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Women’s football gets NOC for SAFF Championship

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Karachi: The women’s national football team finally received a no objection certificate (NOC) on Saturday, to participate in the SAFF Women’s Championship. 

The team received the clearance from the Pakistan Sports Board (PSB) just three hours before their flight to Kathmandu, Nepal, where the event in scheduled to take place from October 17 to 30. 

The PSB had initially declined the NOC request, citing delays in the necessary documentation from the Normalisation Committee (NC) of the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF). 

The board had demanded the NC to submit the required paperwork to facilitate the NOC process. However, due to administrative issue, this wasn’t followed and technicalities left the team in an uncertain scenario just days before the championship.

In a letter from the PSB, the board stated: “Based on the undertaking given by Muhammad Shahid Niaz Khokhar, Member, Normalisation Committee of Pakistan Football Federation, the Pakistan Sports Board has no objection on participation of Pakistan Women National Football Team to participate in SAFF Football Championship to be held in Nepal from 17th to 30th October, 2024.”

The PSB sources claimed that the board’s decision to issue the NOC was driven by a commitment to support the athletes, despite the procedural shortcomings from the PFF. The sources noted that the PSB aimed to ensure the team’s participation in the SAFF Championship, recognising the importance of international competition for the development of women’s football in Pakistan.

The delay in NOC approval raised concerns about the team’s ability to compete, as the event features teams from across South Asia, providing a significant platform for the players to showcase their skills and represent Pakistan.

 

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Fry’s heroics save Guardians, forces G5 vs. Tigers

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DETROIT — Pinch hitter David Fry hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in the seventh inning, then bunted home an insurance run in the ninth to help the Cleveland Guardians force a decisive Game 5 against the Detroit Tigers in their American League Division Series with a 5-4 victory on Thursday night.

“David Fry is one of the best baseball players in this league,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said.

Cleveland ended a streak of 11 losses in postseason elimination games dating to Game 6 of the 1997 World Series after Emmanuel Clase recorded five outs for his third multi-inning save of the year.

“It’s win or go home,” Vogt said. “You want your best pitchers out there as long as possible.”

AL Cy Young Award favorite Tarik Skubal will start Game 5 for the Tigers on Saturday afternoon in Cleveland.

“It’s always comforting to have Tarik Skubal on the mound,” Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said.

The winner advances to the AL Championship Series against the New York Yankees starting Monday.

“We’re still one win away,” Detroit first baseman Spencer Torkelson said. “That’s the mindset. We don’t want it easy. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy.”

Fry said the Guardians’ resilience was no surprise.

“We’ve shown that all year long, that’s who these guys are,” he said. “We have a bunch of tough dudes. We get down 2-1 and we’re in the locker room like it’s just another day. We show up ready to play to try and get a win. And let’s go win Game 5.”

On the verge of reaching the ALCS for the first time since 2013, the Tigers overcame a 2-1 deficit when Zach McKinstry homered in the fifth and Wenceel Pérez hit a run-scoring single in the sixth.

Steven Kwan singled off Sean Guenther with two outs in the seventh.

Beau Brieske had pitched scoreless ball for 5⅓ innings over four postseason appearances before Fry, batting for Kyle Manzardo, drove a fastball off an advertising sign between the two bullpens in left for the second pinch-homer in Cleveland postseason history after Hank Majeski in Game 4 of the 1954 World Series.

That quieted the 44,923 fans who set a playoff attendance record for the second straight day at 25-year-old Comerica Park.

Fry became the fourth player in postseason history with a go-ahead, pinch-hit HR when facing elimination, joining Jake Bauers (2024), Trot Nixon (2003), and George Vukovich (1981).

“Such a great baseball game,” Vogt said.

Clase preserved a 4-3 lead in the eighth when he escaped a second-and-third jam by striking out Trey Sweeney on a 100.9 mph cutter as the batter’s helmet came off.

Brayan Rocchio and Kwan hit one-out singles in the ninth and Fry bunted back to reliever Will Vest. Rocchio slid home headfirst to beat Vest’s backhand flip, boosting the lead to 5-3.

That proved to be important.

Pinch hitter Justyn-Henry Malloy doubled leading off the bottom of the ninth, advanced on Parker Meadows’ groundout and scored on Jace Jung’s groundout.

Clase, who gave up Kerry Carpenter’s three-run homer in the ninth inning of the 3-0 loss in Game 2, struck out Matt Vierling, who couldn’t check his swing on a low and outside cutter.

“I was really excited to get to the mound, especially getting the trust back from the manager to get me in that role and that responsibility,” Clase said through an interpreter.

Lane Thomas ended the Guardians’ 20-inning scoreless streak with a two-out RBI single in the first off Reese Olson, who did not allow a run in the first inning of 22 regular-season starts

Sweeney hit a sacrifice fly in the second and Jose Ramirez put Cleveland ahead with a fifth-inning homere off Tyler Holton, ending an 0-for-10 skid.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Carpenter injured his left hamstring when he scored in the sixth and was pinch hit for in the seventh.

“It’s concerning, but I’m going to hold off any thoughts until the doctors give me an update and he gets imaging and all the things that we need to do prior to Saturday,” Hinch said.

UP NEXT

Left-hander Matthew Boyd may start Game 5 for the Guardians, whose last Game 5 was a loss to the Yankees in the 2022 ALCS. Vogt said the team will make that decision Friday.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Lynx rally from 18 down to stun Liberty in OT

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NEW YORK — Two-time Finals MVP Breanna Stewart missed a driving layup as the final buzzer sounded in overtime Thursday night, and the Barclays Center crowd of 17,732 was stunned.

In one of the most thrilling WNBA playoff games in recent memory, the No. 2-seeded Minnesota Lynx overcame the improbable, erasing a second-quarter 18-point deficit — and a 15-point deficit with 5:20 to go — to take Game 1 of the Finals 95-93 in overtime.

Instead of No. 1-seeded New York fully capitalizing on home-court advantage — the Liberty hadn’t lost in Brooklyn all postseason before Thursday — it was the Lynx who celebrated on the Barclays floor, with Courtney Williams flexing as she left the court and shouting, “Two more.”

The 18-point Lynx comeback was tied for the largest in Finals history, but before Thursday, WNBA teams were 0-183 across postseason play when trailing by 15 or more points in the final five minutes of regulation. When a Betnijah Laney-Hamilton 3-pointer with 5:20 remaining gave New York an 81-66 edge, ESPN Analytics projected the Liberty for a 99.2% win probability.

“I think it defines our team in terms of being able to get through difficult times,” Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said of the comeback. “That’s what we are talking about: You have to be mentally tough and resilient. You have to look inward and not blame other people, and give each other confidence. And we were that team. Thrilled that we could hang in there.”

Stewart, who is hoping to lead the Liberty to the franchise’s first championship, said they would take the loss “on the chin.”

“This is a series,” she said. “We wanted to really win, obviously, for home court. But the beauty is, we have another game on Sunday and we’ll be ready.”

Minnesota improved to 4-1 against New York this year and is two wins away from clinching its first championship since 2017 and fifth overall. And in snagging a road win in such dramatic fashion to open the championship series, the Lynx made their biggest statement yet that even if few expected them to be in the Finals before the season, they certainly belong there now.

The game was defined by big momentum swings. New York rolled early, jumping ahead 32-19 after the first quarter and leading by as many as 18 in the second, marking Minnesota’s largest deficit of the postseason. The Lynx looked more like themselves on both ends as the game went on, managing to close the gap to 44-36 at the half.

“We know it’s a long series,” Reeve said. “Nothing is won in the first quarter. It was not the first quarter that we were hoping for. What our narrative was in the timeouts was just we had to find our footing. Find our footing defensively, and we did the second quarter. We held them to 12 after giving up 32. We went into halftime in good shape.”

Lynx star Napheesa Collier said facing an early deficit was nothing new for the team: “That’s when we really lean on our defense.”

“That’s something we were talking about, getting three stops in a row, chipping at it a little bit at a time,” she added. “Not thinking about the point difference, but thinking about the possession that we need to get a stop and a score. That’s just what we were talking about at halftime.”

Minnesota pulled within two in the third before the Liberty answered to go up by 15 midway through the final frame. But the Lynx closed regulation with an 18-3 spurt, getting their first lead of the game with 5.5 seconds on the clock at 84-83, thanks to a four-point play by Williams after she sank a 3-pointer while being fouled by New York guard Sabrina Ionescu.

Stewart managed to draw a shooting foul with 0.8 seconds left, making the first free throw but missing the second, leading to an extra five minutes of play.

“I just thought we went away from our principles of play,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said of her team’s collapse. “I think we had a great first quarter, and then they lifted up the energy and they outhustled us.”

“We can’t play to ‘not lose’ and I think we started to play a little bit [like that],” Ionescu added. “We were up a lot, and we kind of were looking at the clock, and it seemed like we took our foot off the gas a little bit. And it ended biting us in the butt there late.”

The Lynx mostly controlled overtime. Collier hit what ended up being the winning shot — a turnaround fadeway jumper near the top of the key — with 8.8 seconds remaining, which was followed by Stewart’s missed layup.

“Listen, I want to be taking these shots,” Stewart said of her struggles down the stretch. “I feel like knowing my teammates and that everyone has confidence in me is important. It’s kind of like on to the next and still making sure I’m aggressive any time on the court. Obviously as a player, it’s very frustrating.”

The Lynx — whose dynastic run with four championships in the 2010s was led by WNBA legends Maya Moore, Seimone Augustus, Sylvia Fowles and Lindsay Whalen — saw three players score 20 points in a Finals game for the first time in franchise history.

Kayla McBride (22 points) kept her team in it throughout with big shots, including four 3-pointers. Collier got going with 21 points and was omnipresent defensively with three steals, six blocks and deflections that didn’t show up on the box score.

Williams was the star of the night for her four-point play. According to Elias Sports Bureau, it was the first time in a regular-season or playoff WNBA game that there was a four-point play in the final 10 seconds and the free throw gave that team the lead.

But she did so much more outside of that singular moment, scoring 15 points across the fourth quarter and overtime.

“That’s just a testament to how we believe in each other,” Williams said about taking on more of a scoring role Thursday. “We have so many great 3-point shooters, and the fact that these girls are out here trying to get me the ball, I mean, I could cry.

“This is amazing. I love it. I say that all the time, and I don’t say that for fun. These people I’m around, we believe in each other so much. It’s crazy, man. I’m happy to be here.”

The Liberty made 13 3-pointers and received a 24-point, 10-rebound double-double from Jonquel Jones. They boasted 19 more shot attempts than the Lynx (90-71) and came away with 20 offensive rebounds, securing a plus-12 edge on the glass.

But their good stretches weren’t enough to outweigh their mistakes and the Lynx’s furious rally.

“We’re disappointed,” Brondello said. “We have to be better. We’re a better team than what we showed today.”

New York, known for its five Finals appearances without a championship, fell to 0-6 in the opening game of the Finals, the longest losing streak in Game 1 of any postseason series in league history.

“I think they took us out of what we wanted to run,” Brondello added. “They were really aggressive. They were blowing up stuff. We couldn’t get clear passes. We tried to go downhill and they would stunt and get back, and we just got a little bit stagnant. I thought we were slow. We were up, so you’re trying to move the ball, but then we are slow in our speed, execution speed, and then it was making it easy for them.”

Added Reeve: “We held them below 40% [shooting], which is monumental. A lot of that was obviously late. We got big stops when we needed them. Repeatedly, whether ball is going out of bounds or 50/50 balls, referees, whatever happens, jump balls, fouls, all that stuff, we just had to be gritty at the end. We had to get stops to win, and that’s what I’m proud of.”

The teams reconvene Sunday in Brooklyn for Game 2 (3 p.m. ET, ABC) before the best-of-five series moves to Minneapolis for Game 3 and, if needed, Game 4.

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Djokovic beats Fritz to set up Shanghai final with Sinner

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Shanghai (Reuters): Novak Djokovic moved a step closer to his 100th ATP title on Saturday when he beat American seventh seed Taylor Fritz 6-4 7-6(6) in the Shanghai Masters semi-finals to set up a title decider against top-ranked Jannik Sinner.

Earlier on Saturday, Sinner secured the year-end world number one ranking by beating Czech 30th seed Tomas Machac 6-4 7-5 and becoming the first Italian to reach the final.

Djokovic, the 24-times Grand Slam champion, will play his fifth final in the tournament’s history, looking to claim his 100th ATP title as well as his fifth Shanghai Masters crown.

“I came here this year definitely with the vision or desire to get to the final and fight for 100 titles,” Djokovic said.

“I’ve got that chance against the best player in the world and let’s see what happens.”

Fourth seed Djokovic came into the match with a remarkable 9-0 head-to-head record against Fritz and immediately turned up the pressure in the opening game, forcing the American to successfully defend three break points.

The Serbian kept Fritz on the ropes with his powerful and precise groundstrokes, using his backhand to devastating effect as he racked up three more break points at 2-2.

Fritz was only able to fend off one before sending a backhand flying wide, with the break proving decisive as Djokovic wrapped up the opener with his first ace of the match.

U.S. Open finalist Fritz built up some momentum in the second set after holding serve in a tight game where Djokovic landed a series of spectacular passing shots, before earning his first two break point opportunities of the match at 4-3.

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Pakistan’s Asim Khan, Ashab Irfan reach final of Mile High 360 Squash Classic

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The combined imaged shows Pakistan’s Muhammad Asim Khan (R) and Muhammad Ashab Irfan (L). — Supplied

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Muhammad Asim Khan and Muhammad Ashab Irfan achieved their places in the final of the Mile High 360 Squash Classic after winning their semifinal matches earlier on Saturday.

Khan overcame fellow Pakistani Noor Zaman in a dramatic five-game contest, coming from two games down to win 6-11, 8-11, 14-12, 11-9, 11-2 in 96 minutes.

He staged a remarkable comeback after losing the first two games, saving match points in the third game to stay alive before dominating the final two sets.

In the other semifinal, Irfan cruised to a 3-0 victory over England’s third-seeded Tom Walsh, winning 11-8, 11-7, 11-3 in 46 minutes.

Irfan’s aggressive play gave Walsh little opportunity to respond as he swiftly advanced to the final.

The final will feature an all-Pakistani clash between Khan and Irfan.

Earlier, Khan faced a challenging quarter-final against second seed Cesar Salazar of Mexico. After taking a 2-1 lead, Salazar retired in the fourth game, handing Khan victory with a final scoreline of 12-10, 2-11, 11-7, and 11-0.

On the other side, as Khan defeated India’s Veer Chotrani, Irfan produced a strong showing against Dillon Huang of the United States.

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