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Dortmund defender Schlotterbeck needs more time until comeback, says Kovac

Dortmund defender Schlotterbeck needs more time until comeback, says Kovac
Borussia Dortmund’s Nico Schlotterbeck in action with FC St. Pauli’s Noah Weisshaupt during their Bundesliga match at Millerntor-Stadion, Hamburg, in March 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 6 min 43 sec ago

Dortmund defender Schlotterbeck needs more time until comeback, says Kovac

Dortmund defender Schlotterbeck needs more time until comeback, says Kovac
  • Schlotterbeck underwent surgery five months ago for a meniscus tear in his left knee
  • “Nico has come back after five months and has been doing some light training without contact,” Kovac said

BERLIN: Borussia Dortmund and Germany defender Nico Schlotterbeck will need more time before he makes his comeback from a knee injury, coach Niko Kovac said on Thursday.
Schlotterbeck underwent surgery five months ago for a meniscus tear in his left knee that he sustained in April and despite having come back to light team training in recent days, he is still not yet ready for a comeback.
Schlotterbeck’s services were also badly missed in Germany’s two World Cup qualifiers in the international break, with the national team suffering a shock 2-0 loss to Slovakia before beating Northern Ireland 3-1.
“Nico has come back after five months and has been doing some light training without contact,” Kovac told a press conference. “He is a key player, a top national team player.
“Before we even consider the national team, he has to be healthy for the club and have playing minutes in training, in Bundesliga and Champions League matches,” he said.
“It will take more time. A Bundesliga player and especially a defender has to be able to do one-on-ones if they want to be part of the bench, and he is not yet that far,” Kovac said.
Dortmund, who had a shorter pre-season due to the Club World Cup, travel to Heidenheim in the Bundesliga on Saturday, having four points from their two league matches so far.
They also kick off their Champions League campaign on September 16 at Italy’s Juventus.


Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India
Updated 55 min 9 sec ago

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India
  • National team’s previous sponsors, Dream11, have been dropped as a result of India’s newly assented gaming bill

Team India’s shirt front, for both men and women, has displayed Dream11 since 2023. This prominent sponsorship has disappeared with immediate effect, starting with the men’s Asia Cup, which opened on Sept. 9 in the UAE.

Dream11’s disappearance is a casualty of India’s newly assented gaming bill, The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025, which prohibits all forms of money-based online gaming and seeks to promote e-sports and online social games. The new law was passed by the Indian Parliament on Aug. 21, with an element of surprise and alacrity. It includes provisions to set up an Online Gaming Authority that will oversee the sector and provide policy guidance, along with harsh penalties for non-compliance. 

Its impact on Dream11, India’s largest fantasy sports platform, is severe, causing it to cease all paid contests and switch to a free-to-play model. It may be assumed that the company’s owners would be upset, since 95 percent of group revenues and profits have been erased overnight. Instead, it has been sanguine, at least publicly, expressing respect for the law. Harsh Jain, the CEO of Dream Sports, the parent company, has said that jobs are safe and that sufficient reserves are available to allow transition away from the fantasy sports platform, which was valued at $8 billion.

Even before the new bill came into force, Dream11 and its competitors had been subject to rising regulatory costs, the government having quadrupled the goods and service tax rate on online games. Profit margins were squeezed and Dream Sports registered losses in its latest financial year, its first in years. Although Dream11 is upbeat about its capacity to rebuild, the wider gaming industry, valued at $25 million and comprising about 400 companies, faces a shake-out. Its contribution to India’s economy, through its spend on advertising and services, will drop sharply.

The implications for the Board of Control for Cricket in India, or BCCI, are less problematic. Its revenues have almost doubled over the past five years, to the point where its cash and bank balance records show about $2.25 billion, with 60 percent generated by the Indian Premier league. It is by far away the richest cricket board in the world, Cricket Australia a distant second with $79 million. Dream11’s three-year contract with the BCCI was valued at Rs 358-crore (circa $41 million) and was due to run until March 2026. The board has released a tender to invite new sponsors for a tenure of two-and-a-half to three years. A bid submission deadline of Sept. 16 has been set. 

Despite each of the BCCI’s five previous main team sponsors having problems that led to early contact termination, there is unlikely to be a shortage of interest. The Indian front-of-shirt spot is probably the most visible in world cricket, something which the BCCI clearly believes, because it has increased its base asking price by 10 percent. It is keenly aware that sponsoring the Indian cricket teams provides brand visibility to upwards of a billion people. It is coincidental that the previous sponsors ran into trouble. Sahara, which sponsored between 2001 and 2012, foundered because of legal issues for its owner. Star Indian, 2014 to 2017, encountered ant-trust scrutiny and rising costs, while Chinese smart-phone company, Oppo, suffered from poor returns and Indo-Chinese geo-political tensions between 2017 and 2020. Prior to Dream11, edtech company, Byju’s, faced severe financial and operational difficulties that ultimately led to insolvency.   

Whoever lands the new deal will hope that the so-called curse or “jersey-jinx” of sponsoring India’s cricket teams does not strike again. It is reminder that, even in India’s cricket-obsessed society and market, there are latent risks lurking in changes that emerge in regulatory regimes and market dynamics. While the BCCI seems to be immune from risk in its sponsorship strategies, apart from inconvenience caused by a sponsor’s early termination, the cessation of Dream11’s activities has affected other parts of cricket’s ecosystem.     

The company had partnerships with the Caribbean Premier League, New Zealand’s Super Smash and the Big Bash League in Australia. It had also been the “official fantasy game partner” for all ICC events. Although Dream11 had deals with the Pro Kabaddi League, the Indian Super League and the International Hockey Federation, it is cricket where the main impact has fallen. Apart from the immediate effect in India, European Cricket, which was backed financially by Dream11, announced a temporary suspension of matches on Aug. 25. This included all games part of the European Cricket Network, or ECN, the European Cricket Series, the European Cricket League, the Women’s European Cricket Championship and all international matches involving European countries.

ECN started in July 2019 with a single tournament in Spain, with eight clubs and 16 matches. It had an ambition to kindle the unrealized potential for cricket in Europe. In 2024, it had more than 1,800 televised games in 20 countries, following on from 1,700 matches in 2023, when events were organized on 330 days across 16 countries. Europe’s cricket infrastructure has been built from a very low base. Each host country earned about 10,000 euros per tournament, critical funding for national boards outside of mainstream cricket. This funding is now in jeopardy and the ECN has to find ways of completing its 2025 tournament schedule, as well as finding new sponsors.

Fantasy sports platforms became essential infrastructure for cricket development in Europe and other emerging markets. Dependency on revenue streams from those platforms was shattered overnight by the elimination of their business models by regulators in another country. The fact that the country is India adds another dimension to its already evident burgeoning influence across large swathes of cricket’s landscape. The evidence lies in the affluence of the BCCI, its control of its own players, the close linkages between the BCCI and the ICC, and the levels of Indian ownership in franchise leagues, of which The Hundred is the latest incarnation.

The motivations for the online gaming bill are honorable. It seeks to address addiction and financial ruin caused by compulsive playing, mental health and suicide caused by heavy financial loss, as well as opportunities for money laundering and threats to national security by illegal messaging. Although gambling and betting have long been restricted by Indian law, the online domain remained largely unregulated. Digital engagement of a healthy variety, such as social and educational games that build skills and cultural values, are supported. Nonetheless, one bill enacted in Mumbai has impacted sport in the physical arena, exposing the fragility of building cricket development and sponsorship strategies on gaming platforms. 


India routs UAE for 57 to notch 9-wicket win in Asia Cup

India routs UAE for 57 to notch 9-wicket win in Asia Cup
Updated 11 September 2025

India routs UAE for 57 to notch 9-wicket win in Asia Cup

India routs UAE for 57 to notch 9-wicket win in Asia Cup
  • UAE batters had no answer for India’s relentless bowling attack

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates: Left-arm spinner Kuldeep Yadav and seamer Shivam Dube helped limit the United Arab Emirates to 57 runs as India swept to a nine-wicket win in the Asia Cup on Wednesday.
Kuldeep baffled batters with his sharp googlies and bagged 4-7 while Dube claimed 3-4 to dismiss UAE in 13.1 overs — the lowest-ever T20 total against India.
In the Group A game, India cruised to 60-1 in just 4.3 overs with opening batter Abhishek Sharma (30) showing flashes of his skillful power-hitting and Shubman Gill scoring an unbeaten 20.
UAE folds without a fight
UAE batters had no answer for India’s relentless bowling attack despite Jasprit Bumrah showing signs of rustiness in his first T20 game since the World Cup last year.
Captain Suryakumar Yadav believed his team was “flexible” when India won the toss and the skipper chose to field. India had lost the toss in 15 consecutive games.
Alishan Sharafu (22) and captain Muhammad Waseem (19) gave UAE a reasonable start of 41-2 in the powerplay before the batters crumbled against Kuldeep’s sharp spin and Dube warmed up for more tougher games ahead in the tournament with a three-wicket haul.
Bumrah nailed Sharafu will his trademark smearing yorker in the second over and Mohammad Zohaib sliced a catch to backward point when he tried to play Varun Chakravarthy inside out.
Kuldeep’s three-wicket over, that included a plumb leg before wicket dismissal of Waseem, rattled UAE middle-order before Dube claimed three wickets in his two overs and UAE folded with more than six overs to spare.
India called back No. 10 batter Junaid Siddique after wicketkeeper Sanju Samson had him stumped when the batter strolled out of his crease after he missed a pull shot of Dube.
India accepted Siddique’s clarification that he came out of his crease to explain that he got distracted with a rag falling from the pocket of Dube.
However, Siddique couldn’t open his account as he fell of the next legitimate ball of Dube when Suryakumar held onto a high catch at mid-on.
Kuldeep finished off the innings when he had Haider Ali caught behind.
India’s quick chase
Left-handed Abhishek showed how quickly he could unsettle the bowlers in the powerplay when he smashed spinner Ali’s first ball for a six over wide extra cover with his trademark inside out shot. He smashed three sixes and two boundaries in his 16-ball knock.
India needed only 10 runs when Abhishek miscued Siddique’s short ball and got caught at wide mid-wicket but Suryakumar smashed Siddique over fine-leg for a six off the first ball he faced.
Gill then completed the victory with a boundary to mid-on of Simranjeet Singh as UAE slumped to heavy defeat in the group that also include Pakistan and first-timer Oman.


Partnership will ‘nurture future stars’ at Al-Jazira, says Manchester City academy director

Partnership will ‘nurture future stars’ at Al-Jazira, says Manchester City academy director
Updated 11 September 2025

Partnership will ‘nurture future stars’ at Al-Jazira, says Manchester City academy director

Partnership will ‘nurture future stars’ at Al-Jazira, says Manchester City academy director
  • The club has announced a strategic collaboration with City Football Group which will focus on its long-term development

ABU DHABI: City Football Group and Al-Jazira Club have announced a collaboration agreement focused on supporting the latter’s long-term football development.

The new agreement will expand upon CFG’s existing consultancy work with Al-Jazira Academy and include advising on other key areas of football strategy.

CFG has supported the Abu Dhabi academy for the past two seasons, providing expertise in coaching methodology and education, technology, facilities and operations. The collaboration aims to attract top talent and nurture future stars following successes like the U-21 team’s double win of the Emirates Cup and Super Cup in the 2024-25 season.

Manchester City Academy director Thomas Kruecken said Al-Jazira had a clear vision — to provide the best development platform for young footballers in the UAE.

“We support this vision,” he said. “For the past two years, our teams have been working together at the academy level where City Football Group has been providing consultancy services for Al-Jazira Academy.

“In the future, we will continue exchanging ideas and best practices 
 and make sure Al-Jazira Academy gets the best possible support to fulfil their ambitions.”

Kruecken also laid out the goals — short and long term — that the link will aim to achieve.

“This collaboration aims to attract top talent and nurture future stars, following successes like the Al-Jazira Academy’s U-21 team’s remarkable double win of the Emirates Cup and Super Cup in the 2024/25 season,” he said. “Attracting top talent will help support Al-Jazira Club (to) be sustainable for the long-term.

“In Manchester, a lot of players have come through at Manchester City Academy at a young age and have now become world-class players,” he added. “Al-Jazira has the same ambition to produce their own and we support them and share our expertise and ideas.”

Gareth Prosser, Al Jazira Academy director, echoed Kruecken’s words.

“The collaboration with City Football Group allows us to access so many areas of expertise and insights,” he said. “This support will help grow Al-Jazira Academy and realize our ambition to provide the best development platform to young players. We are working on a weekly basis to exchange ideas, share valuable insights and develop programs.”

He added: “In terms of the future, we hope to see more players coming through from the academy and into Al-Jazira’s first team and then representing the senior national teams. We want players to have a professional career, playing in elite leagues across the world.”

Beyond the academy, CFG will advise on best practices in areas such as talent identification, recruitment, player development and performance optimization. The collaboration will also include the sharing of knowledge in data analytics and the identification of actionable data insights. 

For CFG, the partnership strengthens its presence in the region and opens new opportunities for knowledge exchange and local insights. It complements CFG’s regional City Football Schools programs, which currently have more than 3,000 students enrolled.

“We look forward to expanding our work with Al-Jazira Club across key, high-impact football projects,” said Olivier Turkel, general manager at City Football Middle East.

“Because of our unique model, we bring a diverse global expertise, as well as a track record of successes around the world. Through the consultancy, we aim to share our unique insights and to contribute to the club’s on-pitch performance. This collaboration is also an opportunity to contribute to the continued growth of football in the region, and we will work hard to do so.”

Al-Jazira Club CEO Jamal Saeed Al Nuaimi said: “Collaborating with City Football Group underscores our commitment to world-class football development and reinforces our position as a regional leader and innovator. We take pride in the progress already achieved at our academy, and we are confident that CFG’s proven expertise will elevate us further — enhancing talent cultivation and driving sustainable, long-term success across the club.”


Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity
Updated 11 September 2025

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity
  • The bout, sponsored by Riyadh Season and Saudi sports promoter Turki Alalshikh, will be broadcast on Netflix
  • Another fight to watch is the bout between Fernando Vargas Jr., and Callum Walsh

LAS VEGAS: Global enthusiasm for championship boxing is set to rise, thanks to the upcoming contest between super middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and lightweight champion Terence “Bud” Crawford.

The bout, sponsored by Riyadh Season and Saudi sports promoter Turki Alalshikh, will be broadcast on Netflix Saturday, Sept. 13.

Wednesday saw high-profile boxers strutting their stuff before audiences at Las Vegas’ Fontainebleau Hotel. Saudi boxer Mohammed Alakel faces Travis Crawford (not related to Terence) as part of the main card lightweight bout prelude to the Canelo-Crawford battle.

Terence Crawford has fought in four divisions from lightweight to light middleweight, including the undisputed championship at light welterweight and welterweight. He says he will “prove the doubters wrong” when he faces off with Alvarez.

“You know, a lot of people was doubting me, saying that this never been done before. But my reply to it is, ‘It’s never been done before until somebody do it.’ And I think I’m gonna be the one to do it,” he told Arab News.

“Everything is 
 on schedule. Everything is where it needs to be. I feel great about it and I’m looking forward to it.”

Alvarez, whose 63 wins include 39 knockouts and only two losses and who is the two-time undisputed super middleweight champion, has captured prestigious belts from boxing’s four main sanctioning bodies — the  captured the boxing sports four most prestigious belts from its four major sanctioning bodies — the World Boxing Association, World Boxing Council, World Boxing Organization and the International Boxing Federation.

But some critics point out he has gone the 12-round distance in his last seven fights, with some “underwhelming performances” among them.

Crawford is confident ahead of the bout, saying: “I just think 
 styles make fights and 
 certain fighters don’t get up for them. But I think he’s motivated now and I’m looking forward to it.”

He thanked Alalshikh and Riyadh Season for sponsoring the fight and encouraging his move upwards into the Super Middle East division.

Also looking forward to the weekend is Alakel, who will not take his recent successes — including knocking out his last opponent, Yumnan Singh, in the first round of their Aug. 16 match in Riyadh — for granted. However, he is hopeful of a win over Travis Crawford.

“I’ve been working really hard and it’s time to go show the people what I’ve been talking about,” he told Jon Anik, the Ultimate Fighting Championship commentator who will call the fights.

“I just focus on myself because I know the way I fight. I’m not somebody who really cares about what’s happening out there 
 No pressure, excited to be in a big, big crowd since I was (a) young kid. I’ve been dreaming of these moments and it’s finally alive 
 I feel the excitement.”

Also on the bill as a co-main fight before the Canelo-Crawford bout are Christian Mbilli who will defend his WBC interim super middleweight belt against Guatemala’s Lester Martinez.

Mbilli, who has won 29 fights with no losses, acknowledged a win could see him face off at a later date with the winner of the Canelo-Crawford battle.

“It’s a little bit of pressure, but it’s good pressure. I’m very happy to be part of attraction of the show. I have a message for everyone, don’t miss the fight. It will be a very, very good fight,” Mbilli told Arab News.

“I’m working on training to never have a loss. I don’t think about loss. I am thinking about win.”

The Cameroonian-French super middleweight, who competed in the 2016 Olympics, said he began boxing as a child because he was constantly fighting other kids in school.

“I had some problem in the streets when I was young. I had a lot of problems like fighting or something like that. I was moved to boxing to know how to defend myself,” he said, explaining how that helped him discover boxing as a career.

Another fight to watch is the bout between Fernando Vargas Jr., and Callum Walsh — both undefeated in their careers to date.

Vargas said he was honored to be sponsored by Riyadh Season and told Arab News his father advised him “to be smart first” and to “study his boxing rivals” and never take them for granted.

“It’s a huge opportunity. I’m not just on the card but I’m co-main eventing, so I definitely wanna get Turki’s (Alalshikh) attention with this victory.

He added he was grateful for the opportunities given to him.

“They get us to big stages like this and the fights in the beginning of your career. You gotta remember those who believe in you and put their money where their heart is.”

Many of the boxers spent the afternoon sparring in rings set up in the lobby of the Fontainebleau Hotel and Casino, while also discussing their hopes for the weekend with media representatives from more than 50 countries.

Canelo vs. Crawford will take place at the 65,000-seat home of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders, the Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.


Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week
Updated 11 September 2025

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week
  • șÚÁÏÉçÇű’s Abdullah Darkazanli steals the spotlight with second-round victory in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS: Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority and president of the șÚÁÏÉçÇűn Boxing Federation, attended on Wednesday exhibition bouts and public workouts as a part of the Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and Terence “Bud” Crawford fight week.

Alvarez, the undisputed super-middleweight champion takes on the undefeated Crawford on Sept. 13 at the Allegiant Stadium under Riyadh Season 2025.

Alalshikh watched Canelo, Crawford, and the other fighters showcase their preparations at the public workouts for fans.

The night began with a series of exhibition undercard bouts.

The UK’s Mikey Talon recorded a unanimous decision win over America’s Christian Robles after six rounds. The heavyweight clash that followed ended in a draw between Cuba’s Yoandi Toirac and America’s Skylar Lacy.

Mexico’s Bryan Leon Salgado then extended his unbeaten record by defeating America’s Devonte McDonald via unanimous decision. In the fourth fight, Kazakhstan’s Bek Nurmaganbet stopped America’s Steven Sumpter, leaving his opponent bloodied from a barrage of punches.

The highlight of the night was șÚÁÏÉçÇű’s Abdullah Darkazanli’s emphatic second-round victory over American Cody Koboski, with fans celebrating a memorable triumph for the fighter.

Attention now turns to Thursday night’s press conference at T-Mobile Arena, where Canelo and Crawford will once again face-off before the world’s media.