The Surprisingly Wholesome Meaning Behind AC/DC’s Misunderstood Name
What if we told you AC/DC was named after a household appliance?Australian rock band AC/DC…
What if we told you AC/DC was named after a household appliance?Australian rock band AC/DC…
Seattle Mariners former outfielder Ichiro Suzuki (51) exits the dugout to throw out the ceremonial first pitch before a game against the Tampa Bay Rays at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images An unveiling of their Ichiro Suzuki statue turned into a bad break for the Seattle Mariners on Friday.
As a navy blue tarp was pulled back to reveal the bronze statue of Seattle’s Hall of Fame right fielder, the bat in the right hand of the Ichiro likeness snapped just above the knuckles and remained only partially intact. Suzuki, standing in front of the statue next to Ken Griffey Jr., Edgar Martinez and owner John Stanton, buried his head in his hands with a grimace as the statue on the first-base side of T-Mobile Park received attention.
“I did not do that,” Griffey said.
The Mariners had some fun at their own expense, posting a message to social media with a miniature replica of the statue with a bid for comic relief: “Breaking: We’ve updated tonight’s Ichiro Replica Statue giveaway.”
Breaking: We’ve updated tonight’s Ichiro Replica Statue giveaway. pic.twitter.com/EcFfkaAUd6
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) April 10, 2026
“I didn’t think Mariano (Rivera) would come out here and break the bat,” Ichiro said through his longtime interpreter.
The statue is an homage to Suzuki’s iconic batting stance with his bat positioned and held 90 degrees from the ground with his left hand crossing his chest.
Ichiro was a 10-time All-Star for the Mariners as part of his Hall of Fame career. He had a .321 batting average and 438 steals in 14 seasons (2001-12, 2018-19) with Seattle.
–Field Level Media
Seattle Mariners former outfielder Ichiro Suzuki (51) exits the dugout to throw out the ceremonial first pitch before a game against the Tampa Bay Rays at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images An unveiling of their Ichiro Suzuki statue turned into a bad break for the Seattle Mariners on Friday.
As a navy blue tarp was pulled back to reveal the bronze statue of Seattle’s Hall of Fame right fielder, the bat in the right hand of the Ichiro likeness snapped just above the knuckles and remained only partially intact. Suzuki, standing in front of the statue next to Ken Griffey Jr., Edgar Martinez and owner John Stanton, buried his head in his hands with a grimace as the statue on the first-base side of T-Mobile Park received attention.
“I did not do that,” Griffey said.
The Mariners had some fun at their own expense, posting a message to social media with a miniature replica of the statue with a bid for comic relief: “Breaking: We’ve updated tonight’s Ichiro Replica Statue giveaway.”
Breaking: We’ve updated tonight’s Ichiro Replica Statue giveaway. pic.twitter.com/EcFfkaAUd6
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) April 10, 2026
“I didn’t think Mariano (Rivera) would come out here and break the bat,” Ichiro said through his longtime interpreter.
The statue is an homage to Suzuki’s iconic batting stance with his bat positioned and held 90 degrees from the ground with his left hand crossing his chest.
Ichiro was a 10-time All-Star for the Mariners as part of his Hall of Fame career. He had a .321 batting average and 438 steals in 14 seasons (2001-12, 2018-19) with Seattle.
–Field Level Media
Seattle Mariners former outfielder Ichiro Suzuki (51) exits the dugout to throw out the ceremonial…
Luciano Spalletti will stay on as Juventus coach after signing a new two-year deal, the Serie A club announced on Friday.
Spalletti will reportedly be earning five million euros ($5.8 million) a season from his extended contract.
“It’s important that I tell you first before it becomes official that we have decided to extend my contract for two more years,” Spaletti said in a video released by the club which showed him speaking to his players.
Spalletti was brought in by Juve in October to replace the sacked Igor Tudor and charged with ensuring qualification for the Champions League.
The club has been convinced by the 67-year-old who most famously won the Serie A title with Napoli in 2023.
Spalletti, whose previous job was a tumultuous and unsuccessful stint as Italy coach, has Juve one point away from fourth place which is currently occupied by Como.
However, the gap is effectively two points as Como won both meetings between the two teams this season.
Juve face another Champions League qualification contender in Atalanta on Saturday night.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Luciano Spalletti will stay on as Juventus coach after signing a new two-year deal, the Serie A club announced on Friday.
Spalletti will reportedly be earning five million euros ($5.8 million) a season from his extended contract.
“It’s important that I tell you first before it becomes official that we have decided to extend my contract for two more years,” Spaletti said in a video released by the club which showed him speaking to his players.
Spalletti was brought in by Juve in October to replace the sacked Igor Tudor and charged with ensuring qualification for the Champions League.
The club has been convinced by the 67-year-old who most famously won the Serie A title with Napoli in 2023.
Spalletti, whose previous job was a tumultuous and unsuccessful stint as Italy coach, has Juve one point away from fourth place which is currently occupied by Como.
However, the gap is effectively two points as Como won both meetings between the two teams this season.
Juve face another Champions League qualification contender in Atalanta on Saturday night.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Luciano Spalletti will stay on as Juventus coach after signing a new two-year deal, the…
[original_title April finally has something to say, and my cart has been listening. This month…
Apr 9, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Blues defenseman Colton Parayko (55) controls the puck against the Winnipeg Jets during the third period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images The St. Louis Blues and Chicago Blackhawks will each look to break out of a slump when the division rivals face off Saturday in Chicago.
The Blues (33-33-12, 78 points) have lost four of their past six games (2-3-1) after going 10-1-2 in their previous 13. That successful stretch saw St. Louis pull to within four points of the second wild card from the Western Conference into the Stanley Cup Playoffs, with a game in hand at that time.
“We seemed to have lost how fast we played north and how quickly we were attacking their net,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said after a 3-2 home loss to the Winnipeg Jets on Thursday. “A problem last game (a 3-1 home setback to the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday) and today’s game is us taking away east-west plays in our own end. That’s something we’ve got to improve upon here and work on tomorrow.”
The current skid has seen St. Louis fall seven points back of the Los Angeles Kings for that final spot, with three other teams (Nashville Predators, Winnipeg Jets, San Jose Sharks) between them. Four games remain for all but Nashville, which has three left.
The Blues’ slim hopes were all but officially dashed with the loss to the Jets. That official elimination from postseason contention could come Saturday with a regulation loss to Chicago, a Kings win against the Edmonton Oiler or a Blues OT loss combined with either one point gained by the Kings or a Predators win against the Minnesota Wild.
“It’s pride,” Blues defenseman Colton Parayko said. “It’s a privilege to play in this league every single day you show up to the rink and play in the NHL. It’s even more special to wear the Blue Note. I’ve been fortunate to do it for 11 years and you can’t take that lightly. It’s going to, for me, be easy to show up and play for this Blue Note.”
The Blackhawks (28-37-14, 70 points) were officially eliminated from contention following a 3-1 loss to the Edmonton Oilers on April 2. That defeat is part of a 1-6-1 stretch for Chicago, which sits second to last in the NHL standings, ahead of only the Vancouver Canucks.
Most recently, the Blackhawks dropped a 7-2 decision to the Carolina Hurricanes on Thursday in the opener of their four-game homestand to close out the season.
“We’ve done a pretty good job all year of competing pretty hard,” Chicago coach Jeff Blashill said. “I don’t want to overreact to a bad night. It’s frustrating, for sure. Our fans deserve better, for sure. I recognize all of that. But there are (bad) nights that happen, and this was one of them.”
While the bright spots have been few and far between for the Blackhawks over the second half of the season, there has been one during their current skid: Anton Frondell.
The 18-year-old forward, the No. 3 pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, scored both Chicago goals in the loss to Carolina and has eight points (three goals, five assists) in nine games since his debut on March 24.
“I love to score,” Frondell said. “It’s the best feeling ever. Of course, fun for me to score, score two goals, but it sucks to lose.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Blues defenseman Colton Parayko (55) controls the puck against the Winnipeg Jets during the third period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images The St. Louis Blues and Chicago Blackhawks will each look to break out of a slump when the division rivals face off Saturday in Chicago.
The Blues (33-33-12, 78 points) have lost four of their past six games (2-3-1) after going 10-1-2 in their previous 13. That successful stretch saw St. Louis pull to within four points of the second wild card from the Western Conference into the Stanley Cup Playoffs, with a game in hand at that time.
“We seemed to have lost how fast we played north and how quickly we were attacking their net,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said after a 3-2 home loss to the Winnipeg Jets on Thursday. “A problem last game (a 3-1 home setback to the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday) and today’s game is us taking away east-west plays in our own end. That’s something we’ve got to improve upon here and work on tomorrow.”
The current skid has seen St. Louis fall seven points back of the Los Angeles Kings for that final spot, with three other teams (Nashville Predators, Winnipeg Jets, San Jose Sharks) between them. Four games remain for all but Nashville, which has three left.
The Blues’ slim hopes were all but officially dashed with the loss to the Jets. That official elimination from postseason contention could come Saturday with a regulation loss to Chicago, a Kings win against the Edmonton Oiler or a Blues OT loss combined with either one point gained by the Kings or a Predators win against the Minnesota Wild.
“It’s pride,” Blues defenseman Colton Parayko said. “It’s a privilege to play in this league every single day you show up to the rink and play in the NHL. It’s even more special to wear the Blue Note. I’ve been fortunate to do it for 11 years and you can’t take that lightly. It’s going to, for me, be easy to show up and play for this Blue Note.”
The Blackhawks (28-37-14, 70 points) were officially eliminated from contention following a 3-1 loss to the Edmonton Oilers on April 2. That defeat is part of a 1-6-1 stretch for Chicago, which sits second to last in the NHL standings, ahead of only the Vancouver Canucks.
Most recently, the Blackhawks dropped a 7-2 decision to the Carolina Hurricanes on Thursday in the opener of their four-game homestand to close out the season.
“We’ve done a pretty good job all year of competing pretty hard,” Chicago coach Jeff Blashill said. “I don’t want to overreact to a bad night. It’s frustrating, for sure. Our fans deserve better, for sure. I recognize all of that. But there are (bad) nights that happen, and this was one of them.”
While the bright spots have been few and far between for the Blackhawks over the second half of the season, there has been one during their current skid: Anton Frondell.
The 18-year-old forward, the No. 3 pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, scored both Chicago goals in the loss to Carolina and has eight points (three goals, five assists) in nine games since his debut on March 24.
“I love to score,” Frondell said. “It’s the best feeling ever. Of course, fun for me to score, score two goals, but it sucks to lose.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Blues defenseman Colton Parayko (55) controls…
McIlroy had long chased a Masters victory, the final infinity stone in his personal Career Grand Slam quest, and the general consensus was that the psychological relief from capturing it would lead to a different type of play from Rory across the rest of his career. Maybe even specifically on the grounds where he broke through.
Given that Rory has had at least a share of the lead in every Masters round he has played as a winner of the tournament, it has only been two to be clear, that sort of makes sense! McIlroy walked off of Augusta National’s 18th green with an impressive 6-shot lead over the next-closest challengers (Patrick Reed and Sam Burns) and is a weekend away from being the first person to win consecutive Masters tournaments since Tiger Woods a quarter century ago. He has literally doubled the under par score of both Reed and Burns. Birdieing 6 of your final 7 holes will do that.
Time will tell what challenges lurk for McIlroy to win his 6th career major championship and if it will come on Sunday evening. Right now he is playing as if it will indeed. And he is proving that he can get it done in any way, shape, form, or fashion. Consider that at the moment he has hit 13 of 28 possible fairways. Imagine what will happen over the weekend if that gets dialed in?
You never know when it comes to Augusta National. That is the beauty of it all.
McIlroy had long chased a Masters victory, the final infinity stone in his personal Career Grand Slam quest, and the general consensus was that the psychological relief from capturing it would lead to a different type of play from Rory across the rest of his career. Maybe even specifically on the grounds where he broke through.
Given that Rory has had at least a share of the lead in every Masters round he has played as a winner of the tournament, it has only been two to be clear, that sort of makes sense! McIlroy walked off of Augusta National’s 18th green with an impressive 6-shot lead over the next-closest challengers (Patrick Reed and Sam Burns) and is a weekend away from being the first person to win consecutive Masters tournaments since Tiger Woods a quarter century ago. He has literally doubled the under par score of both Reed and Burns. Birdieing 6 of your final 7 holes will do that.
Time will tell what challenges lurk for McIlroy to win his 6th career major championship and if it will come on Sunday evening. Right now he is playing as if it will indeed. And he is proving that he can get it done in any way, shape, form, or fashion. Consider that at the moment he has hit 13 of 28 possible fairways. Imagine what will happen over the weekend if that gets dialed in?
You never know when it comes to Augusta National. That is the beauty of it all.
When Rory McIlroy finally sipped a green jacket over his shoulders after winning the Masters last year, many posited that the floodgates would open.
McIlroy had long chased a Masters victory, the final infinity stone in his personal Career Grand Slam quest, and the general consensus was that the psychological relief from capturing it would lead to a different type of play from Rory across the rest of his career. Maybe even specifically on the grounds where he broke through.
Given that Rory has had at least a share of the lead in every Masters round he has played as a winner of the tournament, it has only been two to be clear, that sort of makes sense! McIlroy walked off of Augusta National’s 18th green with an impressive 6-shot lead over the next-closest challengers (Patrick Reed and Sam Burns) and is a weekend away from being the first person to win consecutive Masters tournaments since Tiger Woods a quarter century ago. He has literally doubled the under par score of both Reed and Burns. Birdieing 6 of your final 7 holes will do that.
Time will tell what challenges lurk for McIlroy to win his 6th career major championship and if it will come on Sunday evening. Right now he is playing as if it will indeed. And he is proving that he can get it done in any way, shape, form, or fashion. Consider that at the moment he has hit 13 of 28 possible fairways. Imagine what will happen over the weekend if that gets dialed in?
You never know when it comes to Augusta National. That is the beauty of it all.
When Rory McIlroy finally sipped a green jacket over his shoulders after winning the Masters…
Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior said on Friday that Enzo Fernandez has apologised to him and the club after being dropped for two matches over comments about his future, but confirmed the midfielder will not play against Manchester City on Sunday.
The 25-year-old Argentine World Cup winner was omitted from Saturday’s FA Cup quarterfinal, a 7-0 victory over League One Port Vale, and will sit out Sunday’s Premier League clash against second-placed City at Stamford Bridge.
Fernandez, who has been wearing the captain’s armband in the absence of the injured Reece James, had said that he would look at his options after the World Cup and expressed a desire to live in Madrid.
“I had a really good conversation – three or four – with Enzo,” Rosenior told reporters.
“He’s apologised to me and to the club, and we’ll deal with that after a massive game on Sunday. It’s a serious meeting about something very serious. Enzo, every single step of the way, I’ve not been questioning his character or who he is as a person. I believe people make mistakes. He won’t play on Sunday. But hopefully, after that, he’ll be a massive part of the group moving forward. There are still a few hurdles to be overcome that I won’t go into. I want every player really focused now on a huge run-in,” he added.
ALSO READ | ‘Grumpy’ Pep Guardiola wants Bernardo Silva to stay at Manchester City for life
Chelsea is sixth in the Premier League table with 48 points from 31 matches.
“Qualifying for the Champions League is all we can focus on right now,” Rosenior said.
“There are teams fighting relegation, teams mid-table, teams pushing at the top end – it doesn’t matter. Every game is so difficult in this league. It’ll be a big challenge on Sunday, but one we’re looking forward to,” he added.
Rosenior said centre back Levi Colwill was back in training after suffering a serious knee injury in August, and that right back James has been running following a hamstring problem.
“Trevoh Chalobah is working hard; he’s back on the pitch. Colwill is in full training, but he still needs to overcome some hurdles regarding selection,” he added.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior said on Friday that Enzo Fernandez has apologised to him and the club after being dropped for two matches over comments about his future, but confirmed the midfielder will not play against Manchester City on Sunday.
The 25-year-old Argentine World Cup winner was omitted from Saturday’s FA Cup quarterfinal, a 7-0 victory over League One Port Vale, and will sit out Sunday’s Premier League clash against second-placed City at Stamford Bridge.
Fernandez, who has been wearing the captain’s armband in the absence of the injured Reece James, had said that he would look at his options after the World Cup and expressed a desire to live in Madrid.
“I had a really good conversation – three or four – with Enzo,” Rosenior told reporters.
“He’s apologised to me and to the club, and we’ll deal with that after a massive game on Sunday. It’s a serious meeting about something very serious. Enzo, every single step of the way, I’ve not been questioning his character or who he is as a person. I believe people make mistakes. He won’t play on Sunday. But hopefully, after that, he’ll be a massive part of the group moving forward. There are still a few hurdles to be overcome that I won’t go into. I want every player really focused now on a huge run-in,” he added.
ALSO READ | ‘Grumpy’ Pep Guardiola wants Bernardo Silva to stay at Manchester City for life
Chelsea is sixth in the Premier League table with 48 points from 31 matches.
“Qualifying for the Champions League is all we can focus on right now,” Rosenior said.
“There are teams fighting relegation, teams mid-table, teams pushing at the top end – it doesn’t matter. Every game is so difficult in this league. It’ll be a big challenge on Sunday, but one we’re looking forward to,” he added.
Rosenior said centre back Levi Colwill was back in training after suffering a serious knee injury in August, and that right back James has been running following a hamstring problem.
“Trevoh Chalobah is working hard; he’s back on the pitch. Colwill is in full training, but he still needs to overcome some hurdles regarding selection,” he added.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Chelsea manager Liam Rosenior said on Friday that Enzo Fernandez has apologised to him and…
Apr 9, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Detroit Tigers center fielder Parker Meadows (22) collides with left fielder Riley Greene (31) on a fly ball hit by Minnesota Twins designated hitter Josh Bell (not pictured) in the eighth inning at Target Field. Meadows left the game. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images The Detroit Tigers placed center fielder Parker Meadows on the 10-day injured list on Friday with a broken bone in his left arm sustained in a scary collision with a teammate during a loss at Minnesota on Thursday.
Meadows, 26, fractured the radius bone in his left arm as well as suffering a concussion. He also received five stitches in his left cheek.
“Tough blow for him, tough blow for us,” manager A.J. Hinch said Friday.
In a corresponding move, the Tigers recalled outfielder Wenceel Perez from Triple-A Toledo.
Meadows is required to clear concussion tests by a team physician in the return-to-play program. He also will need additional testing to determine the severity of fracture and if he will need to have surgery.
He was hospitalized overnight in Minneapolis after being carted off the field in the bottom of the eighth inning of the 3-1 setback. Meadows was playing center field and Riley Greene was playing left field when Twins hitter Josh Bell hit a slicing fly ball toward the left-center field gap. Both outfielders converged on the ball, and Greene made the catch but his head clipped the side of Meadows’ face as the players collided.
Meadows fell to the outfield grass and remained still for a few moments as teammates and trainers came to check on him. He rolled onto his back as trainers attended to him. Eventually, Meadows was able to sit up and gingerly get to his feet. He walked slowly a few steps to a cart that trainers had requested to take him off the field.
He is hitting .250 with two RBIs and three stolen bases in 12 games. Meadows is a career .233 hitter with 16 home runs, 59 RBIs, a .308 on-base percentage and .383 slugging percentage in 189 regular-season games since 2023.
Detroit selected Meadows in the second round of the 2018 MLB Draft.
Perez, 26, batted .244 last season for the Tigers with 13 homers, 43 RBIs, a .308 on-base percentage and .405 slugging percentage in 100 games. He is a career .243 hitter with 22 homers and 80 RBIs over 212 regular-season games since 2024.
Perez played every outfield position as well as designated hitter each of the past two seasons. He helped fill in for Meadows in 2025 when he was out for the first two months of the season due to a nerve issue in his right (throwing) shoulder during spring training.
Javier Baez moved from shortstop to center field to replace Meadows, and rookie Kevin McGonigle entered the game to play shortstop.
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Detroit Tigers center fielder Parker Meadows (22) collides with left fielder Riley Greene (31) on a fly ball hit by Minnesota Twins designated hitter Josh Bell (not pictured) in the eighth inning at Target Field. Meadows left the game. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images The Detroit Tigers placed center fielder Parker Meadows on the 10-day injured list on Friday with a broken bone in his left arm sustained in a scary collision with a teammate during a loss at Minnesota on Thursday.
Meadows, 26, fractured the radius bone in his left arm as well as suffering a concussion. He also received five stitches in his left cheek.
“Tough blow for him, tough blow for us,” manager A.J. Hinch said Friday.
In a corresponding move, the Tigers recalled outfielder Wenceel Perez from Triple-A Toledo.
Meadows is required to clear concussion tests by a team physician in the return-to-play program. He also will need additional testing to determine the severity of fracture and if he will need to have surgery.
He was hospitalized overnight in Minneapolis after being carted off the field in the bottom of the eighth inning of the 3-1 setback. Meadows was playing center field and Riley Greene was playing left field when Twins hitter Josh Bell hit a slicing fly ball toward the left-center field gap. Both outfielders converged on the ball, and Greene made the catch but his head clipped the side of Meadows’ face as the players collided.
Meadows fell to the outfield grass and remained still for a few moments as teammates and trainers came to check on him. He rolled onto his back as trainers attended to him. Eventually, Meadows was able to sit up and gingerly get to his feet. He walked slowly a few steps to a cart that trainers had requested to take him off the field.
He is hitting .250 with two RBIs and three stolen bases in 12 games. Meadows is a career .233 hitter with 16 home runs, 59 RBIs, a .308 on-base percentage and .383 slugging percentage in 189 regular-season games since 2023.
Detroit selected Meadows in the second round of the 2018 MLB Draft.
Perez, 26, batted .244 last season for the Tigers with 13 homers, 43 RBIs, a .308 on-base percentage and .405 slugging percentage in 100 games. He is a career .243 hitter with 22 homers and 80 RBIs over 212 regular-season games since 2024.
Perez played every outfield position as well as designated hitter each of the past two seasons. He helped fill in for Meadows in 2025 when he was out for the first two months of the season due to a nerve issue in his right (throwing) shoulder during spring training.
Javier Baez moved from shortstop to center field to replace Meadows, and rookie Kevin McGonigle entered the game to play shortstop.
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Detroit Tigers center fielder Parker Meadows (22) collides with…
Anil Kumble, the legendary cricketer, has urged caution amid the growing clamour to fast-track Vaibhav Suryavanshi into the Indian team, even as he acknowledged the 15-year-old’s remarkable consistency and temperament.
Speaking at a Barclays event on the power of global sport to drive community impact and opportunity at the Cricket Club of India on Friday, the former India captain and coach drew parallels with Sachin Tendulkar’s teenage exploits while emphasising the need to allow Suryavanshi the time to grow.
“When Sachin Tendulkar came into the scene, every time he walked out as a 14 or 15-year-old, he was scoring hundreds. I am sure what we have seen of Vaibhav, he is certainly doing all the right things,” Kumble said. “At this point in time, it’s a bit of pressure on a young lad to say, ‘look, I want you to play for India in two months’ time’.”

Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. | Photo Credit: PTI
Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. | Photo Credit: PTI
Suryavanshi, who turned 15 last month, has seamlessly transitioned from his Under-19 World Cup heroics into the Indian Premier League, where his audacious strokeplay has caught the imagination. Earlier this week, he struck Jasprit Bumrah for a six off the very first ball he faced — a statement shot that intensified calls for his immediate elevation to India’s T20I side.
Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. “It may happen, it may not happen, but he has a wonderful time. Even 10 years later, he will still be 25. That’s the best part about someone doing so well as a 15-year-old,” he said.
The former leg-spinner also pointed out that cricket offers different pathways to success. “Some start at 15, some at 28, but they still have a role to play. For Vaibhav, it could be this year, next year or maybe a couple of years later. But the way he is batting, I am sure the selectors will be watching closely.”
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Anil Kumble, the legendary cricketer, has urged caution amid the growing clamour to fast-track Vaibhav Suryavanshi into the Indian team, even as he acknowledged the 15-year-old’s remarkable consistency and temperament.
Speaking at a Barclays event on the power of global sport to drive community impact and opportunity at the Cricket Club of India on Friday, the former India captain and coach drew parallels with Sachin Tendulkar’s teenage exploits while emphasising the need to allow Suryavanshi the time to grow.
“When Sachin Tendulkar came into the scene, every time he walked out as a 14 or 15-year-old, he was scoring hundreds. I am sure what we have seen of Vaibhav, he is certainly doing all the right things,” Kumble said. “At this point in time, it’s a bit of pressure on a young lad to say, ‘look, I want you to play for India in two months’ time’.”

Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. | Photo Credit: PTI
Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. | Photo Credit: PTI
Suryavanshi, who turned 15 last month, has seamlessly transitioned from his Under-19 World Cup heroics into the Indian Premier League, where his audacious strokeplay has caught the imagination. Earlier this week, he struck Jasprit Bumrah for a six off the very first ball he faced — a statement shot that intensified calls for his immediate elevation to India’s T20I side.
Kumble, however, stressed that talent must be nurtured patiently. “It may happen, it may not happen, but he has a wonderful time. Even 10 years later, he will still be 25. That’s the best part about someone doing so well as a 15-year-old,” he said.
The former leg-spinner also pointed out that cricket offers different pathways to success. “Some start at 15, some at 28, but they still have a role to play. For Vaibhav, it could be this year, next year or maybe a couple of years later. But the way he is batting, I am sure the selectors will be watching closely.”
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Anil Kumble, the legendary cricketer, has urged caution amid the growing clamour to fast-track Vaibhav…
Mar 28, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Red Wings center Marco Kasper (92) skates with the puck in the second period against the Philadelphia Flyers at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images With three regular-season games remaining, the Detroit Red Wings will be trying to keep their slim playoff hopes alive when they host the New Jersey Devils in their home finale Saturday.
Detroit (41-29-9, 91 points) trails the Ottawa Senators by three points for the final Eastern Conference wild-card spot.
Four other teams are involved in the battle for the postseason and within two points of Detroit. They are the Philadelphia Flyers, New York Islanders, Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals, who all could either capture the wild-card spot or make the postseason by finishing third in the Metropolitan Division.
All teams involved in the race have three games left.
The Red Wings, who are 2-4-1 in their last seven, beat the visiting Flyers 6-3 on Thursday.
“That’s only one of four games for us,” said defenseman Moritz Seider, who had a career-high five points (a goal and four assists). “We need to get six more points and see where that puts us.”
Seider became the first Detroit defenseman with five points in a game since Reed Larson on Feb. 27, 1985 and the fourth in franchise history to pull off the feat.
“He does everything and he does it all well most of the time,” Detroit coach Todd McLellan said. “It’s really remarkable when you consider his age (25) and what he has already accomplished in this game.”
Seider is the first Red Wings’ defenseman with 50 assists in a season since Nicklas Lidstrom in 2007-08. He and Lucas Raymond are the first Detroit teammates with 50 assists each since Lidstrom and Pavel Datsyuk in 2007-08.
Captain Dylan Larkin had a hat trick and an assist for four points, Patrick Kane a goal and two assists and Alex DeBrincat reached 40 goals for the third time in his career against Philadelphia.
“(Seider) can’t have five points every night and (Larkin) can’t have a hat trick every night,” McLellan said. “(DeBrincat) got to 40. We got huge performances from those guys, and that played a huge part of the game.”
Goalie John Gibson left halfway through the game with a stiff neck after stopping 13 of 15 shots. Cam Talbot gave up a goal on 12 shots in relief.
McLellan said he does not think Gibson’s injury is serious, but the team recalled goaltender Michal Postava from AHL Grand Rapids under emergency circumstances.
The Devils (40-36-3, 83 points), who were eliminated from playoff contention on Tuesday, lost 5-2 to the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday night for their third loss in four games (1-2-1).
New Jersey, which has three games left, parted ways with general manager Tom Fitzgerald earlier this week and announced on Thursday that it was shutting down defenseman Luke Hughes for the season.
Hughes had been playing with an upper-body injury sustained before the Olympic break. He will undergo surgery.
Paul Cotter and Luke’s brother, Jack Hughes, scored on Thursday and Jake Allen made 25 saves.
“I thought we did a pretty good job of coming back. I think our team has done a pretty good job of that lately,” said Cotter, who is from suburban Detroit. “You could call it hanging in there, but getting to our game pretty quickly.”
–Field Level Media
Mar 28, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Red Wings center Marco Kasper (92) skates with the puck in the second period against the Philadelphia Flyers at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images With three regular-season games remaining, the Detroit Red Wings will be trying to keep their slim playoff hopes alive when they host the New Jersey Devils in their home finale Saturday.
Detroit (41-29-9, 91 points) trails the Ottawa Senators by three points for the final Eastern Conference wild-card spot.
Four other teams are involved in the battle for the postseason and within two points of Detroit. They are the Philadelphia Flyers, New York Islanders, Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals, who all could either capture the wild-card spot or make the postseason by finishing third in the Metropolitan Division.
All teams involved in the race have three games left.
The Red Wings, who are 2-4-1 in their last seven, beat the visiting Flyers 6-3 on Thursday.
“That’s only one of four games for us,” said defenseman Moritz Seider, who had a career-high five points (a goal and four assists). “We need to get six more points and see where that puts us.”
Seider became the first Detroit defenseman with five points in a game since Reed Larson on Feb. 27, 1985 and the fourth in franchise history to pull off the feat.
“He does everything and he does it all well most of the time,” Detroit coach Todd McLellan said. “It’s really remarkable when you consider his age (25) and what he has already accomplished in this game.”
Seider is the first Red Wings’ defenseman with 50 assists in a season since Nicklas Lidstrom in 2007-08. He and Lucas Raymond are the first Detroit teammates with 50 assists each since Lidstrom and Pavel Datsyuk in 2007-08.
Captain Dylan Larkin had a hat trick and an assist for four points, Patrick Kane a goal and two assists and Alex DeBrincat reached 40 goals for the third time in his career against Philadelphia.
“(Seider) can’t have five points every night and (Larkin) can’t have a hat trick every night,” McLellan said. “(DeBrincat) got to 40. We got huge performances from those guys, and that played a huge part of the game.”
Goalie John Gibson left halfway through the game with a stiff neck after stopping 13 of 15 shots. Cam Talbot gave up a goal on 12 shots in relief.
McLellan said he does not think Gibson’s injury is serious, but the team recalled goaltender Michal Postava from AHL Grand Rapids under emergency circumstances.
The Devils (40-36-3, 83 points), who were eliminated from playoff contention on Tuesday, lost 5-2 to the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday night for their third loss in four games (1-2-1).
New Jersey, which has three games left, parted ways with general manager Tom Fitzgerald earlier this week and announced on Thursday that it was shutting down defenseman Luke Hughes for the season.
Hughes had been playing with an upper-body injury sustained before the Olympic break. He will undergo surgery.
Paul Cotter and Luke’s brother, Jack Hughes, scored on Thursday and Jake Allen made 25 saves.
“I thought we did a pretty good job of coming back. I think our team has done a pretty good job of that lately,” said Cotter, who is from suburban Detroit. “You could call it hanging in there, but getting to our game pretty quickly.”
–Field Level Media
Mar 28, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Red Wings center Marco Kasper (92) skates with…