
Pretorius and Jansen top SA20 run-scorers and wicket-takers list
The 2025 SA20 is over with MI Cape Town winning the tournament for the first time.The final saw Kagiso Rabada take 4-25 as Sunrisers Eastern Cape were unable to win a third successive title. Here is who starred with bat and ball in the third edition of the South Africa T20 tournament.Top run-scorers in SA20 20251. Lhuan-dre Pretorius (Paarl Royals) - 397 runs2. Rassie van der Dussen (MI Cape Town) - 3933. Aiden Markram (Sunrisers Eastern Cape) - 3404. Ryan Rickelton (MI Cape Town) - 3365. Rubin Hermann (Paarl Royals) - 333Joe Root was the highest English run-scorer, making 279 runs at an average of 55.8 in eight group-stage games for Paarl Royals.Top wicket-takers in SA20 20251. Marco Jansen (Sunrisers Eastern Cape) - 19 wickets=2. Hardus Viljoen (Joburg Super Kings), Liam Dawson & Richard Gleeson (both Sunrisers Eastern Cape) and Mujeeb Ur Rahman (Paarl Royals) - 14
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Scottish Sun
30 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Liverpool's surprising secret asking price for Luis Diaz revealed with Barcola or Isak set to replace him
Arne Slot's take on Diaz's exit revealed below Lu what? Liverpool's surprising secret asking price for Luis Diaz revealed with Barcola or Isak set to replace him Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) LIVERPOOL'S shock asking price for Luis Diaz has been revealed ahead of his potential move to Barcelona, reports claim. The Colombian forward opened the door to a surprise exit after confessing he was in talks with other clubs this week. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Luis Diaz has reportedly been told he can leave Liverpool for £51million Diaz, who has two years left on his Anfield contract, has been linked with an exit since last summer. Despite that, Diaz played a key role in bringing a 20th English title to Merseyside this season, providing 13 goals and seven assists in his best-ever Premier League campaign. Liverpool haven't offered the 28-year-old a contract extension and he could be marginalised after the expected £126million signing of Florian Wirtz - which would smash the British transfer record. Despite initially rejecting Barcelona's advances, Liverpool have reportedly told Diaz that he can leave for just £51million, according to Spanish outlet SPORT. READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS 'harsh and unfair' Club kicked out of Europe by Uefa in Crystal Palace-style case This newly alleged gentleman's agreement is significantly lower than the initially thought £70million asking price. SPORT also claimed that Barca are "convinced" that they will finally land Diaz when the second-half of the summer window opens after the Club World Cup. His girlfriend, Gera Ponce, posted an emotional Instagram message which some fans believed was a farewell. She wrote under a slideshow of photos showcasing Diaz's triumphs in the 2024-25 season: "From the first day we arrived, we felt first hand what it means to be a part of this club. 3 CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS "We knew the slogan was 'You'll Never Walk Alone', but to hear them sing it with so much passion, support us every moment and show such unconditional love... confirmed to us that here you never walk alone. "This fanbase doesn't just support, it feels. And what you have made my boyfriend and our entire family feel is something we carry in our souls." Liverpool's £100m Barcola bid / Gyokeres forces Man Utd move / Grealish City axe | Transfers Exposed But Liverpool boss Arne Slot is eagar to keep Diaz for next season's title defence as he plans a potential £300m reboot. As well as Bayer Leverkusen star Wirtz, Liverpool have entered the £100million race for Paris Saint-Germain ace Bradley Barcola, who is often benched in big games for fellow superstar Desire Doue. Liverpool chiefs have also not given up all hope of prising Alexander Isak away from Newcastle. The champions have already spent £29.5m on Wirtz's Leverkusen team-mate Jeremie Frimpong, 24, with another £40m-plus earmarked for Bournemouth's 21-year-old left-back Milos Kerkez.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Australia learn cricket's oldest lesson as South Africa turn the tables in WTC
Right from the start of the day, there was an inevitability that this match was Australia's. They started 218 runs in front, in the third innings, walking back onto a Lord's field where 28 wickets had fallen in the previous two days. They had the four-star bowling attack, their opponents had the shooting-star batting order, one that had flashed and vanished in its first sighting. Soon this would be compounded by the Temba Bavuma's hamstring injury. The lead as it stood looked a chance to be enough, and first would come the chance to increase it a smidgen more. The sense of inevitability only grew as that smidgen broadened into a big dirty smudge. There is nothing more galling for a cricket team than a long tenth-wicket partnership. Every ball is more annoying than the one before. Things had started right, Kagiso Rabada in his second over of the day trapping Nathan Lyon with only four runs added to the score. On four wickets for the innings, nine for the match, Rabada was ready to complete twin milestones. Except they didn't come. Not in his third over, nor his fourth. Not his fifth, not his sixth. Not even his seventh. When he was taken off after drinks, fading with fatigue, it must have been galling to the entire side, their champion deserving that last swipe of icing on the cake. Instead, not content with seeing off the major threat, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood just kept batting: 135 balls, 59 runs, to the stroke of lunch. Starc made a few Test fifties early in his career, including a 99, as slap-and-slash affairs. He hadn't made one in the last six years, but over that time his batting has probably been better. He has made 20s, 30s, 40s, over long periods, in tough situations, when resistance was needed. Look at the previous World Test Championship final, the last Ashes in England, some of the most difficult outings against India. Today's unbeaten 58 was one of his best, by far his slowest score of anywhere near that size, facing 136 balls, more than anyone in the Test to that point. So a session of frustration, surely a distraction for South Africa as a lead inverted its final numbers from 218 to 281. Then an early wicket for who else but Starc as Ryan Rickelton nicked an outswinger. Starc again, as Wiaan Mulder chipped to cover for 27. Bavuma's hamstrings have always popped like champagne corks on New Year's Eve, and the South African captain did another when he was on 9. It was still inevitable, it seemed. Australia were on their way to win. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion But there was one wrinkle. For all that the Starc and Hazlewood stand drove South Africans mad, every run they made was also an example to the same team of how much easier run-making had become. The pitch metrics showed that movement had eased through the air and off the surface. The sun was shining brightly. And while it was the fourth innings of the Test, it was also only the third day. Those who pay attention to county cricket will know there has been a Lord's trend, at least recently, of scores growing bigger as matches goes on, with surfaces easing as chases are made. A month ago, Middlesex spinner Zafar Gohar sealed a chase of 366 at eight wickets down. Most followers of the Australian Test team would find themselves short of the required standard on reaching the Zafar Gohar round of their local pub trivia night, but that is a fact with some bearing on Australian fortunes. Because over the next session and a half, that inevitability shifted. Bavuma batted on despite the injury, riding some luck with a dropped catch, injuring Steve Smith in the process, then growing into an unbeaten 65. At the other end was Aiden Markram, who had looked like a million dollars from the outset, riding the bounce and diverting the pace of Australia's celebrated quicks, using their gifts to build his score. As the runs went by, South Africa became the team untroubled, Australia the team starting to scramble, and by stumps the pairing remained intact with only 69 more to win. Markram started his career with a fourth-innings hundred against Australia, and has reached that career's peak with another here. The first time he still ended up on the losing side; this time, he mustn't. Cricket is fond of dishing out the lesson that nothing can truly be known, or in more frank terms, the lesson that you, the one making the assumptions, are an idiot, actually. No matter how many times the lesson is taught, each fresh instance of an opportunity will see some portion of us fail to remember it. Australia were going to win this, it was inevitable, until they weren't. South Africa will win it from here, that too is an inevitability. Which means it might happen. Or it might not.


North Wales Chronicle
an hour ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Matheus Cunha determined to help change fortunes of ‘dream team' Man United
The 20-time English champions are in the midst of a rebuild under Ruben Amorim, having limped home 15th in the Premier League and lost the Europa League final to fellow strugglers Tottenham. The defeat in Bilbao cost them Champions League qualification, meaning United will spend a first season without European football since 2014-15. But the Red Devils' issues did not deter Brazil international Cunha, who completed his eagerly-anticipated £62.5million switch from Wolves on Thursday. ✍️ It just looks right. — Manchester United (@ManUtd) June 12, 2025 'It is the most common phrase that you can say at this moment, but this is the dream come true,' he told MUTV. 'Maybe outside, I think maybe my decision, they don't understand. But when you have always dreamed to play here, it's easier to pick this decision. 'For me, no-one else is like United. Of course, I know it's been a hard season for everyone. I think my decision shows what this club is for me and what I believe this club can be. 'And, of course, I'll do everything that I can to manage this inside of me, to play for my dream team and put my dream team to win.' A post shared by Manchester United (@manchesterunited) Cunha loved United growing up and spoke of his admiration for Wayne Rooney, along with many other members of the triumphant 2008 Champions League side. The Red Devils are a long way from even qualifying for that competition right now, yet the forward has lofty ambitions. 'I don't think we have one player who comes here and then doesn't think about the glory days in Man United,' Cunha said. 'To remember all the times that they win the Premier League, how many titles it was, and of course to qualify for the Champions League. This is what I think about United, you know to put this club on top. 'Then what I can do is everything to show them I'm here to help the team, to conquer these kind of things.' Cunha is the first of Amorim's summer recruits and the Brazilian, who has signed a deal until 2030 with the option of another year, is excited to work under the United head coach. 'I really believe in him, everything that he did in Portugal,' he said. 'I hope he can conquer the world like he did in Portugal. 'But of course I think he needs the players that can do everything like I'm open to do and help the team, help him. All the conversation that we have had made my decision easier.'