Sports
The Hundred: Welsh Fire name Mike Hussey head coach of men’s team | Cricket News

Australian Mike Hussey has been confirmed as the new head coach of the Welsh Fire men’s team ahead of the third year of The Hundred.
Hussey played over 300 times for his country, and has extensive experience of white-ball leagues around the globe as both a player and a coach. Most recently, Hussey was part of the England men’s team’s coaching staff in their successful ICC T20 World Cup campaign.
He arrives into the role ahead of Deadline Day, and The Hundred Draft, in which his team will have first pick.
Hussey, known within the game as ‘Mr Cricket’, said: “I’m really looking forward to getting started at Welsh Fire and being part of The Hundred.
“From a distance it looks a fantastic competition to be involved in, one that’s attracting big crowds and getting lots of kids interested in the game.
“For my part, hopefully I can get help get things moving in the right direction on the pitch in Cardiff and give all of those fans who’ve been coming to watch something to really get excited about.”
Mark Wallace, cricket manager of Welsh Fire, said: “We’re thrilled to be able to appoint someone of the calibre of Mike. There are few better people around the world with the relevant expertise and knowledge of white-ball cricket to help take us forward.
“It’s really exciting to have him on board, and we look forward to working together to hopefully bring some on-field success to the team and our fans.”
Sports
Chelsea financial results 2021/22: Club posts £121m losses after Government sanctions on former owner Roman Abramovich | Football News

Chelsea say Government sanctions imposed on former owner Roman Abramovich were a factor in the club posting losses of £121m in 2021/22.
Russian billionaire Abramovich was sanctioned by the UK Government in March 2022 as it sought to freeze the assets of individuals it believed had connections to the country’s president, Vladimir Putin, following the invasion of Ukraine.
Chelsea were placed under a special licence, which restricted their ability to sell tickets, accept event bookings and even sign contracts with players.
The restrictions remained in place until May 30 last year when a new consortium led by American businessman Todd Boehly completed its takeover of the club.
The Blues released their annual accounts on Monday and said the impact of the sanctions would be felt “in the following years”.
Chelsea said turnover had increased to £481.3m from £434.9m the previous year despite the sanctions. Commercial revenue increased to £177.1m.
The losses were attributed to increased operating expenses including matchday and non-matchday costs.
The financial results do not capture Chelsea’s summer 2022 or January 2023 acquisitions, when they spent around £600m on new players.
The 2021/22 results show £118m was invested in the playing squad but a profit of £123m was made on player sales including Tammy Abraham, Marc Guehi, Fikayo Tomori and Kurt Zouma.
The club said they continued to comply with UEFA and Premier League financial regulations despite the losses and the impact of the Government sanctions.
“Despite the loss in the year and the operating challenges due to the sanctions, the club continues to comply with UEFA and Premier League financial regulations,” said the club in the announcement of the results on their website.
Chelsea’s remaining fixtures
April 1: Aston Villa (H) – Premier League, kick-off 5.30pm, live on Sky Sports
April 4: Liverpool (H) – Premier League, kick-off 8pm, live on Sky Sports
April 8: Wolves (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm
April 12: Real Madrid (A), Champions League quarter-final, kick-off 8pm
April 15: Brighton (H) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm
April 18: Real Madrid (H), Champions League quarter-final, kick-off 8pm
April 26: Brentford (H) – Premier League, kick-off 7.45pm
April 29: Arsenal (A) – Premier League, kick-off 5.30pm, live on Sky Sports
May 6: Bournemouth (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 13: Nottingham Forest (H) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 20: Manchester City (A) – Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 28: Newcastle (H) – Premier League, kick-off 4.30pm
TBA: Man Utd (A) – Premier League
Sports
Anthony Joshua should retire if he loses to Jermaine Franklin on Saturday, says Johnny Nelson | Boxing News

If Anthony Joshua loses to Jermaine Franklin on Saturday he should retire from boxing, says former WBO cruiserweight champion and expert pundit Johnny Nelson.
I’d expect Anthony Joshua to get it done. But Jermaine Franklin is 29 years old, (has had) 22 fights, won 21, stopped 14 of his opponents and in his last fight against Dillian Whyte people say he should have won. But that’s questionable.
My big question is this: Anthony Joshua, after losing two fights on the bounce, has had to relook at his confidence to think ‘who am I, do I belong here, do I want this?’
For Anthony Joshua that’s everything.
Because he’s had to go through a bit of turmoil, mentally, emotionally and come to terms with the fact that he’s no longer the best fighter, officially, in the world. He’s got to get in the queue again like everybody else.
When fighters are in a hard, tough fight, that will tell you how hungry they are. How much do they really want it? For Anthony Joshua when it comes to boxing Jermaine Franklin, he needs to be dominant, he needs to be smart, he needs to be sharp, he needs to work on that self-confidence.
Because he has the ability. Otherwise he wouldn’t have been a world champion twice. So he has the ability.
If Anthony Joshua loses, he jacks it in. If he doesn’t jack it, he should jack it. Because it’s a hard mountain to climb. Especially when you’ve had the success and the heights that he’s had. So he can’t afford to lose. That’s a must. Then from that, it’s confidence building.
We’ll see if he really thinks ‘you know what, I can eventually become world champion again, I’ll fix what I got wrong’. Because he’s only been boxing 10, 11 years as a professional fighter. So if he thinks he can fix what he think he got wrong in regards to why he’s not world champion, then there’s a reason to stick around still chase the guys that are there, one of them has beaten him twice.
Of course there’s that lucrative fight that everyone’s talking about, which is him and Tyson Fury, which personally, I fell in love with the idea at first but it was teased so much and it never happened.
So I don’t even don’t want to talk about it.
Danger for Okolie
With Lawrence Okolie what we saw clearly in his win over David Light on Saturday was his vulnerabilities are exposed. But as a world champion he has so much more to still work on, to still develop on. If he can stay world champion and develop alongside trainer SugarHill Steward then he’ll be alright.
But for the time being it’s going to be dangerous for him. He’s got the power. He’s got the unorthodox style, but his style needs refining.
It’ll take about two or three fights down the line. They’ll try to create some distance for Lawrence. Because what Lawrence does, he’ll throw a shot and he’ll grab, he’ll hold. I know it sounds silly as he’s a world champion but it’s a bit of a novice move to make.
It’s a bit of a vulnerable move to make because you can walk into shots. He smothers his opponent where actually he could make a harder job a little easier if he used his height, used his reach, used that power.
Because this young man spars with heavyweights, he’s comfortable. He’s talking about moving up to heavyweight. He’s got the power there, it’s just the confidence and self-belief to believe in what he’s actually got.
You’ve got the punch power, you’ve got the ability, but you’ve just not got the belief to go with the ability.
I’m honest with you I thought Lawrence Okolie was probably top dog until Saturday night. Then I realised actually Richard Riakporhe could beat this guy and beat him well.
Riakporhe is a dangerous, compact fighter, whose confidence is now matching his ability. So these guys are developing but at world class level.
Here in the UK we’re doing so, so well. We’ve got Chris Billam-Smith as well. We’ve got fighters that are at the world class level but they’re not the finished article. So we’ve got a good time to look forward to in the regards to the UK division.
Sports
Inside Borussia Dortmund’s academy: From the footbonaut to virtual reality – the innovation game explained | Football News

The name of Borussia Dortmund conjures images of the awesome Yellow Wall that is the Sudtribune at Signal Iduna Park, home to Europe’s biggest attendances. In the industrial heartlands of Germany’s Ruhr, for many, Dortmund epitomises proper football.
Every academy player at BVB is reminded of these roots, taking a trip to the Yellow Wall upon signing. Traditions matter. But this is a place of innovation too, with a cutting-edge sports science department building the footballers of the future. Just whisper it.
“We are quite a traditional club,” Paul Schaffran tells Sky Sports. “It is a very down-to-earth area. On the one side, the identity of the club is based on hard work and humility. On the other side, we are very technology focused.”
Schaffran is the head of sports science at Dortmund’s academy, based across the city from the stadium. A youthful 35, a tour of the grounds with the cap-wearing Schaffran is not quick – he stops to shake hands with every colleague, as is the custom at the club.
He is proud to be part of what happens here.
“We are a benchmark over the last decade when it comes to accompanying players on the final steps of their development into professional footballers. Players like Jadon Sancho, Gio Reyna, Christian Pulisic, Youssoufa Moukoko, Ansgar Knauff and many more.
“That has been the strength of Borussia Dortmund for years.”
Under Lars Ricken, a scorer for Dortmund in the 1997 Champions League final and now head of the academy, this has become a finishing school for Europe’s best talents. But what they really want to find is the next Mario Gotze, who joined at nine and went all the way.
“That is what Lars Ricken tells us every day must be our goal. Not only to bring in players at from other clubs but also to develop our own players from the youngest age groups. But it is hard to say a nine-year-old can be a Champions League player.”
They are willing to innovate to make it happen. Perhaps you have heard of the footbonaut, a contraption housed inside its own building at the training ground for almost a decade now. “Jurgen Klopp was the guy who started that,” says Schaffran. It has been a big success.
What might have been seen as a gimmick when introduced remains integral to the academy coaching at Dortmund, booked out daily between 4pm and 8pm as players build up their hours in contact with the ball. It is fired at them in at all angles. Reactions are tested.
“The emphasis is on perception, decision-making, working on the weaker foot. What pace is the ball coming at? What spin is on the ball? What angle is it coming at? It is about visual scanning and a clean first contact, and then it is the space that you can create.
“Let us say that you play five minutes in the footbonaut. That is 40 to 50 balls that you play. If they train three times per week for half an hour in the footbonaut, they will have more touches in there than they will have in the whole week in game situations.”
As a player is put through his paces in the footbonaut, the attention is drawn to his boots. “There is a sensor on the foot, tracking the technical movement,” Schaffran explains. “It tells you how many touches they have with each foot and the kicking speed.”
The collection of this data has allowed Dortmund to develop benchmarks for their academy players. Not only can these be used to compare individuals but a series of tests help them to identify which areas each young player needs to focus on improving.
“We start our cognitive training at the age of eleven, looking at eye movements, perception, visual scanning. We have been focusing on this cognitive criteria for six or seven years now, so we have data on all of our players that we collect two or three times a year.
“Twice a year, for example, our players will go in the footbonaut and play 32 balls in a standardised setting. Sixteen on the right side and 16 on the left side. Sixteen in front and 16 behind. In the end, you can see how fast and precise they act in each area.
“We have an average score and we often see a big difference in perception between the right side and the left side. If their scanning is not good on one side then their reactions will not be as good on that side. Most of the time it is not about the technique.”
There is a growing appreciation of the importance of scanning in football, a realisation that a player’s awareness of what is around them can be the difference between good and great. It has led to Dortmund implementing a virtual reality tool to help train that.
The Be Your Best software is similar to the FIFA games but through the use of a VR headset is totally immersive, testing players’ scanning ability in various situations. Since September, the first cohort of Dortmund academy players are using them to accelerate their learning.
“It is not just the number of scans but the timing of them,” Schaffran explains. “For me, the timing of them is much more important than the number. If you let the players train on Be Your Best, they can get a feel for when they are able to do their scan.
“When the ball is free, when there has been a long pass from player A to player B, that is the right time for me to do a scan. The next question is where you are scanning. Is it the left shoulder or the right shoulder? Where is the blind spot?
“I talked with our U19 coach. He says that if a midfielder only looks over their left shoulder for years and years then it is pretty easy to stop them because they will never turn to their right because they are unable to get any information on that side.
“We need them to be flexible. A full-back might be playing in the centre in a few years, or the other way around, so it is important that they have no blind spot in terms of their scanning. It is important they can see what is happening on all sides of the pitch.”
Many would argue that this is no substitute for playing – and Schaffran agrees. “Time on the training ground is limited because they have school. The U12s are at our training ground for about 15 hours a week. They should be on the pitch for as long as possible.”
But that is one of the advantages of virtual reality. It increases the total hours of training. “If you have a solution like Be Your Best I can say that once per week you come early and you can also train for five hours per week at home. You can do those extra hours.”
And sometimes show just works better than tell. “Another advantage is that they can see what is important in visual scanning. I can tell them it is important but if you go into a VR environment and do a loop 100 or 200 times then that has a big improvement.”
Dortmund have noticed the results already. The footbonaut prepares players for the pitch. Now, Be Your Best prepares them for the footbonaut. “That adaptation is fast. After 10 to 15 sessions with Be Your Best there will be an improvement in the footbonaut.”
Importantly, the academy players enjoy it. “They absolutely love it. They would do more if they could.” There are plans to make that happen, expanding the use beyond those housed on-site at the club’s boarding house to include all 240 players in the academy.
Just do not expect Dortmund to shout about it unless asked. “Look on our website,” adds Schaffran. “There is no mention of virtual reality, bio-banding training, ultrasound bone measurements or other innovations.”
An old-school football club at the vanguard of new ideas.
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