Bastidores do São Paulo: conselheiros vivem movimento para reorganizar grupos políticos

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Em 2026, o ano político do São Paulo será bem tenso. Com eleições se aproximando, o time começa a se movimentar tanto pelo lado que será lançado pelos apoiadores de Julio Casares, atual presidente, quanto o lado que será o nome da oposição. O Lance! apurou que a “dança das cadeiras” já está se movimentando. A reportagem confirmou que, entre a oposição, grupos de conselheiros estão começando a se dividir.

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Ao todo, os grupos estão divididos da seguinte maneira:

Grupo Participação (Coalizão) – comandado por Themis Almeida e Vinicius Pinotti, reúne 54 conselheiros.Grupo Movimento São Paulo (Coalizão) – liderado por Antonio Donizete Gonçalves (Dedé) e Douglas Schwartzmann, conta com 40 conselheiros.Grupo Legião Tricolor (Coalizão) – sob liderança de Carlos Belmonte, também soma 40 conselheiros.Grupo Força São Paulo (Coalizão) – dirigido por Olten Ayres, possui 28 conselheiros.Grupo Vanguarda (Coalizão) – chefiado por Marcelo Pupo, é formado por 19 conselheiros.Grupo Sempre Tricolor (Coalizão) – liderado por Fernando Bracalle (Chapecó) e Adilson Alves Martins, tem 15 conselheiros.Grupo Tradição (Oposição) – Líder: Fernando Casa Del ReyGrupo Raiz (Oposição) – Miguel AugustoGrupo Legenda (Oposição) – Líder: Roberto Natel

O Lance! apurou que no sábado (6) ocorreu a reunião amplamente comentada entre os integrantes de grupos da oposição, destacada pelo clima de união entre estes três. Na prática, porém, o encontro teve caráter mais motivacional do que estratégico. O ponto considerado relevante foi a postura firme de Marco Aurélio Cunha, que apresentou tom de liderança e sinalizou disposição para assumir papel de destaque.

MAC está começando a se movimentar mais visando o próximo ano. Nas eleições anteriores, existiu um movimento semelhante, mas ao longo das campanhas, os grupos se afastaram. A tendência é que a composição final das chapas dependa das articulações com outros grupos, especialmente os liderados por Pinotti e Belmonte, considerados os aliados mais prováveis para uma união ampla.

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➡️Tudo sobre o Tricolor agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! São Paulo

As conversas devem avançar nas próximas semanas, quando serão definidos os termos de uma eventual parceria e a participação de cada núcleo na formação da chapa.

Orçamento de 2026 deve ser aprovado na próxima semana

O São Paulo deve ter uma reunião no Conselho Deliberativo no dia 17 de dezembro para votar e aprovar o orçamento para a temporada 2026.

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políticaSão Paulo

A Saka & Madueke hybrid: Arsenal ramp up move to sign £75m "monster"

Arsenal have made a blistering start to this season, and the theme of their success continues to be squad depth.

On Wednesday night, it was substitutes that made all the difference, as the Gunners beat Bayern Munich 3-1 in the Champions League.

Riccardo Calafiori set up Noni Madueke to score the go-ahead goal, before Gabriel Martinelli raced around Manuel Neuer to stroke home the clincher soon after, all three doing so off the bench.

In recent seasons, most notably last year, Arsenal’s title hopes have been derailed by injuries, simply not possession-requisite deputies, in terms of quality, quantity and sometimes both, to cope with key absentees.

Well, this time round, numerous key figures have been or are currently still sidelined, and this has not hampered the Gunners one bit, so do Mikel Arteta and Andrea Berta now have their eyes set on further new recruits in January?

Arsenal target a new attacker

Those who thought Mikel Merino up front had been confined to the past were very much mistaken, the Spaniard forced back into the emergency centre-forward role because, well, in recent weeks there haven’t been any other options.

Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus and Viktor Gyökeres remain sidelined, Martin Ødegaard, Madueke and Martinelli have all made their returns this week, but Leandro Trossard is a doubt for Sunday’s trip to Stamford Bridge after suffering a knock against Bayern, the severity of which is not yet known.

So, could Arteta request the arrival of a new attacker in January?

Well, according to reports in Spain, Arsenal are interested in signing Karim Adeyemi from Borussia Dortmund, with Manchester United also in the race to secure his signature.

They add that die Schwarzgelben value the German international at £75m, but could be under pressure to sell, considering that his contract expires in 2027, hence why there is ‘intensifying’ interest from the two Premier League giants.

So, could he become the 13th German to feature for Arsenal, following in the footsteps of Jens Lehmann, Per Mertesacker, Mesut Özil, Bernd Leno, Lukas Podolski and others?

What Karim Adeyemi​​​​​​​ would bring to Arsenal

After beginning his senior career at RB Salzburg, Adeyemi joined Dortmund in the summer of 2022 for €38m (around £33m), scoring 31 goals and registering 22 assists for the club to date.

Analyst Ben Mattinson praises his “electric pace” and labels him a “transitional monster”, which is possibly best demonstrated by this goal he scored in the Champions League against Graham Potter’s Chelsea at the Westfalenstadion​​​​​​​.

Meantime, according to the Bundesliga, he is one of the fastest players in the division’s history, reaching a top speed of 22.77 miles per hour, which would result in an £80 fine if he ran that fast up Holloway Road parallel to the Emirates.

He is very much a key player at Dortmund, as the table below documents.

Goals

5

2nd

Assists

3

2nd

Shots

31

2nd

Key passes

12

3rd

Shot-creating actions

39

2nd

Goal-creating actions

7

2nd

Big chances created

4

2nd

Attempted take-ons

54

1st

Successful take-ons

24

1st

Progressive carries

35

1st

Top speed

32.2 km/h

1st

Touches in box

65

1st

Average rating

7.31

2nd

The table underlines Adeyemi’s importance to Dortmund.

Only Serhou Guirassy has scored more goals, with wing-back Julian Ryerson the only player boasting better creative numbers, but Adeyemi is currently combining the two.

The attacker also leads the way at die Schwarzgelben for all the dribbling statistics as well as top speed, registering the most touches of any Dortmund player in the opposition penalty area.

This emphasises how he is currently able to combine all the things that make both Madueke and Bukayo Saka elite – the two players noted as among the five most stylistically and statistically similar players to Adeyemi among those in their position across Europe’s top five leagues, as per FBref.

Madueke is a direct dribbler who is a major goal-threat, underlined by the fact that he ranked third in the Premier League last season for progressive carries and fifth when it came to touches in the attacking penalty box.

Saka meantime is the creator in chief, registering more shot-creating actions and big chances created than any other Arsenal player so far this season, despite a spell on the sidelines due to injury.

Well, right now, Adeyemi is able to combine all of these qualities into one, seemingly fulfilling his full potential at the age of 23, suggesting he would be an excellent addition to Arteta’s team and could be the man to fire them to that elusive first Premier League title since 2002.

Shades of Declan Rice: Arsenal expected to move for £80m "superstar"

Arsenal are ready to add the final flourishes on their high-flying squad.

ByAngus Sinclair Nov 29, 2025

Salt and Buttler make opening case irrefutable

With Duckett and Smith rested, Buttler and Salt’s dominant stand revived a proven pairing heading into the World Cup

Vithushan Ehantharajah13-Sep-2025The initial shock of England’s score in the second T20I against South Africa is tempered by the numbers at the very top of the order. Phil Salt’s unbeaten 141 from 60 balls and Jos Buttler’s 83 from 30 went some way to explaining how one Test nation put up 304 for 2 on another.This was a batter’s dream of a fresh Emirates Old Trafford pitch, against a Proteas attack missing the vaunted pair of Lungi Ngidi and Keshav Maharaj. And while head coach Shukri Conrad was less than impressed, the protagonists of the “onslaught” that left his side “bereft of ideas” do at least have previous.Salt and Buttler’s 126 was the 12th century stand by England openers, and they are now responsible for a third of them. They also bagged England their highest powerplay score of a crisp 100 for 0.Related

  • England break 300 barrier on record-smashing night

  • England 304 for 2; Salt 141* sets up crushing 146-run victory

And yet, neither were certain to be opening at all in this series having been absent from the top two at the start of the season, for differing reasons.Salt’s were personal: he was granted time off for the West Indies series after the birth of his first child. Buttler’s, meanwhile, was business, continuing to operate at No.3, a role he had taken on since the 2024 T20 World Cup semi-final defeat to India.During the 3-0 sweep of West Indies, Ben Duckett and Jamie Smith made compelling cases for their own partnership. Signing off with 120 in Southampton felt like the start of a new direction.For Salt, that could have been terminal, not that he wanted to check, believing seeking a guarantee to be “arrogant”, and a misunderstanding of the cut-throat nature of top-level, international sport.Buttler, meanwhile, probably assumed he’d continue out of necessity. He had instigated the move to first drop when captain, to remedy a problem position. Between England’s 2022 World Cup success and 2024 exit, five different batters (Dawid Malan, Will Jacks, Jonny Bairstow, Moeen Ali and, on a single occasion, Buttler) had produced just a single fifty in 20 innings between them.Having batted at three for 40 matches leading into this series, across international and domestic codes, Buttler was clearly knuckling down for the full-time gig. An average of 55.00 for Harry Brook in the role suggested welcome stability. But with Smith and Duckett rested at the end of a long summer, he and Salt found themselves back up top. And how.

“We’ve got pretty set roles. It’s my job to get us off to as good a start as soon as possible and give Jos the opportunity to take a couple of balls, because when he does, he goes on and gets a match-winning score, a lot of the time, a lot more than anyone else.”Phil Salt

This was a blitz of boundaries and records, both individual and collective. And this was no anomaly. Of the 17 times they have opened, this was the ninth fifty of more.Behind the consistency is clearly a synergy between the two. An understanding honed for England, Lancashire and Manchester Originals. Mutual benefits and admiration.”It’s the way we bounce off each other well,” Salt explained. “We’ve got pretty set roles. It’s my job to get us off to as good a start as soon as possible and give Jos the opportunity to take a couple of balls, because when he does, he goes on and gets a match-winning score, a lot of the time, a lot more than anyone else.”When one of us needs to get the other back on strike, we don’t often need to communicate out there. There’s no ego or anything like that, we just do it and I think that’s a massive part of a good opening partnership.”Buttler was similarly effusive at the innings break, lauding his partner’s sprint out of the blocks to the tune of three successive fours and a final ball six to take 18 off Marco Jansen’s opening over: “I think Salty’s one of the best players of the first ball and first over.”Buttler’s right, he is. No international batter scores faster in the first over of games; Salt’s strike rate of 144.80 almost 20 points ahead of the next contender, Malaysia’s Syed Aziz (126.53). Salt knows it, too.Phil Salt strikes at 144.80 in the first over of games•Stu Forster/Getty ImagesHe makes sure to keep across his “balls per boundary” in the first over and powerplay. Last week, former England white ball analyst Freddie Wilde sent him a “batting MOT” document after Salt requested a breakdown of his current strengths and weaknesses. Even the golden duck at the beginning of the five-over chase in Wednesday’s first T20I – caught at deep backward square – kept Salt on track for a high attacking shot percentage.”It’s something I worked [on] when I wasn’t in the England team, when Eoin Morgan was the captain,” said Salt of his immediate antics when in the middle. “I remember having a conversation with CJ (Chris Jordan) about how you need to play, and how if I did this (attacked from ball one), I could be the first person to put that stamp on it.”In order to knock a man out of possession, you need to do something they can’t do. From quite early in my career, I looked at that and thought if I can be the most dangerous in the first six, 10, 15 balls of the game, that’s quite a unique tool. It’s something I’ve always worked on from that point.”Even with Salt’s rapid start, he and Buttler were broadly level after four overs – the former 31 off ten to the latter’s 35 off 14. Buttler subsequently faced nine of the next 11 deliveries and added 30 more. Buttler looked set for century No.2. A top-edged sweep brought about Buttler’s end.

“From quite early in my career, I thought if I can be the most dangerous in the first six, 10, 15 balls of the game. That’s quite a unique tool.”Phil Salt

In swooped Salt to farm the accolades Buttler had left behind; the fastest T20I century now his, off 39 deliveries, along with England’s highest score, and extra distance in the hundred column. For all Buttler’s achievements, and the universal truth that he is the greatest limited overs batter England have produced, Salt has the titles usually reserved for GOATS.When that was put to Salt after the match, the 29-year-old humbly nodded to the inspiration for his white ball prowess: “I can’t turn into Jos Buttler overnight, but I certainly try and take the best bits.”It is easy to get giddy after nights like this, but it should be easier to see the light. England’s management may crave continuity across all three formats, but persisting with Duckett and Smith would be a failure to acknowledge something more tested and far superior.Duckett could bat three, giving England extra weapons against the ample spin they are likely to face in next year’s T20 World Cup on the subcontinent. Smith, meanwhile, can either slot further down or wait his turn. He remains green at this level, and it is worth noting his career runs are 11 shy of what Salt managed in an evening.As it happens, the only opening pair to average more than Salt and Buttler’s 60.43 is Buttler and Alex Hales, who combined for 66.00 across nine innings. That union was contained within England’s successful 2022 World Cup campaign. The product of reconciliation with Hales following Jonny Bairstow’s freak leg break.Three years on, the chain of events presenting England with a world-class opening combination ahead of another global tournament are less serendipitous. Now they just need to see sense, which has been in front of them the whole time.

KKR CEO Venky Mysore: 'Russell agonised over leaving KKR'

Venky Mysore reveals why the franchise decided to release Russell before he announced his IPL retirement and took over as KKR’s power coach

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi05-Dec-20258:03

Will KKR go all-out to for Cameron Green?

Was releasing Andre Russell, or ‘Muscle Russell’ as Shah Rukh Khan called him, a last-minute decision? Can you now disclose why you decided to release him?
Venky Mysore: I wish there was no auction every year because this just becomes very nerve-wracking many times, and some things that you don’t want to do, you end up having to do. But no, it wasn’t like a last, last-minute thing, but we were grappling with all combinations, ideas, what to do and all that. Finally, we said, okay, this [release] is what we have to do.But some people missed the fundamental point, which is the [purse] deduction for us was 18 crore, not 12 crore by releasing Dre. So, although his contract value was 12 crore, the deduction from our purse was 18 crore in 2025. A lot of people missed that and said, oh, why would KKR not see value in a person who is at 12 crores? 18 crores, which would be deducted from our purse if we had reattained him, is a lot of money in the context of an auction. That was the trigger.And in mini-auctions, you want to go with as much as you can to have the flexibility to look at options that might come your way. So from that perspective, if it was 12 crore, I think the decision would’ve been very different.If the deduction was 12 crore, would you have retained him?
Mysore: I mean it would have made a huge difference. Although 12 cr is still a lot, but could we get a player of his quality for 12 cr in the auction? It’s very unlikely in a mini auction (if you release him at that price). But releasing 18 cr, from the auction purse, it’s a fair amount of money. Therefore it was not a last-minute decision. It was a last-minute announcement.You are also trying to figure out what the alternatives would be. When you put someone in an auction, you have to go with an assumption you may not be able to get a player back. So if that’s the case, then what are your options? How do you resolve it? What’s your structure? All those discussions happen. So yes, in the days leading up to the retention deadline, we made the call.What was Russell’s reaction?
Mysore: Although we have never had to put him [Russell] in the auction, these discussions happen every time there’s a retention opportunity and it happened even ahead of a mega-auction. Particularly last year because the whole fee structure was very different and very, very punitive. If you retained more than three players, then you were penalised literally because fourth player retention slab was 18 crore, like Dre.So you are trying to do the math and say, can I get this player for 18 crore or less in the auction? We don’t want to obviously let any of our players go. Therefore I had the discussion this time with Dre and said, we may have to do this (release). And he said, “wow, never been in an auction since 2014.” Because before that he was with Delhi [Daredevils]. Then we picked him and since then he’s never been been in an auction. So it’s a strange feeling for both of us. And he’s always a very sensible and sensitive guy, easy to communicate with. Very emotional, but not clinical, like a few players I have dealt with.It hit him after a couple of days after that conversation. He came back to me and said, “oh, I’ve really had a lot of sleepless nights wondering about where all of this could go. I’m so used to the purple and gold, Knight Riders and relationships I have built with the franchise, you and the owners.”We jokingly discussed, and many people know that over the last 11 years that he’s been with us, I’ve probably spoken with Dre more than I’ve spoken with my wife. We sent him to Dallas [to train with local NFL team] twice to help him become more fitter, more stronger. When he was handed the year-long anti-doping ban in 2017, I was very much in touch and sent our physio from TKR – Trinbago Knight Riders – to Jamaica to work with Dre and help him with his fitness and more importantly, just to keep him in the right spirits. It was a tough year for him when a cricketer can’t play. Imagine one year was a very long time, but then right after that was a retention year in 2018.Andre Russell has been a match-winner for KKR – both with bat and ball•BCCIWe didn’t know what form he was in, what fitness level he was in, but we retained him. But he always acknowledges that and always says, “I’ve tears in my eyes because I got a million-dollar contract and retention decision on him.”All that kind of hit him after about 48 hours of the initial conversation on releasing him. Then the auction discussions started in a way, to say, how do we handle it? What happens? And all that.At that point, he had not yet given up on coming to the auction? Your conversation was on him getting released – correct?
Mysore: Exactly. I’ve had a few of these types of conversations over the 15 years I’ve been running the franchise. Very rarely do players feel like they are done. They always feel like, oh yeah, I’ve got cricket left in me – one year, two years, three years…that’s where his [Russell’s] head was also. And he’s probably right, but he also realised by the time 2026 IPL comes around, he’ll be 38. And for someone who’s an allrounder like him, a pace bowler who comes in at death, has to smash, has to run a lot, field like he does, his instincts take over once he is on the field. He’s a natural athlete, but body and age do catch up.But somewhere that conversation [retiring from IPL] did come up as an option and he gave it more thought. For a variety of reasons, it appealed to him and said, yeah, why not? Let’s do this.Was it your suggestion or his?
Mysore: I could see he (Russell) was agonising over it, and, so when I shared this with SRK [Shah Rukh, KKR lead owner], it was actually SRK’s suggestion of offering Russell a coaching role. Because, see, a player is thinking somewhere at the back of his mind, what happens after I hang up my boots? But I don’t think they want to think about it also so much because professional athletes are like that. They believe I’m still good, and Dre still is – he is fantastic and playing other leagues.Yesterday (December 3, in the ILT20 match between Abu Dhabi Knight Riders and Sharjah Warriorz) also, he came in and straightaway smashed that six, which are trademark Dre sixes, which hits the sight screen and the ball comes back to the middle of the pitch literally. You start thinking, oh my God! And even with the ball, runs in first ball, clean bowled DK [Dinesh Karthik].It just felt like he was very free in his mind after making the retirement decision. Because the guy took a couple of catches, is sliding and diving and throwing. I sent him a note later, saying “what’s going on here, Dre? How you doing power coach?” I was kidding him. Everybody has started calling him power coach and I think he loves it. We’re very happy. I think he’s very happy. He’s completely accepted it, come to terms with it.Power coach – Russell said it was your idea. He has not coached anywhere, so how did that come about?
Mysore: It was almost a spur of the moment thought. We were talking what role he could best do and I said: what are you best known for? It is your ability to come in and finish games with very few balls left and go from ball one. With his bowling as well, he has always been one of these enforcer type of bowlers. Then fielding also, I’ve never seen somebody as athletic as him. I mean now it’s different, but when he was younger, if he was the guy on the boundary line, anyone who hit the ball to him wouldn’t venture to run a two because he used to be so quick and slide and pick up and throw and he was so powerful.The image of him when he walks in itself is like, oh my God, here he comes. There’s going to be some power hitting now. I said to him: “what can you help us, help the team the most with is all your experience and skills. When you bring them together, it’s all about power, every thing that you did.” So I said, “we will call you power coach.”Actually that put a smile on his face, and Dre said, “maan, that sounds really good.” And it’s probably the first of its kind that there’s such a terminology given to someone who can come in and help. So it’s more than coaching, it’s also a lot about communicating with certain types of players who are going to play that role, which Dre was playing so well, and basically talking about his experiences.KKR coaches used to always make him talk, and even when I used to have informal conversations, I used to say: “what do you think? You are sitting in the dugout, 16 runs needed an over and when you walk in, what are you thinking?” He says, “I back myself to get those 15-16 runs an over because I feel like I can clear the boundary at least twice an over, so I’m calculating how many sixes are needed in the remaining balls in the innings.” That is unique how many people can actually do that.Andre Russell finished with 223 sixes in the IPL•Getty ImagesYes, only a few have managed to walk in under pressure and succeed. Dre does that and now you have a Tim David performing similar role, hitting sixes at will.
Mysore: Correct. You can’t teach power, but you can at least help players with the mindset as long as they have the skillset. And then help them with how do you think to work through that.Dre also is a very sensible and a very practical guy because once he agreed to join the coaching staff, he was very quick to say, listen, I’m only going to be like a sponge coming there to absorb everything. He is aware there are highly experienced guys who are in the support staff now: Abhishek [Nayar] has been with us since 2018, [Dwayne] Bravo since 2015 in TKR and mentor since last year in KKR, [Shane] Watson has been head coach in MLC and other places, also assistant coach in IPL, Tim Southee brings amazing experience as a bowling coach. So there is a wealth of experience and knowledge in our support staff. So Dre told me: “I can learn a lot from all of these guys because I’m getting my feet wet, but at the same time, I’ll have a lot to offer wherever I can.”Can Russell play in T20 leagues where Knight Riders don’t have a franchise?
Mysore: We don’t want to restrict somebody from playing or earning more money. As long as it doesn’t conflict with what we are doing he’s perfectly at liberty to play those tournaments. His contract does say he’ll play for us full-time on all the three leagues – CPL, MLC and ILT20 – and he can do other stuff which doesn’t conflict with where we play.What was the reason for overhauling the coaching staff?
Mysore: Why the reset is because we were forced to, no? Last year [after 2024 IPL] our coaching cabinet was cleaned out. [Gautam Gambhir, Abhishek Nayar, Ryan ten Doeschate, the KKR mentor and assistant coaches, took over coaching roles with Indian men’s team]. But the learning really for me is, it’s not a perfect science in terms of players who transition into coaching, and whether they can be as good as they were as players.Another learning is: the game is changing so fast that ideally you want coaches who are contemporary cricketers. That’s what we have in Abhishek Nayar, Dwayne Bravo, Shane Watson, Tim Southee and now Dre, too. Because they have just been there, done that. In fact, yesterday [December 3 match between ADKR and Warriorz] was a funny moment when Dre was bowling to Southee – my power coach is bowling to my bowling coach and my mentor [Bravo, who is ADKR head coach] is in the dugout. It was a very comical moment.So the point I am making is their touchy-feely stuff around the game will be so strong because they were, [and are still] just playing it. And secondly, what happens is, the way they can relate to the players about what the players go through. So when you’re in team meetings, strategy planning etc. the players also realise when it comes from them, these are people who have just been there, who have done it recently.Andre Russell is one of two allrounders in IPL history to achieve the double of 2000 runs and 100 wickets•BCCIGoing into the mini-auction with a purse of INR 64.3 crore – enough money to buy whoever you want – do you see KKR in a pole position to build a strong squad?
Mysore: We are never usually the ones to go into the auction with the highest purse. But it just so happened two players [Venkatesh Iyer and Russell] accounted for 41.5 crore. So that is very, very unusual that something like that happens at KKR. So now we are sort of saying, okay, let’s see. But a lot of players have withdrawn from the auction, or not put their names in, which is also interesting.You released Venkatesh Iyer after buying him for 23.5 cr last year. Post the mega-auction, you’d mentioned that you don’t buy a player and release to buy him back cheap, as that’s not how you operate. What changed?
Mysore: As I said at the start of our conversation, auctions create this, call it confusion or whatever, at times. I mean if he had scored 500 runs, he would’ve said, “hey, price tag doesn’t matter at all.” Maybe it did (grins), and it weighed (on Venkatesh). He probably had his worst year by his standards with us since 2021. The thought process that goes through the franchise think-tank at the table is, what would you rather do? And I have as much money as possible and flexibility to engineer that whichever way you want, or just go in there and be at the mercy of whatever. And so last year, in many ways, it was a bit of a learning thing for us; it was purely very, very circumstantial. I mean this is probably the first time we have done something like that: picked a big player at price, that was quite exciting. Now, because of the mini-auction dynamics rather than anything else, we decided to release him.In a recent interview, Rajasthan Royals lead owner Manoj Badale said he enjoys the challenge and unpredictability the mega-auction presents. What is your view on the mega-auction?
Mysore: We have made our position very, very clear when last year we franchises had a big discussion with IPL around retention and various other significant topics. We said you cannot be punishing franchises who have worked very, very hard to build teams to identify talent, develop them and have had success. And suddenly you are saying that’s it, let’s do a mega auction every three years.After 18-19 years of the league, this shouldn’t be happening. I’m not a fan of the viewpoint around equalising and this surprise element and all that. It doesn’t make any sense, to be honest. It doesn’t help the league, it doesn’t help the whole fan community. I mean this is the reason why the retention rule got created. In the very first auction that I attended, in 2011, there was not supposed to be any retention, but it was introduced because there were some key players that certain franchises didn’t want to release.The original plan was every three years everybody goes into the auction. Not that I disagree with that, I agree with that retention principle, but the principle of it is really that you are rewarding teams for having developed players, built that team, built that franchise, and connected with the fan base and working through it.And imagine you go win a championship and then you get dismantled after that. Or what happens is that the punishment for having good players to retain is so high that you see teams coming in with huge purses to the auction. We all had equal opportunity. And how could that be good for the league, this type of churn? So I’m not in the camp which says auctions are exciting.Venky Mysore on KKR’s coaching overhaul: “Why the reset is because we were forced to, no?”•BCCISo maximum retention for you?
Mysore: There should not be a big auction at all in my opinion. What we recommended was, if you want, you have a mini-auction every year, which means that you have rights to hold onto the player. Of course, that comes with certain questions. Immediately people will say, oh, but what about the players? You pick somebody for 50 lakhs and in that three-year cycle they’ve done exceedingly well. But I said, that will not be the reason for you to have an auction.You should create a different system for that. The system should be that everybody’s spending the same salary cap. You allow the teams to renegotiate salaries if there was going to be a situation like that where you want to reward somebody who’s coming with a 50-lakhs player who has done exceedingly well for you. I mean Venkatesh Iyer was 20 lakhs when we picked him, but he takes us to the final in 2021, almost single-handedly. So then he gets rewarded when the retention thing came in, which is great. As long as you are within the salary cap, you renegotiate your salaries internally.How would you do that?
Mysore: I would be sitting with him and saying, boss, this is what I think we can do. You go to the auction, who knows what your auction price could be? If I’m allowed to do that, and if the player doesn’t agree, then there is a release discussion. Say we got a player at 18 crore at the previous auction, but we want to now negotiate that to 12 crore for the next season. If the player says fine, we can then take the extra money and redistribute the difference with other players who have performed exceedingly well and deserve a higher fee. In theory the auction does that, but what happens there is that the franchise loses its option because somebody else is waiting with more money.You can see how some of our players from the championship year ended up with other franchises at the last mega-auction. So if I’m allowed through this system, where I can renegotiate directly, as long as I stay within my overall salary cap and the subject to the players agreeing, why not?But let’s say the player doesn’t agree. Another franchise could influence him and say you get released. You think that will not happen en masse?
Mysore: Correct, that could happen, but not en masse. And that player actually will realise that if not too many teams are releasing, there may not be big money in the mini auction, right? I mean the players feel they can get more only because there are teams releasing players and coming with lot of money, like us this year. But if this system was implemented, many of the teams will probably work in such a way based on the relationships they have with the players and what the intangibles that the franchise has to offer in terms of the environment, how they are taking care of, and the success and things like that.But the system you are suggesting needs to be transparent and equitable for players.
Mysore: These are all solvable problems. For example, an uncapped Indian player’s fee increases automatically the moment he becomes capped. So there is a system to readjust that anyway already. We just need to apply our minds and solutions can be found.Should the auction purse then be increased accordingly?
Mysore: No. I’ve always maintained this, the player fees expands to meet the salary cap. And then when you look at the highest that somebody gets, everyone is flabbergasted and say, “oh my God, 23 cr, 24 cr!” I told them, “Listen, you go back to any auction, the highest that a player gets is typically 20-25% of the salary cap. If the salary cap 125 crore, they’re getting 25 crore. So don’t be surprised because it’s just the dynamics of competition.” People are all sitting on money and will be raising the paddle based on how much money they have left in their kitty. So raising salary cap is not changing anything. It is just increasing or inflating the player fees and skewing the upper end. So that’s not something that we would advocate at all.But the player will say ‘I am a key stakeholder, too. The IPL and franchises are profiting due to my performance.’ So why should the player not command a good price?
Mysore: Yeah, fair enough. The counter to that is to say, let’s pay for performance then. Let’s make the fixed fee a very low fee and have a performance incentive built in there so a player can say, “Listen, I’m performing and therefore I should get paid.” Fair enough. But by the same token, somebody right now is getting a high fee but the performance is well below par, it’s not like we are cutting the fees, we’re not. So it’s still at a nascent stage in that sense. But the idea is you shouldn’t kill the goose that’s laying the golden egg. Franchise sports has existed around the world for decades. So they’ve all done circles around this subject and come back with plans and ideas on how everything can be structured. So we can borrow a lot of these things so we don’t have to reinvent the wheel.

Trent Alexander-Arnold criticized by Spanish media for 'non-existent' performances in stuttering start to life at Real Madrid

Trent Alexander-Arnold has been singled out for some hefty criticism by sections of the Spanish press as his difficult start to life at Real Madrid continues. The England international arrived in the summer after bringing an end to his time with boyhood club Liverpool, but he has only managed four starts in La Liga and just one in the Champions League despite right-back mainstay Dani Carvajal being sidelined by injury.

  • Alexander-Arnold struggling after making dream summer transfer

    Alexander-Arnold decided to call time on his Liverpool career after winning a second Premier League title with the Reds last season, signing for Los Blancos in time for the summer's Club World Cup. However, it has been far from an ideal start to life at Santiago Bernabeu, with the 27-year-old struggling to convince fellow Merseyside icon Xabi Alonso that he warrants a regular place in his starting XI. He has made three consecutive starts in recent weeks thanks to Carvajal's injury, but so far he has been unable to conjure up the creative spark that made him such an asset to Jurgen Klopp and later Arne Slot, failing to register a single assist since the start of the current campaign. Instead, it's been Madrid's attacking and midfield players who have been setting up the majority of the team's goals, with Arda Guler leading the assist rankings in their La Liga outings with five, while Vinicius Junior and Federico Valverde have contributed four apiece. Whether it will all come together for Alexander-Arnold in Spain remains to be seen, but the notoriously short-tempered local press have not wasted any time declaring how lost the right-back has looked during his first six months as a Madrid player.

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    What the Spanish media said

    While plenty of Madrid's players have struggled during the early parts of the 2025-26 season, Alexander-Arnold in particular came in for criticism after his performance in the 1-1 draw with Girona at the weekend. Writing for , Spanish journalist Alfredo Relano claimed: "Now that Trent is here, he seems like a clueless and insubstantial player, with the expression of a rabbit in the headlights. His quality at set-pieces is masked by his right foot, but in open play he is non-existent." The same publication had published a slightly more sympathetic report a few days earlier, admitting Alexander-Arnold had produced a "mixed bag" of performances since joining the likes of Jude Bellingham and Kylian Mbappe at the club.

  • How Alexander-Arnold performed against Girona

    Madrid's draw with Girona was disappointing for a number of reasons. It was their third consecutive stalemate in La Liga, which allowed Barcelona to open up a four-point lead at the top of the table after Hansi Flick's side beat Atletico Madrid on Tuesday evening, and they had to rely on an Mbappe penalty to drag them level after Azzedine Ounahi had bagged the opener shortly before half-time. Alexander-Arnold himself committed the cardinal sin of failing to track his opposite number before the goal and couldn't provide much ingenuity at the other end of the pitch. He did create two chances but only completed one of his 10 attempted crosses, also committing two fouls in defence.

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    What comes next for Alexander-Arnold and Real Madrid?

    While criticism has headed his way, Alexander-Arnold did enough last time out to be included in Alonso's starting line-up for Wednesday night's trip to Athletic Club. A win is crucial for Los Blancos, with manager Alonso starting to feel the heat after some unconvincing recent performances, while an improved showing from Alexander-Arnold could ease some the pressure starting to build on the Englishman's shoulder, and perhaps even provoke a more positive reception from the Spanish media. Regardless, the boyhood Scouser will be keen to show everyone he's not the 'clueless' player he has been labelled and perhaps start to work his way back into contention for England duty, with next year's World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico fast approaching.

Owen Hargreaves says “exceptional” Tottenham star outshone Simons against Prague

Tottenham secured a comfortable 3-0 victory over Slavia Prague at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Tuesday evening, strengthening their bid for automatic Champions League qualification with a commanding performance.

Thomas Frank’s side also extended their 100 per cent home record in Europe with their third consecutive N17 victory, all without conceding a single goal in that time.

Spurs have now climbed into a coveted top eight place as a result, and there were a few star performers on the night.

David Zima’s bizarre own goal opened the scoring on 26 minutes, with the Czech defender inexplicably heading Pedro Porro’s dangerous corner past his own goalkeeper after Cristian Romero’s initial flick-on.

The opening period proved slightly chaotic, with Tottenham dominating possession yet struggling to convert superiority into clear-cut opportunities against Slavia’s resilient defence.

Richarlison should have given Spurs the lead within 45 seconds, heading Wilson Odobert’s excellent cross straight at goalkeeper Jindrich Stanek from point-blank range.

Slavia threatened sporadically, with Stanek producing several outstanding saves to deny Tottenham’s attack. The Czech international frustrated Mohammed Kudus and substitute Mathys Tel — who was named in the squad despite being left out of their original 22-man list — with exceptional saves.

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The timeline is unclear.

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However, two second-half penalties then secured Tottenham’s victory.

Kudus converted their first spot-kick before Xavi Simons completed the scoring after being fouled inside the area, though Slavia’s Igoh Ogbu escaped a second yellow card for the challenge that conceded the penalty.

In some bad news, Micky van de Ven received a booking that rules him out of the crucial Borussia Dortmund clash, representing the evening’s only negative for Frank.

Ben Davies made his first appearance of the campaign during stoppage time, providing a sentimental moment with Son Heung-min watching from the stands following his emotional farewell visit to North London.

The victory maintains Tottenham’s remarkable 22-match unbeaten run at home in European competitions whilst extending Slavia’s winless streak to six Champions League games. The Czech champions also remain without a goal across their last four European matches.

Tottenham now need just four points from their remaining fixtures against Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt to guarantee at least playoff qualification, with top-eight automatic progression firmly within reach.

A lot of the noise has centered around yet another convincing performance from Simons, his second on the bounce after Brentford last weekend, but according to Hargreaves, it was another man who stole the show.

Owen Hargreaves praises 'exceptional' Mohammed Kudus

While the media have lavished Simons’ 9/10 display, it was Kudus who attracted serious praise from TNT Sports pundit Owen Hargreaves.

Speaking after the match, Hargreaves told TNT that Kudus was Tottenham’s ‘best player by far’ and put in a truly ‘exceptional’ display.

The Ghanaian will be facing off against England at the World Cup, potentially Djed Spence, who jokingly said that he was going to pocket his teammate in the States.

However, if we were Spence, we’d certainly be worried.

Kudus has been Tottenham’s standout attacking star by some way this season, and it’s hard to imagine where Frank’s side would be without the former West Ham sensation, who crossed the London divide in July.

The 25-year-old, on top of his nine goal contributions in all competitions this season, has also averaged more successful take-ons per 90 than any other player in the Premier League — marking himself out as England’s most devastating dribbler (WhoScored).

Last night was yet another example of the excellent business done by Spurs to tempt Kudus to north London, and the best could still be yet to come.

Root unperturbed by 'challenge' of facing pink-ball master Starc

England’s key batter won’t dwell on Perth dismissals, despite poor head-to-head record

Vithushan Ehantharajah30-Nov-2025England’s first training session at the Gabba on Sunday, ahead of the second Ashes Test, featured a couple of unfamiliar “dog-throwers”.With the Lions taking part in the Prime Ministers’ XI match in Canberra, Matthew Potts and Josh Tongue with them, and the bowlers resting up after Saturday’s session at Allan Border Field – only Ben Stokes sent deliveries down – net bowlers and coaches were working overtime. As were two new faces in England stash.They were drafted in from the Sunshine Coast by bowling coach David Saker as reinforcements. And it was no coincidence there was a left-hander in there.After Mitchell Starc blasted through England in the first Test at Perth to put Australia 1-0 up, the extra focus was a no-brainer. The tourists had no answers for Starc’s brilliance as he finished with 10 in the match. They will need to find some ahead of the day-night Test, because no one does it better than the 35-year-old in this novelty off-shoot of the longest format.Related

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No bowler has anywhere near as many as Starc’s 81 pink-ball wickets at 17.08, nor his experience of 14 Tests with various iterations of the lighter Kookaburra. Like cocktails on a beach, he is a class apart when the sun sets. And with half of each day’s play expected to take place under lights, there is unlikely to be a period not suited to his game.As is England’s way, the onus is on individuals to work out their own ways of combating Starc. And it was noteworthy that one of England’s greatest problem-solvers, Joe Root, hogged a left-handed thrower during the afternoon session, trying to workshop a method against a familiar foe.The pair have played each other 23 times – red and pink – and Starc has the slight upper hand in their ongoing battle.Test cricket’s second-most productive run-scorer averages 34.9 against Starc, who has removed Root 10 times in Tests, including twice last week.”I think the first innings, to be honest, it was a pretty good ball,” Root said of his dismissal for a duck on day one, twisted around and edging to third slip. “Nipped across you from straight in. I wasn’t looking to whip it through square leg or anything like that. It was just one of those things you can get on a lively wicket. In England that probably doesn’t carry, it drops short with soft hands. It’s just one of the things you have to wear.”In the second innings, Root felt he started well “being quite busy and proactive” before edging a drive onto his stumps for 8 from 11 deliveries. The third batter dismissed in a run-less six balls that turned the Test on its head. “I just made a slight error of judgement and it costs you. You could play and miss at that, or it goes between stumps and keeper and goes for four, and you never think about it again.”Joe Root trains at the Gabba•Getty Images

Fine margins? Or, whisper it – does Root have a Starc problem? Both can be true, of course. Likewise, the fact that since adding the wobble seam delivery to his repertoire, Starc has been able to challenge both edges of the bat, regardless of whether he is faced with a right- or left-hander. Supplemented by his pace, angle and swing, he was able to cover for the loss of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood in the first Test, and may do again in the second.”Clearly the more he’s played, the more experience he’s getting, and the more skills he’s developed,” Root said. “He’s a fine bowler and has been for a long time – and that’s never changed. They’ve had a couple of injuries, and he’s had to step up and he did that very well in the last game. Our challenge will be, can we counter that this week?”Root is optimistic solutions can be found, even in Starc’s day-night domain, and sees no reason why the bowler’s strengths cannot be managed to a degree. It is worth noting, Starc’s average with the pink ball at the Gabba is a solid yet unspectacular 29.00, with 14 dismissals across six innings.”It’s understanding all of the different tools he might have and then how are you going to counter that both in a positive manner and in allowing yourself to do it for a long period of time. Just being clear individually in how you want to go about scoring your runs and readying yourself as best you can is going to be the key.”With two days of practice, and information due to come their way from Canberra, England are fairly happy with the current batch of pink balls, even if Root thinks day-night matches are unnecessary for an Ashes series. Having played in all seven of England’s previous ones, he will need to draw on that experience, and share it with team-mates, if the tourists are to dent Australia’s impressive record in the side-format, which currently reads 13 wins out of 14. That one loss came here at the Gabba, against West Indies in 2024.”It felt pretty good when facing it. I think it’s [the black seam] actually a nice way of really focusing on the ball. Look hard at that seam and give you as many cues as you can from that point of release.”Of course, it’s going to have its different challenges and nuances from the red ball, but that’s all part and parcel of it. Can we be better at it than Australia? That’s the question and the challenge ahead of us.”

Saifuddin returns but no Taskin for first two T20Is against Ireland

Taskin is currently playing in the Abu Dhabi T10 and was not available for selection

Mohammad Isam23-Nov-2025Bangladesh have picked Mohammad Saifuddin and Mahidul Islam Ankon for the first two T20Is of the three-match series against Ireland. They replace Taskin Ahmed and Shamim Hossain from the squad that played the T20Is against West Indies last month.Saifuddin was part of the T20I series against Afghanistan in Sharjah, which Bangladesh won 3-0, while Ankon is uncapped in the format. He has played one Test and three ODIs, though.Chief selector Gazi Ashraf Hossain said that Taskin was not available for selection as he is currently playing in the Abu Dhabi T10. He also mentioned that Shamim Hossain has been left out.”Taskin has an NOC, so he is not available to us currently,” Hossain said. “We know that he will play for Bangladesh whenever we ask him to, but we are well aware of the plans.”We haven’t considered Shamim Hossain for the first two T20Is. We have picked Mahidul Islam so that we can try someone in the top four.”All three matches of the series will be played in Chattogram, on November 27, 29 and December 2.Bangladesh squad for Ireland T20IsLitton Das (capt), Saif Hassan (vice-capt), Tanzid Hasan, Parvez Hossain Emon, Tawhid Hridoy, Jaker Ali, Nurul Hasan, Mahidul Islam Ankon, Mahedi Hasan, Rishad Hossain, Nasum Ahmed, Mustafizur Rahman, Tanzim Hasan Sakib, Shoriful Islam, Mohammad Saifuddin

Arsenal hold initial talks to sign £88m Odegaard upgrade who’s “Mbappe-like”

It would be fair to say that the last week or so hasn’t been ideal for Arsenal.

Yes, Mikel Arteta’s side are still top of the Premier League, but a draw away to Chelsea and then a defeat at the hands of Aston Villa have diminished their lead to just two points.

Moreover, while they certainly weren’t terrible against the Villans, they failed to make the most of their chances.

One player who has received quite a bit of criticism from the fan base in the aftermath is Martin Odegaard, and if reports are to be believed, the club could be looking to bring someone in who could be bad news for his place in the team.

Arsenal target Odegaard upgrade

With the transfer window now less than a month away from reopening, Arsenal have a chance to reinforce their squad, and the good news is that they’ve already been linked with a host of brilliant players.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

For example, Real Madrid’s Rodrygo has once again been touted for a £70m move to the Emirates, as has Nottingham Forest’s £79m Murillo.

However, while both Brazilians would undoubtedly have an impact on Arteta’s side, neither one could be described as a potential rival, upgrade or replacement for Odegaard, unlike Kenan Yıldız.

Yes, according to recent reports from Italy, Arsenal have reignited their interest in the Turkish wonderkid.

In fact, the report goes further than that, revealing that the Gunners have once more made contact to find out what would be needed to make this deal happen.

However, while a potential price is not mentioned in the story, other reports from last month claim that a fee of around £88m could be enough to tempt Juventus into selling.

It would therefore be a costly and potentially complicated transfer to get over the line, but given Yıldız’s ability and potential, Arsenal should fight for him, especially as he could provide real competition for Odegaard, if not outright replace him.

How Yıldız compares to Odegaard

So, the first thing to point out is that while Yıldız is primarily viewed as a winger, he could easily become more of a ten over time.

After all, while he has spent plenty of time out wide, his most-played position is second striker, and given his third-most-played position is attacking midfield, the idea of him dropping a little deeper does not feel far-fetched.

Moreover, the youngster already possesses one of the key characteristics of the best tens: the ability to both score and assist goals with relative ease. There is a reason European football writer Danny Corcoran has suggested the youngster has “Mbappe-like ability.”

For example, in 52 appearances last season, totalling 3520 minutes, he scored 12 goals and provided nine assists, which comes out to a goal involvement on average every 2.47 games, or every 167.61 minutes.

He has somehow become even more dangerous this season, scoring six goals and providing five assists in 19 appearances, totalling 1533 minutes, which is a goal involvement every 1.72 games, or every 139.36 minutes.

Yıldız’s vs Odegaard

24/25

Yıldız

Odegaard

Appearances

52

45

Minutes

3520′

3447′

Goals

12

6

Assists

9

12

25/26

Yıldız

Odegaard

Appearances

18

11

Minutes

1457′

516′

Goals

5

0

Assists

5

2

All Stats via Transfermarkt

For comparison’s sake, Odegaard scored six goals and provided 12 assists in 45 appearances, totalling 3447 minutes, last season, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.5 games, or every 191.5 minutes.

This season, in the period he has been available, the Norwegian international has provided two assists in 11 appearances, totalling 516 minutes, which is an average of one every 5.5 games, or every 258 minutes.

With it clear that the Turkish gem is more of an attacking threat than the Gunners’ captain, what else makes him a player that Andrea Berta and Co cannot miss out on?

Well, as his output would suggest, he is, in the words of content creator Alex Moneypenny, someone “capable of the spectacular.”

Whether that’s a goal from distance, a mazy run that ends in a chance or just some tidy footwork that gets his team on their way, the Regensburg-born talent is an attacker who can seemingly do it all.

This is unsurprisingly reflected in his underlying numbers as well.

Yıldız’s Scout Report

Statistics

Per 90

Percentile

Goal-Creating Actions

1.22

Top 6%

Shot-Creating Actions

6.10

Top 8%

xAG: Exp. Assisted Goals

0.46

Top 9%

Carries into Penalty Area

3.41

Top 11%

Shots on Target

1.46

Top 12%

Successful Take-Ons

3.17

Top 12%

All Stats via FBref for the 25/26 UCL

According to FBref, he ranks in the top 6% of attacking midfielders and wingers in the Champions League for goal-creating actions, the top 8% for shot-creating actions, the top 9% for expected assisted goals, the top 11% for carries into the penalty area and more, all per 90.

Ultimately, while it would be an expensive transfer to get over the line, Arsenal should do what they can to sign Yıldız, as he’s got the ability and potential to replace Odegaard and become a world-class ten.

Sterling 2.0: Berta flop already looks like he'll never make it at Arsenal

It is not looking good for the Arsenal star so far this season.

ByJack Salveson Holmes 6 days ago

Oval Invincibles rebrand as MI London as Hundred deal is finalised

Oval Invincibles, the most successful franchise in the Hundred, will be rebranded as MI London from 2026 onwards, after Surrey and Reliance Industries Limited concluded their protracted negotiations in the wake of this year’s equity sale.The name change brings the men’s and women’s teams in line with the rest of the Ambani family’s Mumbai Indians stable which, in addition to its flagship team in the IPL, includes MI Cape Town in the SA20, MI Emirates in the ILT20, MI New York in Major League Cricket, and Mumbai Indians women’s team in the WPL.The announcement marks the last of the eight deals that emerged from the ECB’s sale of equity stakes in the Hundred earlier this year, and comes almost five months after the first six of these were tied up. Reliance secured a 49 per cent stake in Oval Invincibles, having valued the franchise at £123 million – the second most expensive behind the Lord’s-based London Spirit, at £295 million.The delay in the announcement reflects a reluctance at Surrey to relinquish a brand identity that had tied the teams to their home ground at the Kia Oval, and which had delivered five titles in as many years of the competition – with the women completing back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022, before the men sealed their third win in as many years this summer, in their victory over Trent Rockets at Lord’s.However, Surrey chairman Oli Slipper acknowledged the strength of the MI brand in confirming the team’s rebranding, with its haul of 13 titles across competitions in the 17 years, including five IPL titles and at least one in every other competition in which it has competed.Akash Ambani, Mumbai Indians co-owner, chats to Jordan Cox after Oval Invincibles’ victory in the Hundred final•Philip Brown/Getty Images

“We’re pleased to have reached an agreement with the Reliance team over our partnership in the Hundred franchise team,” Slipper said. “Reliance bring a significant depth of cricket and business expertise and have had great success with their franchise teams in India and around the world – there’s no doubt that they are here to win. They are passionate cricket people and together we will continue the success of our two teams.”We have worked very closely with Reliance over the name of the new team and believe that MI London will give us the best opportunity to build the fanbase at home and across the world. We also believe that the team brand will help to grow the commercial value of our franchise, in turn boosting investment into the long-term sustainable growth of Surrey and of cricket in our community.”Mrs Nita M. Ambani, co-owner of Mumbai Indians, said: “We are delighted to welcome MI London into the #OneFamily and take the MI legacy to new frontiers. London holds a special place in the heart of cricket, and we are honoured to be part of its rich heritage. Together with Surrey, we look forward to nurturing young talent, engaging diverse communities, and uniting fans through their shared love of the game.”Mr Akash Ambani added: “We are happy to welcome MI London into the #OneFamily, marking a new chapter in our journey of uniting cricket fans, nurturing talent, and growing the game across continents. The Invincibles’ winning record and spirit of excellence perfectly embody the MI ethos of passion, resilience, and teamwork. Building on our shared passion for cricket, we look forward to collaborating with our partners at Surrey CCC and building on the legacy of The Hundred’s most successful team.”The eight partnerships combined represent a valuation for the teams of over £975 million, with over £500 million is now set to be invested into English and Welsh cricket. This includes a £50 million commitment to grassroots cricket, with the remainder set to be distributed to professional counties.Vikram Banerjee, Managing Director, The Hundred, said: “It’s an exciting moment to now have all eight deals complete. The world-leading partners we now have on board will help us take The Hundred to the next level and establish it as the unmissable summer event.”We’re already working closely together as we aim to make the 2026 season of The Hundred the best yet. It’s also an important moment for the whole of the game in England and Wales, unlocking significant investment to support the game at every level.”

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