The enduring appeal of a well-established amateur tournament

The 1988 competition comprised 16 teams, three of which have participated in each competition since that year. They are the Wombats from Australia, Darjeeling CC from Dubai and the Drifters from England. My team is the latter and its name is appropriate. (AFP Filephoto)
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Updated 04 April 2024
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The enduring appeal of a well-established amateur tournament

  • International Cricket Sixes is a wonderful event that is far removed from the money-laden world of franchise cricket

In Chiang Mai, northern Thailand, the 34th edition of an International Cricket Sixes is being played, ending on April 6. Its inaugural competition took place in 1988, but three years were lost to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sixes cricket was introduced to Thailand by Myles de Vries, initially at the Royal Bangkok Sports Club in 1985. A move to Chiang Mai was initiated by de Vries and Adrian Gundlach. This was to establish a separate identity for the Sixes away from Bangkok and take advantage of an underutilized facility at the Chiang Mai Gymkhana Club. It is believed that support was provided by the tobacco industry, which was based in the north.

The 1988 competition comprised 16 teams, three of which have participated in each competition since that year. They are the Wombats from Australia, Darjeeling CC from Dubai and the Drifters from England. My team is the latter and its name is appropriate.

Folklore has it that the choice was made because its members drifted unknowingly from one situation to another. It has stuck through many iterations and has been a remarkable catalyst for many long-lasting friendships.

This applies to both the Drifters and to members of opposing teams. It is a tournament that epitomizes a combination of friendship and competition, of cricket played in the right spirit. This has led it to become recognized as the largest amateur six-a-side event in the world. It could not have achieved this status without the hard work and dedication, freely given, of a number of people over the years. It is an even more remarkable achievement that the status has been attained in a country not normally associated with cricket.

A common belief is that the game was introduced to Thailand by the children of elite Thai families, who were educated in England. The Bangkok City Cricket Club was formed in 1890, playing its first match in November of that year at the Pramane Ground close to the Royal Palace. However, the game failed to develop in Thai society and it was soon played only by expatriate residents.

According to the Cricket Association of Thailand, the first cricket match played in Chiang Mai was in 1895. This predates the formation of the Gymkhana Club by a group of 14 expatriates with the purpose of encouraging the sport in the north of the country. Cricket was first mentioned in the Minutes of the Club Committee meeting of Nov. 6, 1898. Later that month, the Sports Committee Meeting referenced the inclusion of cricket in the forthcoming Christmas program. The colonial clubhouse, replete with veranda, remains, providing the base for golf, cricket, squash and tennis sections.

Across holes seven to nine of the golf course lies the cricket ground. There are two permanent buildings. One serves as the engine room during the tournament, housing match commentators, scorers and organizers. The other is the boundary bar. Temporary tents are provided around half of the boundary perimeter to house the teams, while the scoreboard is moved to the other side of the ground so as to be visible to all.

After 1988, the tournament grew in both size and reputation as international cricketing stars were attracted. In 2002, 30 teams came from nine different countries. This was surpassed in 2007, with 33 teams from 14 different countries and in 2008 with 36 teams. Since then and until the pandemic, the number has been between 30 and 32. No stars have been attracted since 2012.

This year there are 26 men’s and three women’s teams in a separate competition, which began in 2008. Eleven of the teams are from Australia, five from England, four from Thailand, the balance from seven other countries. The competition’s format has evolved over the years. Teams are now divided into two sections — Gentlemen and Players — according to historic or perceived strength. Within these sections, teams are divided into groups of four, the results of which determine placings in Round Two. This has five levels, in descending order: Cup, Shield, Bowl, Plate and Spoon. Each is a mini-tournament to determine the finalists at each level.

All of this could not happen without a superb organizing team. Operations Manager George Appleton, formerly in the Royal Navy, has spent most of the last six months preparing for the event. Richard Lockwood, a well-known statistician in the game, is the committee chair and chief scorer. They have been in Chiang Mai for six and 15 years, respectively. Other volunteers have taken on roles as commentators, treasurers, bar managers, organizers of umpires, and media and communications facilitators. They continue a line of previous tournament organizers. One of those was Maurice Bromley, in whose honor the Shield competition is named.

Inevitably, the tournament’s composition has changed over the years. Some teams have aged and faded away. Others have managed to rejuvenate themselves. The tournament does seem to have a solid base. In 2024, five of the 26 teams had competed over 30 times, five between 20 and 26, six between 10 and 19 times, with eight between one and nine. New teams joined, two in 2024, one of them the Lao Elephants. Cricket started officially in Lao seven years ago, being played on a dirt track and a potholed outfield. It has progressed to a newly built AstroTurf pitch, a well-groomed outfield embraced by eucalyptus trees.

In addition to attracting new teams and sustaining the ethos for existing ones, another objective of the Sixes has been to provide support for the development of junior cricket in the Chiang Mai area.

This has been through fundraising, tournament organization, coaching and development work. Selection of players at national age group levels has provided rewards.

None of this could be achieved without the volunteers. Each team pays an entry fee, and sponsorship is attracted, but hospitality income is critical in providing the means to sustain the tournament. It also provides spin-off benefits for the local economy, while matches are streamed live, worldwide. This wonderful event is far removed from the money-laden world of franchise cricket.


FIFA lift ban on Congo Brazzaville

Updated 5 sec ago
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FIFA lift ban on Congo Brazzaville

JOHANNESBURG: A ban on Congo Brazzaville competing in international competitions has been lifted, a FIFA statement said on Thursday.
Congo were suspended last February due to government interference in the administration of football in the central African nation.
This prevented the ‘Red Devils’ playing 2026 World Cup qualifiers against Zambia and Tanzania in March.
Last year, Congo lost away to Zambia and at home to Morocco, and forfeited the points to Niger after a dispute over where the match should be played.


Yamal pearl seals Barcelona La Liga title triumph at Espanyol

Updated 4 min 30 sec ago
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Yamal pearl seals Barcelona La Liga title triumph at Espanyol

CORNELLÀ DE LLOBREGAT, Spain: A stunning Lamine Yamal strike helped crown Barcelona La Liga champions with a 2-0 win at local rivals Espanyol on Thursday, with victory ensuring Real Madrid cannot catch them at the top of the table.
Yamal’s effort and Fermin Lopez’s goal took Hansi Flick’s side seven points clear of Los Blancos with two matches remaining, to clinch Barcelona’s 28th title and complete a superb domestic treble.
Only the Champions League escaped an exciting young Barca side this season, as they won the league for the second time in six years, at Espanyol’s ground again just as in 2023.
Back then, celebrating Barca players were chased from the field by angry home supporters but this time Espanyol turned on the sprinklers to soak the jubilant visitors, who headed down the tunnel quickly.
Yamal opened the scoring after 53 minutes of a tense derby clash with a brilliant curling effort, before Lopez added another in the 95th minute to secure victory.
Outside the stadium before the match several Espanyol fans were hit by a car which drove into a big crowd, although none were seriously injured and police said it appeared to be an accident.
Barcelona were seconds away from sealing their title triumph on Wednesday but Real Madrid snatched a 95th-minute winner against Mallorca to delay the inevitable.
Flick’s side started slowly in Cornella, with Espanyol, 16th, looking dangerous on the counter-attack and keen to secure their top-flight survival.
Wojciech Szczesny made a fine save to deny Javi Puado who broke through on goal in Espanyol’s best chance of the opening period.
Barca dominated the ball but failed to create any clear opportunities themselves in the first half.
The Catalan giants have often blown teams away this season, approaching a century of goals in La Liga, but with the title on the line and a hostile crowd against them, they needed something special to break through.
That came from 17-year-old wing wizard Yamal, who zipped inside off the right flank and unleashed a rocket into the top corner from outside the box, in a replica of his goal for Spain against France in the Euro 2024 semifinals.
It was the teenager’s eighth La Liga strike of the season but with goals in both matches against rivals Real and also in the visit to face Atletico Madrid, he has a penchant for the big occasion.
Barca’s superb display in Sunday’s Clasico, in which they beat their rivals 4-3 in a thrilling battle, effectively won them the title.
They still had to get it over the line against their neighbors, though, and that became easier when Leandro Cabrera was sent off for an elbow into Yamal’s stomach.
Even though they had a player fewer, Espanyol pressured Barcelona heavily until Lopez drilled past Joan Garcia to end the hosts’ resistance.


Al-Ittihad crowned as champions after Al-Raed victory

Updated 15 May 2025
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Al-Ittihad crowned as champions after Al-Raed victory

  • The Tigers are now nine points clear of Al-Hilal
  • Al-Ittihad now take the Saudi Pro League trophy back to Jeddah

JEDDAH: Al-Ittihad are champions of Saudi Arabia for the 10th time after winning 3-1 at Al-Raed on Thursday.

The Tigers are now nine points clear of Al-Hilal and as the second-placed team have just three games remaining and have an inferior head-to-record, there is no way they can catch the leaders.

Just two years after their last title triumph, Al-Ittihad now take the Saudi Pro League trophy back to Jeddah and for the rest, the focus is now all about finishing in second and qualifying for the 2025-26 AFC Champions League Elite.

It looked as if there would be another twist at the top when Oumar Gonzalez put Al-Raed, who are officially relegated, ahead after just nine minutes. The Cameroonian pounced on a rare defensive mistake from N’Golo Kante to fire home from close range.

With top scorer Karim Benzema watching injured from the sidelines, there may have been a few concerns but if Laurent Blanc’s men were rattled, they didn’t let it show as they were back level after just 21 minutes thanks to Steven Bergwijn. Abdulrahman Al-Oboud broke into the right side of the area and squared the ball for the Dutchman who made no mistake.


It was obvious from the reactions of the Al-Ittihad attackers that they wanted more and they took the lead five minutes before the break. Unai Hernandez swung over a corner from the left and Danilo Pereira was the first to the ball at the near post to head smartly past the ‘keeper.

From then, it was always going to be difficult for the hosts and it was game over just two minutes after the restart. Bergwijn chipped a pass or a shot through a crowded area and Al-Aboud was there on the goal line to bundle the ball home to seal the win and the title.

The t-shirts with ‘Champions 25’ were soon put on and the celebrations started. They may continue for some time.


Ronaldo tops Forbes’ list of highest-paid athletes for third year in a row

Updated 15 May 2025
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Ronaldo tops Forbes’ list of highest-paid athletes for third year in a row

  • Since he joined Saudi Arabian club Al-Nassr, the Portuguese forward’s estimated total earnings are around $275 million
  • Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry is second at $156 million, followed by boxer Tyson Fury with $135 million

 

Cristiano Ronaldo topped Forbes’ list of the world’s highest-paid athletes for the third consecutive year and the fifth time in his career.
Following his move to Saudi Arabian club Al-Nassr, Ronaldo’s estimated total earnings are around $275 million.
The Portuguese forward increased his income by $15 million through off-field endorsements as well as lucrative sponsorship deals backed by his large social media followers: 939 million in total as of May.
Meanwhile, Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, who in March became the first NBA player to reach 4,000 career three-pointers, jumped to second place in the rankings with $156 million.
Boxer Tyson Fury claimed third place with $135 million. Despite losing his world heavyweight titles to Oleksandr Usyk in December, Fury’s income has been boosted by partnerships promoting Maltese tourism and his Netflix reality show.
Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, reached fourth with $137 million, thanks to record-breaking signing bonuses and a lucrative contract extension.
Meanwhile, Argentine Lionel Messi dropped to fifth place with $135 million — the same as last year — having moved to Major League Soccer side Inter Miami, as well as continuing to receive high-profile endorsements from Adidas and Apple.
Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James, nearing the end of his illustrious career, came sixth with $133.8 million.
MLB New York Mets outfielder Juan Soto came in at a remarkable seventh place, earning $114 million. The 26-year-old Dominican signed a $765 million, 15-year contract, the largest in baseball history.
French striker Karim Benzema, who plays for Saudi Arabia’s Al Ittihad, is eighth with earnings of $104 million.
Japanese Shohei Ohtani is in ninth place with $102.5 million, having deferred most of his earnings from his mega-contract with MLB team Los Angeles Dodgers. His earnings were boosted significantly by their World Series victory last year.
NBA Phoenix Suns’ Kevin Durant rounds off the top 10 with $101.4 million.


Sinner sends message by demolishing Ruud to reach Italian Open semis

Updated 15 May 2025
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Sinner sends message by demolishing Ruud to reach Italian Open semis

  • Ruud was supposed to be Sinner’s toughest test in Rome
  • The 23-year-old demolished sixth seed Ruud in just over an hour with an ominous display of tennis

ROME: Jannik Sinner marched into the semifinals of the Italian Open on Wednesday after destroying Casper Ruud in straight sets 6-0, 6-1 and sending a warning that the world number one is officially back.

Ruud was supposed to be Sinner’s toughest test in Rome since he came back from his three-month doping ban, as the Norwegian came into the match in hot form on clay after winning in Madrid earlier this month.

In his previous matches Sinner looked to be still finding his feet after his suspension, accepted from the World Anti-Doping Agency for testing positive for traces of clostebol in March last year.

But the 23-year-old demolished sixth seed Ruud in just over an hour with an ominous display of tennis, his domination such that the home fans at the packed center court, seemingly out of sympathy, began to cheer the rare points that Ruud won.

Ruud even got the loudest cheer of the match when he held his serve for the only time, in game three of the second set, holding his arms aloft in ironic celebration.

“I was feeling great on court today. I think we all saw that,” said Sinner.

“How I felt today was very, very positive signs for me... I was serving well and also returning well. Moving great on the court, so I’m very happy about that.”

Tommy Paul, a 7-6 (7/4), 6-3 winner over Hubert Hurkacz in the day’s first match, will have wondered what on earth he can do to stop Sinner if the Italian brings that form to Friday’s last-four clash.

Sinner won the first set in just 27 minutes, giving up only seven points as he stalked the court with intent, dressed all in black as he has been all week.

And he then maintained his record of not dropping a set in the tournament to not so much stroll as smash into the last four, and send a message to Carlos Alcaraz.

Spaniard Alcaraz, Sinner’s key Grand Slam rival ahead of the French Open, will contest the other semifinal with Lorenzo Musetti on Friday afternoon, with the blockbuster final tennis fans wanted still on.

Home hope and sixth seed Paolini became the third Italian woman to reach the Foro Italico final, and the first since her doubles partner Sara Errani was thumped by Serena Williams in 2014.

Late bloomer Paolini, 29, will face one of Coco Gauff and China’s Zheng Qinwen, who beat world number one Aryna Sabalenka on Wednesday night, after beating Peyton Stearns 7-5, 6-1.

“It’s a privilege to be in this position. I matured late as a tennis player but everyone has their own path. Some mature earlier and some later,” said Paolini.

“I’m just enjoying it without thinking too much about the past.”

Paolini was favorite to get past unseeded Stearns but early on her American opponent showed why she got to her first 1000 series semifinal by knocking out a succession of big names including Naomi Osaka and fifth seed Madison Keys.

Paolini looked way off the pace when she lost the first three games of the match in surprisingly timid fashion, serving weakly and mishitting a host of simple shots.

But she slowly began to force herself back into the contest, putting pressure on Stearns to find shots with her serving and finding both more power and accuracy on her forehand.

Stearns’ frustration was clear to see after being broken to allow Paolini to serve for the set, lashing her racket into her bag before giving herself a telling off in her seat.

And a break of serve in the third game of the second set deflated Stearns, whose fate was sealed two games later when Paolini took the third of three break points, roaring her joy to her delighted supporters in the center court stands before comfortably seeing out the match.

Paolini could yet win both the singles and women’s doubles tournaments, with her and Errani taking on Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider in the semifinals on Friday.