Sports
Pogacar targets more history at season-ending Il Lombardia | The Express Tribune

MILAN:
Tadej Pogacar is red-hot favourite to match a feat only ever achieved by cycling icon Eddy Merckx as the Slovenian superstar bids to win the Tour of Lombardy for the fifth consecutive year.
No-one but Merckx has ever won three Monument races in the same season but world champion Pogacar is on course to cap another remarkable year by equalling that record at the “Race of the Falling Leaves” on Saturday.
In April, the Team UAE rider won both the Tour of Flanders and Liege-Bastogne-Liege having also finished second at Paris-Roubaix, while a month earlier he was third at Milan-San Remo, meaning he has finished on the podium of all four Monument races so far this season.
Merckx managed a trio of Monument victories four times in his career and has a record 19 wins in the prestigious one-day classics.
Cycling’s Monuments are tougher than the regular one-day classics mainly due to their length, and the route for the 2025 Giro di Lombardia is a hefty 238km from Como to Bergamo.
Pogacar will face formidable opposition with double-Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel in his last race for one-day specialists Soudal-Quick Step before joining Red Bull.
“If anyone can tell me how to beat Tadej please do,” Evenepoel joked last week after coming second at the World and European championships to Pogacar.
At just 19, French tyro Paul Seixas will be one to watch after his third place at the recent European road race.
Mavericks Tom Pidcock and Julian Alaphilippe can be counted on to bid to try and upset the order, while Ireland’s Ben Healy should feature in any shake-up.
‘Best season’
But 27-year-old Pogacar is on-form, recently retaining the world crown and adding the European road race title to his long list of honours, which includes four Tour de France triumphs.
“Every year I say to myself it’s my best season so far, but then next year comes and it’s a better season. But soon enough, there will be a moment where I won’t be able to top it off,” Pogacar said after claiming the European crown.
“I’m over the moon with every season I’ve done, and this year is no exception. I realise that I’m lucky to be able to win all these races.”
Pogacar is used to breaking records — this year he became the first man to win both the Tour and world championship two seasons in a row — and he also has another of the sport’s greats in his sights.
Only Fausto Coppi has won the season-ending Il Lombardia five times, and no-one has ever strung together five consecutive victories, with the Italian great winning four on the bounce between 1946 and 1949.
The race has been Pogacar’s personal playground since he first won it in 2021, the route so often perfect for a rider who loves to attack early and burn off the competition.
The last time it finished in Bergamo, two years ago, Pogacar made his move on the decisive Passo di Ganda climb that is also on this year’s gruelling route, which features a series of steep climbs.
Israel-Premier Tech and race organisers came to a mutual agreement that the team would not take part, after having been targeted by pro-Palestinian protesters at several recent races.
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The billion-dollar agent behind the NFL’s biggest stars
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Wetzel: Why college basketball coaches can watch more football in 2025

The University of Illinois football team plays host to top-ranked Ohio State on Saturday, assuring a sellout crowd and a frenzied campus atmosphere. The weather in Champagne is expected to be perfect — mostly sunny and in the 70s.
“Chamber of Commerce stuff,” said Brad Underwood, the school’s basketball coach.
In past years, Underwood would have set up a massive recruiting weekend, trying to convince every possible high school prospect to see U of I at its best. The early signing period, after all, is just five weeks away.
This year? No official visits, just a couple of local players who will drive over on their own.
“I’m just choosing not to do it,” Underwood said. “I’m not wasting the time or the dollars.”
Welcome to the fall, where college basketball recruiting season is in semi-hibernation.
The recruiting calendar has shifted for myriad reasons. The tendency of coaches to favor experienced players from the transfer portal has lowered the heat on landing high school stars. Meanwhile, top players are holding out for more certainty and what they hope are higher monetary offers in the spring.
But the trend is compounded this year by uncertainty over a proposed NCAA change that would provide all athletes five years of eligibility over a five-year span, dubbed the “5-in-5 Rule.” The goal is to end redshirts, arbitrary waiver decisions and lawsuits over eligibility.
The problem is, it’s unclear if the rule will pass, let alone when it will be implemented. The NCAA process is notoriously slow, and though a source with knowledge of the situation tells ESPN that it won’t happen this academic year, there has been no official statement. In an age of rapid and dramatic change, coaches remain wary.
If the 5-in-5 rule does happen, then suddenly almost every current college senior would have an extra year of eligibility, causing a logjam for incoming freshmen.
Since coaches have no idea how many players can return, they also don’t know how many new players they might need.
And if they need new players, will they add from a portal list of experienced 22-year-olds rather than turn to unproven high schoolers? That doesn’t factor in how much revenue share money and NIL opportunities need to be allocated to keep your roster.
Essentially, the entire sport is flying somewhat blind on how to build a roster for the 2026-27 season. Illinois might need significant work. Or it might need almost no one (it has two high school players committed).
“No one knows what is coming or what to do,” said Underwood, who has led Illinois to five consecutive NCAA tournament appearances.
That also extends in the other direction. Current players are more cautious because they can’t project what they’re walking into, from playing time to available money.
It’s one reason, even with the Nov. 15 early signing period approaching, only 16 of ESPN’s top 50 recruits (and just three of the top 15) are committed to a school.
“In the past, a high school recruit would say, ‘This is how I would fit in on the roster,’ but that is gone now. You don’t know the roster for next year,” said Paul Biancardi, ESPN’s national director of recruiting. “With the portal kids coming or leaving, you don’t know what the roster is going to be.”
Everything has been pushed to the spring, where Underwood expects “total chaos.”
His frustration isn’t with the proposed rule — he says he supports 5-in-5 as long as it ends the waivers and legal cases. And Underwood, despite being a coach of 38 years, isn’t grumbling about the good old days. He likes most of this new era.
“I’m tired of all the complaining by coaches,” Underwood said. “I think … [college] basketball is the best it’s ever been. There is so much top-end talent in the game. I think the game is ready to explode.”
He would just like some clarity on how to plan for next year.
“We just need to know what it is going to be,” he said.
If a fifth year eventually comes, many high school prospects could be pushed to the mid-major level. That, too, can be a strategy. If you are, say, a top-100 recruit, why sign with a major team to play a limited role, when you can go to a mid-major and prove yourself?
“That’s an opportunity for kids,” Underwood said. “Go build your brand as a double-digit scorer.”
Basically, no one is sure what path to take.
“It’s really fascinating how it’s changed, how coaches go about it, the money, the transfer portal,” Biancardi said. “Everything is different.”
Not all bad, just different. Underwood says it used to be “hair on fire” this time of year. This September, though, he went out just one day to recruit. April and May will be crazy, but he has more time to connect with “the guys I’m going to try to win with this winter.”
And on what otherwise would have been a busy fall recruiting weekend, he might get to settle in and watch the football game.
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Australia in ‘tight’ race to have Cummins fit for Ashes opener | The Express Tribune

SYDNEY:
Australia is in a “tight” race to get injured captain Pat Cummins ready for the first Ashes Test in November, coach Andrew McDonald admitted Friday, while insisting he was “still optimistic”.
Pace spearhead Cummins has not played since picking up a lower back injury in a Test against the West Indies in July.
McDonald said there was “a lot more positivity” surrounding the skipper’s chances of playing in the opening Test match in Perth starting November 21.
“But the reality is, we’re starting to get tight in terms of the times,” McDonald said.
“We’re still optimistic, hopeful, but this time next week, I think we’ll be in a position to get a better gauge on where he’s at.”
Cummins would need at least “four, four-and-a-half weeks” of bowling practice to condition his body for the rigours of Ashes cricket, McDonald said.
“One of the benefits with Patty is that he has had the ability to prepare for Test matches off shortened preparations.
“So if it was to be shrunken down, we’d be very confident that he would still be able to perform in the first Test.”
McDonald said he would weigh up whether Cummins could be included in the side even if he was a “little bit underdone”.
Australia retained the Ashes in England in 2023 after the series ended in a 2-2 draw.
They enjoyed a 4-0 sweep of England at home in 2021-22.
Cummins was the leading wicket-taker with 21 scalps at an average of 18.
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