko. (Tuttosport – in Italian), external

    Newcastle are also set to beat Barcelona and Real Madrid to the free transfer signing of 18-year-old Spain Under-19 winger Antonio Cordero, whose Malaga contract expires this summer. (Mail), external

    Manchester United and Chelsea are interested in Ipswich’s 22-year-old English striker Liam Delap. (Football Insider), external

    Chelsea are also keen on Copenhagen’s 19-year-old Sweden Under-21 winger Roony Bardghji. (TBR Football)

    Fiorentina are considering offering Moise Kean a new contract containing an increased release clause following Premier League interest in the 24-year-old Italy striker, including from Tottenham and Arsenal. (Corriere dello Sport via Calciomercato – in Italian), external

    Chelsea are monitoring Sporting’s 19-year-old Portugal Under-21 midfielder Dario Essugo, who is on loan at Las Palmas. (Fabrizio Romano), external

    Bournemouth’s 19-year-old Netherlands-born Spain Under-21 defender Dean Huijsen is also interesting Chelsea. (Teamtalk), external

    Real Madrid boss Carlo Ancelotti has been told he must decide before May if he wants to become the coach of Brazil. (OK Dario – in Spanish, external), external

    Arsenal expect to sign Espanyol’s 23-year-old Spanish goalkeeper Joan Garcia this summer. (Football Insider), external

    Manchester United want Athletic Bilbao sporting director Mikel Gonzalez to replace Dan Ashworth at Old Trafford. (El Chiringuito via Football Espana)

  • Leading LIV Golf player to get spot in The Open

    Leading LIV Golf player to get spot in The Open

    The leading LIV Golf League player not already exempt for this year’s Open Championship will gain entry to the field for Royal Portrush.

    The highest-placed player in the top five of the circuit’s standings after its June event in Dallas who has not already qualified will be awarded the spot.

    The 153rd Open takes place on the Northern Irish club’s Dunluce course from 17 to 20 July.

    The USGA last week announced that the US Open, which takes place from 12 to 15 June at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania, is offering an exemption to one leading LIV player.

    “The Open is a global championship for the best men’s golfers and each year we review our exemptions to ensure we offer pathways into the championship based on results achieved on the leading professional tours,” said Mark Darbon, the chief executive of the R&A, which runs The Open.

    “We acknowledge that players competing in LIV Golf should also have the opportunity to secure places in The Open through its individual season standings as well as existing pathways.

    “We are proud to offer a wide range of opportunities to qualify globally and look forward to seeing which golfers will emerge to take their place at Royal Portrush in July.”

    The Masters and the US PGA Championship have previously awarded special exemptions to LIV’s Joaquin Niemann while Sergio Garcia also received an invitation for the US PGA.

    Niemann and Garcia finished second and third respectively in the Saudi Arabian-funded breakaway circuit’s individual standings for 2024 behind Jon Rahm.

    Rahm already has an exemption for all of this year’s majors based on his victories in the 2021 US Open and 2023 Masters.

    Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Cameron Smith, Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson are also exempt for The Open as a result of their performances in past championships.

    The PGA Tour has been in protracted negotiations with LIV’s backers, the Saudi Public Investment Fund, in an attempt to resolve the split in world golf.

  • Woods pulls out of Genesis after mother’s death

    Woods pulls out of Genesis after mother’s death

    Tiger Woods has withdrawn from this week’s Genesis Invitational because he is “still processing” the death of his mother.

    The 15-time major champion says he is “not ready” to return to golf following the death his mother, Kultida, which was announced on 4 February.

    Three days later tournament organisers announced Woods’ participation in the event at Torrey Pines.

    “I planned to tee it up this week, but I’m just not ready,” Woods wrote on social media.

    “I did my best to prepare, knowing it’s what my mom would have wanted, but I’m still processing her loss.

    “Thanks to everyone who has reached out. I hope to be at Torrey later in the week and appreciate the continued kindness since my mom’s passing.”

    Woods has not played a PGA Tour event since last year’s Open at Royal Troon in July.

    The American has not played regularly since sustaining severe injuries in a car accident in February 2021 and had more surgery on his lower back in September.

    The 49-year-old did play alongside teenage son Charlie in a 36-hole event in December, and has also taken part in the Tomorrow’s Golf League (TGL) event he founded.

    Woods is tournament host of the Genesis Invitational, which starts on Thursday and benefits Woods’ TGR Foundation.

    It was due to take place at the Riviera Country Club but was relocated to Torrey Pines in San Diego because of the Los Angeles wildfires.

  • Boom or bust? Golf in flux but is it really thriving?

    Boom or bust? Golf in flux but is it really thriving?

    Crisis, what crisis? Are the doomsayers mistaken over the current state of professional golf?

    Are we wrong to keep highlighting divisions and splits, tumbling television audiences and the controversial sources of so much of the sport’s income?

    Should we not be viewing this from a glass half full perspective? Indeed if we do, is the tumbler not overflowing with good news? Look at what is happening in the royal and ancient game.

    It is back live on free-to-air television in the UK, the leader of the free world is brokering a united future and top stars are stirring up a giant simulator to “grow the game”.

    At its recreational level the post-covid boom is being sustained. More people are playing, ‘influencers’ are attracting dedicated followings and the latest season of a behind the scenes docu-series is about to drop on Netflix.

    What’s not to like? Tiger Woods makes his latest comeback this week at Torrey Pines and we are edging ever closer to the year’s first major at a time when the four grand slam tournaments have never been stronger.

    Last weekend there was action all over the globe, with an international array of golfers competing for vast sums of money.

    Poland’s Adrian Meronk pocketed a cool $4m (£3.2m) for victory under the lights in LIV’s season opener in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, while Tom McKibbin’s debut yielded more than $1m in individual and team earnings for the young Northern Irishman.

    What a time to be a male pro golfer.

    Thomas Detry’s brilliant win at the Phoenix Open earned the Belgian $1.67m while in Qatar, the DP World Tour’s players scrapped over spoils, admittedly smaller but guaranteed by the European tour’s alliance with America.

    China’s Haotong Li pocketed £341,000 for his victory, taking a big step towards gaining access to the riches of America next season, made available to the top 10 not otherwise exempt in the Race to Dubai.

    Isn’t this the essence of professional golf? Creating tournaments that supply lucrative livings for the very best players in the world?

    Of course it is.

    And LIV, whose arrival prompted such a cash injection is off to a flier at the start of its fourth season. New chief executive Scott O’Neil is already chalking up handy victories.

    A TV deal with Fox Sports in the US is a significant upgrade on the CW Network – a backwater in terms of sports broadcasting – and now the agreement with ITV means live golf is again available free-to-air in the UK.

    An even bigger success is the R&A and the USGA providing formalised pathways for those competing in these 54-hole shotgun starts to qualify for The Open and US Opens.

    LIV just got legit and that is a very big deal.

    The game remains split, though, while creating the competitive tension that is benefitting players – just as O’Neil’s predecessor Greg Norman predicted it would.

    Separate camps remain, in one corner The PGA and DP World Tours, LIV in the other; with the Masters, US PGA Championship, US Open and Open sitting in the middle.

    Those four majors are the only places where we can see all of the world’s best players; Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele and Rory McIlroy take on LIV recruits such as Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka.

    The majors are exactly what is said on their tin and have never been more eagerly anticipated. They also show an elevated state that golf could achieve on a far more regular basis.

    And this is where the leader of the free world comes in. US president Donald Trump wants unity, sees nothing wrong with doing deals with Saudi Arabia and has the power to get it sorted.

    The PGA Tour has asked him to become involved in brokering a deal with the Saudi Public Investment Fund’s golf-mad governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan. They’ve been trying to thrash this out since June 2023 and every aspect has, so far, been top secret.

    That is, until Trump’s involvement. He clearly wants an agreement and more importantly needs to be seen publicly as the catalyst. That’s the art of his kind of dealmaking.

    Never mind that for many, the source of the next tranche of money that will pour into the sport’s bulging coffers is so contentious. Now there seems little fear that Saudi Arabia’s heavily criticised record on human rights will ever derail golf’s gravy train.

    These are the good times, remember.

    But golf’s future depends on people not being turned off by excessive earnings perceived as inappropriately high for what is on show.

    How many people will watch LIV on Fox or ITV? Or, for that matter, the PGA Tour on the traditional golfing networks in the US and UK. Will this September’s Ryder Cup carry its usual lustre now American players are being paid to represent their country?

    Will Woods and McIlroy’s TGL simulator show capture the imagination of a new golfing audience? The jury is out on that one with much to debate.

    Will Netflix’s third series of Full Swing produce heroic figures around who fans can rally? Or will we be turned off by the opulence of the gilded golfing life enjoyed by the biggest stars?

    And will there still be scope for the uniquely heart-warming stories that golf has always generated?

    The quest to improve ‘the product’ is set to spell the end of Monday qualifiers for what will become 120 player tournaments on the PGA Tour next year.

    Last week Will Chandler played his way into the Waste Management field in Arizona on the Monday and finished sixth after playing Sunday’s final round with world number one Scheffler.

    These are the sort of stories that keep us dreaming. Cara Gainer’s first Ladies European Tour (LET) win is another of those – the 29-year-old Englishwoman’s play-off win in the Lalla Meryum Cup in Morocco last weekend is a much deserved breakthrough.

    This week she is off to a more lucrative LET event – you guessed it – the Aramco Series event at Riyadh Golf Club in Saudi Arabia. But she will be playing for a fraction of the funds LIV’s men were fighting over.

  • Norrie beats Svajda in Delray Beach Open

    Norrie beats Svajda in Delray Beach Open

    British number two Cameron Norrie beat American Zachary Svajda in straight sets to reach the Delray Beach Open second round.

    Norrie, the 2022 winner, needed 90 minutes to seal a 7-5 6-4 win over the world number 169.

    The players traded breaks of serve in a tight first set played in hot and humid conditions in Florida.

    A powerful forehand down the line gave Norrie a crucial second break, with the 29-year-old comfortably holding serve to take the set.

    With an equally tight second set level at 4-4, Norrie could not convert five break points in a mammoth eighth game before finally taking the sixth.

    He then took the second of two match points on his serve to set up a second-round meeting with French second seed Arthur Rinderknech or Canada’s Gabriel Diallo.

  • Lions watch week two: Fly-halves, flankers & props star

    Lions watch week two: Fly-halves, flankers & props star

    The battle to earn selection for the British and Irish Lions squad continued in the second round of the Six Nations, but which players staked their claim?

    Lions head coach Andy Farrell was at Murrayfield on Sunday to watch his Ireland team overpower Scotland, while England overcame France in a thriller to claim their first win.

    Six Nations Rugby Special pundits Joe Marler and Chris Ashton have selected their starting XVs based on the weekend’s matches, and here are three positions under consideration.

    Fin Smith produced an inspired second-half display at Twickenham to turn the tide in England’s favour over France.

    Smith, on his first Test start, began slowly before creating two late tries.

    He changed the direction of attack to clip the ball wide for Northampton Saints team-mate Tommy Freeman to gather and score, before timing his pass for Elliot Daly to glide through the French defence in the penultimate minute.

    Smith’s conversion handed England victory and he was named player of the match to stake his claim for the number 10 jersey.

    Marcus Smith, who started at fly-half in the opening round defeat by Ireland, had a solid game from full-back but will be targeting a return to his preferred position.

    It remains to be seen whether Farrell considers Marcus Smith as an option at fly-half or elsewhere but Fin Smith has certainly boosted his chances.

    In the Scottish capital, Finn Russell was denied the chance to impose himself on Ireland and strengthen his claim to the Lions’ 10 shirt which he wore in South Africa in 2021, after colliding with team-mate Darcy Graham in the first half.

    His opposite number Sam Prendergast ended the game with the player-of-the-match award after a balanced and controlled display.

    The 21-year-old, on his fifth cap, fired an excellent long pass for Calvin Nash to score the opening try and kicked 12 points from the tee.

    Former Scotland captain Johnnie Beattie told BBC Rugby Union Weekly: “He is 21 years old and is only going to get better.

    “He needs game time to mature and grow in confidence but in terms of raw material, with his kicking game and his ability to take time on the ball and choose the right option, his distribution was excellent.”

    BBC rugby union correspondent Chris Jones added: “The 10 is a really interesting debate. It is still Finn Russell’s shirt from 2021 because he finished the third Test.

    “He didn’t get a chance against Ireland to show what he can do but knowing Finn, he will have a blinder against England at Twickenham and cement himself.

    “But then there is Fin Smith, Sam Prendergast, Jack Crowley and Marcus Smith, whether he goes at 10 or as more of a floating outside back.”

    Flankers

    Tom Curry has been one of the standout England performers under Steve Borthwick and he continues to excel after recovering from hip surgery.

    He carried with intensity, making valuable metres in the build-up to Fin Baxter’s try, and was tireless at the breakdown.

    When fit, Curry is one of the first names in Borthwick’s XV and former England wing Ashton says the Sale Sharks flanker is also a cert in the Lions back row, alongside Ireland captain and number eight Caelan Doris.

    “Having had such a big hip operation and coming back to play the way he is, is impressive,” said Ashton. “He could hardly walk off the pitch because he put such a shift in.

    “We have so many good back rows but I think seven and eight are nailed on.”

    England’s Ben Earl also impressed after moving to the flank with his powerful ball-carrying and energy around the field, but both Ashton and former England prop Marler picked replacement Ollie Chessum in their Lions teams from round two.

    Chessum was dynamic in the loose and shored up England’s line-out, from which they were able to lay the platform for Daly’s winning try.

    Ireland’s Josh van der Flier, the 2022 World Player of the Year, was at the centre of the visitors’ dominance in Edinburgh, making the most tackles of any player on the field (19) while Jac Morgan was the Welsh silver-lining in a disappointing defeat by Italy.

    Props

    Ireland loosehead prop Andrew Porter was in supreme form against Scotland.

    He battled hard against Zander Fagerson, who is also tipped for Lions selection, before folding up replacement Will Hurd in the scrum.

    It was his power and exuberance in open play, however, which shone through. Porter charged at Scotsmen with ball in hand and at the breakdown all afternoon.

    His clear-out of the ruck allowed Ireland quick ball for James Lowe to score their third try before his neat hands created the opportunity for Jack Conan to claim the fourth.

    Marler picks Porter as his loosehead of round two, while he also selects former England team-mate Will Stuart.

    Like Porter, tighthead Stuart was influential in the set-piece and from open play as England claimed revenge for their record defeat by Les Bleus two years ago.

    “I have been really impressed with Will Stuart,” said Marler.

    “He has had a number of chances over the last couple of seasons but has not really been able to bring his club form with Bath to the international stage.

    “He is now putting in some really big performances.”

    Ashton, meanwhile, selects England loosehead Ellis Genge for his tenacity in the loose and leadership as Borthwick’s vice-captain.

  • Breetzke makes ODI history with 150 but SA lose to NZ

    Breetzke makes ODI history with 150 but SA lose to NZ

    Matthew Breetzke became the first player to make 150 on their one-day international debut but South Africa lost to New Zealand by six wickets in Lahore.

    The right-hander made exactly 150 from 148 balls at the top of the order as the Proteas posted 304-6 in a match that is part of a tri-series that also contains Pakistan.

    He hit 11 fours and five sixes and eclipsed West Indies legend Desmond Haynes, who made 148 against Australia on his debut in 1978. The next highest score on debut is 127.

    The highest score in a women’s ODI on debut is 136 not out and was made by USA’s Chetna Pagydyala against Zimbabwe last October.

    Breetzke, who has played one Test and 10 T20s for South Africa, opened the batting and was dismissed in the 46th over by Matt Henry.

    The 26-year-old is not part of South Africa’s squad for the Champions Trophy, which starts on 19 February, and is playing in a weakened squad as the Proteas balance workload after their franchise T20 tournament, the SA20, concluded on Saturday.

    He was supported by Wiaan Mulder (64) and Jason Smith (41), while seamers Matt Henry and Will O’Rourke both picked up two wickets for New Zealand.

    New Zealand’s successful chase was built on a second-wicket stand of 187 between Devon Conway and Kane Williamson.

    Conway made 97 from 107 balls and the Kiwis needed 68 from 87 balls when he picked out point off Junior Dala.

    Daryl Mitchell and Tom Latham, who was out first ball, fell shortly after but Williamson guided New Zealand home with an unbeaten 133 off 113 balls.

    He hit a four to seal the victory and moved to 7,000 ODI runs in doing so. He has reached the landmark in 169 innings, second to only South Africa’s Hashim Amla (150 innings).

    The win secures New Zealand’s place in Friday’s tri-series final, and they will be joined by the winner of Wednesday’s game between Pakistan and South Africa.

  • Trophy win would justify India loss – Duckett

    Trophy win would justify India loss – Duckett

    Opener Ben Duckett says he does not care if England are beaten 3-0 in their one-day series in India, as long as they win the Champions Trophy.

    England have lost six of their seven matches on Brendon McCullum’s first tour as white-ball coach and are already 2-0 down going into the third and final ODI in Ahmedabad on Wednesday.

    They then travel to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy, beginning their campaign against Australia on 22 February.

    “We have come here for one thing and that is to win the Champions Trophy,” said Duckett. “We still believe we can do that. It’ll be completely different conditions, all different teams we are playing against.

    “If we lose 3-0 to India, I don’t care as long as we beat them in the final of the Champions Trophy. If we do that, we probably won’t look back on this if we do the business in that competition.

    New Zealander McCullum, who reinvigorated England’s Test side, was given control of the white-ball teams after Matthew Mott was sacked last summer.

    England, once simultaneously world champions in both limited-overs formats, are looking to rebuild after an awful period which included lacklustre performances at the 50-over World Cup in 2023 and again at the T20 version last year.

    McCullum’s first assignment is among the hardest in global white-ball cricket. India – T20 world champions – first beat England 4-1 in the shortest format and, in following up with victory in the ODIs, extended an England winless run in ODI series in that country that stretches back to 1985.

    Along with Australia, England will meet South Africa and Afghanistan in the group stage of the Champions Trophy, which is being held in Pakistan and Dubai.

    “It’s about peaking at the right time,” said Duckett. “We have been close against this India side and we have been nowhere near our best. We will always take positives.

    “We could dwell, start meetings and going at each other but the group under Baz aren’t going to do that. It’s difficult not to get the results here, but hopefully we can turn it around in Pakistan.”

    Batter Tom Banton has now joined the squad in India after Jacob Bethell was ruled out of the tour and the Champions Trophy with a hamstring injury.

    Banton, 26, is expected to be confirmed as Bethell’s replacement in the Champions Trophy squad in the coming days.

  • The Afghan women’s team who will not be silenced

    The Afghan women’s team who will not be silenced

    “Don’t do anything until I get back!”

    Mel Jones was in the middle of a television commentary, but she was also in the middle of masterminding an escape from the Taliban.

    The former Australia cricketer was one of the three women who organised and funded ways for the Afghanistan women’s cricket team to flee their country in 2021 in what she said felt at times like “a Jason Bourne movie”.

    Among the 19 players who made the terrifying journey to Australia was Firooza Amiri, who shook with fear every time her family were stopped in the car at eight check points they had to pass on the journey out of their home country.

    To this day, Amiri cannot fathom how their excuses of attending a “family wedding” and “taking their mother to receive medical care in Pakistan” were believed.

    “It was the biggest miracle of my life,” she told the BBC.

    Three and a half years later, she and her team stepped on to the field at the Junction Oval in Melbourne for an Afghanistan Women’s XI who were playing their first ever match as another chapter in their remarkable story started.

    Among those watching on emotionally from the sidelines was Jones, who set up what was dubbed a “backyard immigration service” to organise emergency humanitarian visas, money and safe passage for the players and their families.

    Considering the dangerous journeys they had made, this was to be a day of overwhelming joy for the players who were finally back competing in the sport they love.

    But the specially designed badge on their kits – rather than an official crest – was a big reminder that their fight to play remains far from over while the International Cricket Council (ICC) does not recognise them as a national side.

    In a new documentary, ‘Cricket’s Forgotten Team’, the BBC looks into the team’s story by speaking with the players and those who played a crucial role in safely evacuating them.

    Watch Cricket’s Forgotten Team on BBC iPlayer

    ‘I didn’t know if we were going to live or die’

    01:20

    Media caption,

    “I didn’t know if we were going to live or die”

    Amiri had been drinking tea at home with her grandmother in August 2021 when she heard that the Taliban had returned.

    “In that moment I was shocked and I felt that I would lose everything,” she said with tears in her eyes, adding that she knew immediately the team would need to leave the country.

    “My parents lived through the first time that Taliban were in Afghanistan and they knew what would happen to the girls.

    “I didn’t know if I was going to survive. I didn’t know if there was going to be a chance for me and my family to get out of Afghanistan, I didn’t know if we were going to live or die.

    “I burned everything, all my certificates, all my medals. There’s nothing left.”

    Under Taliban laws, women are banned from universities, sport and parks. It is also forbidden for their voices to be heard outside of their homes.

    Amiri’s team-mate Nahida Sapan recalled how the Taliban came to her home searching for her.

    “My brother went outside and one of the Talib asked him, ‘Do you know about some cricket girl? We think she lives here.’ My brother was very scared. I had a scorebook for all of my team-mates so I went home and ripped all of the paper up and put it in the trash.”

    Sapan, whose brother worked for the previous government, said her family then started receiving calls and messages from the Taliban.

    “They were direct threats. They were saying: ‘We will find you and if we find you, we will not let you live. If we find one of you we will find all of you.’

    “I was so worried about all of the team girls. We all needed a safe place.”

    That safe place was to come from an unlikely source on the other side of the world.

    Evacuation ‘felt like a Jason Bourne movie’

    Thousands of miles away, Mel Jones was sitting in quarantine in an Australian hotel during the Covid-19 pandemic when she received a message from an Indian journalist asking whether she had heard about the Afghan cricket team’s situation.

    The players had looked to the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) for assistance after the Taliban took over but received none.

    On their own, they were terrified under the rule of the hardline Islamist group.

    The journalist put Jones in touch with one of the players and she asked if there was anything she could do to help. The player replied to say that all her team-mates and the backroom staff needed to get out of Afghanistan.

    Jones, who won two World Cups with Australia, then went through her contact book and brought volunteers on board, including her friend Emma Staples, who used to work for Cricket Victoria, and Dr Catherine Ordway, who had helped to evacuate Afghan women footballers.

    Creating a tight network of people who could help, including on the ground in Afghanistan, they organised visas and transport to eventually get 120 people out of the country, mainly into Pakistan and then on military flights to Dubai. From there they flew to Melbourne or Canberra on commercial flights supported by the Australian government.

    “I don’t think I understood the enormity of what we were doing at the time,” Staples said. “We were told that we may not be able to save everyone.

    “For me, it was co-ordinating what we joke about now as being a backyard immigration service. It was filing out visa documents, passport documents and trying to transfer money to Afghanistan for the girls to purchase passports.

    “It was six weeks of gathering information from the family members, trying to get identification, but we just had this extraordinary spreadsheet that detailed everybody.”

    She said communication with the players was “really challenging” but “nothing Google Translate couldn’t fix”.

    “We giggle now about the language barrier, I got called different names such as ‘delicious’ and some other odd things,” Staples recalled with a smile.

    “It all happened so quickly for them that I don’t think they had time to think about what they’ve had to leave behind. I have no doubt that some of them are going through survivor’s guilt.”

    Jones, 52, who now works as a cricket broadcaster, said there were moments when it was not clear that the mission would succeed.

    “We had to fight the system when everyone kept saying it was impossible. Things were happening minute to minute,” Jones said.

    “Without sounding flippant, there were moments that felt like you were in a Jason Bourne movie,” she said, recalling trying to commentate on television while also messaging a player who was struggling to find the right car that would take her to safety.

    “She couldn’t find the car and was going up to different people and I had to warn her you can’t do that [for safety reasons], but then I had another commentary stint so I had to say ‘don’t do anything until I get back!’.

    “That was the fearful part for me, just making sure they made the right decisions.”

    Image source,Emma Staples
    Image caption,

    Emma Staples (left), Mel Jones (centre) and Dr Catherine Ordway (right) were instrumental in getting the cricketers out of Afghanistan

    In hiding and then ignored

    For months after they landed in Australia, the female players kept their whereabouts a secret while they were living in temporary accommodation as they still feared for their safety.

    The local cricket clubs they joined also helped protect their identities.

    They waited until December 2022 and then wrote to the ICC to tell them they were living in Australia and to ask two big questions: what had happened to their contracts with the ACB and what had happened to the money that goes to the ACB that should be for their development?

    They also requested that some of those funds be redirected to the players in Australia.

    After a month, the ICC replied to say that contracts were a matter for the ACB and that it was up to the board to decide how to spend the funds it receives from the global governing body.

    But with the ACB refusing to engage with their female players, the team were left feeling like those at the top of sport had washed their hands of them.

    In June 2024, in light of Afghanistan’s men’s team reaching the semi-finals of the T20 World Cup, the women seized their moment to write a second letter to the ICC.

    This time they asked to be allowed to form a refugee international team.

    They say they have never received a response to that letter.

    “It’s so painful and so disappointing,” said Shabnam Ahsan, who was just 14 when she fled her country. “I don’t understand why they [the ICC] are not doing anything to help us. We have worked so hard and we deserve help just like every other team.”

    The ICC told BBC Sport in a statement it “remains engaged with the situation in Afghanistan, with the wellbeing and opportunities of players as our top priority”.

    Its chair Jay Shah added: “We are committed to supporting cricket development through the Afghanistan Cricket Board while recognising the challenges facing Afghan women’s cricket, including the concerns of players living in exile.

    “The ICC is also reviewing certain communications concerning Afghanistan women’s cricket and exploring how they can be supported within ICC’s legal and constitutional framework. Our focus is on constructive dialogue and viable solutions that safeguard the best interests of all Afghan cricketers.”

    Boycott calls and ‘gender apartheid’
    Image source,Cricket Australia
    Image caption,

    Firooza Amiri (second from left) and her team-mates played their first match as the Afghanistan Women’s XI last month

    Records show Afghanistan had a women’s cricket team in 2012 which folded shortly afterwards. It was then officially relaunched in 2020 when a talent camp led to 25 players being given contacts.

    Having a women’s team is part of the criteria required for a country to become a full ICC member and it means Afghanistan receives full funding and Test status.

    Yet despite no longer having a women’s team, the ACB still enjoys that full membership, a fact that has started to raise eyebrows around the world.

    Earlier this year, UK politicians wrote to the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) calling for England’s men to boycott their Champions Trophy match against Afghanistan on 26 February in protest at the treatment of Afghan women.

    The ECB refused but called on the ICC to act, with chief executive Richard Gould writing to the global governing body to take action after what he called “gender apartheid”.

    He also called for Afghanistan’s funding to be withheld until women’s cricket is reinstated and support given to Afghan women’s players.

    Amiri said she and her team-mates are “proud” of the Afghanistan’s men’s side. All they want is to be treated on the same terms.

    “The ICC celebrates equality, but I don’t know what equality they’re celebrating,” Amiri said. “Afghanistan doesn’t have a women’s team and they are still giving the men’s team the chance to play and funds.

    “I am so angry. The ICC has never done anything for us. We just want to have a team to give hope to the millions of women in Afghanistan.”

    ICC chief Shah said: “Although we continue to support the ACB, we acknowledge the absence of a women’s programme and are actively addressing this through the Afghanistan Cricket Task Force, led by deputy chairman Mr Imran Khwaja.”

    As a result of this lack of recognition as a national team, the women had to play as an Afghanistan Women’s XI – rather than officially as Afghanistan – when they faced a Cricket Without Borders side in Melbourne last month.

    ‘We don’t want this to be our first and last game’

    01:12

    Media caption,

    ‘Just don’t give up’: An Afghanistan Women’s XI play first match in Australia

    Stepping out at the Junction Oval, which a few days earlier had hosted a Women’s Ashes match between Australia and England, the players sported a custom-made kit that featured a badge they had designed themselves.

    The logo depicted a red tulip and a golden wattle – the national flowers of Australia and Afghanistan – entwined around a cricket ball.

    It was a sign of how much they have embraced their new life down under, where many of the players now study or work.

    The players lost the 20-over exhibition match with four balls to go. But the true victory was the game itself taking place.

    “It was so good,” bowler Nilab Stanikzai said. “We are so happy to finally play together.

    “We hope it pushes the ICC to support us. To the people in the high positions, please help us.”

    Nahida Sapan, who captained the side on the day, added: “We don’t want this to be our first and last game. We want to play a lot, we want to achieve our dream.”

    And team-mate Shazia Zazai said: “We’re doing this for all Afghan women. To tell them to be proud of themselves and that they are the strongest women in the world. Please don’t give up.”

    It was a day full of emotion and sheer joy but an important question remains: what’s next for the team?

    They have no official funding, although an online fund called Pitch Our Future was launched the day after their match and aims to raise £750,000 to help secure the team’s future.

    The Marylebone Cricket Club Foundation UK has also pledged that Afghanistan’s women players will be the first beneficiaries of their new Global Refugee Cricket Fund.

    The players still have big dreams to one day play on the international stage, but that depends on whether the ICC engages with them.

    However, one thing is certain: at a time when women in Afghanistan feel they have no voice, this team will not be silenced.

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