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Record breaking prize pool fueling second Esports World Cup

Record breaking prize pool fueling second Esports World Cup

CNN11-07-2025
The Esports World Cup officially kicked off its second annual tournament in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, drawing over 2,000 competitors from 84 different countries. Setting the scene for us in Riyadh, CNN's Eleni Giokos.
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The Hundred Is Getting Big Cash, But The Cricket Feels Too Casual
The Hundred Is Getting Big Cash, But The Cricket Feels Too Casual

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

The Hundred Is Getting Big Cash, But The Cricket Feels Too Casual

The Hundred, English cricket's answer to the Indian Premier League, is in its fifth iteration. Having started amid much fanfare and considerable eye-rolling from purists, the tournament is about to enter a new phase of cash injection. The Hundred offers a cosy domestic dose of garish colors, potato crisp team sponsors and big shots. It still feels like cartoon cricket, with world-class superheroes mixing with local lads to play for a team that has no history. Millions of pounds of private investment is now on the table to make it a megabeast. Or at least a big kid brother of the IPL, valued at a cool $12 billion. On the eve of the 2025 The Hundred, the England and Wales Cricket Board admitted there was no evidence that the nascent competition had created a ripple effect for supporters to follow other formats of the game. Its mere presence has eliminated Test matches from the August calendar. The ECB carried out that crime of passion to take cricket to families and youngsters who speak a different social media language. The DJs and music aren't exactly Caribbean party stands, but it's all part of the carnival. 'We know the interest is there, we just need to get people to come more often for all formats, rather than just that 'I've been to the Test once a year' type of thing,' said ECB Chief Executive Richard Gould. Official figures for last season showed a decrease in ticket sales from the 2023 Hundred edition, falling from 580,000 to 540,000. The game changer could be coming in 2026. Six of the current eight teams in the Hundred have sold stakes to private investors, including four owners of IPL franchises. Overall, the total valuation of eight teams is about £975 million ($.1.3 billion). Trent Rockets are in the final stages of a deal with Ares and Cain Investment, the latter run by Chelsea FC co-owners Todd Boehly and Jonathan Goldstein. Oval Invincibles, the holders, agreed in principle to a £60 million ($81 billion) offer by Reliance Industries, headed by Mukesh Ambani. The Ambanis are India's richest family and owners of the Mumbai Indians. There are some issues preventing completion. There is talk of synchronizing the format from the current one hundred deliveries with the more universal T20, as well as rebranding team names, which is said to be holding up the Invincibles sale. For instance, Manchester Originals will become Manchester Super Giants, according to Sanjiv Goenka, owner of Lucknow Super Giants. The creation of a Champions League format is on the agenda, and a switch to auctions from the current draft format is also likely to be discussed. As for the cricket, the product had the misfortune to follow the epic Lord Mayor's Show that was the England and India Test series. In the very first game, London Spirit, whose Silicon Valley-led minority shareholder is Tech Titans, fell in a heap against the Invincibles. A lot of games haven't been close thrillers. Sam Billings' team appear to be one of the few sides in the competition that has a consistent and clinical approach to winning. They have dominated the last two editions. 'It's very easy to look at the guys who grab the headlines, but collectively as a group, every single man in that squad has put something towards this, even if they haven't played, they've given so much to the group,' said Billings after his team beat the Southern Braves in last year's final. Gould mentioned the importance of fandom built around a team, and at the moment, the cricket feels like a good bit of professional fun between friends rather than a true trophy. It's only the Oval franchise that looks and acts the part. The BBC and Sky Sports have entered into the spirit of the Shiny Happy People kind of vibe. Mic'd up players like David Warner and Steve Smith leads to some forced banter with the commentary team. The one edgy clash on the pitch was the sledging that Birmingham Phoenix batter Liam Livingstone copped from his England teammate Sam Curran. One of the true beneficiaries of The Hundred has been the women's game. The double-header, different gender matches create some momentum for a home atmosphere and that has converted into record-breaking crowds of up to 15,000. Thirty-one per cent of ticket sales in 2024 were from females. The gender pay gap has widened to £135,000 between the men and the women, although the ECB has argued that is down to the commercial realities of promoting the elite men's bracket in a competitive global market. The new investment and big owner cojones will surely ensure that the staging is better and that the product is slicker. It's just hard to recreate a scenario that actually feels as important as an IPL match. That feeling of jeopardy rather than The Hundred jocularity is the essence of competitive sport.

Canada coach Jesse Marsch's focus is on final days of European transfer window as World Cup looms
Canada coach Jesse Marsch's focus is on final days of European transfer window as World Cup looms

New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Canada coach Jesse Marsch's focus is on final days of European transfer window as World Cup looms

With less than 10 months to go before the most important tournament in Canadian soccer history, this European season will be crucial for Jesse Marsch's players to establish themselves as difference-makers ahead of a World Cup their homeland is co-hosting. Canada's head coach already knows who he can start in every game of their World Cup challenge. Advertisement A fit Alphonso Davies will likely return to a starting position at German champions Bayern Munich in a few months following a long-term knee injury. Stephen Eustaquio is Marsch's defensive-midfield rock, and more successive starts at Portugal's Porto this season will help him enter the tournament with confidence. Jonathan David finally made his long-awaited move up the European ladder this summer, joining Italian giants Juventus. If he can score with the same regularity in Serie A as he did in France's Ligue 1 with Lille, Canada's chances of getting out of their group next June and into the knockout phase will shoot up. After finding his footing with a move to Villarreal in Spain, Tajon Buchanan could return to his electrifying best. But there is more to Marsch's group than his stars. He is set on determining who is second tier of core players are. And many of those names will have to solidify themselves in Europe this season to be part of the World Cup. 'We're going to have between 10 and 15 players move this (summer transfer) window,' Marsch said. 'That's a lot.' Marsch spoke to The Athletic about a number of his players now beginning their European club campaigns and how their 2025-26 seasons could change his team's outlook for next summer. Marsch had said he was hopeful of getting Davies and Moise Bombito, two of Canada's most important players, into his September camp, which will see the squad travel to Europe for friendlies against Romania and Wales. Yet neither will attend, because of injuries. 'He's starting to get back to being on the pitch. We'll see where we are in a couple of weeks,' Marsch said of Davies. A return for the friendlies in November, likely to be played in Toronto against as yet unnamed opponents, now feels like a plausible outcome for the Bayern full-back. Marsch also confirmed Bombito will miss next month's international window. The centre-back with French top-flight club Nice recently had an MRI on a stress fracture in his tibia (the larger of the two bones in your lower leg), having missed the Concacaf Gold Cup this summer due to a wrist injury. The coach expressed no concern about whether the 25-year-old's injuries would impact him long-term. 'The wrist thing, he landed weird… and then he took a whack in training for his leg. And it's actually a good thing they caught it, because it was a tiny little fracture that isn't so easy to find, and those can lead to bigger problems. I think in a month he'll be training and playing,' Marsch said. Advertisement When Bombito does return, Marsch hopes he can transfer the lessons he's learned playing on a strong Nice side to the national team. 'As good of a player as Moise is, I think that his leadership is also going to be vital, with his communication and his overall personality in the team,' Marsch said. Marsch seems convinced that Tani Oluwaseyi's rumoured move from Minnesota United of MLS to La Liga's Villarreal would benefit the centre-forward. It's believed talks between the clubs are advanced, though a deal is not done. If the transfer is completed and Oluwaseyi then succeeds in Spain, the second forward spot in Canada's starting XI could be his to lose. 'He's earned it,' Marsch said of the 25-year-old's mooted switch to Europe. 'His performances have been very good. Tani has clear strengths and clear challenges to his overall game. His strengths can fit the game at the highest level. For any player, it's about understanding what you're good at and how to play into what you know you can be. Tani does that better than maybe any player I've ever coached.' Again, if Oluwaseyi does go to Villarreal, Marsch wants to see him continuing to find space inside the penalty area and physically imposing himself in games. 'Spain is the league of teams that sit back and defend and make it very difficult. So there's not a lot of space to play, but you can be good at transition, if that's the approach that you take with your team. And I think Tani is a really good player in transition, and he still has good link-up play,' Marsch said. Where does the Oluwaseyi situation leave Cyle Larin and Promise David? Both aren't out of the running for the right to play beside Jonathan David at the World Cup. After signing a contract extension to 2029 with Union Saint-Gilloise in Belgium's top division, Marsch said he wants to see a 'higher level fitness and better understanding of how to fit into the game at all moments' from Promise David this season. Advertisement It's believed Larin is working towards an exit from Real Mallorca of La Liga. Marsch said he can see him moving to another club in Spain. Consistency will be paramount from Larin's performances this season. While Canada's top two 'keepers – Maxime Crepeau and Dayne St. Clair – battle in MLS for the 2026 starting spot, other possible options in goal are playing in Europe. Yet Marsch has squashed the possibility that Owen Goodman, of Huddersfield Town in the English third tier, might play for Canada, despite the 21-year-old's expressed hope that he could one day do so, having lived in the country for several years as a child. 'Owen Goodman is not eligible. I've seen different reports but through everything we've done, he is not eligible (for Canada),' Marsch said. Marsch still wants to provide different competition for Crepeau and St. Clair, even down the road, and said he will call MLS side Atlanta United's backup Jayden Hibbert into the September camp. Hibbert has previously played one friendly for Jamaica and would need to complete a one-time switch of country. His mother was born in Mississauga, Ontario, making him eligible. Marsch said the 21-year-old will be his third goalkeeper for the upcoming international window. One development from the Gold Cup that can't be overlooked: the incredible emergence of 19-year-old Luc de Fougerolles as a trusted centre-back who could contend for a starting spot heading into the World Cup. Derek Cornelius, the other half of Canada's longstanding centre-back pairing alongside Bombito, has struggled with minor injuries. '(Cornelius) wasn't as healthy as we wanted him to be,' Marsch said of the 27-year-old's summer. 'There were certain things that maybe I felt like we could have handled them better. So I was frustrated that we didn't have him at his top level. Maybe we challenged him too much in the friendlies leading into the Gold Cup that led to his injury.' And so the balance of power at the back may have shifted. With De Fougerolles having joined Dender in Belgium's top division on loan from Fulham of the Premier League and Cornelius now considering whether it's best to stay at Marseille in Ligue 1 and fight for a starting spot or move to another club, this European season will be vital for Marsch to make decisions on his starting centre-backs for 2026. Advertisement The hope is that Cornelius plays with the consistency needed beside a more dynamic Bombito. 'Derek is a really important guy,' said Marsch, who recently travelled to France for a lengthy conversation with Cornelius, whose future remains up in the air with a variety of options being considered ahead of the transfer window closing on September 1. 'I really enjoy his intellectual capacity and his mentality to be the best footballer he can be,' Marsch said. 'We talked about what it looks like if he stays at Marseille? What does it look like, fighting for his position? How can he maximize that opportunity to the best of his ability? And what could that look like? And then, if there's other opportunities or loans or selling or whatever, what are those opportunities like? Who are those coaches? What are those environments?' With De Fougerolles already finding his rhythm in Belgium, starting all three games since moving from Fulham, the race for Canada's 'other' centre-back job is still wide open. The teenager recently re-upped on a new deal with Fulham before going out on loan, though Marsch said he stressed the need for De Fougerolles to get out of England and experience a different soccer culture. 'Luc is going to compete for a starting spot, regardless. I think he's emerged as our third centre-back. I think everybody in the group really sees and respects who Luc is and what he brings,' Marsch said. Marsch pointed to the fact De Fougerolles got a red card in just his second appearance for Dender but was put right back into the starting line-up afterwards as evidence of the club's belief in him. 'If he does well at Dender, that's only going to increase his chances of playing a big role with us,' Marsch said. Not long ago, Kone was destined to be Canada's next starting midfielder alongside Eustaquio. His ascent through Montreal in MLS to Watford in the English Championship, combined with his silky passing qualities, athleticism and dangerous shooting abilities from outside the box eventually made him a bona fide starter for Canada. But a transfer to Marseille in summer 2024 did not go well, and Kone's confidence and qualities took a hit. He was then not used as much as expected during the Gold Cup. 'He thought he could have played more (at that tournament), and I understood why,' Marsch said. 'There was a moment when he came in late before the Gold Cup, because he had a couple of things going on with his mother. And I think that even disturbed a little bit of rhythm, and then it gave a little bit of room for other guys.' Advertisement It means a player who was once Canada's most promising prospect is now on the outside looking in. While Kone will undoubtedly be on Marsch's World Cup squad if fit, he is no longer the assured starter he was in 2023 or early last year. 'The balance I was trying to get right in the Gold Cup was: How do we get Promise David and Daniel Jebbison going at the striker position, but make sure that we also get enough from all the important guys? And it was a little bit like this in the (No 6 position) too, right? Like, how do we get Nathan Saliba (of Belgium's Anderlecht) going a little more? How do we get Niko Sigur (of Hajduk Split in Croatia) more opportunities? Did I handle Ismael perfectly? I don't think I did,' Marsch said. Marsch hopes Kone's recent move to Sassuolo in Serie A provides an opportunity for the 23-year-old to get on the right track. Kone appears to have the backing of his new club. He's already started for them in the Coppa Italia, and is showing signs of him at his creative best. 'Going to Italy and playing for this club at this time, where there's going to have to be real, clear, tactical, defensive, tactical organization and structure, but he can still be the one that can create things, this could be a really good thing for him,' Marsch said. More of that creativity, with more necessary maturity on and off the field, this season could put Kone back to where many thought he would be: starting for Canada in their opening World Cup group match in Toronto on June 12 next year. 'I've been very clear with him that it's important for him to get the balance right between the discipline and the concentration of actively understanding what his role is, and then also have the freedom to play the way that he knows he can and to break things down and to create scoring opportunities with his creativity,' Marsch said. One possible challenger for a starting midfield spot is Sigur. After becoming a starter at Hajduk Split over the past two seasons, the versatile 21-year-old is ready for his next challenge. 'He desperately wants a move,' Marsch said. Marsch is a fan of Sigur's soccer intelligence and said if he stays in Croatia, where he has proven himself capable of playing at right back and central midfield, it wouldn't change his standing for the 2026 squad. Despite rumours of a transfer to Atalanta in Serie A, Marsch sees a different possible landing spot for the crafty Burnaby, British Columbia native. 'Some interest has come from the (German) Bundesliga, which I think would be great for him. There is also interest elsewhere. Niko has incredible flexibility with the way he plays,' Marsch said. Advertisement If it's not Kone or Sigur starting in an advanced midfield role? Well, a strong season from Saliba with Anderlecht, after a summer move from Montreal, could pave the way for the 21-year-old to claim a place in Marsch's World Cup team. Saliba's transition from living with his parents in Montreal to playing on a different continent has gone smoothly — he has already scored two goals in just 262 minutes for the Brussels side across eight domestic and European-level appearances. 'He looks like he's acclimated perfectly,' Marsch said. 'He is clearly able to play possession football, intensive football. He's an incredible passer, he's a very intelligent person, very strong mentality and a very good professional. If you scout a player like him and you're a club that values young players, it's just like, 'How quickly can we get him?'' Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

2026 Esports World Finals is coming to Los Angeles and El Segundo
2026 Esports World Finals is coming to Los Angeles and El Segundo

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

2026 Esports World Finals is coming to Los Angeles and El Segundo

The City of Los Angeles, an epicenter of sport championship events, is adding yet another tournament to it's host list: global competitive esports . The Global Esports Federation announced Tuesday that it had selected the City of Los Angeles to host the 2026 Global Esports World Finals Games, with the Los Angeles Times Media Group Serving as a host partner. "The Los Angeles 2026 games will stand as a symbol of how Esports is shaping the next generation, driving opportunity for building digital skills and inspiring cultural change," said Paul Foster, CEO of the Global Esports Federation from The Times building in El Segundo. The media group will embark on reinventing a warehouse adjacent to the Times building, off of Imperial Highway, which will become a virtual arena for players and spectators, said Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, Los Angeles Times Media Group's executive chairman. "We now have a challenge where by July 2026, Los Angeles' first and largest global esports stadium will have to be built on this campus and El Segundo Mayor Chris Pimentel has graciously given us his support," Soon-Shiong said. The arena will house the week-long competition and event celebration slated for Dec. 4, 2026. Los Angeles and El Segundo beat out eight other international cities prior to selection, and Los Angles mayor Karen Bass said the two cities were uniquely positioned to host the global event. "We are adding yet another major international event to the lineup, showing that Los Angeles is where the world comes to compete in every form, from the field to the arena to the digital stage." This is the first time the esports world finals will be hosted in the United States. The relatively new global competition has been held previously in Singapore, Istanbul, Riyadh and Lima. The competitive video graming event will feature a mix of team sports and individual games and an estimated 1,000 athletes representing more than 100 countries. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Solve the daily Crossword

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