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Hathurusinghe: Forget WTC, winning Tests for your country is motivation enough
However, Hathurusinghe and Trott believe players across the two sides are looking forward to some red-ball cricket.
"You are playing for your country, aren't you?" Hathurusinghe said ahead of the Test. "Forget about the Test Championship; that came four years ago. Before that, playing Tests for your country was the dream, when you are nine or 11 years old.
"If there's a problem [playing a Test for your country], then he is in the wrong place. Winning for your country is enough for myself and the players. It is the motivational factor."
Trott was of a similar opinion. "I think there's an ambition to play Test matches, being a Test nation. But I think it is also important that every Test match we go into, we try to win as well," he said.
The lack of Test matches has been an issue for both teams. Bangladesh have played only one Test this year, while Afghanistan's last was more than two years ago. The monsoon, the school exams in Bangladesh, and the lack of context because it's a one-off series, could all affect the viewership of this Test.
"All Test cricketers will tell you they like playing Test cricket. They will say it is their favourite format because of the challenge and the test it creates between the two sides."
Jonathan Trott
For Hathurusinghe, though, just representing the country in a Test match should be motivation enough for the players.
"Playing for the Tigers is an honour. I think we don't look beyond that," he remarked. "Overall, if you ask my opinion, Test cricket is the pinnacle of the game no matter how the other formats are going to be in the future. Your skills as a cricketer are tested in Test cricket, as a bowler, batter and fielder. Your mental skills and resilience is tested. There's no better format for any cricketer if you really want to be proud of representing your country."
"We haven't played for a while, Bangladesh have played quite a lot of Tests recently," Trott said. "I think it is always good to develop the players' mindset of being ambitious and playing Tests, along with all the other formats. Being competitive in red-ball cricket just as much in white-ball cricket."
"I think [Afghanistan players are] just as ambitious as Bangladesh were when they started playing Tests. You see Bangladesh now going on to beat other teams at home. I think it's important to have that ambition. I think it is what drives the game. All Test cricketers will tell you they like playing Test cricket. They will say it is their favourite format, because of the challenge and test it creates between the two sides. Also individual as well. It is something that I am looking forward to seeing tomorrow."
"It is very difficult to replace a guy like Rashid," Trott said. "He has vast experience in playing all around the world in different competitions and different variations of the game. He has played Test cricket. So yes, that's obviously missed.
"But I think him having time off, obviously there's a lot of cricket coming up. Asia Cup and World Cup is coming up. I certainly see this time off for him now to get his back sorted out, with a view to the future, in the competitions in a few months' time."
He underlined that Afghanistan have a confident unit that could give Bangladesh a run for their money. "I think any team playing at home will have a bit of an advantage. I think certainly a team that has played more Tests by a long stretch will also have a bit of advantage. It doesn't mean tomorrow they will play better than us. We prepared really well. I feel the players have trained exceptionally well. They are excited to play a Test in Bangladesh," he said.
"Whatever has happened in the past, whoever is favourite or the conditions, it is all about what happens tomorrow and who does it the best. It is my job to make sure everyone is ready for the Test starting tomorrow".
Meanwhile, the hosts are keen to develop a playing style rather than just focusing on the result of this game. "We discussed before the Ireland series that we want to play a certain brand of cricket regardless of the result," Hathurusinghe said. "Our aim is to get the result but we want to understand how our skillset lasts five days in different conditions, challenging ourselves in certain ways.
"We might do different things tactically if we have to earn points in the WTC. This game is giving us the opportunity to play on a sporting wicket. Regardless of playing the Championship or not, we will find the way best suited for us to play at home. We have to keep an eye on how we want to play away from home."
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84
Bills say Diggs not at camp; agent says he is
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -- Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott said Tuesday that Stefon Diggs is not at the team's mandatory minicamp, but the wide receiver's agent had a different story.
McDermott called Diggs' absence "very concerning" prior to Tuesday's minicamp practice. Diggs had missed voluntary workouts.
But Diggs' agent, Adisa Bakari, told ESPN's Adam Schefter that his client is in Buffalo and has been there since Monday morning. He said Diggs took his physical, met with McDermott and general manager Brandon Beane the past two days and "will be there for the entirety of the minicamp."
The team is also scheduled to practice Wednesday and Thursday.
"When players miss, in particular player of Stef's caliber, you'd love to have those players here," McDermott said. "So, overall been pleased with the attendance and the guys' effort."
The wide receiver signed a four-year, $96 million extension last offseason, and trading him would incur a significant dead cap hit, including $13.2 million this year. Diggs, 29, and the Bills had their sights set on him retiring with the Bills when the contract was signed in April 2022.
After the team's postseason loss to the Bengals in January, Diggs was noticeably upset with quarterback Josh Allen on the sideline and left before talking to the media. At times this offseason, Diggs' tweets have gotten attention for being cryptic about his time with the team.
Diggs has totaled 1,200-plus receiving yards in each of his three seasons with the Bills. He has totaled 29 touchdowns. Allen and Diggs have connected on 338 completions over the past three seasons, the most for any quarterback-receiver duo in the NFL since 2020.
Last week, Beane said that he anticipates "everyone will be here. I haven't been told otherwise." Pass rusher Von Miller also said this offseason that he expected Diggs to be at minicamp.
Behind Diggs, the wide receiver room contains Gabe Davis, Trent Sherfield and Deonte Harty. The Bills drafted tight end Dalton Kincaid in the first round this year.
Rangers hiring ex-Capitals head coach Laviolette
The New York Rangers are hiring Peter Laviolette as their next head coach, the team announced on Tuesday. He agreed to a three-year deal with New York, sources told ESPN.
Laviolette, 58, has coached 21 years in the NHL and was most recently with the Rangers division rival Washington Capitals last season. The Capitals did not renew Laviolette's contract after they missed the playoffs.
The Rangers will be the fifth team Laviolette will have coached in the division; he also had stints with the Carolina Hurricanes, New York Islanders and Philadelphia Flyers.
With 752 career victories, Laviolette is the eighth-winningest coach in NHL history and has the most wins of any American-born coach. He coached Carolina to the Stanley Cup in 2006 and has taken two other teams to the final: Philadelphia in 2010 and Nashville in 2017.
"Peter's impressive resume, which includes winning a Stanley Cup and advancing to the final with three different teams, has made him one of the most respected coaches in the league," owner James Dolan said in a statement. "As we move forward in our goal to consistently contend for the Stanley Cup, I am confident that Peter is the right head coach to lead our team."
The Rangers parted with Gerard Gallant after a first-round loss to the New Jersey Devils in May. Gallant had led the Rangers to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2022. Gallant was under contract through the 2024-25 season.
The Rangers cast a broad net in their search, but honed in on a veteran coach because the organization believes it can win a championship as soon as next year, sources told ESPN.
Among the up-and-coming coaches the Rangers talked to were Spencer Carbery (who was hired by the Capitals) and Jay Leach, an assistant coach with the Seattle Kraken.
The Rangers let go of most of their assistant coaching staff -- keeping on longtime goalie coach Benoit Allaire -- so Laviolette and GM Chris Drury will now fill those positions, sources said.
How the Nuggets cultivated the NBA's most dynamic duo
DENVER -- The summer of 2010 in the NBA is generally remembered as the year LeBron James left the small-market Cleveland Cavaliers to form a superteam in Miami with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. So much of the next decade in NBA history traces back to that event, whether it be small-market teams trying to protect themselves from losing a star of James' magnitude in free agency, or other teams trying to construct a superteam of their own.
For the Denver Nuggets, though, the summer of 2010 was the year their own star, Carmelo Anthony, told them he didn't intend to re-sign when his contract was up the following summer and wanted to be traded to the New York Knicks. It was a request more than a demand, and it was beneficial to both parties: The Nuggets wouldn't be left with the kind of hole James had left in Cleveland, and Anthony could sign a five-year maximum extension with the Knicks.
Nuggets president Josh Kroenke remembers that meeting like it was yesterday.
"I was 30 years old, and my dad [Stan Kroenke] had just put me in charge of the team," Kroenke told ESPN from inside the Nuggets' locker room Monday night after Denver closed out its first NBA championship with a 94-89 win against the Miami Heat in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
"And my first meeting was to fly to Baltimore where Melo asks to be traded."
The lessons he learned there, hard as they were, would serve as the foundation for this years-in-the-making championship run.
"I learned we can't have that sort of instability if we're going to try to grow," Kroenke said. "We needed to build through the draft. We needed guys that wanted to be here and guys that played for each other, and over time we eventually found those guys and built around them."
It sounds so simple now in the glow of a championship locker room. Find two stars in the draft, develop them, add complementary players, watch the team grow, hope it results in a championship.
Every new coach or general manager articulates a vision like this when they get hired. Very few actually have the patience and persistence to see it through like the Nuggets did this season.
Even fewer know how to identify the stars to build around, like Denver did with Finals MVP Nikola Jokic and point guard Jamal Murray, and then stick with them when it takes a while to see results, or there are setbacks like Murray's knee injury, which kept him out of the previous two playoff runs.
"If you want to be a success, you need a couple years," Jokic said after Monday's title game. "You need to be bad, then you need to be good, then when you're good you need to fail, and then when you fail, you're going to figure it out.
"There is a process -- there are steps that you need to fill -- and there are no shortcuts. It's a journey, and I'm glad that I'm part of the journey."
THERE'S A CERTAIN irony that the end of the Nuggets' championship journey came by beating Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat, because so many people in the organization point to the final game of the 2018 season when Butler and the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the Nuggets as the beginning of this run.
Or rather, the moment Denver knew that Jokic and Murray were the stars they wanted to build around.
"I saw a flash of something that I thought could be special," Kroenke said. "None of those guys had been in a playoff-type atmosphere before, but they weren't scared of the moment; they embraced it. They read the defense correctly almost every time and adjusted to everything they encountered. They just didn't quite have the experience necessary to get it done."
That summer James was again a free agent and the Nuggets tried to earn a pitch meeting with him. The next year, they explored trading for Anthony Davis when he requested a trade from the New Orleans Pelicans, sources said.
But outside of some light tire-kicking on two players who'd soon be named to the NBA's 75th Anniversary team, the Nuggets have remained steadfastly committed to a team built around Jokic and Murray since the end of the 2017-18 season.
General manager Calvin Booth remembers a different moment: a breakfast with Jokic during the 2020 NBA bubble that was unremarkable in every way, except for the way Jokic carried himself.
"We were down 3-1 to the Jazz in the first round," Booth told ESPN. "And there's just so much pressure being down in the first round like that after we'd gone to a Game 7 in the second round [against the Portland Trail Blazers] the year before.
"So here we are, like basically on the verge of disaster, and he was just, like, serene. The energy he was emitting was like, 'We're OK. We're fine.'"
Jokic had had a dreadful game a few nights earlier. Had Denver lost to the Jazz, he would've faced the brunt of the criticism. But he showed no signs of panic.
"I don't even remember what we ate," Booth said. "What I remember was how calm he was."
Denver came back to beat the Jazz in seven games behind brilliant performances from Jokic and Murray. Then they came back from a 3-1 deficit to the Los Angeles Clippers in the next round to advance to the conference finals against the eventual champion, Los Angeles Lakers.
Murray was sublime during the bubble, averaging 26.5 points, including two 50-point games. He also found his voice as a leader.
"There was a big faction of players that wanted to leave the Bubble," Booth said. "And [Murray] was like, 'We're not leaving. There's no f---ing way we're leaving.' And at that point, everybody kind of turned around.
"There'd been some momentum building in our group to leave, and he basically squashed it and said, 'We're not doing that. We're playing too well. I'm playing too well. We're not leaving here.'"
THE TWO-MAN GAME between Jokic and Murray has become one of the most effective duos in NBA Finals history. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Jokic and Murray's 56.1 points per game ranks behind only Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant (2001) and Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant (2017).
But there's a delicate alchemy to building on-court relationships like this, let alone a team around them. The skill sets have to be complementary, the egos have to enhance each other, rather than compete. The personalities have to be different enough to fill all the types of needs a championship team has. And then, of course, they must come up big in the biggest of moments.
Over the course of the Nuggets' playoff run, the American public has been both charmed and baffled by Jokic's personality. He does not love the spotlight or play into any of the traditional narratives written for star players who finally complete their hero's journey by winning a championship.
He is simply a brilliant basketball player who sees all the attention that comes along with superstardom and the NBA Finals stage as "a little too much."
Assistant coach Ognjen Stojakovic thinks something is being lost in translation, however. Yes, Jokic was delightfully self-deprecating in bemoaning how many congratulatory text messages he'll need to respond to, or that he'll have to stay in town until Thursday for the Nuggets' championship parade. And yes, he laughed at the viral video of himself lethargically shaking a champagne bottle in the locker room.
But there's something else. Something Stojakovic says is hard for someone who didn't grow up in Serbia to understand.
"Ili si pukovnik ili pokojnik."
You're either a colonel or you're dead.
"This is the line we all grew up with," Stojakovic explains, while writing the phrase down in his native tongue so it can be translated later. "All of us from the ex-Yugoslavia know this saying from the war. They say, either you're a colonel or you're dead. There's no in between."
Jokic was born in 1995, in the middle of the 10-year conflict between Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina that killed at least 140,000 people. Earlier in his career he spoke about hiding in bomb shelters as a child and living without electricity. But he is rarely asked about that time anymore.
Monday night, a photo of Jokic in a Denver Nuggets sweatshirt shirt when he was about 5 years old went viral on social media after it was shared on Instagram by Serbian agent Misko Raznatovic.
"Back in 2000, when this photo was taken, he is wearing a Nuggets sweatshirt -- not because he loved basketball or even knew about the Nuggets -- but because he got it as a present. Chances of a kid from a small Serbian town having a sweatshirt from a lesser-known American team back in 2000 were minimal," Raznatovic wrote. "But chances of that same kid growing up to play basketball and achieve his career high, win two MVP titles and sign a historic agreement with the same club whose sweatshirt he wore at age 5, were -- zero."
It was a wonderful post about destiny and the improbable story that's led Jokic to the pinnacle of the NBA. It is the kind of story we are used to with superstars who complete their journey by winning a championship.
But it is not the whole story.
"Imagine you are living in Serbia now and you want [Jokic] to win the title," Stojakovic said. "Tonight you'll be very happy. But then you have to figure out what's going to happen tomorrow. It's just a different world, a different perspective."
This is why Jokic seemed so serene to Booth back at that breakfast in 2020. Or why he is eager to get home to Serbia and spend his summer with his family and horses, instead of doing the late-night talk show circuit or capitalizing on his fame with endorsement deals.
There is a balance to him off the court, even as he jokes about being unbalanced when he does some of his best work on the court.
"Basketball is not the main thing in my life, and probably never [will] be," Jokic said before the Finals. "And to be honest, I like it, because I have something more at home, [something] that is more important than basketball. I think that's [what I've] learned. I already knew that, but this kind of proved that I was correct."
Jamal Murray gets emotional talking about his journey to winning his first NBA championship as Nuggets fans shower him with cheers.
MURRAY IS THE opposite. Basketball has always been his whole life. He was trained by his father, Roger, for this moment and this stage starting at the age of 3. Literally trained in the art of kung fu and the lessons of Bruce Lee, the stories of Murray building his mental toughness by training in the Canadian winters and balancing cups of hot tea on his legs while doing wall squats are legendary.
He is at his best when things are at their worst on the court, or when he's battling through an injury.
Game 3 was perhaps his finest of the series. Murray finished with 34 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists as the Nuggets took control of the game and the series. He also suffered a nasty floor burn at some point during the game, which needed to be taped up the rest of the series.
"The thing about Jamal," Booth says. "When he feels pain, that makes him present. And when he's fully present, he's incredible."
Rowan Barrett, the director of Team Canada, sensed this from Murray the first time he watched him as a 15 year old at the Falstaff Community Center in Toronto.
"If there's one thing you always notice with him, it's that the most difficult moments of the game, he seems to always be in the middle of it, making some sort of play," Barrett told ESPN. "After seeing that for a while, you realize, 'OK, this is not by chance. It's not coincidence.'"
Over the next few years, Barrett came to understand how Murray had grown so mentally tough.
He practiced. He practiced quieting his mind when he felt physical pain. And he practiced self-discipline, even when everyone around him was urging him to rest.
"So we're getting ready for the U17 world championships," Barrett said. "And it's one of these things where you're going to play eight games in nine days or eight games in 10 days."
Team Canada was running two-a-day practices to prepare for the grind. Murray was doing two extra sessions before and after those practices. The coaching staff was concerned he was overdoing it and worried he'd get hurt.
Murray wouldn't stop. So the staff took everyone's shoes after the second practice session with the idea of saving Murray from himself.
It didn't work.
"After everyone's leaving the gym, we started hearing the ball bouncing," Barrett said. "And it's Jamal on the far end, shooting in bare feet."
ALL OF THAT changed on the night of April 13, 2021, when Murray crumpled to the ground with a torn ACL in his left knee. This was a pain he could not conquer with his mind.
And it shook him in ways he was still processing Monday night.
"It was really hard to put into words," Murray said, choking back tears. "Everything was hitting. Everything was hitting at once, from the journey, to the celebration with the guys, to enjoying the moment, to looking back on the rehab, to looking back at myself as a kid.
"To see it full circle, going from my rehab, not being able to walk, go up the stairs, not just for a month or two. It was for a long time. A lot of different things going through my head."
Murray was so shaken by his injury, he asked Malone if he was going to be traded. He couldn't process how the team could stick with him for as long as he knew the rehabilitation process would take. He also couldn't process how his mind couldn't immediately conquer the physical reality of what had happened to him.
"I have to say that I had my doubts," Murray said. "It's just natural. Somebody asked me about butterflies. That's what makes you alive. That's what makes you care. When you doubt yourself, that's what makes you try to find a way to turn it around. In whatever sport, in whatever injury, in whatever career you're in, when you go through adversity, it's how you envision and visualize yourself at the end of it."
If anything, rebuilding his mental strength and toughness after his invincibility was shattered was the hardest part of Murray's journey back. But the fact that the Nuggets waited for him -- and Michael Porter Jr. (back surgery) through two postseasons -- is what made all of them so strong this year.
"You know, it's just a stick-to-it-iveness, staying with it, not feeling sorry for yourself," coach Michael Malone said.
It is a mantra Malone has lived by through his long coaching career. It took him roughly two decades to get his first head-coaching job, and he often wondered if that day would ever come. When he finally did get that first job, with the Sacramento Kings in 2013, he didn't get much of a chance. The Kings fired him after 106 games and a 39-67 record.
That time was difficult for Malone. His father, Brendan Malone, had only gotten one chance to be a head coach, and it was easy to wonder if that would be his fate as well.
"One of my favorite poems is 'Self-pity' by D.H. Lawrence," Malone said. "I hate people that feel sorry for themselves."
He was talking about Porter's performance in Game 5, when he turned in his best game of the Finals (16 points and 13 rebounds) after losing his shooting touch during the first four games (a combined 32 points). But he was also talking about all of it, the whole journey he and his team had been on.
It was an incredible thing to reference a poem like this on the night he and the Nuggets won an NBA title. But it was also fitting.
I never saw a wild thing
Sorry for itself
A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough
Without ever having felt sorry for itself.
Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray lead the Nuggets to the franchise's first NBA Finals championship.
STAN KROENKE HAS owned professional sports teams for 23 years, but has only recently started winning championships. His Colorado Avalanche (NHL) have been the most successful of his three domestic pro teams, having won two Stanley Cups in the 23 years he's owned the franchise.
In 2022, his Los Angeles Rams won the Super Bowl, and now his Denver Nuggets have won an NBA title.
All of these championships were won in different fashions, Kroenke told ESPN. There's no secret formula.
The Rams made the Super Bowl in 2019 but knew they needed to add more star players to the mix to actually win one. So Kroenke authorized general manager Les Snead to trade multiple draft picks to acquire stars like safety Jalen Ramsey, linebacker Von Miller and quarterback Matthew Stafford.
It worked, and Snead uttered the infamous "F--- them picks" line on the championship dais.
"I think with 'F--- them picks,' Les and I both knew you can only say that for a while and then you don't do it anymore," Kroenke said. "We kinda, we pushed the chips in and we were able to get the championship.
"But it's hard to get these things. I've known great owners that have been around leagues for a long time and they've never even won one. All you can do is try to build these foundations and let 'em bloom, get great people involved and hopefully it comes out."
These Nuggets were built very differently than Snead built the Rams. When Booth took over for Tim Connelly last summer, he put together a 34-page packet on the last 15 NBA champions, looking for trends in average size, age, experience and a whole host of other measurements. It's what guided him in assembling the eight new players who complemented the core group so well during this championship run.
But the story of these Nuggets always comes back to Jokic and Murray. Of picking the right two stars to build around and being patient enough to let them prove you right.
For those who go as far back as Josh Kroenke, that patience is the most fulfilling part.
That meeting when Anthony requested a trade was six years before Murray was drafted. But the roots of this title run go all the way back.
The last piece of the trade the Nuggets made with the Knicks when they finally traded Anthony in 2011 was the right to swap first-round picks in 2016. Denver finished (33-49) that season and would have had the No. 9 overall pick of the first round. The Knicks finished (32-50) and held the seventh pick in the draft.
That pick was Jamal Murray.
The Minnesota Twins reinstated first baseman/outfielder Joey Gallo from the injured list on Tuesday.
Gallo missed the past nine games with a left hamstring strain. He returns after a three-game rehab assignment.
The Twins made room for Gallo by optioning OF Kyle Garlick to Triple-A St. Paul.
Gallo, 29, is batting .188 with 11 home runs and 23 RBIs in 46 games this season, his first with the Twins.
Garlick, 31, went 1-for-11 with five strikeouts in six games in place of Gallo.
Nottingham Open 2023 results: Katie Boulter, Harriet Dart and Jodie Burrage win first-round matches
Katie Boulter won her first match since becoming British number one to move into round two of the Nottingham Open.
Harriet Dart and Jodie Burrage were also first-round winners in the build-up tournament before July's Wimbledon.
Dart beat Canada's Rebecca Marino 6-4 6-2 and Burrage gained a hard-fought 7-6 (7-5) 3-6 7-6 (7-4) win over Tereza Martincova of the Czech Republic.
Boulter is 126th in the world rankings, with 128th-ranked Raducanu currently out of action after hand and ankle surgery.
Burrage, Swan and Dart, 131st, 134th and 143rd in the rankings respectively, could overtake Boulter next week.
Heather Watson, who won her first-round match on Monday, is 195th and a former British number one and could also regain top spot, but would need to reach the final to have a chance to do so.
Boulter became the 23rd woman to become British number one since the rankings began in 1975 and needs to reach at least the quarter-finals in Nottingham to have a chance to stay there.
In a post on Instagram, she wrote: "Been mulling over whether I was going to post this today.
"It's not my highest ranking nor my best career moment however someone reminded me today that this little girl would be proud if I told her she would be British number 1 one day.
"Whether it be for one minute, one day or one year, it's not my biggest goal but shows I'm heading in the right direction. Now I've got work to do as my main goals are pending."
Against world number 420 Appleton, Boulter dropped only four games but in the next round she could play French Open semi-finalist Beatriz Haddad Maia of Brazil - if she defeats Ukrainian lucky loser Daria Snigur.
Murray in action after first title in Britain since 2016
Three-time Grand Slam champion Andy Murray will also be in action in the men's Challenger event, fresh from his win at Surbiton last week.
Murray claimed his first title on home soil since Wimbledon in 2016 and is looking to build on that before the grass-court major starts on 3 July.
The 36-year-old took part in a light practice on Monday with coach Ivan Lendl by his side.
Murray plays Belgian qualifier Joris de Loore on Tuesday and you will be able to watch live coverage of that match on BBC Red Button, the BBC Sport website and app.
Britain's Liam Broady, Arthur Fery, Jan Choinski, Ryan Peniston and George Loffhagen are all scheduled to play on Tuesday as well.
Play at the Nottingham Tennis Centre began on time at 11:00 BST, despite a series of knife and van attacks in the city in the early hours of Tuesday in which three people were killed.
Club file: Nick Clifford working wonders at Wigginton for 40 years
Nick Clifford lives 200 yards from the front door of his beloved Wigginton Squash Club and has given it 40 years of devoted service. This year, that dedication received a royal seal of approval. Nick leads a team of loyal volunteers who keep the York club thriving and bucking the downward trends of squash participation. […]
Lloyd Williams: Ealing signing of Cardiff's Wales scrum-half 'hugely exciting'
English Championship side Ealing have confirmed their signing of Wales scrum-half Lloyd Williams from Cardiff.
The 33-year-old ends a 13-year career at Cardiff Arms Park which has seen him make 260 appearances - a record for the club in the professional era.
He has also won 32 caps for Wales and was part of his country's squads at the 2011 and 2015 World Cups.
"The signing of Lloyd is hugely exciting for all of us at the club," said Ealing director of rugby Ben Ward.
"I've admired him and his style of play for some time, and I'm confident he should slot in well with how we want to play," he told the club website.
Williams follows fellow Wales player Jonah Holmes in swapping the United Rugby Championship for life in west London after the winger left Dragons for Ealing last summer.
Ealing finished second behind Jersey Reds in the Championship this season before beating the islanders to win the Championship Cup.
"After such a long time at one club, when the opportunity arose to test myself in a different league and a new environment, it was one I was keen to take," Williams told Ealing's website.
Aphiwe Dyantyi signs for South Africa side Sharks after four-year doping ban
Aphiwe Dyantyi says he is "excited to be back" after signing for South African team Sharks shortly before the end of a four-year doping ban.
The 2018 World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year tested positive for multiple anabolic steroids in 2019.
Dyantyi, who scored six tries in 13 Tests for South Africa in 2018, denied any wrongdoing and said the banned substances were ingested by accident.
The winger, 28, will be eligible to play for the Sharks from August.
Dyantyi looked certain to be included in the Springboks' 2019 World Cup squad before being banned.
"More than anything, I'm just excited to be back. I just trust that everyone is as excited as I am to see what I can do. I only promise to give my best for the jersey," said Dyantyi.
Paul Rendall: Former England and Wasps prop dies aged 69
Former England prop Paul Rendall has died at the age of 69 after being diagnosed with motor neurone disease last year.
He won 28 caps for his country and played at the 1987 and 1991 Rugby World Cups.
Nicknamed 'The Judge', Rendall - who played his club rugby for Wasps - made his Test debut aged 30.
England Rugby tweeted that Rendall was a "much-loved team-mate and fan favourite".
Playing in a front row alongside Brian Moore and Jeff Probyn, Rendall made his first cap against Wales in 1984. He was later squeezed out of the team by Jason Leonard.
Rendall made his final appearance in the 1991 World Cup pool match against Italy, where he sustained an Achilles injury.
After his playing career, Rendall worked at Bracknell RFC between 1991 and 2001, first as their head coach and then the director of rugby.
During his time, Rendall earned five promotions in six seasons as Bracknell reached the second-tier English Championship.
Will Carling, a former England captain, tweeted that he was "genuine, kind, loyal and tough".
"The man quietly taught a young captain the importance of enjoying life! He was a master. He was also genuine, kind, loyal and tough. A lovely man," tweeted Carling.
Former England prop Rochelle Clark, a 2014 World Cup winner, tweeted: "Sad to hear of England Rugby legend Paul Rendall passing. Such a character on and off the field. The 'Judge' will be missed. RIP to one of the greats."