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Thala for a reason? Shivam Dube credits 'Mahi bhai' after mat… — and more

Thala for a reason? Shivam Dube credits 'Mahi bhai' after match-winning performance against the Netherlands

Shivam Dube said guidance from former India captain MS Dhoni helped shape his batting approach after he played a match-winning 67-run knock in the last group-stage match of the T20 World Cup against Netherlands at the Narendra Modi Stadium on Wednesday.

Dube said he had struggled against pace bowling early in his career, but advice from Dhoni on strike rotation and controlled intent helped him improve in pressure situations.



"When I first came into the IPL, I struggled against fast bowlers and wasn’t striking the ball cleanly. I realised that if I want to dominate at this level and I have the power, I needed to work on that aspect. I put in significant effort during the off-season. Mahi bhai told me that it’s not necessary to hit sixes every time. Boundaries and strike rotation are equally important.

"That clarity has helped me. If I get a good ball, I look for a boundary or rotate strike. In the death overs, I will naturally go harder, but early in the innings, my focus is on smart intent," Dube told Jio Hotstar, as cited by news agency IANS.

Speaking about pressure situations, Dube said his focus is on batting according to the match scenario and staying till the end if required.

“I don’t feel pressure; I focus on the situation. If wickets fall, my responsibility is to bat deep. If I stay till the end, I know I can add 10–15 crucial runs in the final over. I avoid taking unnecessary risks in the middle overs. If the situation demands stability, I rotate strike. If the platform is set, I’m ready to attack from the first ball,” he said.

Dube walked in to bat when India were 69 for 3 after nine overs and stabilised the innings with a 66-run knock off 31 balls.

He also contributed with the ball, taking two wickets for 35 runs in three overs. For his all-round performance, he was named player of the match.

Diaz: Liverpool Move Was 'Good Decision'

Speaking to Sky Germany, Diaz said, 'When FC Bayern approached me, I knew from the very first moment that I wanted to make this move.' The Colombian winger emphasized that happiness for himself and his family was central to the decision.

Since joining Bayern, Diaz has made a significant impact with 19 goals and 15 assists this season. He acknowledged the adaptation challenges, particularly the language barrier, but praised teammate Harry Kane, calling him 'a machine' who 'really does everything well.'

Premier League defender does not rule out Barcelona move amid widespread interest

Premier League defender does not rule out Barcelona move amid widespread interest
Premier League defender does not rule out Barcelona move amid widespread interest

AFC Bournemouth and Argentina defender Marcos Senesi happens to be one of the players FC Barcelona are monitoring ahead of the summer transfer window.

The Blaugrana are scouring the market for a left-footed centre-back before next season. And while Inter Milan’s Alessandro Bastoni would be the dream target, finances make a move unlikely.

Senesi, meanwhile, is seen as a much more feasible option, considering his contract with Bournemouth expires at the end of the season, making him a free agent.

However, the South American defender has been garnering a lot of interest from several other top clubs as well.

Senesi yet to make a decision

Now, according to reports in England, as relayed by Mundo Deportivo, Senesi’s entourage still maintains the possibility of joining Barcelona as a future option and has not ruled it out at this stage.

Marcos Senesi is a target for Barcelona. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

Several Premier League sides, among them Chelsea, as well as clubs from other leagues, such as Borussia Dortmund and Juventus, are monitoring his situation.

However, a source from the player’s camp acknowledges that when Barcelona show interest, it is difficult not to take it into account. As such, nothing has been ruled out because the opportunity to play for the Catalan club is always appealing.

Senesi is a player that the Blaugrana have been following for a long time now, and the interest can be traced back to 2018 when he was still at San Lorenzo.

With the La Liga champions still holding an interest and the player also seemingly open to the idea of making the move happen, it remains to be seen if this develops into something substantial in the coming months.

Indianapolis Colts address pressing need right away in 2026 mock draft

In The Athletic's first beat writers mock draft of the 2026 NFL draft cycle, the Indianapolis Colts addressed a big need on defense.

Each of the beat writers made the first-round selection for each of the respective teams they cover. The Colts, as we know, do not have a first-round pick. Their first selection will come in Round 2 at No. 47 overall, and with that pick, James Boyd selected Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez.

"The former Texas Tech standout was a turnover-forcing machine in college, and his comfort level in space would surely be welcomed in Colts defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo’s system," wrote Boyd.

Rodriguez was one of PFF's highest-graded run defenders at the linebacker position. He was also very good in coverage, generating four interceptions and three pass breakups. Rodriguez also forced seven fumbles.

Adding to the linebacker room should be a top priority this offseason for GM Chris Ballard.

For one, depth is needed. Germaine Pratt is a free agent, and behind Zaire Franklin on the depth chart, there is very little NFL experience.

However, in addition to that, an added coverage presence is a must as well, in order to maximize Lou Anarumo's defensive scheme.

Ballard also mentioned the need to get younger and faster on defense this offseason, and while he didn't specifically bring up the linebacker position, that sentiment very much applies to that position.

As Boyd noted, the opportunity for Rodriguez to step in and help right away exists.

This article originally appeared on Colts Wire: Indianapolis Colts upgrade linebacker position 2026 NFL mock draft

The best American heavyweight is a woman named Claressa

When we think of great American heavyweights, we immediately think of "The Greatest." We then think of the others. We think of "The Brown Bomber" and "The Rock." We think of "Jersey Joe" and "Smokin’ Joe." We think of "The Galveston Giant" and "The Manassa Mauler." We think of "Sonny," or "The Big Bear." We think of "Big George." We think of "The Easton Assassin." We think of "Iron Mike", "The Real Deal" and "Big Daddy." We think of strong men, dominant men, violent men. We think of men who had the ability to unite a nation and break faces. We think of proud men — American men.

We also think of the men not quite great enough to be identified by just a nickname, but still great enough to exist and thrive in the eras in which the more iconic heavyweight champions reigned. These men played their part, and would all reign today, and it is only by identifying their deficiencies that we understand the greatness of the ones who dominated. It is then we understand what makes a truly great American heavyweight: The personality, the singularity, a certain je ne sais quoi.

In 2026, we look for the same traits, only the talent pool is shallower and the search therefore broadened. Now we find these traits not in American men so much, but in a woman: Claressa Shields.

Not only is Shields, 17-0 (3 KOs), the reigning WBC, IBF and WBO women’s heavyweight champion, but she is the single American heavyweight currently in possession of a world title. She is also a two-time Olympic gold medalist — 2012 and 2016 — and the self-proclaimed “Greatest Woman of All Time,” or “GWOAT,” which means the idea of continuing a heavyweight lineage comes as neither a shock nor a heavy burden for Shields to bear.

Ask her and she’ll tell you she is better equipped than many of her male counterparts to carry the torch. Unlike them, she has the skills to be dominant, as proven by her Olympic gold medals and 17 professional wins, and is seemingly without equal. Prior to her move to heavyweight, Shields had won world titles at super welterweight, middleweight, super middleweight and light heavyweight, and was seldom troubled, never mind close to losing. That’s what enables her to now walk and talk the way she does as a heavyweight. It’s why, at the age of 30, she already has a documentary ("T-Rex") as well as a feature film ("The Fire Inside") about her life. It’s why, back in November, she announced an $8 million contract with Wynn Records and Salita Promotions which will map out the next two years of her fighting career.

That deal, the most lucrative in women’s boxing history, arrives at a time when Shields’ singularity has never been more apparent or important. In much the same way her rise as a “great American heavyweight” is inflated somewhat by the death of the “great American heavyweight” in the men’s game, Shields’ ability to keep calling her own shots and be her own boss resonates louder by virtue of so many of her peers signing with Jake Paul and his Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) outfit. In fact, in recent years MVP has become a one-stop shop for women’s boxing, which is not only a testament to MVP’s investment in the sport’s women, but a sign that only a few women in boxing have the power and confidence to lead, not follow.

One of those women is Claressa Shields.

“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with what those girls have done,” she tells Uncrowned. “I could have done the same thing [signed with MVP], but I just like knowing that when I accomplish something it’s because I did it. I don’t like feeling like someone else will get all the credit for my hard work.

“I don’t mind having a partner. Salita Promotions has been one of my biggest partners over the last nine years. He [Dmitriy Salita, Shields’ promoter] may have not understood my vision as far as the beauty and strength, but he definitely understands it now. I know when I first pushed my image to him, he was like, ‘Claressa, I don’t know.’ But I was like, ‘No, trust me, this is it.’”

FLINT, MICHIGAN - FEBRUARY 02: Claressa Shields (R) punches Danielle Perkins during the ninth round of their undisputed heavyweight title bout on February 02, 2025 at Dort Financial Center in Flint, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images)
Claressa Shields (R) punches Danielle Perkins during the ninth round of their undisputed heavyweight title bout on February 2, 2025 at Dort Financial Center in Flint, Michigan.
Nic Antaya via Getty Images

Dmitriy Salita may not have understood the vision at first, but he did understand boxing and boxers. Salita himself was a former pro, of course, and was once a regular on the New York fight scene from around 2004 until he retired in 2013. He even boxed for a world title against Amir Khan in 2009.

More than that, though, Salita knew women’s boxing. He knew, first of all, that it existed and deserved its place — something not everybody in boxing wanted to acknowledge at the time — and he knew what it was like for a female trying to make her way in the sport in the late nineties and early aughts. He knew this primarily because of his close relationship with one Kisha Snow, a female heavyweight Golden Gloves champion who “used to knock men out in sparring” at Brooklyn’s Starrett City Boxing Club. That was where Salita and Snow both learned to box and where they often hung out. It was there Salita, a white Jew from Ukraine, saw how much harder Snow, a Black girl from New York, had to work just to be seen and heard.

By the time Salita then encountered Claressa Shields, shortly after her professional debut in 2016, he carried some of that experience with him. He remembered Snow, his “big sister.” He remembered how she had been treated. He remembered how, in a fairer world, she should have been treated.

“When I first met Claressa, I drove down to Berston Field House with flowers and a box of chocolates and we both laughed about it,” says Salita. “But we got along great.

“On the surface we come from two very different backgrounds, but if you look behind the curtain, not really. My family emigrated from Odessa, Ukraine to Brooklyn, New York, and we were on welfare food stamps. We lived in a one-bedroom apartment and had nothing. All the kids at school made fun of me.”

Shields was born and raised in Flint, Michigan, home of the southpaw Chris Byrd, one of the last American world heavyweight champions. She was introduced to boxing by her father, Clarence, who was in prison from the time Claressa was 2 to 9 years old. According to Clarence, who fought in some underground leagues, boxing was a men’s sport and no place for girls, be it his own or someone else’s. He didn't properly meet Claressa until she was 9 and he didn't relent and allow her to box until she turned 11.

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 08:  Claressa Shields (R) of the United States in action against Marina Volnova of Kazakhstan during the Women's Middle (75kg) Boxing semifinals on Day 12 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at ExCeL on August 8, 2012 in London, England.  (Photo by Scott Heavey/Getty Images)
August 8, 2012: Claressa Shields (R) of the United States in action against Marina Volnova of Kazakhstan during the women's middleweight (75kg) boxing semifinals at 2012 Olympic Games.
Scott Heavey via Getty Images

By then Shields had already had her fair share of fights. Even just getting to the age of 11 had been a battle, what with one parent in jail and the other, her mother Marcella, addicted to drugs and alcohol. While at home, Claressa was known to skip meals to allow her siblings the chance to eat, as well as sleep on the floor because she was without a bed. She also says she was sexually abused by her mother’s boyfriend at the age of 5, though was not believed when she later relayed the traumatic experience to her mother. That led to Shields moving out of the family home to go live with her grandmother; one of many key decisions in her young life.

“I’ve always had to make decisions for my life, and I’ve made pretty good decisions since the age of 13,” says Shields. “But I’m also the kind of person who says, ‘Look, whatever choices I make, I can live with them.’ I think a lot of people in this life need to learn that. Whether the decision is good or bad, you need to learn how to live with it and roll with the punches. 

"I was taught to lie in the bed that you make and that’s what I do. I really have no excuses for who I am or how I am. Running from Flint definitely helped mold me, but I just think I’m one of the most resilient, strong and powerful women that I’ve ever met. I continue to grow as I get older.”

If there’s any hint of pain in Shields’ voice, it is soon overpowered by the strength in it. In fact, there is a hardness to Shields which, although in keeping with what people expect from heavyweight boxers, is perhaps less in keeping with what they expect from women. As such, Shields, like Snow before her, has to work that much harder and do that much more — to be respected, to be liked.

She makes no apologies for speaking her mind, however, nor will she feign weakness for the purpose of enhancing her likability. This, after all, is not a popularity contest. This is boxing. This is her world. In the ring, Shields feels safe, untouchable, herself. In the ring, there is nobody better equipped to protect Claressa Shields than Claressa Shields.

I just think I’m one of the most resilient, strong and powerful women that I’ve ever met. I continue to grow as I get older.Claressa Shields

“With me being the oldest girl out of my siblings, and my brother going to prison, I had to look out for myself and my siblings,” she says. “When you have an upbringing like I had, and people aren’t really taking care of you the way they’re supposed to, and you don’t have really great parents, you learn early on that nobody’s going to give you nothing. If nobody’s going to give you nothing, how are you going to have something? The only way for you to have something is to get out there and get it.

“I really respect people who go out there and get it when the odds are stacked against them. I look at someone like Terence Crawford. People had so much disrespect for him early on, but he just continued to press forward. He didn’t let anybody else’s doubts affect him, and he then proved his greatness to the world. That’s kind of the same thing I’m doing. There have been so many rumors — ‘Claressa can’t sell tickets; nobody wants to watch her fight’ — but I’m one of the only females who has been able to do it with a small promoter and sell out arenas and make sure I’m part of history.”

There is a sense with Shields that much of her boasting, including the “GWOAT” nickname, stems from her having to be her own cheerleader growing up, and having to make up for an absence of support by overcompensating with self-love once she understood what the concept meant.

If that translates as remotely arrogant, or unbecoming of a young woman in the spotlight, so be it. She has surely earned the right.

“It takes outspoken, strong leaders to make social change,” says Salita. “Muhammad Ali is one example of that and there are many others too. These people use their platform to make the world a better and more equal place. If Claressa was quiet and tame, none of this would happen. She is who she is and she’s got the credentials to back it up.

“Claressa’s success has had a massive impact on the growth of women’s boxing in the United States. She was the first woman to headline an event on premium cable television, which was Showtime, and since then women have started to get the recognition they deserve.

“Also, if you think about it, she’s currently the only American heavyweight champion of the world. That’s a title that always belonged in America. I know she’s a woman and it’s different, but it’s quite incredible that she’s now a dominant heavyweight figure.

“She is, I think, the right person at the right time when, socially, we are ready to accept and celebrate a woman who is a boss outside the ring and a boss inside the ring.”

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 15: Claressa Shields poses in fur by FGM Bespoke at her Wynn Records Presents: Claressa Shields Signing Celebration at Level South Olive on November 15, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jerritt Clark/Getty Images for Wynn Records)
November 15, 2025: Claressa Shields poses at her signing party in Los Angeles following her record-setting $8 million promotional deal.
Jerritt Clark via Getty Images

In her role as “boss,” Shields knows any decision she makes in the ring or in business will be considerably easier than the decisions she had to make as a young girl in Flint, when she was conditioned to believe she would never be a boxer, much less a boss. Even so, there will still be big decisions. Adult decisions. Career decisions. Financial decisions.

One such decision arrived last summer, in fact, when Shields, having just beaten Lani Daniels, became a free agent for the first time in her career.

“I have been with Claressa since her second professional fight, and throughout our time together we’ve had various contract extensions,” says Salita. “But she had never really become a free agent and explored the market until after her fight in July. She spoke with everybody: MVP, Matchroom [Boxing], others.

“Claressa and I are friends, we’ve known each other for about 10 years, so I obviously felt some level of uncertainty. But I really believed what we offered Claressa was the best. With a superstar like Claressa, first you pay them because you believe in them. Then the superstar becomes the franchise and they pay you.”

In the end, Shields signed an $8 million, two-year deal with Wynn Records and Salita Promotions before embarking on a whistle-stop tour of countless news studios in the U.S. to announce it. It was, she proclaimed, the “most lucrative deal in women’s boxing” — and she was right, too.

Sometimes a boast can also be a fact. Often with Shields that seems to be the case.

If nobody’s going to give you nothing, how are you going to have something? The only way for you to have something is to get out there and get it.Claressa Shields

“I know a lot about the boxing business these other girls don’t know,” she says. “I know how to build my brand, I know what I stand for, and I know what’s good for my brand and what’s bad. I’ve mastered brawn and beauty. Early in my career, I don’t think people saw the beauty in me that I saw and knew was there. But then I found a way to put it at the forefront. Now people see the strength and they see the beauty, also. That’s done a lot for my career.

“I have to do it my own way. I can’t do it like nobody else because there’s only one Claressa Shields. When God has chosen you to do something, He has chosen you. I knew that when I turned pro, I would be the first woman to make a million bucks. I knew it. Even though women hadn’t made anything close to that at the time, I knew I would be the one if I stuck to my guns. Now I’m selling out 16,000-seat arenas and all my fights are big events.”

Her next fight, a third defense of her heavyweight titles, takes place this Sunday at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Opposing Shields will be unified super middleweight world champion Franchon Crews-Dezurn, someone Shields knows well. They boxed for the first time in the amateur ranks, then made their professional debuts against one another in 2016. That was a fight Shields won over four rounds. Since then, the pair have enjoyed contrasting levels of success, fame and fortune. Crews-Dezurn, older by eight years, went on to become champion of the world, while Shields did both that and more.

Given all that, you would expect a trailblazer like Shields to receive only praise for her achievements. Yet monitor her interactions on social media for any length of time and you will soon discover that she is not only divisive, but a target — for fans and for fighters.

Boxing - Claressa Shields v Savannah Marshall - IBF, WBA, WBC & WBO World Middleweight Titles - O2 Arena, London, Britain - October 15, 2022 Claressa Shields celebrates winning her fight against Savannah Marshall Action Images via Reuters/Andrew Couldridge
Claressa Shields' belt collection has become quite extensive in recent years.
Action Images via Reuters / Reuters

Happy to engage, Shields will, in the tradition of American heavyweights of old, use trash talk to motivate herself and remind her audience how great she is. The only difference perhaps is that Shields, a heavyweight champion in 2026, campaigns at a time when the audience is granted the platform and license to shout back and say to her all the things she once heard from others — whether at home or at school — growing up. This lands Shields in a rather difficult place. On the one hand, she feels as though she has won, with all the belts and medals to prove it. On the other hand, the nature of the world — and the toxicity of social media — means that sometimes the illusion of community Shields experiences as a successful world champion bears an unnerving resemblance to the community she left behind as a young girl. People then wonder why the “T-Rex” — the old nickname Shields no longer employs — occasionally bites.

“People can be whoever they want to be on social media, but I think I’m one of the few people who are just themselves on there,” she says. “That’s what makes it hard for me, that I’m not faking it or portraying myself to be someone I’m not. I don’t mind arguing with people on social media. Sometimes it’s annoying because I have a different stardom than other fighters and my brand is bigger than boxing now. But sometimes it’s actually funny. When you’re training two or three times a day, and you have a bit of downtime, it’s good to have people bothering you online.

“The thing is, you can write anything online — literally anything — and the world can see it. You can go on YouTube and make up these AI videos and spread lies. Just three weeks ago, up on YouTube, I saw a video that said I was pregnant. I’m watching this and am like, ‘How am I pregnant? I’ve got a f***ing six-pack now and am fighting in three weeks. Where is this coming from?’

“But that’s what the internet is. It’s just made-up mumbo jumbo with a whole bunch of haters. There’s a reason why they call followers ‘followers.’ It’s because all they do is follow people. They’re not leaders. You’re rarely going to see people who are leaders online. But I’m a leader and these people are my followers. They’re just hating on me because I’m the 'Greatest Woman of All Time.'”

With not even a knowing wink, or so much as a blink, she delivers that line — the closer — as though merely saying her name.

Perhaps, having said it so often, the two are now interchangeable — name and nickname. Perhaps, when you have said it enough, through good times and bad, when celebrating and when crying, and before sleeping and waking up, what is considered a boast to the ears of the world is simply self-motivation to yours. Or perhaps, as was true of others, time will prove that Claressa Shields is exactly who and what she says she is. It will prove her right and the haters wrong. It will prove that a nickname, rather than just something you choose, is something a great heavyweight becomes.

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