
Gloucestershire sign Australia's Short for Blast
Australia batter D'Arcy Short has joined Gloucestershire for the defending champions' 2025 T20 Blast campaign.The left-hander, who can also bowl spin, has played for his country in both white-ball formats and has twice been named 'Player of the Tournament' in Australia's Big Bash.He averages just over 30 with the bat for Australia in his 23 one-day international and T20 appearances for his country.He has previously had spells in the Indian Premier League with Rajasthan Royals and the Trent Rockets in The Hundred, as well as having played for Durham and Hampshire in past Blast campaigns."What a player to be joining us at this exciting time," Gloucestershire head coach Mark Alleyne told the club website., external"He brings a batting versatility with him, being brilliantly effective from one to six and offering spin options in the power play and middle."D'Arcy compliments everything we are about and we can't wait to get him on board."Short will be available for the entire Blast group stage.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Steelbacks win again as Derbyshire misery continues
Northamptonshire Steelbacks maintained their 100% start to the T20 Blast with a 10-run win over Birmingham Bears despite more heroics from Pakistan paceman Hasan from taking a hat-trick against Derbyshire on Sunday, Ali took three more wickets as the Steelbacks made 184-6 at Wantage Road but a late batting collapse saw the Bears fail to make it three successive miserable campaign continued with a fifth defeat from their opening five games as they were beaten by an Ollie Robinson-inspired Trent Bridge, Nottinghamshire failed to recover from losing two wickets in the first over of their run chase against Yorkshire after Dawid Malan's quick-fire 58 helped the visitors post a daunting target. Match scorecardsLooking for a sixth successive win to start their campaign, Matthew Breetzke (53) and Justin Broad (60) struck half-centuries to help the Steelbacks to a challenging 184-6 with skipper David Willey weighing in with 34 from 29 Ali once again showed what a good operator he is in this format with 3-42 and the vital wicket of Broad to follow club-best figures of 6-28 against Derbyshire on visitors looked in control of the run chase at 139-3 but home skipper David Willey brought himself back on to bowl and he removed Dan Mousley for 68 before taking a diving catch in the deep to remove Ed Barnard off the bowling of Bears lost five wickets for 21 runs to subside to a 10-run defeat and Northamptonshire now have six wins from six, with seven victories in the North Group being enough to make it through to the quarter-finals last season. Falcons fail to fly again while it's all-White for Yorkshire While Northamptonshire have a 100% winning record in the T20 Blast, Derbyshire suffered a fifth defeat in five games as they were beaten by 16 runs at Robinson's T20-best 70 from 46 balls, sharing an 84-run partnership with Colin Ackermann (33), helped the home side reach 168-6 at Falcons reply was given a rapid start by Aneurin Donald and Caleb Jewell as they raced to 30 inside the opening three overs but when Donald was dismissed for 15 the visitors lost wickets at regular 33 and Wayne Madsen with 37 kept Derbyshire's hopes alive but a three-wicket burst from Ben Raine (3-21) ensured the points remained in Jack White returned T20-best figures of 4-33 to inspire Yorkshire to back-to-back victories as Nottinghamshire fell to a nine-run defeat in the East Malan's third successive half-century gave Yorkshire the perfect start at Trent Bridge as he hit seven fours and three sixes in an innings of 58 from only 28 visitors' captain shared an opening stand of 83 with Adam Lyth (29) before Daniel Sams, Liam Patterson-White and Dillon Pennington, with two wickets each, helped Nottinghamshire restrict them to home side's reply got off to an awful start as White removed Lyndon James and Jack Haynes without scoring in the first Joe Clarke anchored the Nottinghamshire innings with 50 and, helped by Freddie McCann (31), worked them back into the Daniel Sams launched Dom Bess for successive sixes to raise hopes of an Outlaws win but when he was caught and bowled by the spinner attempting to hit a third maximum Yorkshire knew the win was theirs."With the ball I tried just to put it on a good length and got a bit of luck," said White."It has been a really enjoyable first season here for me so far and hopefully we can get some more wins and move up the table in all formats." Thursday fixtures South GroupChelmsford: Essex v Glamorgan Taunton: Somerset v MiddlesexThe Oval: Surrey v KentPlay starts at 18:30 BST


Daily Mail
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Aussies stage huge comeback in World Test Championship final as Steve Smith surpasses Don Bradman - and South Africa make a shocking mistake
South Africa are ruing a costly non-review after Australia 's pace juggernaut hit back during a rollicking first day of the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Kagsio Rabada (5-51) threw a mighty first punch, justifying Proteas captain Temba Bavuma's call to bowl first with his 17th five-wicket haul to help skittle Australia for 212. But rank underdogs South Africa, aiming to break a 27-year title drought in ICC tournaments, were left reeling at 4-43 by stumps. Their batters left the famous London venue in a daze on Wednesday evening (Thursday AEST) following a masterful final session of bowling from Australia's famed pace trio - Mitchell Starc (2-10), Pat Cummins (1-14), and Josh Hazlewood (1-10). South Africa earlier used two unsuccessful reviews on allrounder Beau Webster - which were ruled as umpire's call - but failed to refer a third which would have had the towering Tasmanian trapped lbw for only eight. No.6 Webster, in just his fourth Test, went on to top score for Australia with a career-best 72. South Africa's Wiaan Mulder grimaces as he's hit for four by Beau Webster after his team made a huge error with a review on the Tasmanian all-rounder Their eventual total could have been well below 200 had Webster departed early given Australia lost 5-20 to end their innings. '(Squad member) Corbin Bosch came down to fine leg, and he says it was out,' Rabada recalled when he discovered the Proteas had blown an opportunity. 'I was like, 'oh man!'. It was a bit annoying. 'He (Webster) didn't start off too well out there. 'Looked like he was going to get out any ball, but I guess his positive intent got him through.' Steve Smith (66) was still coughing after battling through flu to put on a crucial 79-run stand with Webster after Australia were limping at 4-67. 'It looked pretty good to me from the other end. I don't know what happened actually,' Smith said of South Africa not using a review. 'I know Beau was in a little bit of pain; I don't think it actually hit his pad, I think it just hit his leg. 'They had a chance to use a referral and didn't.' Bavuma (three) will resume in the middle on Thursday with David Bedingham (eight). Smith, who became the highest-scoring visiting batter in Tests at Lord's, was left fuming at himself for falling to part-time spinner Aiden Markram when in reach of a 37th century. 'I'm still trying to fathom how I've done that,' said Smith, putting his head into his hands. It was all about the Rabada redemption story early in the day, running riot underneath overcast skies in London by taking two wickets in four balls. Rabada, in his first Test since serving a one-month ban for testing positive to cocaine, removed Usman Khawaja (a 20-ball duck) and Cameron Green (four) in the seventh over. In his first Test since March 2024, fit-again Green hit his first delivery to the boundary at fine leg in a promising start. But the 26-year-old was gone just two balls later, edging a Rabada rocket to slips where he was superbly caught by Markram. Marnus Labuschagne, in his first innings as a Test opener, started brightly to get through until drinks. But as he often has during the last two years, the under-pressure Queenslander struggled to keep the score ticking over. Labuschagne got caught between playing a shot and leaving a Marco Jansen delivery, nicking off for 17 from 56 balls. The 30-year-old, who was once described as having 'opening-itis', won the battle to be Khawaja's fifth opening partner in 18 months over teenager Sam Konstas. The spectre of Konstas, one of Australian cricket's rising stars, will now loom even larger for the upcoming three-Test tour of the West Indies. Labuschagne's last Test century came back in July 2023 at Manchester. Travis Head, who starred with a matchwinning 163 in Australia's WTC final triumph in 2023, was out on the final ball before lunch after wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne hung on to a screamer.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Rugby Union Weekly Inside the Lions camp
We go behind the scenes at the Lions training camp in Portugal to see how preparations have begun for the clash with Argentina in Dublin and the tour down under. Chris chats to Ellis Genge who's already striking up an unexpected 'bromance' with one of the Irish players he's usually slating on the pitch. Genge talks openly about trying to get out of his comfort zone in camp and how he's approaching his first Lions tour aged 30. Forwards coach John Dalziel stops by to talk Argentina and what has impressed him most since the players came into camp. Plus, Jac Morgan tells us how it feels to be flying the flag for Welsh rugby on tour, his memories of the Australia tour in 2013 and he discusses the fierce competition in the back row.