Kyle Schwarber Makes Phillies History With Latest Home Run

Kyle Schwarber hit his 44th home run of the season during the Phillies' game against the Mariners on Tuesday night. In the process, he broke a Philadelphia franchise record by homering in 15 consecutive series.

Schwarber came to the plate to face Seattle's Bryce Miller in the bottom of the 1st with one out and no one on. Behind in the count, he chased a 1-2 fastball that was up and out of the zone and smashed it up and out of the park.

In addition to setting a new Phillies' record, Schwarber retook the National League lead in home runs. He also moved within three home runs of his own career-high as well as MLB leader Cal Raleigh, who played earlier in the day.

Schwarber has been putting on an absolute show this season. Between treating just about every fanbase he's seen to a long ball over the last two months, he also won the All-Star Game with three home runs on three swings.

The last team to keep Schwarber in the ballpark for an entire series was the Astros, who held the Phillies to just one run in three games. Schwarber went 2 for 11 with a walk in the series.

مباريات ليفربول المتبقية في دوري أبطال أوروبا بعد الفوز على إنتر ميلان

خاض فريق ليفربول الإنجليزي مباراة أمام إنتر ميلان الإيطالي، مساء الثلاثاء بمنافسات بطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا.

وحل ليفربول ضيفًا على إنتر ميلان بملعب “جوزيبي مياتزا” في إطار مباريات الجولة السادسة لمرحلة الدوري بدوري الأبطال.

المباراة حسمت بفوز ليفربول بهدف دون رد على خصمه إنتر ميلان، وذلك من خلال ضربة جزاء سجلها دومينيك سوبوسلاي في الدقيقة 88.

ويتبقى لليفربول مواجهتين في مرحلة الدوري لدوري أبطال أوروبا، بعد خوضه 6 جولات في المسابقة.

ويحتل ليفربول المركز الثامن في ترتيب دوري أبطال أوروبا برصيد 12 نقطة، وتوقف رصيد إنتر ميلان عند 12 نقطة في المركز الخامس.

والجدير بالذكر أن الفرق من المركز الأول إلى الثامن تتأهل مباشرة لدور الـ 16 في دوري أبطال أوروبا.

والفرق من المركز التاسع للمركز الرابع والعشرين تخوض مباراة ملحق بنظام الذهاب والإياب بعد إجراء قرعة، لحسم التأهل لدور الـ 16.

وعقب ذلك تقام مباريات بين الفرق المتأهلة بصورة مباشرة لدور الـ 16، مع الفرق المتأهلة من الملحق، وذلك وفقًا لقرعة أيضًا. مباريات ليفربول المتبقية في دوري أبطال أوروبامباراة ليفربول ومارسيليا

يواجه ليفربول خصمه أولمبيك مارسيليا الفرنسي، في الجولة السابعة بمرحلة الدوري، يوم 21 يناير 2026، خارج أرضه. مباراة ليفربول وقره باج

يستقبل ليفربول نظيره قره باج، في الجولة الثامنة بمرحلة الدوري، على ملعب “آنفيلد”، يوم 28 يناير 2026.

Web se divide sobre expulsão em Palmeiras x Botafogo-SP

MatériaMais Notícias

O Palmeiras ficou com um jogador a mais na reta final do primeiro tempo contra o Botafogo-SP, na Arena Barueri. Nas redes sociais, os torcedores dividiram opiniões sobre o lance que resultou na expulsão de Matheus Costa, que fez falta em Rony.

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➡️ Siga os lances de Palmeiras x Botafogo-SP

O atacante palmeirense arrancava sozinho rumo à grande área da equipe de Ribeirão Preto. Contudo, foi parado pelo defensor por um puxão na camisa. Alguns torcedores interpretaram como se o lance não fosse necessariamente para cartão vermelho.

➡️ Vem faturar no sabadão! Aposte R$50 na Lance! Betting e leve mais de R$300 com Palmeiras, Santos, Internacional e Fluminense

Palmeiras e Botafogo se enfrentam pela última rodada (12ª) da primeira fase do Paulistão. O Verdão tenta ficar com a primeira colocação geral do torneio estadual e, com isso, ter a vantagem de decidir os jogos do mata-mata sob seus domínios, no Allianz Parque ou na Arena Barueri. O time de Ribeirão já está eliminado.

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Brewers vs. Rockies Prediction, Odds and Key Players for Monday, July 1 (Rockies Live Dog?)

The final game of the night in Major League Baseball takes place at Coors Field with the Colorado Rockies hosting the Milwaukee Brewers.

These teams are in totally different spots this season, as the Brewers are in first in the NL Central with 50 wins already in 2024 while the Rockies are over 20 games out in the NL West, sitting in last place. 

However, oddsmakers aren’t setting Milwaukee as a massive favorite in this one, and it could have to do with an interesting pitching matchup. Let’s dive into the odds and my best bet for this NL clash on Monday. 

Brewers vs. Rockies Odds, Run Line and Total

Run Line

Brewers -1.5 (-105)Rockies +1.5 (-115)

Moneyline

Brewers: -155Rockies: +130

Total

11.5 (Over -102/Under -118)

Brewers vs. Rockies Probable PitchersMilwaukee: Bryse Wilson (5-3, 3.89 ERA)Colorado: Austin Gomber (1-5, 4.63 ERA)Brewers vs. Rockies How to WatchDate: Monday, July 1Time: 8:40 p.m. ESTVenue: Coors FieldHow to watch (TV): Bally Sports Wisconsin, AFN, MLB NetworkBrewers record: 50-34Rockies record: 28-55Brewers vs. Rockies Key Players to WatchMilwaukee Brewers

Christian Yelich: Christian Yelich rocked a homer on Sunday, and he’s now hitting .321 with eight homers, 36 runs batted in and 18 stolen bases in 2024. Yelich has an OPS+ of 149, and he’s on pace for his best season since he was last an All-Star back in 2019. 

Colorado Rockies

Austin Gomber: Austin Gomber was awful at Coors Field in 2023, posting a 7.05 ERA in 15 starts, but he’s flipped the script this season with a 3.57 ERA in six starts. The Rockies are just 5-10 in his outings, but Gomber could be a sneaky pitcher to back on Monday. 

Brewers vs. Rockies Prediction and Pick

Regression is coming for Bryse Wilson, who has a 4.65 xERA this season and a Fielding Independent Pitching of 4.89. 

While he did throw six shoutout innings in his last outing, he still posted a 5.19 ERA in June, and now he has to go to a hitter-friendly park in Coors Field.

Last season, Coors Field was a nightmare for lefty Austin Gomber, but he’s turned things around at home in 2024. The Rockies starter has a 3.57 ERA in six home starts, holding opponents to a .226 batting average. On the road, opponents are hitting .288 against Gomber. 

Backing the Rockies in any scenario is a risky proposition since they’ve won just 28 games all season, but a few blowup outings by Wilson in June completely took the Brewers out of games. 

I’ll fade him on the road here. 

Thelwell signing has become Rangers' biggest waste of money since Cortes

Glasgow Rangers officially confirmed that both CEO Patrick Stewart and sporting director Kevin Thelwell left their roles at Ibrox on Monday after the club’s underwhelming start under the new ownership.

Chairman Andrew Cavenagh revealed that the ownership believes that they need different people in those roles in order to bring success back to Ibrox in the months and years to come.

Thelwell was let go by the Gers after he played a key role, as sporting director, in the appointment and firing of Russell Martin, as well as the signings throughout the summer transfer window.

The former Everton chief was given the funds to retool the squad for the head coach in the summer, but after that appointment and the signings he made, Rangers won one of their first eight Scottish Premiership matches.

However, Thelwell would be far from the first sporting director to make some mistakes in the transfer market. Former Gers technical director Nils Koppen, for example, made his fair share.

One signing that officially went through in the summer but was sanctioned before Thelwell’s arrival was the permanent addition of Oscar Cortes.

Why Oscar Cortes has been a waste of money for Rangers so far

The 21-year-old forward initially joined on loan from Lens for the second half of the 2023/24 campaign, and produced one goal and one assist in six games in the Premiership, per Sofascore.

That convinced the Scottish giants to sign him on a season-long loan with an obligation to make it permanent at the end of the season in the summer of 2024, which led to him signing for £4.5m earlier this year.

He is currently the ninth-most expensive signing in the history of the club, with that £4.5m move from Lens, and the Gers have simply not got enough back from him on the pitch to justify that expense.

In the 2024/25 season, the Colombian winger made ten appearances in the Premiership without delivering a single goal or assist for the team, whilst he also missed out on 22 matchday squads and was an unused substitute on six occasions, per Transfermarkt.

Despite his dismal form last term, Rangers had to sign him permanently for a hefty fee of £4.5m because it was an obligation that was put in place in the previous summer. That led to him leaving on loan to Sporting Gijon this season.

Appearances

5

Starts

1

Unused sub

6

Goals

0

Key passes per game

0.0

Big chances created

0

Assists

0

As you can see in the table above, Cortes has struggled badly in Spain since his temporary switch to the second division outfit, with more games left sat on the bench than appearances in LaLiga 2.

His lack of goal contributions for the Spanish side means that he still has not provided a goal or an assist since registering one of each in a 5-0 win over Hearts in February 2024.

With over three years left on his contract at Ibrox, it remains to be seen whether or not the 21-year-old whiz will make a success of his Rangers career or not, but it is not looking good on current evidence.

With his form for the Gers and out on loan, Cortes currently looks like a big waste of money for the significant fee that the club agreed to pay Lens for him, unfortunately.

Whilst Thelwell did not have any say in that move, it was going through irrespective of anything he did after becoming sporting director in April, one of his own summer signings looks to be an even bigger waste of money than Cortes.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The former Light Blues chief opted to splash the cash on Portugal U21 international Youssef Chermiti, and the early signs from his Ibrox career are far from promising.

Why Rangers should not have signed Youssef Chermiti

Thelwell agreed a deal with his former club Everton to sign the striker for a fee of £8m. That made him the most expensive signing made by the Gers since they signed Tore Andre Flo for £12m in 2000.

When signing a player for that kind of outlay at Ibrox, it is fair to expect that they should be able to make a relatively immediate impact for Rangers, even if they are not the finished product, because Chermiti is their most expensive signing in 25 years.

Unfortunately, though, the Portuguese marksman has failed to prove his worth to the Light Blues on the pitch with his performances so far in the 2025/26 campaign, with just one goal to his name so far.

The former Premier League flop has produced one goal and one assist in 13 appearances in all competitions for the Scottish giants, per Sofascore, which shows that he has not offered a regular threat at the top end of the pitch.

Chermiti’s form in the Premiership, in particular, has left quite a bit to be desired for a player who is the club’s most expensive signing in 25 years.

FotMob rating

6.48

16th

Goals

1

Joint-3rd

xG

0.3

14th

xA

0.2

15th

Dribbles per 90

0.4

14th

Dribble success rate

16.7%

14th

As you can see in the table above, the Portugal U21 international ranks poorly in the Gers squad in a host of key metrics, and the only reason that he ranks highly for goals is that only two players in the squad have scored more than one league goal.

Chermiti, who was described as a “nothing player” by Portuguese journalist Kevin Fernandes, has simply not done enough with the game time that he has been given, domestically or on the European stage.

The ex-Everton striker was signed for almost twice as much as Cortes and appears to be heading in the same direction as the winger, as another expensive flop who is unable to make a significant impact on the pitch for Rangers.

Therefore, Chermiti looks on course to be an even bigger waste of money than the Colombian forward because he cost £3.5m more and has been just as underwhelming at the start of his Ibrox career.

"Rotten" Thelwell signing is Rangers' biggest waste of time since Dowell

This summer signing by Kevin Thelwell has been as bad as the deal to bring Kieran Dowell to Rangers.

ByDan Emery Nov 26, 2025

Phillies Make Decision on Starting Rotation Plans Ahead of Aaron Nola's Return

The Philadelphia Phillies already boast one of MLB's best starting pitching rotations, and that five-man group is set to welcome another member in the coming days.

Manager Rob Thomson told reporters today that Aaron Nola will be making his return to the Phillies after missing the last three months with an ankle injury and a subsequent stress fracture to his ribs.

Nola is set to make his return to the rotation on Sunday against the Nationals, and Thomson informed reporters that Philadelphia will go with a six-man pitching rotation for the time being, via ESPN. He didn't specify how long that would last, though he said the team will go through the rotation "once, for sure" and reassess after that.

Given the performance of their starting pitchers this season, it's a move that makes plenty of sense. The Phillies have two Cy Young candidates in Zack Wheeler and Cristopher Sanchez, and four starters––Wheeler, Sanchez, Ranger Suarez and Jesus Luzardo––with a bWAR of 2.4 or greater. Taijuan Walker has also been a solid rotation member since returning to starting duties, and he owns a 3.05 ERA over his last five starts.

It's not a bad problem to have, as the Phillies map out their pitching plans for the remainder of the season. Getting a sixth man in the rotation will allow all of the starters to get a bit more rest, which could prove valuable down the stretch run of the season.

Nola had uncharacteristically struggled before landing on the IL. The 32-year-old had a 6.16 ERA in his first nine starts, and had surrendered 11 home runs in 49 2/3 innings. After a lengthy spell on the shelf, he'll hope to return to his previous form as he gets back to the mound.

Red Sox Star Rookie Roman Anthony Agrees to Lucrative Contract Extension

The Boston Red Sox and breakout rookie outfielder Roman Anthony are in agreement on an eight-year, $130 million contract extension that includes a club option for the final year of the contract, according to a report from ESPN's Jeff Passan.

Anthony will now be under team control through the 2034 season.

Anthony's new deal will begin in earnest in the 2026 season. There are significant escalators in the deal that could take the maximum value of the contract to $230 million.

The 21-year-old Anthony, who was one of the top prospects in all of baseball, was called up earlier this season and has become an integral part of Boston's summer resurgence as one of the premier contenders in the American League.

In 46 games for the Red Sox, Anthony is slashing .283/.400/.428 with an .828 OPS. He has hit two home runs to go along with 19 RBI in his first season with Boston.

The former second-round pick in the 2022 MLB draft is a breakout star for Boston, and will now be a cornerstone for the franchise for years to come.

YES Network Shakes Up Yankees Broadcasts, Drops Longtime Analyst

The YES Network is making changes to its coverage of the Yankees.

On Wednesday, Andrew Marchand reported that longtime analyst and play-by-play announcer John Flaherty will not return next season. Flaherty had been on Yankees broadcasts for two decades following a 14-year MLB playing career.

Over the years, Flaherty served as an analyst and also hopped on the mic to do play-by-play when lead announcers Michael Kay and Ryan Ruocco were out.

Flaherty took to social media to acknowledge the news:

The 58-year-old broke into the big leagues with the Red Sox in 1992, and played for the Tigers, Padres, and Rays before joining the Yankees from 2003 to '05. He signed with the Red Sox in late 2005 but announced his retirement during spring training in 2006.

Marchand reports Kay will call 135 games in 2026, while Ruocco will call about 15. David Cone, Paul O'Neill, and Joe Girardi will all continue in their analyst roles, and the plan is for one or two of them to be on every broadcast next season.

Yankees Brass Seemed to Disagree Whether Anthony Volpe Injury Affected His 2025 Play

Throughout much of the Yankees' 2025 campaign, one overarching question seemed to follow the club: What's wrong with Anthony Volpe? Volpe, one of the club's former top prospects and its starting shortstop in '25, regressed at the plate and in the field, frustrating fans and sparking plenty of questions from the media about his status as the starter. His struggles even prompted general manager Brian Cashman to acquire shortstop José Caballero at the trade deadline.

But after Volpe aggravated a torn labrum in his left shoulder on Sept. 7, it was revealed that he had been playing through discomfort since initially suffering the injury back in May, offering a potential answer to the above question.

However, Yankees manager Aaron Boone and Cashman, speaking to reporters at the Yankees' end of season news conference on Thursday, seemed to disagree on the impact Volpe's injury had on his play.

Boone, after citing the initial reluctance to undergo the shoulder surgery, as well as multiple instances where Volpe aggravated the injury, said he believed it did not affect Volpe's play.

"…I think for the overwhelming majority of the year [the injury] was not affecting his play," Boone said. "There were things like, he would dive on it a certain way, tick it off, aggravate it—I think in some ways, the injury probably got a little bit worse towards the end of the year based on a couple of episodes that happened. But I don't think it was impacting performance.

"And this is something that you can play with, play through. But the finality of getting it fixed now hopefully frees him up to really go dive on it the way he's going to dive on it and make those next level of plays that Anthony makes. And then hopefully because you're fixing something that is hurt on the body, that hopefully it does help performance to go to another level."

Cashman, on the other hand, seemed to once share Boone's sentiment on the Volpe injury, but no longer.

"I personally think now I'm starting to lean more into that yes, it was affecting him," Cashman said. "Because ultimately, he had to have the surgery. None of that was really on the table in-season…"

Cashman went on to explain that, because the injury kept popping up throughout the season amid Volpe's peaks and valleys in performance, and due to the "severe" clean-up needed in Volpe's shoulder that was noted by the doctor who performed the surgery, that he ultimately believed it was "probably" more of an impact than originally thought.

One thing both Cashman and Boone seemed steadfast on: Volpe will continue to be the club's starting shortstop in 2026.

The Yankees will need Volpe to more closely resemble the 2023 and '24 versions of himself than the '25 version to continue to justify their faith in the 24-year-old. After taking home a Gold Glove in '23 and rating as one of the bets defensive shortstops in '24, Volpe was among the worst shortstops in the Statcast metric, Outs Above Average, in '25. At the plate, he posted a wRC+ (an all-encompassing offensive metric) of 83, tied for the sixth-worst in MLB.

Volpe cannot begin hitting for four months, at which point, Boone said the club will reevaluate the shortstop's timeline. In the meantime, Caballero, and any potential infield additions the Yankees make this winter, will hold down the fort at short.

Whatever happened to Ravi Shastri 1.0?

When did the outspoken rebel, who always put players’ interests first, turn into an establishment man?

Sharda Ugra22-May-2020Come to Think of ItLockdown does these things. From the dregs of my memory came a conversation with Ravi Shastri, commentator, circa 2000. It was the first day of the Nagpur Test versus Zimbabwe we watched India’s first foreign coach, John Wright, set down cones for the fielding warm-up. “Wouldn’t you want to be coach?” I asked Shastri. His reply: “When I’m coach,” – it wasn’t an if, but when – “I’ll come to the ground in a blazer and tie. I won’t do all this fielding practice and all, I’ll be in charge – overall.” Shastri’s baritone placed the word “overall” in upper case, upper class: uber boss.Today, Shastri is overall head coach of the Indian team but he doesn’t come to the ground in a blazer and tie. He doesn’t run fielding practice either, but the team’s uber boss undeniably is captain Virat Kohli. What would that Shastri of two decades ago make of this one? It’s hard to shake off the suspicion that he – and the cocky young man who played cricket for India before him – would probably laugh contemptuously at this avatar and throw a few juicy oaths in his direction.Before proceeding, a disclaimer: this is no up-close-and-personal psych analysis (friends, family and loved ones, please hold horses and hit-squad instructions). What is being discussed are the avatars of the Shastri available for public consumption.Shastri 2.0, seen and heard on TV and social media pushes the once un-pushable Shastri 1.0 into a hazy retreat of the memory. In 2016, the former India spinner and Shastri’s Bombay team-mate at one time, Sairaj Bahutule, said Shastri was “always a player’s player”. Today’s Shastri is better recognised as power’s player.ALSO READ: Karthik Krishnaswamy: Why the 2005 Super Series was not really a bad ideaThe qualities that drive him today – pride, ego, confrontation, delight in mano a mano combat – have always been a part of him. In the past, they were employed in the service of other ends. Resurrecting Shastri 1.0 leads to double takes of self-doubt: Are you sure that was Shastri and not someone else you’re thinking of? And was he really that way? In tribute to 1.0, of bloody course he was.The 1980s and 1990s Shastri was a hard-boiled competitor, allrounder, rabble-rouser, and heartthrob, who strutted around knowing he’d stretched his game to the maximum, brushing off the heckling that followed him in his later years – for his not especially expansive range of strokes, and a very 1980s strike rate.He was the protype Mr . Shastri went from being a precocious teenage spinner, flown straight in to a Test in New Zealand, to a man for all crises. From No. 10 on debut to opener in England, Pakistan, Australia, Zimbabwe and South Africa. He was central to India’s best ODI result before the 2011 World Cup, Man of the Series in the 1985 World Championship of Cricket. (Bombay took pride in sighting the Audi that was his prize on the streets of the city.)In the ’90s, when most Indian cricketers (excepting Bishan Singh Bedi, of course) were either quietly spoken or aloof, largely respectful of authority, and veered away from confrontation or controversy, Shastri came across as someone if not from the future, then surely someplace else. Self-aware, unabashed, abrasive even, unafraid of the establishment. For all those born after 1990 reading this, I tried to find a contemporary Indian equivalent. There aren’t any. This is a player with 80 Tests (11 hundreds, seven overseas, four as opener in Pakistan, England and Australia, and two of the other three in the West Indies), 150 ODIs, 6938 runs and 280 wickets for India. The best you could do to create a contemporary Shastri is take ten or less per cent of Hardik Pandya’s talent and multiply Pandya’s achievements ten times over, but you’d still not get there.Better, then, to tell Shastri 1.0 stories. In 1989, he was one of six senior cricketers who took the BCCI to court after the board banned them for participating in a masala series in North America. The cricketers won. His bowling was going off the boil, his knee was acting up, there were mocking references to his limited shot-making repertoire; this was the first guy to hit six sixes in an over after Garry Sobers, but he was pilloried for his shot, and for how he stepped promisingly out of his crease to offer an anti-climactic forward defence.In Indian cricket, where senior v junior was a big deal, we heard he was never afraid to speak up in team meetings, even as a teenager. Naturally, as his stature grew, so did his forthrightness. He said many times that he opened mostly overseas because his tigers-at-home team-mates turned into chickens on tour. He was a reporter’s dream, because he was professional, accessible, and didn’t backtrack. When you identified yourself on the phone, you heard the familiar baritone “” (rough translation: “Yes, what’s up?”). You went to him when a comment was needed on anything prickly, because no one else would talk. No matter how dangerous or stupid the question, you rarely got, “No comment.” You either got a quotable opinion or useful nuggets.Ravi Shastri 1.0: Self-aware, unabashed, and unafraid of the establishment•Getty ImagesWhen he was on an injury layoff in ’89-90, I interviewed him for the first time for ‘s Sunday section, accompanied by a friend. A completely besotted fan, she was brought along on the condition there would be no hysterics, and there were two token end-over questions to explain her presence. This was in Shastri’s new bachelor pad in Worli, where he first showed us around, flinging open the door to his bedroom (which my friend remembers in astonishing detail even to this day). He asked us if we would have tea or coffee, settled in, and replied to questions as if he were live on the BBC. He spoke freely about everything and everyone, and the interview became the lead story in the Sunday paper the following week. A memorable pull quote featured the word “t**t” in 32pt size because I had no idea what it meant, nor did anyone else on the desk, imagining, like I did, that it must be a variant of “twit”. He was expressing his opinion about the lobby. He believes to this day the crowd is in the habit of what he called : literally, spin the cap around, or change one’s opinion at the drop of a hat (Lalit “Moses” Modi would be an example of Shastri’s very own spinning cap).In 1993-94, Shastri’s last first-class season, he led a young Bombay side with half a dozen debutants (the India players were away on tour) to their first Ranji Trophy title in ten seasons. He scored 612 runs at 61.20, (three centuries, two fifties) and took 17 wickets at 15.41. Shastri’s young tykes beat Haryana in Faridabad, first-innings-ed Karnataka in Bangalore, outbatted Maharashtra in Pune, and returned home to win the final versus Bengal. Five from that side played for India, and at least seven had outstanding first-class careers. On a happy March afternoon on the Wankhede outfield, Shastri’s smile, as wide as the North Stand, graciously egged us on: “Go to the youngsters, the youngsters, they are the stars.” As captain, he had led bigger, more senior Bombay names. He was deferential to no one, and his tactical acumen was tied in with his gift to make people believe they could walk on water.After retirement he slipped into commentary because he had never been shy. His voice was young, his views were fresh, and tracer bullets were a novelty. He was passed over for a commentary gig in 1998, allegedly because of his affiliation with WorldTel, one of the parties then involved in a tussle for the BCCI’s broadcast rights. When Manoj Prabhakar’s sting-operation tapes appeared in 2000, implicating a number of big-name players in match-fixing, one of the few who came out looking in private exactly like he did in public was Shastri. On the tapes, you will find him in what looks like the same Worli apartment, sprawled on a sofa in shorts, a mug of something at hand, his language punctuated by profanities, telling horror stories and calling out people.In those early broadcast days, Shastri stepped up as an unofficial supporter of India’s players. He turned up at the post-match media conference during the Mike Denness drama in Port Elizabeth in 2001. Denness, the match referee who banned or suspended six Indian players for excessive appealing and ball-tampering, was present at the press conference, next to Cricket SA CEO Gerald Majola, but was not allowed to speak. “If Mike Denness cannot answer questions, why is he here?” Shastri asked. “We know what he looks like.”ALSO READ: Osman Samiuddin: Is Saeed Anwar criminally underrated?During the 2002 tour of England, Shastri championed the Indian players’ commercial rights on air. A dispute over pressure being exerted on the team to sign the ICC player agreements for the 2002 Champions Trophy – which gave the ICC sponsors’ commercial rights precedence over those of players’ individual sponsors – became a three-way tussle between the ICC, the BCCI (aka its president Jagmohan Dalmiya) and the senior players. In the middle of the melee, Shastri said, on air, words to the effect of, “Mr Dalmiya, this is for you, if you are listening,” and explained the players’ stance. No surprise that in November that year, in the third attempt to set up an Indian players’ association, Shastri was centre of the head table during the launch press conference in Calcutta.Halfway through the first decade of the 2000s, Shastri made his peace with Dalmiya and became part of the BCCI’s big-issue crisis-resolution team. When Sourav Ganguly and Greg Chappell had their bust-up, Shastri, Sunil Gavaskar, Dalmiya and S Venkataraghavan (the same bunch who had selected Chappell as coach) formed a review panel to sort them out. After I wrote a verified version of what Shastri said to Ganguly (“Do you realise now that this entire chain of events has been started by you?”), the phone rang. “Ravi here. What you have written is all s**t.” A few sentences of argument ensued on both sides and the call ended, but it didn’t affect our next round of interactions. That was what 1.0 was like. The straight-shooting cliché – exactly that. Now, from the outside, it looks like that Shastri has been kidnapped and replaced by an identical twin whose method acting is a bit off.In sobering hindsight, the advent of the IPL and his decision to sign up to as a BCCI employee-commentator could well be where the transformation began. To go from commentator to cheerleader, not of Indian cricket at large but – and there is a painful difference – of the Indian cricket establishment. Of whoever occupies its highest position. He is coach today and naturally must support his team, even if with completely OTT utterances. But what about if Shastri was asked about the delay in issuing domestic cricket contracts? Or about improving pay structures for women cricketers across the board? Or the right of Indian players to play in overseas T20 leagues? Or an India-Pakistan Test at a neutral venue?I know who wouldn’t have had to weigh his options before answering those questions.Ravi 1.0, , we miss you.Come to Think of it here

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