Mets Announcers Rightly Bury Club for 'Unfathomable' Collapse After Season-Ending Loss

The New York Mets will miss the 2025 MLB playoffs. A few months ago, that seemed impossible.

Nevertheless, New York lost to the Miami Marlins 4–0 on Sunday, eliminating them from postseason contention on the regular season’s final day. Francisco Lindor grounded into a double play in the top of the ninth to end the game. The team has a payroll of approximately $323 million and won't be playing in October.

After Lindor's season-ending groundout, Mets broadcasters Gary Cohen, Ron Darling and Keith Hernandez lamented the collapse they had watched over the past few months.

"And the Mets' agonizing, three-and-a-half-month, slow-motion collapse is complete," Cohen said. "It is unfathomable that this collection of talent winds up outside of an expanded playoff system. After having the best record in baseball for the first two and a half months of the season, everything goes wrong over the last three-and-a-half months, and the Mets find themselves on the outside looking in."

"Players about as stunned as the fans," Darling said. "I think a lot of the players felt as though this day would never come, that they'd be able to turn it on at some point and not have to endure this. But they weren't able to do that."

"This has got to be so heartbreaking, disappointing for the players, but they didn't get it done," Hernandez said.

New York's loss means Cincinnati has made the postseason. The Reds lost to the Brewers 4–2 on Sunday and finished with the same 83-79 record as the Mets but hold the tiebreaker. That means had New York won on Sunday or Saturday, Cincinnati would be out and the Mets would be in.

New York had MLB's best record on June 12 at 45–24. After that, they went 38–55.

Juan Soto And His Massive Contract Weren't Enough

The Mets spent lavishly over the offseason, most notably inking Juan Soto to a 15-year, $765 million contract. They also re-signed Pete Alonso to a two-year, $54 million deal that paid him $30 million this season and brought back Sean Manaea on a three-year, $75 million deal.

It didn't matter.

Soto had an excellent season, slashing .263/.396/.525 with a career-high 43 home runs, 105 RBIs and 38 stolen bases. His wRC+ of 157 ranked fifth in baseball, and he generated 5.8 fWAR, which ranks 11th. His raw hitting numbers were down from 2024, but he didn't get to play 81 games with a friendly short porch in right field at Yankee Stadium.

In the end, Soto was a star, but the rest of the roster wasn't up to the task.

It will be a long offseason in Queens.

Aaron Judge Had a Hilarious Reaction to Giancarlo Stanton's Leisurely Base Running

The Yankees beat the Minnesota Twins, 6-2, on Monday night to win for the third time in their last five games. Four different New York batters hit home runs with the noting on the back page that the team was benefited as "usual punching bag Twins arrive to fix their woes."

Giancarlo Stanton went 2-for-4 at the plate with a home run. He also singled in the first inning. A Ben Rice single then advanced him to second base, but being a heads-up runner he saw centerfielder Byron Buxton fumble the ball in center and took third.

So here, presented without further comment, is Giancarlo Stanton going first to third in about as much time as it would take Corbin Carroll or Elly De La Cruz to get there on a triple.

As you can see at the end of the clip Aaron Judge was sufficiently impressed as he pointed both his palms towards the sky to communicate the universal signal for "

موقف ريال مدريد من إقالة ألونسو بعد الهزيمة أمام مانشستر سيتي

كشفت تقارير صحفية تطورات جديدة حول مستقبل تشابي ألونسو مدرب ريال مدريد بعد الهزيمة أمام مانشستر سيتي بهدفين لهدف في دوري أبطال أوروبا.

ولم ينجح ريال مدريد في الحفاظ على تقدمه في نتيجة المباراة بهدف نظيف عن طريق رودريجو في الدقيقة 28، حيث تعادل نيكو أوريلي لمانشستر سيتي في الدقيقة 35.

وفي الدقيقة 43 من أحداث الشوط الأول نفذ إيرلينج هالاند بنجاح ركلة جزاء في شباك تيبو كورتوا.

اقرأ أيضاً.. رودريجو: علينا تقبل صيحات الاستهجان.. وأسينسيو يقلل من مانشستر سيتي

وبحسب صحفي “سكاي سبورت ألمانيا” باتريك بيرجر، فإن تشابي ألونسو لن تتم إقالته من تدريب ريال مدريد رغم الخسارة ضد مانشستر سيتي بهدفين لهدف.

وكانت تقارير صحفية قبل المباراة قد أشارت إلى أن ألونسو قد تتم إقالته في حال الهزيمة أمام مانشستر سيتي على ملعب “سانتياجو برنابيو”.

ويرى ريال مدريد أن أداء الفريق كان جيدًا بما يكفي وأن الخسارة كانت مؤسفة أمام مانشستر سيتي، وبالتالي سيبقى ألونسو في منصبه وسيتم تقييمه بعد مباراة ديبورتيفو ألافيس في الجولة القادمة من الليجا.

Jogos de Internacional, Grêmio e Juventude são adiados pela CBF

MatériaMais Notícias

A Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) adiou jogos de Internacional, Grêmio e Juventude até a próxima segunda-feira (6). A medida vale para partidas dentro e fora de casa, porque os treinamentos também foram comprometidos.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

➡️A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta!

O motivo é a situação emergencial existente no Rio Grande do Sul, que sofre com inundações, quedas de barreiras e deslizamentos de terra, tragédias derivadas das fortes chuvas. Até o momento, são 10 mortes confirmadas.

O confronto entre Internacional e Juventude, válido pela Copa do Brasil, já tinha sofrido adiamento anteriormente. A partida aconteceria às 21h30 desta quarta-feira (1).

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No sábado (4), o Inter enfrentaria o Cruzeiro, em Belo Horizonte. O Juventude receberia o Atlético-GO, no Alfredo Jaconi, na segunda (6).

Enquanto isso, o Grêmio receberia o Criciúma no domingo (5). O Imortal já entrou em campo pela Copa do Brasil, na terça (30), e empatou em 0 a 0, fora de casa.

Além dos jogos das equipes da Série A, como Internacional e Grêmio, partidas das categorias de base, divisões inferiores e do futebol feminino sofreram adiamento.

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Shohei Ohtani Might Be Peaking Just in Time for Postseason

The Dodgers’ plan to slow play Shohei Ohtani, the pitcher, back to top form is working to perfection. Ohtani looked so good throwing six shutout innings against the Diamondbacks Tuesday night that he is a full-bore Game 1 option for manager Dave Roberts when the National League wild-card series begins Tuesday.

And when Ohtani does make his first career postseason start on the mound while taking his usual spot as the Dodgers’ leadoff hitter, he will replace Babe Ruth as the starting pitcher to hit from the highest spot in the batting order in a postseason game. Ruth hit sixth for the Red Sox in Game 4 of the 1918 World Series.

Three other postseason starting pitchers have batted in a spot other than ninth, all in the eighth spot: Zack Greinke in the 2021 World Series for the Astros and Kyle Hendricks and Jason Hammel twice each in the ‘16 postseason for the Cubs.

In his 14th game on the mound since a second elbow procedure, Ohtani reached season highs against Arizona in innings (six), pitches (91) and batters faced (22). Most impressively, Ohtani pitched off his fastball, which was electric, and held his stuff deep into his start. Here are the key numbers:

Inside Ohtani’s Tuesday start vs. Diamondbacks

Stat

Amount

Rank

Whiffs

16

Most since June 27, 2023

Whiffs on four-seam fastball

9

2nd most of career

Sixth inning fastball velocity

99.1

4th highest of career; highest since 2022

Max Velocity

101.2

4th pitch this month above 101 mph (career-high)

Roberts likely won’t announce his Game 1 starter until playoff matchups are set, but Ohtani has made 11 straight starts on at least six days of rest and if (and when) he starts NLWC Game 1 he will have … six days of rest.

The start Tuesday was the 100th pitching appearance for Ohtani in MLB. His 670 strikeouts through 100 games are the 11th most in history.

That’s impressive enough. But know this: that same all-time pitching talent also this year became the first player in history with 50 homers, 100 walks and 19 stolen bases in a season. Amazing.

And one more note about the incredible two-way talent of Ohtani:

The Two-Way Power of Shohei Ohtani in 2025

Stat

Amount

Rank

Balls Hit 100+ MPH

196

Most in MLB (Tied with Yandy Díaz)

Pitchers Thrown 100+ MPH

39

3rd most by starter since his return on June 16

The Dodgers’ plan to slow-play not just Ohtani but also all their top starters appears to have worked well. Los Angeles pitchers have made only 19 starts this year on four days of rest or fewer, the fewest in MLB (Houston is next at 23) and the seventh fewest in any full season. Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are all throwing well, giving Roberts good choices about how he wants to line up his postseason rotation.

Now he must fix his bullpen, and Roki Sasaki may be the answer. Sasaki, who is expected to be activated Wednesday, hasn’t pitched in MLB since May 9 because of a right shoulder impingement. After making five rehab starts in the minors, Sasaki made his past two appearances out of the bullpen for Oklahoma City. Each time he threw one shutout inning. He hit 100 mph with his fastball.

Roberts is expected to give Sasaki two relief outings this week as further trials for a high-leverage postseason role, which could include anything up to closing games.

Eric Karros Was in the Stands to See His Son Hit First Career HR Against Former Team

Longtime first baseman and designated hitter Eric Karros had the Rockies' number over the course of his 14-year career—slashing .320/.380/.619 with 37 home runs and 108 RBIs in just 129 games.

On Tuesday, Colorado began to return the favor for all the damage the Karros family has done to it over the years.

With two out in the bottom of the sixth inning of the Rockies' game against the Dodgers, Colorado third baseman Kyle Karros—Eric's son—launched his first big-league home run over Coors Field's left-field wall. Eric was in the stands to witness the blast.

Kyle, a rookie out of UCLA, entered Tuesday having played in 11 games with the Rockies. He's slashed .273/.400/.364 with three runs batted in.

Eric, on the other hand, slashed .268/.325/.454 in 1,755 games played with Los Angeles, the Cubs and the Athletics. His 284 home runs rank 189th in history.

Though more of a doubles hitter than a home run hitter, Kyle has swatted six dingers in the minor leagues this year—so it was only a matter of time before he began his pursit of his dad.

Ross Taylor stars in another successful New Zealand chase

He has scored five centuries at No. 4 or lower since 2014 in his team’s successful chases

Bharath Seervi05-Feb-2020348 – The target successfully chased down by New Zealand, is their biggest ever in ODIs. Their previous biggest chase was a target of 347 against Australia, also at Seddon Park in Hamilton, in 2007. New Zealand’s previous best chase against India was 281 at the Wankhede Stadium in 2017 in which also Ross Taylor and Tom Latham were the stars in the chase.Ross Taylor has starred in New Zealand’s big chases in ODIs•ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – Bigger successful chases against India than the 348 by New Zealand on Wednesday. Australia had chased down 359 in Mohali last year, which is the highest.5 – Number of times Taylor has scored a century in successful chases batting at No. 4 or lower since 2014. No other batsman has scored more than two centuries in successful chases at those positions in this period. Two of Taylor’s centuries have come against India and three against England. In three of the top-four chases for New Zealand, Taylor has scored hundreds. In the top-three successful chases for New Zealand against India, Taylor has scored two hundreds and a 95.10.48 – Run rate of the Taylor-Latham partnership for the fourth wicket – 138 runs in 79 balls. It is the second-quickest century partnership while chasing for the fourth wicket or lower in ODIs (where balls are known). The only quicker stand was of 120 off 55 balls at 13.09 between Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina against Sri Lanka in Hobart in 2012.369 – Runs scored by Nos. 4 and 5 in this match, the second-highest aggregate in any ODI. Shreyas Iyer (103) and KL Rahul (88*) from India and Taylor (109*) and Latham (69) were the Nos. 4 and 5. The third and fourth-wicket partnerships for both sides combined to 438 runs, which is the third-highest in any ODI. It was only the third instance of both the No. 4 batsmen scoring centuries in the same ODI.111 – Runs scored by New Zealand in a span of eight overs between the 34th and 41st overs, at a run rate of 13.88, which tilted the match towards them. Latham scored 54 off 24 and Taylor got 48 off 25 in that phase. Since 2001, where ball-by-ball information is available, only once a team has scored more runs in those overs – 115 by South Africa against Netherlands in the 2007 World Cup.84 – Runs conceded by Kuldeep Yadav in his 10 overs, his most expensive figures in ODIs. His previous most expensive figures were 75 against Australia in Indore in 2017.

'There has to be a format where the bowlers are able to challenge batters'

Sachin Tendulkar talks about how ODIs are skewed in favour of batsmen, and looks back to his landmark Sharjah innings against Australia 22 years ago

Sharda Ugra24-Apr-2020It’s not the time to be fussing over birthdays and celebrations, and Sachin Tendulkar doesn’t have his 47th on his mind. The days he has kept track of instead are the number he has spent indoors in his home in Mumbai, without meeting a single outsider. Count them from March 15 onwards. And let’s not forget that, regardless of whether social-distancing norms are in place or not, it’s not like he can step outside for a change of scene and shop for groceries. What Tendulkar misses is the happy whirl of meeting old friends, playing golf or badminton, and otherwise being busy.This is, though, a chance to think about the future, to reflect on what could be, and think about what the new normal might be when cricket does return. Though players have generally tried to adapt to this “forced off-season” by trying to stay fit at home, it may take a while for them to return to their previous levels of on-field sharpness, no matter how much fitness work they have done during the lockdowns. But Tendulkar says, “I personally don’t feel the game is going to change as such.” What he cannot get his head around is the idea of closed-door contests.”That would be odd. Because you get so much energy from the spectators also. If India is to win a crucial game, you want people to be around you to celebrate – to amplify that. But no one inside the stadium? It’s not going to make anyone feel special. It is going to be a weird feeling, and I don’t know how players will react.”ALSO READ: Kartikeya Date: The three phases of Tendulkar’s ODI batting (2018)International games, at least, Tendulkar says, need their living, breathing audiences.”Can you imagine Roger Federer and [Rafael] Nadal playing on the centre court of Wimbledon with nobody there? It’s going to be such a strange thing to watch. Not just cricket, any sport needs to have that energy.”In contrast to the still vast global appetite for him, Tendulkar himself post-retirement is not an obsessive watcher of live cricket. It has been seven years since his emotional Wankhede farewell, and in that time cricket appears to have been enormously transformed, with the advent and explosion of T20 leagues and fundamental changes in elements of the sport itself.Since these are days of nostalgia and whimsical imaginings, what kind of batsman would a millennial or Gen Z Tendulkar have been? Not much different, he thinks: “I would have continued to be myself in today’s cricket, I don’t think I would have changed anything.” What, no 360-degree shot-making or Dilscoops or switch hits?He has seen his younger self on a few YouTube videos and imagines he would not have needed to use those tools. “I don’t see there would have been any need to do something out-of-the-box different. Because if I had continued doing [what I did] the same way, the boundary line is only 70 yards [away],” he laughs. “So if you are going to back yourself to clear [it], then you work on consistency more than anything else, depending on the surfaces. There are surfaces that compel you to play differently, I would have been flexible in my mind, my thought process. I think that flexibility has to be there.”0:28

Happy Birthday, Sachin

What both longevity in the game and the new rules of modern cricket demand is the willingness to keep innovating. “Like how bowlers have developed the slower-ball bouncer, the knuckleball and the wide yorker – they have developed various things. So have the batters. In time to come, maybe eight-ten years down the line, we will be looking at a totally different game – the batswing could be different, the stance could be different. Or the loading up. A lot of elements which we are not thinking of today because it’s not demanded by the game today. But in time to come, it may change.”He remembers watching Andy Flower reverse-sweeping his way to the top of the Test aggregates on the 1999-2000 India tour and saying that Flower was about “eight-ten years ahead of the rest of the lot”. Twenty years on, Tendulkar is right and Flower has come to be seen as having been an innovator back then. When he is asked about the most visible changes in the game since his retirement, Tendulkar points to two issues. One is the absence of a mechanism to correct umpiring bloopers using the DRS. “Those types of things, when the bowlers didn’t get the wicket even though the batsman was out, or the batsmen were given out when they were not, it costs us games. Those type of things win or lose matches and series. Today that doesn’t happen – a bad decision can be completely negated and you still have a chance.”The other he has touched upon before – the ODI rule changes in the early 2010s, where a total of four fielders were allowed outside the ring in the non-powerplay overs, and the use of two new balls in ODIs.”If you have to look at one-day cricket then [with] the two new balls, if the pitches are not helpful, it makes bowlers’ life really difficult. Two new balls have virtually diminished reverse swing, I have not seen lot of reverse swing. [There is] occasional reverse swing here and there.” The use of a single ball, he says, “guaranteed little bit of reverse swing with the discoloured ball and the softer ball”. With two new balls, the ball stays hard, “travels faster, and so I think bowlers have been challenged more”.ALSO READ: Have the new rules made ODIs an unequal contest? (2013)The five fielders in the ring has been an additional challenge. Tendulkar illustrates, offering a standard field for an offspinner: “You would normally have a long-off, long-on, deep midwicket and deep square-leg, and you have to have a deep point inside the ring. Because of T20, batters are prepared to back themselves, because they’ve worked on those shots, reverse sweeps and all sorts of things.” Earlier, if you pierced the infield ring, he goes on to say, “you got a single for that, with the extra fielder back on the boundary line and you lost strike. If the strike was not rotated, then you [as a non-striker] lost possibly three balls an over. And when you were batting well, the bowler would want to bowl at the non-striker and not you.”It must be remembered that Tendulkar was the first batsman to make an ODI 200, ten years ago, before the new rules came into play, when he was two months short of 37. In the decade since, only five other batsmen have gone past 200, Rohit Sharma thrice.Talking about the new rules, which he sees as palpably unfair to bowlers, gets Tendulkar’s cricket self buzzing again. The on-strike, in-form batsman today is supplied with a bounty. The ball past the infield ring is a four. “If I was batting well,” Tendulkar says, “I would hit a boundary and I would face the ball again. You are getting three runs extra, plus you are retaining strike and I would love to do that.”It is this reminder of his appetite for run-scoring that brings the twin hundreds in Sharjah in 1998 to mind. Those innings were played around this time 22 years ago, and are part of the collective memory of a generation of Indian cricket fans: the Desert Storm innings (143) that took India into the tournament final and the match-winning 134 in the final two days later on Tendulkar’s 25th birthday. His partner in the 143 was VVS Laxman, who scored 23 in a 104-run partnership and remembers talking to Tendulkar in between overs. “But I know he wasn’t listening to me,” Laxman said.On batting under the current field restrictions: “If I was batting well, I would hit a boundary and face the ball again. You are getting three runs extra plus you are retaining strike and I would love to do that”•AFP/Getty ImagesTendulkar has himself recalled being “obsessed” that night about keeping strike. “When you are batting well, you want to face every ball. I wanted to win that game, I didn’t want to just achieve our run rate, I wanted to beat Australia and get into the final, so I was playing for the victory.”What was it like being in the zone that night? “Sometimes, I don’t know… you look at the bowler and whatever you’re thinking, the bowler exactly bowls that,” he says. “It was a little bit of that. I knew more or less what they were bowling and I was ready to play that shot. Sometimes that happens, I wouldn’t say every ball, but whenever one is planning to play a big shot, you say okay, if the ball lands in this area I am going to hit. And exactly that is where the next ball has landed and I have gone for that shot. You have those days where whatever you are thinking, that is what exactly happens.”Over the course of a conversation, especially one of this kind, during a time when cricket itself stands suspended, it is easy to lapse into the past and search for new paths around familiar stories. But the game will go on, cricket will resume, and new stars will be born. Is there anyone in the new crop of gung-ho swashbucklers around the world in whom Tendulkar sees a glimpse of his younger self?ALSO READ: Tendulkar: ‘I wanted to beat Australia twice (2018)It is, of course, a headline-seeking question but Tendulkar, always a batsman of turbo-charged intensity and skill, has remained a man of controlled verbal expression. “Since we are talking about promising youngers, there are a number and the names would be Prithvi [Shaw], Shubman [Gill] and [Sanju] Samson. They all are different players. Just like how when we were playing, Rahul [Dravid] was different to me, I was different to Sourav [Ganguly], and Laxman was different from all of us. Similarly these guys are different but have a promising future. They have their own styles.”Because we are where we are, with cricket stalled, the board chiefs all meeting to talk about the future, and Tendulkar turning 47, maybe this is the best time to talk about what the game could include looking ahead. Something larger than tinkering with powerplays, surely. Tendulkar would personally like the debate about Test cricket to be focused not on quantity (four days not five) but on improving the quality of the contest and keeping spectators engaged.Get home boards to move away from the extremes of dead or unplayable wickets and commit one way or the other – seam or spin. Right in the playing conditions, if need be. It may sound radical and impossible to achieve, but Sachin Tendulkar, cricketer, cricket fan, has a parting observation: “We have two formats in which the bowlers are constantly challenged, have restrictions in their field settings, so there has to be a format where the bowlers are able to challenge batters.”

Which bowler has dismissed the most century-makers in Tests?

And what’s the most catches taken by someone who bagged a pair in the same Test?

Steven Lynch24-Mar-2020Which bowler holds the record for dismissing the highest number of century-makers in Tests? asked K Lokaraj from India
The name at the top of this list is an unsurprising one – Test cricket’s leading wicket-taker Muttiah Muralitharan dismissed 34 batsmen after they got to 100 – but the man in second place is a bit more of a shock: Harbhajan Singh accounted for 28 century-makers in Tests. Jimmy Anderson is currently third, with 26, ahead of the Indian pair of Anil Kumble (25) and Zaheer Khan (24).At the other end of the scale, Glenn McGrath inflicted 104 ducks in Tests, and Murali and Shane Warne 102 apiece.Who was twice stranded on 99 not out in the Sheffield Shield? asked Justin Kelly from Australia
I was rather surprised to discover that there have only been seven cases of a batsman scoring 99 not out in a Sheffield Shield match. The unfortunate man who bagged two – in the space of three matches in 2008-09 – was the Tasmanian allrounder Brett Geeves, who played three white-ball internationals for Australia around this time (and was also called into the Test squad, without winning a cap). Geeves’ first near-miss came against Victoria in Melbourne, and was soon followed by another 99 not out against New South Wales in Newcastle. Both times he was stranded when No. 11 Tim McDonald was dismissed. Poor Geeves never did make a first-class hundred.The others to make 99 not out in a Sheffield Shield innings were Roger Woolley (Tasmania v Western Australia in Devonport in 1978-79), Adam Gilchrist (WA v South Australia in Adelaide in 1995-96), Jimmy Maher (Queensland v WA in Brisbane in 1998-99), Michael Klinger (Victoria v Tasmania in Hobart in 2000-01), and Michael Hussey (WA v South Australia in Adelaide in 2012-13).I spotted that Sachin Tendulkar took part in 72 Tests that ended as draws. I assume this is the record. Who’s next? asked Hasan Narayan from India
Rather surprisingly, perhaps, Sachin Tendulkar’s total of 72 drawn Tests only puts him second on this particular table. On top is Kapil Dev: although he played 69 fewer Tests than Tendulkar (131 to 200), well over half of them – 75 – ended in draws. Two more Indians come next: Sunil Gavaskar (67 draws in 125 Tests) and Dilip Vengsarkar (64 out of 116). Javed Miandad played in 62 drawn Tests, and Allan Border and Rahul Dravid 59 each.Out of the 131 Tests that Kapil Dev was a part of, 75 ended as draws•Getty ImagesWhat’s the most catches taken by someone who bagged a pair in the same Test? asked Kelly Morgan from New Zealand
Two wicketkeepers have taken seven catches in a Test in which they also bagged a pair – South Africa’s Dave Richardson, against Pakistan in Johannesburg in 1994-95, and David Williams for West Indies against England in Port-of-Spain in 1997-98. Ian Healy made eight dismissals, two of them stumpings, to go with a pair for Australia against West Indies in Adelaide in 1992-93 (the match West Indies won by one run). Gary Wilson also took six catches in the match for Ireland against England at Lord’s last year.The record for an outfielder who also bagged a pair is three catches, which has happened seven times now. It was most recently done by the Zimbabwean legspinner Brandon Mavuta, against Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2018-19 (he also managed 0 for 189 with the ball).Following on from the recent question about who has played the most Tests on one ground, I wondered who had played on the most different grounds? asked Michael Clements from England
Sachin Tendulkar does come out on top of this list, helped by having played a record 200 Test matches in all. He played at 42 different grounds, with 11 matches in Kolkata and Mohali, and ten each in Chennai and at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. Rahul Dravid played Tests at 36 different venues, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul at 35. VVS Laxman played at 32 different grounds, and Alastair Cook and Jacques Kallis at 30.The former West Indian batsman Faoud Bacchus played 19 Tests at 19 different grounds, a record recently equalled by England’s Adil Rashid.Chanderpaul holds the overall record for having played first-class cricket on the most grounds – 116, one ahead of Tom Graveney and Mushtaq Mohammad. The former England captain MJK Smith played on 114 different grounds, his sometime Test team-mates Jim Parks and Peter Richardson on 113, and Dravid and Tendulkar on 112.Use our feedback form or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Varun Chakravarthy, the architect drawing up Knight Riders' blueprint for success

The accidental spinner talks about his “dream journey”

Shashank Kishore15-Oct-2020″I never thought cricket would come back into my life. Even when I left cricket, cricket didn’t leave me and just came back to me.”Varun Chakravarthy’s emotional journey back into cricket could make a good script for a Tamil movie. He made two unsuccessful attempts to be a professional cricketer – injuries forced him to rethink both times – and he was nearly lost to the game when he pursued a bachelor’s degree in Architecture.At 23, construction and sustainability of a cricket stadium was part of his thesis to obtain his degree. At 26, he began working at an architectural firm doing fieldwork, surveys and finalising project blueprints. Today, he prepares blueprints for the Kolkata Knight Riders in the middle overs of an IPL game. So far, he has held his own – conceding at a more-than-acceptable 7.45 runs an over in the six games he has played.”Life was okay, I got a decent pay but there was no job satisfaction,” Chakravarthy tells ESPNcricinfo as he looks back at the bold step he took in 2016. He informed his bosses of the decision to quit, without really knowing how he would re-ignite a cricket career, which seemed to have hit a dead end.Until then, he used to play on-and-off during the weekends, but the fear of having only a vague goal – “I should somehow play cricket again” – got him thinking. He needed a plan, and that the first step towards that was giving up fast bowling and taking up offspin. “Whenever you need something, you have to go and get it,” he says. “Nothing is going to come to you.”For Chakravarthy, that ‘go get it’ moment came when he met Malolan Rangarajan again, more than a decade after they first bumped into each other in 2005-06 as trainees at the MAC Spin Foundation in Chennai.Incidentally, in the UAE, both Rangarajan, a fielding coach and talent scout now, and Chakravarthy were in opposite camps when the Royal Challengers Bangalore played the Knight Riders in IPL 2020.While Rangarajan went on to become part of Tamil Nadu’s junior cricket set-up and then made his first-class debut in 2011, Chakravarthy, who tried his hand first at fast bowling and then wicketkeeping, put his cricket aspirations on hold and joined architecture school.So how did they meet again? In 2015, Rangarajan rang up a friend to request for a few net bowlers for a personal session where he bumped into Chakravarthy again. He was no more a fast bowler but a mystery spinner. Rangarajan got him to enrol for the Tamil Nadu Premier League draft, where he was picked up by Karakudi Kaalai. In 2018, he moved to Madurai Panthers, where he started his tryst with mystery spin.In 2018, Rangarajan helped facilitate Chakravarthy’s entry into Chennai’s robust first-division league by signing for Vijay CC, a prestigious club that has Rahul Dravid among its alumni. The rise up the ranks was swift.Varun Chakravarthy was the highest-paid uncapped Indian at the IPL 2020 auction•ESPNcricinfo LtdThe confidence of having bowled at the Knight Riders nets in 2018 helped, he says. “I got to meet Sunil Narine, Kuldeep Yadav and Piyush Chawla, and learnt many things. They’ve all proved themselves over and over again.”Two months of net bowling and a TNPL stint later, he found himself picked by the Kings XI Punjab in the 2019 IPL auction. For a whopping INR 8.4 crore ($1.17 million approx.), but not before the Kings XI had to ward off aggressive bids from the Knight Riders. The dream, however, lasted all of one game. A forgettable debut in which he was taken for 25 runs by Narine in his first over was followed by a flight back home because of a finger injury. He didn’t play for another year nearly.”It was very frustrating,” he says of the time spent in the wilderness. “I had prepared well but things didn’t go well. After the injury, my recovery was frustrating. I didn’t know if I’d be okay, I didn’t know if there’d be cricket ahead of me, it was a serious injury so I was in the dark. I was very aloof.”The lack of cricket didn’t dissuade the Knight Riders from bidding for him, and it came as no surprise that Rangarajan was at the next table, bidding fiercely on behalf of the Royal Challengers, for whom he was a talent scout. In a see-saw battle, the Royal Challengers went up to INR 3.8 crore from his base price of INR 20 lakh, before the Knight Riders eventually got him for INR 4 crore ($563,000 approx.).”KKR picking me was a surprise because I hadn’t played because of injuries,” he says. “That gave me confidence.” Chakravarthy was now going to play under Dinesh Karthik, someone he had tried to copy all those years ago as a schoolboy. “Indirectly, Dinesh Karthik has shaped my journey from before. I took up wicketkeeping because of DK. That style, that grace, style – I loved that. But I had no contact with him at that time. It was only many years later that I met him [around 2017] at Chepauk, and then the following season he got me to the KKR nets.”After nearly a year of no cricket, he trained for two months in Mumbai under Abhishek Nayar, the Knight Riders’ talent scout, before lockdown began. A debut for the franchise came sooner than he may have expected, and he hasn’t looked back since. Now, with Narine’s action under the scanner, Chakravarthy’s variety lends balance to the Knight Riders.Along the way, he has ticked off a few boxes too. Before the season, he marked out MS Dhoni’s wicket as a dream scalp. He managed to clean bowl him with a googly when the two sides met. “It was quite a moment,” Chakravarthy says. “After the game, I went up to him for a photo. He posed for it and said ‘well played’.”It was special. I’ve seen him from the stands. CSK used to throw open the stands for net sessions, and I used to watch him from the galleries. The next year, I bowled to him in the CSK nets at Chepauk. Now, playing against him was incredible. talks to me like a normal friend and I am awestruck. It’s still very surreal, still I go and talk. He says don’t be hesitant, talk freely. He really drops bombshells of knowledge. You have to be smart enough to pick it up. It’s been a great journey, a dream journey for me.”

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