Sports
PCB announces major update for players ahead of PSL 11
LAHORE: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Wednesday announced the category renewals of 89 local players for the 11th edition of the Pakistan Super League (PSL).
Five players — including Pakistan’s T20I captain Salman Ali Agha, Sahibzada Farhan, Mohammad Nawaz, Hasan Ali and Abrar Ahmed — have been promoted to the Platinum category.
Going forward, each franchise may retain a maximum of four players, limited to one player per category, the PCB said in a statement. Following completion of retentions, the teams will go into the first-ever PSL Player Auction to complete their team rosters on February 11.
Among the promoted players to Platinum, only Sahibzada was in Gold previously, while others have made the jump from the Diamond category.
Shadab Khan, Naseem Shah, Imad Wasim, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Babar Azam, Saim Ayub, Mohammad Rizwan, Faheem Ashraf, and Mohammad Amir managed to remain in the Platinum category after featuring in the PSL X in the same category as well.
A total of 11 players are in the Diamond category, which includes three from Quetta Gladiators, three from Multan Sultans, two from Lahore Qalandars and Karachi Kings each, one from Peshawar Zalmi and none from Islamabad United.
Mohammad Salman Mirza, Sufyan Moqim, and Mohammad Wasim Jnr are the two players who have jumped up from Gold to Diamond.
Among the 32 players assigned Gold this year, four each are from Islamabad United and Lahore Qalandars, eight from Karachi Kings, six are from Peshawar Zalmi, and five each from Multan Sultans and Quetta Gladiators.
Moreover, Multan Sultans have seven players in the Silver category, Lahore Qalandars have three, Peshawar Zalmi and Islamabad United two each, followed by one each from Quetta Gladiators and Karachi Kings.
Emerging category comprises of 14 players with three each listed in Islamabad United, Karachi Kings, Peshawar Zalmi, two each in Quetta Gladiators and Multan Sultans and one from Lahore Qalandars.
Hunain Shah, Ubaid Shah, Mirza Mamoon Imtiaz, Mohammad Naeem and Mohammad Azab are the players who have made the move from Emerging to Silver for the upcoming season, while Hasan Nawaz went to Gold after featuring in the PSL X in the Emerging category.
Local category renewals (team-wise):
Islamabad United – Shadab Khan, Naseem Shah, Sahibzada Farhan, Salman Ali Agha, Mohammad Nawaz, Imad Wasim (all Platinum), Azam Khan, Haider Ali, Salman Irshad, Rumman Raees (all Gold), Mohammad Faiq, Hunain Shah (both Silver), Saad Masood, Mohammad Shahzad, Mohammad Ghazi Ghori (all Emerging).
Karachi Kings – Hasan Ali (Platinum), Mohmmad Abbas Afridi, Shan Masood (both Diamond), Khushdil Shah, Aamir Jamal, Mohammad Irfan Khan, Mir Hamza, Zahid Mehmood, Omair Bin Yousuf, Shahnawaz Dahani, Arafat Minhas (all Gold), Mirza Mamoon Imtiaz (Silver), Muhammad Riazullah, Fawad Ali, Saad Baig (all Emerging).
Lahore Qalandars – Shaheen Shah Afridi, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf (all Platinum), Abdullah Shafique, Mohammad Salman Mirza (both Diamond), Zaman Khan, Jahandad Khan, Asif Afridi, Asif Ali (all Gold), Muhammad Akhlaq, Mohammad Naeem, Mohammad Azab (all Silver), Momin Qamar (Emerging).
Multan Sultans – Mohammad Rizwan (Platinum), Usama Mir, Iftikhar Ahmed, Usman Khan (all Diamond), Kamran Ghulam, Mohammad Hasnain, Faisal Akram, Akif Javed, Tayyab Tahir (all Gold), Yasir Khan, Muhammad Amir Barki, Mohammad Junaid, Humayun Altaf, Ali Imran, Jahanzaib Sultan, Ubaid Shah (all Silver), Shahid Aziz, Mohammad Zulkifal (both Emerging).
Peshawar Zalmi – Babar Azam, Saim Ayub (both Platinum), Sufyan Moqim (Diamond), Mohammad Haris, Mohammad Ali, Abdul Samad, Hussain Talat, Ahmed Daniyal, Ihsanullah (all Gold), Arif Yaqoob and Mehran Mumtaz (both Silver), Abdullah Fazal, Ali Raza, Maaz Sadaqat (all Emerging).
Quetta Gladiators – Faheem Ashraf, Mohammad Amir, Abrar Ahmed (all Platinum), Saud Shakeel, Mohammad Wasim Jnr, Usman Tariq (all Diamond), Khurram Shahzad, Haseebullah Khan, Khawaja Mohammad Nafay, Hasan Nawaz, Danish Aziz (all Gold), Ali Majid (Silver), Mohammad Zeeshan, Shamyl Hussain (both Emerging).
Sports
Mainieri out as South Carolina’s baseball coach in 2nd season
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Paul Mainieri is out as South Carolina’s baseball coach midway through his second season after he couldn’t approach the level of success he had produced at LSU.
Mainieri, 68, who won a College World Series with LSU in 2009, had been away from the game for three years before South Carolina lured him out of retirement. The Gamecocks went 28-29 last year in Mainieri’s debut season. They’re 12-11 so far this season.
South Carolina lost 22-6 to Arkansas on Friday for its sixth consecutive defeat. The loss dropped the Gamecocks to 0-4 in Southeastern Conference play.
“[Athletic director] Jeremiah Donati and I have agreed that the baseball program will be better served with new leadership,” Mainieri said Saturday in a statement released by the university. “I take full responsibility for the win/loss record of the baseball program over the 80 games I have served as head coach.
“When [former athletic director] Ray Tanner invited me to come out of three years of retirement to coach again, my goal was to work with young people again and restore the South Carolina program to greatness with a return to Omaha. My staff and I have worked diligently in an attempt to accomplish that goal. Unfortunately, that goal has not materialized as quickly as I would have liked and will take more time than I had anticipated and that is time that I just don’t have at my age.”
Donati said he and Mainieri had a conversation Saturday and agreed this move would be in the best interest of the program. Mainieri said: “I did not get the job done at a level that I expected, or the university deserves.”
Mainieri has a 1,545-817-8 record in a 39-year head coaching career. He went 179-121-2 at St. Thomas from 1983-88, 152-158 at Air Force from 1989 to ’94, 533-213-3 at Notre Dame from 1995 to 2006 and 641-285-3 at LSU from 2007 to ’21 before posting a 40-40 record in his 1½ seasons at South Carolina.
He ranks sixth in NCAA history in career wins. He made College World Series appearances with Notre Dame in 2002 and LSU in 2008, 2009, 2013, 2015 and 2017. His 2009 LSU team won it all and his 2017 squad was the CWS runner-up.
“I appreciate everything Paul has poured into our student-athletes and our program, not just at South Carolina, but throughout his career,” Donati said in a statement. “He is a Hall of Fame coach and a world-class individual, and we wish him and his family all the best.”
Sports
Arne Slot: Liverpool’s defeat to Brighton ‘hurts a lot’
BRIGHTON, England — Arne Slot has said Liverpool’s 2-1 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion “hurts a lot” and admitted his team’s form this season has not been good enough.
Danny Welbeck struck twice at the Amex to secure all three points for the hosts, dealing Liverpool a huge blow in the race for Champions League qualification.
“Of course now looking at the league table, this loss hurts a lot and it should hurt us a lot,” Slot said. “But the main problem is that we are in this position because we dropped a point at Wolves in the last minute from a deflected shot. That [Tottenham] goal last week in the 90th minute is, I would say, even a bigger problem than losing away at Brighton.”
Liverpool were without both Mohamed Salah and Alisson Becker for their trip to the south coast, while Hugo Ekitike was substituted with an injury early in the first half.
Asked whether he expects outsiders to have sympathy with his team considering the £450 million ($602M) it spent in last summer’s transfer window, Slot said: “No, I have complete sympathy with that for all the people who are saying this because no one in England is used to the fact that there are also clubs that are selling players.
“So usually in England when a club is buying £450 million like we did, that’s adding that to the already great team you are having.
“But this club has a different model and no one wants to see that and no one wants to understand this, that I can also understand because fans of other teams and certain pundits don’t want to tell you that we sold for £300 million ($401M).
“Then, the £150 million ($201M) player is never available. That’s already one thing, and Giovanni Leoni has never been available because of his injury. That’s already the second thing, and now we’re already going underneath what we’ve sold. Jeremie Frimpong is recently much more available and Mamardashvili was one of the signings, the second goalkeeper.
“But, yes, it makes complete sense if you win the league last season and you spent £450 million that the expectations are high, and those expectations were high for the pundits, for the media, for me, for the fans. At our club we’re also looking at the situation and the challenge we had during this season, and then we might be a bit more realistic, why the season has gone why it is gone. But still it’s not good enough no matter how much excuses I can come up with, it’s still not good enough for the position you’re in right now.”
Asked for an update on Liverpool’s absentees, Slot added: “Alisson definitely out during international break. Hugo could play tomorrow if he needed to. It was a dead leg.
– Danny Welbeck scores twice as Brighton beat Liverpool
– Alisson withdraws from Brazil squad due to injury
“Brighton did what we expected, if you face a team that has only had 62 hours of rest. The first thing they did was make it an intense game. There was nothing wrong with the duels but unfortunately there was a collision and that led to Hugo going out.
“After two minutes, dealing without Mohamed Salah, Alexander Isak and Hugo… we have to find a way of playing players in positions they’re not used to. We did this quite well in the first half but as the game on, Brighton became stronger and stronger.
“Throughout the second half, they were closer to 3-1 than we were to making it 2-2.”
Sports
Men’s March Madness live tracker: Updates on Saturday’s games
The 2026 men’s NCAA tournament has whittled to 32 teams that have their eyes set on the Sweet 16.
ESPN reporters are on-site, from Buffalo to Portland, to give you a real-time look at the Madness. Follow along as they and the rest of the staff track every second-round game on Saturday, with more matchups still to tip:
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(6) Louisville vs. (3) Michigan State: 2:45 p.m.
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(9) TCU vs. (1) Duke: 5:15 p.m.
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(10) Texas A&M vs. (2) Houston: 6:10 p.m.
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(11) Texas vs. (3) Gonzaga: 7:10 p.m.
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(11) VCU vs. (3) Illinois: 7:50 p.m.
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(5) Vanderbilt vs. (4) Nebraska: 8:45 p.m.
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(12) High Point vs. (4) Arkansas: 9:45 p.m.
Live tracker
Previews
2:45 p.m., CBS
How Michigan State can advance to the Sweet 16: Michigan State’s biggest edge against North Dakota State was its dominant frontcourt, with Carson Cooper, Jaxon Kohler, Coen Carr and Cam Ward combining for 62 points and 24 rebounds. That will also be where the Spartans will need to win against Louisville. Despite having plenty of size and depth up front, the Cardinals struggled on the defensive glass against South Florida, and Michigan State is one of the top-10 offensive rebounding teams in the country. The Spartans should be able to have success in that area against the Cardinals. Jeremy Fears Jr. will be the key — he didn’t score the ball well against North Dakota State and turned it over a season-high four times, but he’ll be able to get downhill and put pressure on Louisville. — Jeff Borzello
How Louisville can advance to the Sweet 16: Despite leading South Florida by 23 points before a late surge by the Bulls made the final margin much closer, Louisville has to clean up plenty in order to beat Michigan State. South Florida grabbed 18 offensive rebounds — 37.5% of its misses — and Louisville will have a harder time against Michigan State, one of the most dominant offensive rebounding teams in the country. The key on the offensive end, as it always is for Louisville, will be making 3s. The Cardinals rank in the top five nationally in 3-point attempt rate and made 13 against South Florida. Michigan State was in the middle of the pack in the Big Ten in 3-point defense and allowed an average of 11.1 3-pointers in its losses this season. The X factor could be the absence of Mikel Brown Jr., who has been ruled out again with a lingering back injury, though Louisville has figured out how to win without him over the past five games. — Borzello
5:15 p.m., CBS
How Duke can advance to the Sweet 16: Well, it would help if they showed up like the team that dominated in the second half against Siena — and not the version that played in the first half, when it was down by double digits. Duke’s offensive rhythm was clearly disrupted without Caleb Foster, its best 3-point shooter (40.2%), and the Blue Devils’ defense was weaker than expected with Patrick Ngongba II out due to injury, too. In the second half, however, the Blue Devils turned to a zone and played with a different defensive intensity. They’ll advance if they have the same mojo against TCU. Isaiah Evans was a headache for Siena on fast breaks and off the dribble after halftime; Duke has to do more to put him in a position to impact the game. Cameron Boozer was 13-for-14 from the free throw line. Good defense, Evans making plays and Boozer being Boozer are the keys to Duke moving on. — Medcalf
How TCU can advance to the Sweet 16: Siena became the first 16-seed to hold a double-digit halftime lead over a 1-seed in NCAA tournament history, per ESPN Research, because of its early dominance in the paint. Francis Folefac, a 6-foot-7 forward, was the anchor of a Saints squad that scored 22 points in the paint in the first half against the Blue Devils. That has to be the blueprint for TCU, too. The Blue Devils were vulnerable inside without Patrick Ngongba II, their best defensive player who may not be available for the second round. That’s how the Horned Frogs can win, attacking inside and defending the rim against Boozer & Co. They will also need 3s to fall again (39% against Ohio State), which only happened on occasion during the season when they were 15th out of 16 teams in the Big 12 in 3-point shooting. — Medcalf
6:10 p.m., TNT
How Houston can advance to the Sweet 16: Houston, on paper, is built to withstand Texas A&M’s pressing, up-tempo style. The Cougars have an elite three-guard trio in Kingston Flemings, Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp, who don’t turn the ball over and are effective at getting the game to be played at Kelvin Sampson’s preferred tempo. They also can force their own fair share of turnovers, and A&M has had some issues against teams with intense on-ball pressure. Where Houston can really have an edge is on the offensive glass. The Cougars are annually one of the best offensive rebounding teams in the country, and while this year’s group isn’t quite as elite as previous versions, they’re still in the top 30 nationally in offensive rebounding rate and second-chance points per game. A&M, meanwhile, was one of the worst defensive rebounding teams in the SEC. — Borzello
How Texas A&M can advance to the Sweet 16: It’s all about Bucky Ball and how effective it can be against Houston and one of the best backcourts in the country. A&M wants to play fast, it wants to force turnovers and it wants to make teams uncomfortable. Houston takes care of the ball, ranking seventh in the country in turnover percentage — and the Cougars are even better in Big 12 play. A&M forces turnovers on 18.6% of its defensive possessions; Houston has turned it over that frequently just five times all season. Can A&M win the pace battle? The Aggies average more than 70 possessions per game, ranking in the top 40 nationally. Meanwhile, the Cougars play just over 63 possessions per game, ranking No. 352 nationally. This will be a true contrast of styles, but the fact that A&M just beat another grind-it-out team in Saint Mary’s should give the Aggies optimism. — Borzello
7:10 p.m., truTV/TBS
How Gonzaga can advance to the Sweet 16: Gonzaga gets to avoid facing AJ Dybantsa in the second round, but now the Zags have to play a Texas team with momentum — and one with size that could potentially make life difficult for Mark Few’s club. What should determine the outcome will be the paint battle and free throw margin. Gonzaga leads the nation in paint points per game, scoring nearly 45, while shooting nearly 59% inside the arc. But the Zags outscored Kennesaw State by only four points in the paint Thursday. Graham Ike needs to be his usual dominant self, and it will be helpful to get Matas Vokietaitis in foul trouble. Vokietaitis averages 5.3 fouls per 40 and committed at least four fouls in seven straight games entering Thursday. On the flip side, Ike will have to slow the former Florida Atlantic transfer; Vokietaitis is averaging 17.6 points over his past 11 games and had 23 points and 16 boards against BYU. — Borzello
How Texas can advance to the Sweet 16: Texas, after losing five of six games entering the NCAA tournament, has picked up back-to-back wins over NC State and BYU — and it will need to continue defending at a high level to have a chance against Gonzaga. The Longhorns’ defensive deficiencies have not exactly been a secret; Sean Miller has talked about it at length, bemoaning their inability to guard opponents without fouling. But against NC State, they held the Wolfpack to 0.98 points per possession — their first time limiting an opponent to fewer than one point per possession since Jan. 14. BYU scored 1.06 points per possession against Texas, but that’s well below the Cougars’ season average, and they have potential No. 1 NBA draft pick AJ Dybantsa. Fortunately for Miller, Gonzaga’s offense is not predicated on getting to the free throw line. The Zags score more paint points per game than any team in the country, so Saturday’s game will be key for Matas Vokietaitis to protect the rim and stifle All-American Graham Ike. — Borzello
7:50 p.m., CBS
How Illinois can advance to the Sweet 16: Illinois, which owns the No. 1 offense in America, can advance with the same overwhelming offensive attack it has relied on in wins over Texas Tech, Tennessee and Purdue. The Fighting Illini scored 40 points in the first half against Penn before adding 65 in the second half at a rate of 197 points per 100 possessions. For comparison: The Denver Nuggets have the NBA’s best offense of the season at 120 points per 100 possessions. That’s how good Illinois is right now. Brad Underwood’s team can advance with another overwhelming offensive effort. On Thursday, the Illini turned to David Mirkovic (29 points, 17 rebounds) to keep their national title hopes alive. It’s a tall task for the Rams, who will have to stop one of the most potent offensive attacks in recent college basketball history. Meanwhile, Illinois just has to be Illinois. — Medcalf
How VCU can advance to the Sweet 16: Phil Martelli Jr.’s squad can advance past Illinois if Terrence Hill Jr. plays the role of Superman again and his teammates employ the same resilience — on offense and defense — they demonstrated in the final 10 minutes of regulation on Thursday. The key is they’ll have to do it for 40 minutes against Illinois on Saturday. The Rams scored at a clip of 138 points per 100 possessions in the second half before they forced overtime against the Tar Heels. But the 19-point deficit the Rams had to overcome could turn into a 40-point disadvantage against an Illinois squad with the best offense in the country. They can’t let that happen. They’ll also need Lazar Djokovic (15 points, 2 blocks) to put up big numbers, too, as they attempt to stall the Illinois offensive machine. — Medcalf
8:45 p.m., TNT
How Nebraska can advance to the Sweet 16: Nebraska has already made history by winning the first NCAA tournament game in school history. Now it can add to that feat with another victory and its first Sweet 16 appearance. How? Its defense has the ability to force Vanderbilt star Tyler Tanner into difficult shots. He was just 2-for-6 against McNeese in the first half Thursday, struggling against its relentless pressure. Nebraska is bigger and better (top-10 defense nationally) than McNeese, and the Cornhuskers have put the same defensive clamps on elite teams in Big Ten play. Against everyone else, they’ve been ferocious. But they did hold Troy to just 47 points (77 points per 100 possessions) — the best defense we’ve seen in the opening round through the first half of Thursday. Combine that with Pryce Sandfort, Rienk Mast and Sam Hoiberg all hitting big shots in the first round, and Nebraska might be on its way to the Sweet 16 for the first time. — Medcalf
How Vanderbilt can advance to the Sweet 16: Vanderbilt needs Tyler Tanner to excel and to limit Nebraska’s shooters in order to advance. The Commodores were a different team in the second half against McNeese on Thursday when Tanner, a projected first-round NBA draft pick, got more comfortable against the pressure from one of America’s best defensive teams. He scored 17 of his game-high 26 points after halftime. Overall this season, Vanderbilt is 13-3 when the 6-foot guard scores at least 20 points. Nebraska, which had the best defense in Big Ten play this season, will do all it can to frustrate him. It’s not on him alone, though. The Commodores will have to do their best to shut down the Cornhuskers at the 3-point line: They’ve made 34 3-pointers in their past three games. — Medcalf
9:45 p.m., truTV/TBS
How Arkansas can advance to the Sweet 16: Arkansas wants to run, and it wants a high-scoring game. High Point will be willing to play into that hand, and it’s hard to see how that’s not a plus for John Calipari’s team. The Razorbacks don’t give the ball away since they have two high-level playmakers in Darius Acuff Jr. and Meleek Thomas, and their frontcourt is significantly more mobile and athletic than Wisconsin’s bigs. The turnover battle will be key; High Point ranks in the top five in defensive turnover percentage, but Arkansas protects the ball better than any team in the country. If Acuff and Thomas take care of the ball and the Razorbacks can dominate the paint like they’ve done countless times this season, High Point likely won’t have an answer. Defensively, they can’t let Chase Johnston get hot — from anywhere on the floor. — Borzello
How High Point can advance to the Sweet 16: High Point has won 23 of its past 24 games and just beat Wisconsin while playing a run-and-gun up-tempo affair — don’t count the Panthers out against Arkansas. They won’t be afraid of the pace battle, although they’ll have to find a way to slow Darius Acuff Jr. and backcourt partner Meleek Thomas. Both are difficult to keep from getting to their spots, and High Point just allowed Nick Boyd and John Blackwell to combine for 49 points in the win over the Badgers. Where High Point could have some success is at the other end of the floor. Arkansas is solid defensively, but prone to off ball and rotation lapses, and High Point will look to get up and down the floor and take 3s. A repeat 15-for-40 3-point shooting effort would be nice, too. — Borzello
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