WC 2026 TO FEATURE NEW CONCUSSION SUBS RULE

(Agencies)

ZURICH, May 26: FIFA will introduce a special “concussion substitution” rule at the upcoming FIFA World Cup 2026, marking the first time the tournament will feature a dedicated emergency replacement for players suffering head injuries during matches.

Under the new regulation, teams will be allowed to make an additional substitution if a player is suspected of sustaining a concussion or serious head injury. The change will not count towards the standard limit of five tactical substitutions permitted during a game.

The move has been widely welcomed as an important step towards improving player safety and ensuring quicker medical intervention during high-intensity matches.

Medical teams and match officials are expected to closely monitor head injury incidents.

CANADA SQUAD

GOALKEEPERS: Maxime Crepeau (Orlando City), Owen Goodman (Barnsley), Dayne St. Clair (Inter Miami).

DEFENDERS: Zorhan Bassong (Sporting Kansas City), Moise Bombito (Nice), Derek Cornelius (Rangers), Alphonso Davies (Bayern Munich), Luc de Fougerolles (Dender EH), Alistair Johnston (Celtic), Alfie Jones (Middlesbrough), Jamie Knight-Lebel (Swindon Town), Richie Laryea (Toronto), Ralph Priso (Vancouver Whitecaps), Niko Sigur (Hajduk Split), Joel Waterman (Chicago Fire).

MIDFIELDERS: Ali Ahmed (Norwich City), Tajon Buchanan (Villarreal), Mathieu Choiniere (LAFC), Stephen Eustaquio (LAFC), Marcelo Flores (Tigres UANL), Ismael Kone (Sassuolo), Liam Millar (Hull City), Jayden Nelson (Austin), Jonathan Osorio (Toronto), Nathan-Dylan Saliba (Anderlecht), Jacob Shaffelburg (LAFC).

FORWARDS: Jonathan David (Juventus), Promise David (Royale Union Saint-Gilloise), Daniel Jebbison (Preston North End), Cyle Larin (Southampton), Tani Oluwaseyi (Villarreal), Jacen Russell-Rowe (Toulouse).

CAMEROON SCRIPT RECORD ONE-WKT T20 WIN

(Agencies)

GABORONE, May 26: Cameroon scripted a dramatic world-record victory over Sierra Leone in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, pulling off the biggest one-wicket win in men’s T20 cricket history in terms of balls remaining.

Chasing a modest target of 65, Cameroon survived a sensational batting collapse to reach the target with one wicket in hand and 26 balls to spare, surpassing the previous record held by Portugal, who had defeated Gibraltar by one wicket with 19 deliveries remaining in 2023.

The low-scoring thriller also witnessed a rare statistical feat as both teams produced five-wicket hauls in the same T20 International. Cameroon’s Julien Abega starred with the ball, claiming 5 for 24, while Sierra Leone’s Samuel Conteh answered with an impressive 5 for 23 during the chase.

It marked only the second occasion in men’s T20I history that two bowlers had picked up five-wicket hauls in the same match, the previous instance coming in a game between Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea in 2019.

Both sides entered the contest searching for their first victory of the ongoing qualifier after losing their opening matches, and Abega immediately set the tone for Cameroon with a wicket off the very first ball of the game.

Sierra Leone never recovered from the early blows as wickets tumbled regularly throughout the innings.

They slipped from 22 for one to 39 for six before eventually being bowled out for just 64. Only one batter managed to score in double figures, while three players were dismissed for ducks.

Abega’s spell proved devastating, with four of his five wickets coming through clean bowled dismissals, while Roger Atangana chipped in with three wickets to complete the collapse.

However, Loic and Bomnyuy were the only Cameroon batters to reach double figures in an extraordinary match that will long be remembered for its drama, collapses and record-breaking finish.

Coach Franklin hails improved Nitish Reddy

(PTI)

MULLANPUR, May 26: Nitish Reddy has flourished in a bigger role and is a much improved T20 cricketer from the last Indian Premier League season, said Sunrisers Hyderabad assistant coach James Franklin here on Tuesday.

A much fitter Reddy has made an impact both with the bat and his medium pace bowling for SRH this season, and Franklin said the Indian all-rounder has made significant improvements in his game.

“Last year, Nitish probably took a lot of learnings. There were a few things, form (wise), probably didn’t start exactly how it wanted to for him. Obviously, there might have been a bit more expectation with having just recently been involved with India…” said Franklin ahead of the IPL Eliminator against Rajasthan Royals here on Wednesday.

Reddy has chipped in with seven wickets and 264 runs in 13 games lower down the order this IPL, compared to 182 runs last season while he bowled only 30 balls.

“He has done quite a bit of work on his bowling, he (has) looked as confident as ever with the bat in the early part of our campaign. In terms of the prep work, in the first couple of games he got some validation on that in terms of get-ting a couple of little cameo scores and partnerships,” said Franklin. “That just gives you that validation, as I said, that confidence as a batter to go out and perform a role. His role has obviously been slightly deeper this year as opposed to last year as well, sort of of more (about) coming in with maybe six or seven overs to go at No. 5 or No. 6, and he has played some unbelievable cameos for us in finishing off innings and his bowling as well.”

How cricket’s social media ecosystem created a monster it can no longer control

PTI

NEW DELHI, May 26: When Jessica Davies, wife of Australian batter Travis Head, recently spoke about the torrent of online abuse directed at her family after her husband’s on-field skirmish with Virat Kohli, it wasn’t merely another episode of fan rivalry crossing the line.

Neither was Shrestha Iyer’s anguished reaction after being viciously targeted for appearing in a light-hearted social media video with Punjab Kings’ content team.

These are not isolated cases of “passionate fandom” turning ugly.

They are symptoms of a toxic ecosystem — an organized, monetized and now uncontrollable hate industry that cricket’s peripheral commercial machinery knowingly helped create over the past decade.

What began as aggressive social media marketing has gradually mutated into a Frankenstein’s monster.

“There are agencies that can charge anything between Rs 25,000 to Rs 2 lakh for spreading unmitigated hatred against a particular player,” an industry insider told PTI.

“To run a campaign, customized stats could be given. Now it’s up to them to make the topic trend. Obviously the rates will be different for hours of trending and trending for days,” the insider added.

The social media game around cricketers changed dramatically nearly a decade ago when platforms stopped being merely tools of engagement and became commercial goldmines.

A player’s social media following increasingly determined the value of his digital endorsement deals at a time when traditional advertising revenue through linear television began shrinking.

One viral hashtag could translate into endorsement deals worth crores. And that’s when the ecosystem changed permanently.

“And here entered a very important component. The sports management firms that handled players’ image and commercials,” a senior BCCI official familiar with the workings of the system said.

“The managers would comb through profiles of social media aggregators with decent following. They would be engaged to amplify a player’s social media traction,” the official explained.

Soon, fan clubs multiplied exponentially. Algorithms rewarded outrage over nuance, abuse over analysis and tribal loyalty over sporting appreciation.

What initially looked like harmless fan engagement slowly became weaponized propaganda.Managers, agencies and social media operators found that inorganic amplification worked both ways — glorifying one player and systematically tearing another down.

What nobody anticipated was how quickly this ecosystem would slip out of institutional control.

Bots became armies. Rival fan groups became digital lynch mobs. Manufactured trends became accepted public discourse.

The abuse was no longer restricted to players. Families became collateral dam-age.Wives, sisters and even children became easy targets in a culture where anonymity removed accountability and hatred became currency.

Jessica Head and Shrestha Iyer are suffering today because cricket’s wider commercial ecosystem spent years incentivizing online polarisation without caring about its eventual human cost.

The tragedy is that the same ecosystem that once celebrated “engagement metrics” is now horrified by the monster those numbers created. As cricket’s digital footprint continues to expand, the incidents involving Jessica Davies and Shrestha Iyer have once again exposed the darker side of modern fandom, where online engagement often comes at the cost of basic decency and humanity. What was once projected as passionate support for players has increasingly turned into organised toxicity fuelled by algorithms, anonymous accounts and commercial interests chasing visibility at any cost. (PTI)

Patidar blitz powers RCB into 2nd straight IPL final

(PTI)

DHARAMSALA, May 26: Defending champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru marched into a second successive IPL final with a 92-run demolition of Gujarat Titans in Qualifier 1 here on Tuesday, powered by skipper Rajat Patidar’s blistering unbeaten 93 off 33 balls and a ruthless pace assault that ripped apart their opponents’ top-order inside the powerplay.

Put into bat, RCB piled up a daunting 254 for five, with Patidar producing one of the most destructive knocks of the season, peppering the boundaries with effortless ease after being handed reprieves early in his innings.

The RCB captain tore into the GT attack in the death overs, ensuring his side crossed the 250-run mark in emphatic fashion. Patidar turned the game on its head, smashing nine sixes and five fours after surviving two dropped chances, as RCB plundered 86 runs in the last five overs to seize complete control of the contest. In fact, they got 114 runs off last six overs.Chasing a mammoth target, Gujarat Titans desperately needed a flying start but their hopes were dented inside the powerplay as both in-form openers departed cheaply.Sai Sudharsan’s dismissal turned out to be a bizarre one as his bat slipped out of his hands while attempting a shot off Jacob Duffy (3/39) and crashed into the stumps, leaving the batter stunned on 14.GT suffered a bigger setback soon after when skipper Shubman Gill was cleaned up by the red-hot Bhuvneshwar Kumar for just two, the seasoned seamer once again showcasing his mastery with the new ball.

Bhuvneswar (2/28) showed that he still is an asset for any team. He is now a Purple Cap holder with 26 scalps. The twin blows pushed Gujarat firmly on the back foot against a fired-up RCB attack.Josh Hazlewood (1/39) then got into the act by castling Jos Buttler (29) while Rasikh Salam struck twice in the final powerplay over — dismissing Nishant Sandhu (5) and Jason Holder (0) — to leave the Titans gasping at 51 for five.The battle of equals soon turned into a lop-sided affair as a desperate GT seemed to have buckled under scoreboard pressure.Washington Sundar (8) and impact player Rahul Tewatiya (68) had an unenviable task at hand. The game had already been reduced to a formality in the face of the challenge GT faced.

Eventually, GT were bowled out for 162, sending RCB into their fifth final (2009, 2011, 2016, 2025, 2026).GT, the 2022 champions, will have another shot at making the final on Friday when they take on the winner of the Eliminator between Rajasthan Royal and Sunrisers Hyderabad.

Earlier, the RCB innings began at a furious pace with Venkatesh Iyer (19) taking on Mohammed Siraj with audacious strokeplay, including three early boundaries, before Kagiso Rabada dismissed him for 19 soon after being hit for a six.During his lively spell, Rabada also tested Virat Kohli with sharp bounce and pace in an engaging duel, but the RCB talisman weathered the challenge to score a brisk 43. Alongside Devdutt Padikkal (30), Kohli ensured RCB maintained momentum, helping the side to a commanding 76 for one in the powerplay.

GT clawed their way back through disciplined middle-overs bowling.Rashid Khan delivered tight overs while Jason Holder struck twice in three deliveries to remove Kohli and Padikkal, slowing RCB’s charge significantly. Kulwant Khejroliya too kept things tidy initially as the Titans appeared to have regained control. (PTI)

Royals, Sunrisers set for high-stakes eliminator clash

Rajasthan Royals' Yashasvi Jaiswal during a practice session in Mullanpur on Tuesday. (PTI)

MULLANPUR, May 26: The ferocity and fearlessness of a 15-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi will be pitted against the combined might of an explosive top-order when a resurgent Rajasthan Royals run into a solid Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League Elim-inator here on Wednesday.

MATCH STARTS AT 7:30 PM

Sunrisers Hyderabad made a slow start to the competition before finding sustained momentum in the second half of the tourna-ment. The arrival of regular captain Pat Cummins for the last seven league games also made a substantial impact as they won five of those contests.

Having beaten Rajasthan Royals twice in the league stage, Cummins and Co. would carry the psychologi-cal advantage heading into the high pressure knock-out fixture.

By their own admission, Royals should have qualified much earlier than the last day of the league stage but now that they are there, the Riyan Parag-led unit would be chomping at the bit to put one past Sunrisers Hydera-bad and progress deeper into the tournament.

The Royals top order comprising the sensational Sooryavanshi (583 runs), Yashasvi Jaiswal (397) and Dhruv Jurel (458) has ex-pectedly scored the bulk of the runs for the team.

Same is the case with Sunrisers’ trio of Abhishek Sharma (563 runs), Travis Head (393) and Ishan Kishan (569). A special mention is a must for Henrich Klaasen (606) at number four as he is in the middle of his best IPL season.

Notwithstanding the de-structive abilities of both the top orders, Jaiswal and Head have not been as consistent as they would have liked. The Eliminator presents them the ideal opportunity for a game changing effort for their respective teams.

Sunrisers are arguably the most destructive side of the tournament and therefore it was hardly a surprise that Royals head coach Kumar Sangakkara was inquired about his plans to deal with the opposition’s belligerent top four.

“They’re a good side, aren’t they? They bat well. They trust themselves to go hard and they’ve done it the whole tournament. We have got to hold the line, really. Be disciplined and understand that they’re not a side that you’re going to limit to 120, 130. But we’ve got to be ag-gressive (with our) lines and lengths.

“Even if you’re trying to bowl a good length ball, or a slower ball, it has to be bowled with intent. With the Sunrisers, yeah, it’s going to be a tough clash for us. Let’s see in two days’ time what we come up with,” Sangak-kara said after sneaking into the play-offs. The Sri Lankan legend would bank on lead-ing wicket taker Jofra Archer (21 wickets) to come up with another match-winning spell in the powerplay on Wednesday night, like he did in the must win clash against Mumbai Indians at Wankhede, making the ball talk with both conventional and cross seam.

Nandre Burger and Brijesh Sharma too have been impressive in patches, operating in all phases of the game.

Young leg-spinner Yash Raj Punja has emerged as the lead spinner ahead of Ravi Bishnoi in his debut IPL sea-son while veteran Ravindra Jadeja needs to do more with both the bat and ball.

At the top of the order, trust Sooryavanshi to show no respect to the likes of Cummins, leading wicket taker Eshan Malinga (19) and Sakib Hussain. If the teenager is off the blocks in the powerplay, he could very well take the game away from the opposition.

Another wrist spinner in his rookie season, Shivang Kumar, too has made his presence felt in the middle overs for Sunrisers.

The Mullanpur Stadium, which staged four league games this season, has of-fered a good batting surface with 220 plus being scored in three of those contests in-cluding a 254 by home team Punjab Kings.

SHANAKA HAILS SOORYAVANSHI’S MATURITY

(PTI)

MULLANPUR, May 26: Dasun Shanka, a Sri Lanka captain, says he has been blown away by the composure and poise of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi and he has not seen a “kid” like him in the dressing room.

Shanaka is seeing Sooryavanshi’s meteoric rise from close quarters as his Rajasthan Royals teammate. The 15-year-old has the world cricket in awe of him with his special six hitting ability.

The left-hander from Bihar got out for four in the previous game against Mumbai Indians while in the game before, he smashed 93 off 38 against Lucknow Super Giants.

Asked how Sooryavanshi deals with the highs and lows of the game, Shanaka said his calm approach stands out.

“He is very professional. It’s not about failing or getting runs, but what he does at the practice and how he behaves in the dressing room. How cool he is. I haven’t seen a kid like him behaving like that in the dressing room like that,” said Shanaka ahead of the IPL Eliminator against Sunrisers Hyderabad here on Wednesday.“Even the seniors will (rookies) put them under a lot of pressure, but this guy is very cool. I really love the way he is coping with things, whether he fails or he gets runs. He is a very natural kid. I see a lot of potential in him. Lot of good things,” added the seasoned Sri Lankan all-rounder.

MP’s Gill beats national record holder Toor, breaches CWG mark

(PTI)

RANCHI, May 25: Madhya Pradesh’s Samardeep Singh Gill outduelled seasoned Punjab thrower Tajinderpal Singh to win gold medal in the men’s shot put event on the final day of the National National Senior Federation Competition here on Monday.

Two-time Asian Games champion Toor began his campaign with an opening throw of 20.07m, but the 25-year-old Gill surged ahead in the fourth attempt with 20.46m, which eventually earned him the gold.

Toor, whose national record stands at 21.77m, made efforts to regain the lost ground but his last and final attempt went for 20.06m.

Gill also bettered the Glasgow Commonwealth Games qualification mark of 20.36m set by Athletics Federation of India.

Low hurdler Yashas P of Karnataka and Santhosh Kumar T of NCOE Trivandrum breached the CWG qualifying mark in the men’s 400m hurdles.

Yashas won gold with a time of 49.00 seconds and Santhosh Kumar was close second with a time of 49.06 seconds.

The men’s javelin gold went to promising thrower Shivam Lohakare of Maharashtra. His gold-medal winning throw was 81.71m.

The CWG qualification mark in men’s javelin was 82.61m.