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Pele, king of ‘beautiful game,’ dies at 82

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Pele, the Brazilian king of football who won a record three World Cups and became one of the most commanding sports figures of the past century, died Thursday. He was 82.The standard-bearer of “the beautiful game’’ had undergone treatment for colon cancer since 2021. He had been hospitalised for the past month with multiple ailments. Sao Paulo’s Albert Einstein hospital, where Pele was undergoing treatment, said he died at 3:27 p.m. “due to multiple organ failures resulting from the progression of colon cancer associated with his previous medical condition.”

A funeral is planned for Monday and Tuesday, with his casket to be carried through the streets of Santos, the coastal city where his storied career began, before burial.

“All that we are is thanks to you,” his daughter Kely Nascimento wrote on Instagram. “We love you endlessly. Rest in peace.”

His agent, Joe Fraga, confirmed his death: “The king has passed.’’

Later on Thursday, it was announced that Pele’s funeral would be held on Monday and Tuesday at Santos’ Vila Belmiro Stadium outside Sao Paulo, where the soccer legend played some of his best games.Outgoing Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro declared three days of mourning, and said in a statement that Pele was “a great citizen and patriot, raising the name of Brazil wherever he went.”

Widely regarded as one of football’s greatest players, Pele spent nearly two decades enchanting fans and dazzling opponents as the game’s most prolific scorer with Brazilian club Santos and the Brazil national team.His grace, athleticism and mesmerizing moves transfixed players and fans. He orchestrated a fast, fluid style that revolutionised the sport — a samba-like flair that personified his country’s elegance on the field.

He carried Brazil to football’s heights and became a global ambassador for his sport in a journey that began on the streets of Sao Paulo state, where he would kick a sock stuffed with newspapers or rags.In the conversation about football’s greatest players, only the late Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are mentioned alongside Pele.

Different sources, counting different sets of games, list Pele’s goal totals anywhere from 650 (league matches) to 1,281 (all senior matches, some against low-level competition).The player who would be dubbed The King was introduced to the world at 17 at the 1958 World Cup in Sweden, the youngest player ever at the tournament.

He was carried off the field on teammates’ shoulders after scoring two goals in Brazil’s 5-2 victory over the host country in the final.Injury limited him to just two games when Brazil retained the world title in 1962, but Pele was the emblem of his country’s World Cup triumph of 1970 in Mexico.

He scored in the final and set up Carlos Alberto with a nonchalant pass for the last goal in a 4-1 victory over Italy.The image of Pele in a bright yellow Brazil jersey, with the No. 10 stamped on the back, remains alive with football fans everywhere. As does his trademark goal celebration — a leap with a right fist thrust high above his head.

Pele’s fame was such that in 1967, factions of a civil war in Nigeria agreed to a brief cease-fire so he could play an exhibition match in the country.He was knighted by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II in 1997. When he visited Washington to help popularise the game in North America, it was the U.S. president who stuck out his hand first.

“My name is Ronald Reagan, I’m the president of the United States of America,’’ the host said to his visitor. “But you don’t need to introduce yourself because everyone knows who Pele is.’’

Pele was Brazil’s first modern Black national hero but rarely spoke about racism in a country where the rich and powerful tend to hail from the white minority. Opposing fans taunted Pele with monkey chants at home and all over the world.

“He said that he would never play if he had to stop every time he heard those chants,’’ said Angelica Basthi, one of Pele’s biographers.

“He is key for Black people’s pride in Brazil, but never wanted to be a flag-bearer.’’

Pele’s life after football took many forms. He was a politician — Brazil’s extraordinary minister for sport — a wealthy businessman and an ambassador for UNESCO and the United Nations.He had roles in movies and soap operas, and he even composed songs and recorded CDs of popular Brazilian music.As his health deteriorated, his travels and appearances became less frequent. He was often seen in a wheelchair during his final years and did not attend a ceremony to unveil a statue of him representing Brazil’s 1970 World Cup team.

Pele spent his 80th birthday isolated with a few family members at a beach home.Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, in the small city of Tres Coracoes in the interior of Minas Gerais state on Oct. 23, 1940, Pele grew up shining shoes to buy his modest football gear.

Pele’s talent drew attention when he was 11, and a local professional player brought him to Santos’ youth squads. It didn’t take long for him to make it to the senior squad. Despite his youth and 5-foot-8 frame, he scored against grown men with the same ease he displayed against friends back home.He debuted with the Brazilian club at 16 in 1956, and the team quickly gained worldwide recognition.

The name Pele came from him mispronouncing the name of a player called Bile.He went to the 1958 World Cup as a reserve but became a key player for his country’s championship team. His first goal, in which he flicked the ball over the head of a defender and raced around him to volley it home, was voted as one of the best in World Cup history.The 1966 World Cup in England — won by the hosts — was a bitter one for Pele, by then already considered the world’s top player. Brazil was knocked out in the group stage and Pele, angry at the rough treatment, swore it was his last World Cup.

He changed his mind and was rejuvenated in the 1970 World Cup. In a game against England, he struck a header for a certain score, but the great goalkeeper Gordon Banks flipped the ball over the bar in an astonishing move. Pele likened the save — one of the best in World Cup history — to a “salmon climbing up a waterfall.’’

Later, he scored the opening goal in the final against Italy, his last World Cup match. In all, Pele played 114 matches with Brazil and scored a record 95 goals, including 77 in official matches.His run with Santos stretched over three decades until he went into semiretirement after the 1972 season.Wealthy European clubs tried to sign him, but the Brazilian government intervened to keep him from being sold, declaring him a national treasure.

On the field, Pele’s energy, vision and imagination drove a gifted Brazilian national team with a fast, fluid style of play that exemplified o jogo bonito — Portuguese for “the beautiful game.”

His 1977 autobiography, “My Life and the Beautiful Game,’’ made the phrase part of football’s lexicon. In 1975, he joined the New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League.Although 34 and past his prime, Pele gave soccer a higher profile in North America. He led the Cosmos to the 1977 league title and scored 64 goals in three seasons.Pele ended his career Oct. 1, 1977, in an exhibition between the Cosmos and Santos before a crowd in New Jersey of some 77,000, playing half the game with each club.

Among the dignitaries on hand was perhaps the only other athlete whose renown spanned the globe — Muhammad Ali.Pele would endure difficult times in his personal life, especially when his son Edinho was arrested on drug-related charges.Pele had two daughters out of wedlock and five children from his first two marriages, to Rosemeri dos Reis Cholbi and Assiria Seixas Lemos.He later married businesswoman Marcia Cibele Aoki.

(ESPN)



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Members of Sri Lanka Cricket Transformation Committee Officially Appointed

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The official appointment letters for the members of the newly established “Cricket Transformation Committee” (CTC) were handed over on Monday (04) by the Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports,  Sunil Kumara Gamage.

The following members received their letters of appointment at the Ministry premises:

Sidath Wettimuny
Thushira Radella
Prakash Schaffter
Ms. Avanthi Colombage

The Ministry also noted that veteran cricketers Roshan Mahanama and Kumar Sangakkara, who are key members of the committee, are currently overseas. Their official appointments will be formalised immediately upon their arrival in Sri Lanka.

The Cricket Transformation Committee has been mandated to oversee the administration and drive structural reforms within Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) in accordance with the powers vested in the Minister under the Sports Act No. 25 of 1973.

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Rohit and Rickelton power Mumbai Indians to crucial win over rock-bottom Lucknow Super Giants

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Rishabh Pant's side hardly had anything to cheer about [BCCI]

There were smiles at last for Mumbai Imdians (MI) on a night that hadn’t looked promising when Nicholas Pooran’s fireworks – 63 off 21 – threatened to run them down.

From looking set to concede 250, MI limited the damage, conceding just one boundary in the last three overs – to restrict Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) to 228. Then, Ryan Rickelton and the returning Rohit Sharma –  fit again after five games on the sidelines due to a hamstring injury – turned in an exhilarating batting display to help MI raze their target down in just 18.4 overs.

This was the highest successful chase at the Wankhede Stadium, bettering the 220 MI had chased down against Kolkata Knight Riders to win their season-opener.

Rickelton, who struck 123 not out in his previous innings at the Wankhede last week against Sunrisers Hyderabad, made 83 off 32 in a 143-run opening stand. Rohit, who raised his half-century in 27 balls, made 84 off 44. By the time he was out mistiming an attempted pick-up shot over short fine leg, MI’s equation had come down to 52 off 36.

In the end, MI overturned a sequence of three straight losses; LSG, meanwhile, slumped to their sixth straight loss, which left them firmly rooted to the bottom of the points table.

He got off the mark with a streaky slash over the leaping slip fielder. Then, he was beaten off consecutive Mohsin Khan deliveries in the fourth over. It didn’t get any easier when he just about managed to squeeze out a pinpoint yorker from Prince Yadav in an excellent fifth over that went for just six. And then the floodgates opened.

A frazzled Avesh Khan disappeared for 4, 4, 6, 6 in a poor first over as MI ended the powerplay 71 for 0. By then, Rohit was imperiously flicking full-tosses, backing away and dispatching length balls over cover and slicing them wide of point.

M Siddharth, LSG’s impact sub, then came under Rohit’s wheel – feeding him deliveries into his swinging arc. He launched one of these over long-on to bring up his half-century off 27 balls. The landmark was merely incidental because, by now, Rohit was in his zone.

Even Mohammed Shami wasn’t spared; at one point he was left staring at the pitch, wondering what he’d done wrong. A well-executed bumper was mercilessly pulled to the backward square leg boundary. And then he went full and straight and ended up bowling a low full toss – almost yorker-length – that was shovelled for a leg-side six. Rohit’s knock ended when he swept Siddharth straight to short fine leg in the 14th over.

Rickelton’s first six came in the second over, a no-fuss, no-look pick-up six over square leg, and the big hits just kept coming. He lofted Shami through the line over long-off, and put away full-tosses from Avesh and Siddharth, depositing them behind square on the leg side. Rickelton charged to his half-century off just 22 balls, with 40 of those runs coming in boundaries.

Rickelton took a particular liking to Siddharth, who kept floating them up in trying to swerve his arm ball away from his hitting arc. His second over, the ninth of the innings, got picked away for 23. Rickelton’s party ended a couple of overs later when he fell to Mohsin after having hit him for two sixes in the same over. An attempt to go over cover was hit flat to the man at the edge of the ring. By then, the openers had added 143.

That this was a big chase was primarily down to Pooran. Promoted to No. 3, from where he had scored a majority of his 524 runs last season, he hit three sixes off Will Jacks in the fifth over – all on the leg side – to kickstart his innings.

The ferocity of his ball-striking made you wonder if this was the same batter who had struggled for any kind of batting rhythm through this season – coming into this game, his strike rate of 81.18 was the lowest among all batters who had faced at least 50 balls this season.

He had hit four sixes combined in eight games. He hit twice as many on Monday alone, in an incredible exhibition of clean, fearless hitting. He raised his fifty off 16 balls – with a strike over long-off off Deepak Chahar – and looked good for plenty more until a Corbin Bosch bouncer got big on him. One brought two as Bosch also had the set Mitch Marsh pull one straight to deep midwicket.

Reprieved even before he was off the mark – an inside-edge didn’t carry to Rickelton – Rishabh Pant couldn’t capitalise as he was soon dismissed for 15. Then, debutant Akshat Raghuwanshi – who replaced Mukul Choudhary in LSG’s XI – walloped his first ball for six before being dismissed by Raghu Sharma for his first IPL wicket.

At one point, LSG were staring at the possibility of having to summon a batter as their Impact Player because they kept losing wickets. Himmat Singh was reprieved on 2 when Jasprit Bumrah got him to edge to the keeper off a no-ball. He went on to finish unbeaten on 40 off 31, and Aiden Markram, pushed back to No. 5, on 31 off 25.

Yet, with the last five overs going for just 53, there was a sense LSG left a few runs out there. As it turned out, it’s possible even those extra runs may have not been enough against a rampant MI line-up.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians 229 for 4 in 18.4 overs  (Ryan Rickelton 83, Rohit Sharma 84, Tilak Varma 11, Suryakumar Yadav 12, Naman Dhir 23*, Will Jacks 10*; Mohammed Shami 1-53, Moshin Khan 1-47, Manimaran  Siddharth 2-47) beat Lucknow Super Giants 228 for 5  in 20 overs (Mitchell Marsh 44,  Josh Inglis 13, Nicholas Pooran 63, Rishabh Pant 15, Aiden Markram 31*,  Akshat Raguwanshi 11, Himmat Singh 40*; AM Ghazanfar 1-50, Will Jacks 1-34, Corbin Bosch 2-20, Bosch 2-20, Raghu Sharma 1-36)  by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

 

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Holder and Washington star in Gujarat Titans’ nervy last-over win

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Jason Holder got the big wicket of Shreyas Iyer [Cricinfo]

The top half of the IPL 2026 points table is an utter logjam.Punjab Kings (PBKS), unbeaten through their first seven games, have now lost two in a row. And the team that beat them on Sunday night, Gujarat Titans (GT) have won three in a row. All around the IPL, teams that had led secure lives in the top four have endured setbacks over the last few days.

And so the big squeeze. PBKS remain at No. 1, but they’re only one point above GT at No. 5.

GT, however, are the only team in the top five with a negative net run rate (NRR). This may have something to do with their style of play: they rely on their bowlers to ensure their batters don’t have to score at the frenetic rates of some other teams, but that means their margins of victory tend to be less emphatic.

On Sunday, their margin was wafer-thin – one ball remaining – despite the fact that they dominated virtually from start to finish. Their Test-match pace trio of Mohammed Siraj, Kagiso Rabada amd Jason Holder bowled hard lengths on a pitch that offered steep bounce and plentiful seam movement from those lengths, and reduced PBKS to 47 for 5. Suryansh Shedge  and Marcus Stoinis ensured that PBKS recovered to post 163 for 9, but this was still very much a GT kind of target, perfect for their style of top-order play.

A measured half-century from B Sai Sudarsan laid the perfect platform, but GT’s scoring rate remained somewhere in the region of their original required rate right through their chase. And suddenly, they ended up needing 11 off the final over. Washington Sundar sealed victory with a penultimate-ball six, but on another day, this could have so easily been the story of GT sleepwalking to defeat.

But the major story was this: for the third match in a row, GT pulled off the trademark GT victory. Straightjacketing their oppositions with the ball, and chasing down sub-170 targets with significant contributions from one or two of their top three.

This was a black-soil pitch with a healthy covering of grass, and it was evident from ball one that it would reward bowlers who hammered away on hard lengths. Ball one from Siraj almost produced a chance, with extra bounce leading to a miscued pull from Priyansh Arya that fell just out of reach of Jos Buttler, who had chased from his spot behind the stumps to the edge of the 30-yard circle at backward square leg. Ball two produced the first wicket: a bit of width for Arya to free his arms, but extra bounce once more to take away his control and bring about a slice to deep third.

Siraj struck again with his next ball, going slightly fuller, getting a bit of swing into the left-handed Cooper Connolly to produce an inside-edge to the wicketkeeper.

Rabada matched Siraj’s excellence from the other end, as the two bowled three overs each in the powerplay, beating the bat multiple times as Prabhsimran Singh and Shreyas Iyer struggled to match their usual rates of scoring. Then, Rabada bowled an outstanding sixth over, which included the wicket of Prabhsimran with a 152kph length ball that cramped him for room on the on-the-up punch, and four straight dots to Nehal Wadhera, including one that zipped past the edge and a bouncer that zipped past the helmet. A wicket maiden completed PBKS’ least productive powerplay since the start of IPL 2025: 35 for 3.

There’s no better resource on a trampoline pitch than a towering fast bowler. Holder is four inches taller than the 6’3″ Rabada, and he immediately got in the act in the seventh over, finding Wadhera’s edge with a hard-length ball slanted across him. And when he nipped a back-of-a-length ball back into Shreyas and bowled him off the inside edge in the ninth over, PBKS were five down and in all kinds of strife.

In GT’s previous game against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), the left-arm spinner Manav Suthar didn’t bowl a ball. Given the help the quicks were getting on Sunday, GT may have felt inclined to repeat this, but a wayward 13th over from the left-arm seamer Arshad Khan, which went for 16, may have prompted them to bring on Suthar for the 14th.

And Suthar bowled one of the more forgettable overs of the season. Bowlers often get taken to the cleaners in the IPL even when they bowl reasonably good balls, but this was just an old-fashioned bad over: after starting with a single, he sent down two slot balls, a wide full-toss, a wide long-hop, and another full-toss. Shedge took ruthless toll, going 6, 6, 4, 4, 6. Twenty-seven off that over, and PBKS were suddenly looking at a decent total.

That over was the centrepiece of a 79-run partnership between Shedge and Stoinis. Shedge, who was at one stage batting on 13 off 14 balls, rushed to a 24-ball half-century. He then flicked Rabada for a nonchalant six in the 16th over before falling to Rabada’s extra bounce, caught behind for 57 off 29.

Stoinis held the key to a big finish for PBKS, but Holder forced a miscue out of him with an into-the-pitch cutter from around the wicket in the 18th over. When he followed up with an inducker to bowl Xavier Bartlett comprehensively, PBKS were eight down with 13 balls remaining.

Marco Jansen hit Rashid Khan for a six and four in the final over to haul PBKS past 160, but it wasn’t quite the magnitude of finish they may have hoped for. Only 45 came off their last five overs.

This was an innings of many delectable shots: the high-elbow drive through the covers off Bartlett in the first over, the hooked six over fine leg off Jansen in the sixth, and expert riding of the bounce to cut and carve the ball behind point. But there wasn’t a whole lot of intent to force the pace off balls that weren’t in his hitting zones.

And all of GT’s batters played pretty much this way, with the caveat that this was still an awkward pitch to bat on. Jos Buttler picked off a trademark scooped six over short fine leg, but his 26 consumed 22 balls. Nishant Sindhu, making his IPL debut, fell for 15 off 11. Washington scored 16 off his first 14 balls.

And so, it came to a situation where, after Sai Sudharsan and Impact Player Rahul Tewatia fell in the 15th and 17th overs, GT suddenly came under a bit of pressure.

But with 11 to get off the final over, they found a way to push through. Arshad flicked an almost-perfect Stoinis yorker for four, and then, with three to get off two balls, Washington coolly stepped across his stumps and scooped a full-toss over the fine leg boundary to take GT over the line.

Brief scores:
Gujarat Titans 167 for 6 in 19.5 overs  (Sai Sudharsan 57, Jos Buttler 26, Nishant Sindhu 15, Washington Sundar 40*;  Arshdeep Singh 2-24, Marco Jansen 1-33, Vyjayakumar Vyshak 2-31, Marcus Stoinis 1-26) beat Punjab Kings 163 for 9 in 20 overs (Prabhsimran Singh 15, Shreyas Iyer 19, Suryansh Shedge 57, Marcus Stoinis 40, Marco Jansen 20; Mohammed Siraj 2-28,  Kagiso Rabada 2-22, Jason Holder 4-24, Rashid Khan 1-32) by four wickets

[Cricinfo]

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