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Crypto continues to flourish following news of a ceasefire between Iran and the US, with…
Crypto continues to flourish following news of a ceasefire between Iran and the US, with…
शूट पर निकलीं सान्या मल्होत्रा, कश्मीर से साझा की झलकियां; देखें Source link #शट #पर…
Ashley Westwood doesn’t distinctly remember the last time he was in the dugout at the Sree Kanteerava Stadium. “Would have been the final game of the season when we won,” he tells Sportstar.
The ‘we’ here is Bengaluru FC, a club he helmed with distinction for three campaigns from 2013 to 2016 – winning the erstwhile I-League twice and the Federation Cup once – and the same club that he will return to this Saturday, albeit as the coach of Kerala Blasters in the Indian Super League.
Westwood’s final match in the Garden City came exactly a decade ago, in April 2016, during a 2-1 win over Lao Toyota to seal a AFC Cup round-of-16 berth. Funnily, Westwood was sent off in that match. Ten days earlier, in his final home fixture in the I-League, BFC had beaten Salgaocar FC 2-0 to clinch a second National crown in three seasons.
“Bangalore is full of fond memories,” Westwood says. “Winning the league is one and there was an open-top bus ride after that which remains fresh. Christmas with the players, fancy dress, and then winning the league again in the third season…
“But what I remember the most is the 1-1 draw against Mohun Bagan in the final match of the second season… and lose the title. We could have won three out of three. I remember the disappointments more than the achievements, but success is always a fond memory.”
When Westwood took over, BFC was brand new. It was also his first full-time managerial job. But in three seasons, the franchise had become a benchmark – for both professionalism and achievement.
ALSO READ: India exits AFC U-20 Women’s Asian Cup 2026 despite beating Chinese Taipei
In fact, the Englishman’s final game was the 3-2 away win over Hong Kong side Kitchee that helped earn a maiden AFC Cup quarterfinal slot. Five months later, under Spaniard Albert Roca, BFC reached the final, a first for an Indian club.
“When we started, we didn’t have much,” Westwood recalls. “We had a very small playing squad, and but for some signings like Sunil Chhetri and Robin Singh, the rest were those who couldn’t get a club. Budget was also low. So growing a club from scratch is something that stands you in good stead.”
At Blasters too he has to start from scratch, but only results-wise. After seven contests, the outfit is 13th in a 14-team ISL (one point) compared to BFC’s joint-second position (14). Nonetheless, BFC-Blasters remains one of the fiercest rivalries, and Westwood will experience this first hand.
“I am well aware of the rivalry… between two of the biggest clubs in southern India. For me though, it is about getting our fans to enjoy some good football, regardless of who we play.
“But going back to an old club is always special. I did that many times as a player. Now I am going to do that as a coach.”
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Ashley Westwood doesn’t distinctly remember the last time he was in the dugout at the Sree Kanteerava Stadium. “Would have been the final game of the season when we won,” he tells Sportstar.
The ‘we’ here is Bengaluru FC, a club he helmed with distinction for three campaigns from 2013 to 2016 – winning the erstwhile I-League twice and the Federation Cup once – and the same club that he will return to this Saturday, albeit as the coach of Kerala Blasters in the Indian Super League.
Westwood’s final match in the Garden City came exactly a decade ago, in April 2016, during a 2-1 win over Lao Toyota to seal a AFC Cup round-of-16 berth. Funnily, Westwood was sent off in that match. Ten days earlier, in his final home fixture in the I-League, BFC had beaten Salgaocar FC 2-0 to clinch a second National crown in three seasons.
“Bangalore is full of fond memories,” Westwood says. “Winning the league is one and there was an open-top bus ride after that which remains fresh. Christmas with the players, fancy dress, and then winning the league again in the third season…
“But what I remember the most is the 1-1 draw against Mohun Bagan in the final match of the second season… and lose the title. We could have won three out of three. I remember the disappointments more than the achievements, but success is always a fond memory.”
When Westwood took over, BFC was brand new. It was also his first full-time managerial job. But in three seasons, the franchise had become a benchmark – for both professionalism and achievement.
ALSO READ: India exits AFC U-20 Women’s Asian Cup 2026 despite beating Chinese Taipei
In fact, the Englishman’s final game was the 3-2 away win over Hong Kong side Kitchee that helped earn a maiden AFC Cup quarterfinal slot. Five months later, under Spaniard Albert Roca, BFC reached the final, a first for an Indian club.
“When we started, we didn’t have much,” Westwood recalls. “We had a very small playing squad, and but for some signings like Sunil Chhetri and Robin Singh, the rest were those who couldn’t get a club. Budget was also low. So growing a club from scratch is something that stands you in good stead.”
At Blasters too he has to start from scratch, but only results-wise. After seven contests, the outfit is 13th in a 14-team ISL (one point) compared to BFC’s joint-second position (14). Nonetheless, BFC-Blasters remains one of the fiercest rivalries, and Westwood will experience this first hand.
“I am well aware of the rivalry… between two of the biggest clubs in southern India. For me though, it is about getting our fans to enjoy some good football, regardless of who we play.
“But going back to an old club is always special. I did that many times as a player. Now I am going to do that as a coach.”
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Ashley Westwood doesn’t distinctly remember the last time he was in the dugout at the…
धार स्थित ऐतिहासिक भोजशाला मामले में याचिकाकर्ता हिंदू फ्रंट फॉर जस्टिस के वकील विष्णु शंकर…
The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the throne from the New York Yankees as the most hated team in baseball, if not the entirety of sports. They have taken the old-school Yankee approach of buying every player in the sport and have turned that into back-to-back World Series.
On the other hand, the Yankees have been far quieter in their offseason approaches the last few years. They’re relying on young prospects to continue developing on this team and retaining guys they’ve brought in through trades like David Bednar. They’ve been unwilling to over-expose themselves on top-end talent like Juan Soto, and it might just be working out for them.
New York hasn’t had the most challenging of starts to a season, but they’ve looked like the Evil Empire of old. The offense isn’t incredibly deep at the moment, and will most likely need to add a bat at the deadline if they truly want to be contenders come October, but the pitching looks awfully scary for the Bronx Bombers.
In recent seasons, the pitching has lagged behind the offense, but this year feels like that won’t be the case. The craziest part about this pitching surge is that the Yankees aren’t even close to full strength yet. Max Fried is picking up right where he left off in 2025, with a 1.35 ERA over three starts, and Cam Schlittler and Will Warren aren’t too far behind that mark either.
Those three alone would be scary in the playoffs, but Gerritt Cole and Carlos Rodon have all season to get healthy and join this rotation, which might be the best in baseball.
In the lineup, Ben Rice is taking a massive year three leap, holding an MLB-best 1.380 OPS, and Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, and Cody Bellinger are all having very solid starts to the year. If Jazz Chisolm or Trent Grisham could heat up at the plate, the lineup could be just as good as the Dodgers.
I can’t believe I’m saying this, but the Yankees might be underrated. I wasn’t high on them entering this season, and I’m willing to admit when I’m wrong. This is a very good Yankee squad. It’s far too early to declare that the AL East might have been overrated, but I won’t be shocked if that’s the case. Each team outside the Yankees currently sits below .500 and has far more obvious roster holes.
The Dodgers have done a great job of shielding the Yankees from “some” amount of criticism in the media entering 2026, and I think that’s great for this team. Get in on the Yankees at +800 to win the World Series, or it might end up being too late.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the throne from the New York Yankees as the most hated team in baseball, if not the entirety of sports. They have taken the old-school Yankee approach of buying every player in the sport and have turned that into back-to-back World Series.
On the other hand, the Yankees have been far quieter in their offseason approaches the last few years. They’re relying on young prospects to continue developing on this team and retaining guys they’ve brought in through trades like David Bednar. They’ve been unwilling to over-expose themselves on top-end talent like Juan Soto, and it might just be working out for them.
New York hasn’t had the most challenging of starts to a season, but they’ve looked like the Evil Empire of old. The offense isn’t incredibly deep at the moment, and will most likely need to add a bat at the deadline if they truly want to be contenders come October, but the pitching looks awfully scary for the Bronx Bombers.
In recent seasons, the pitching has lagged behind the offense, but this year feels like that won’t be the case. The craziest part about this pitching surge is that the Yankees aren’t even close to full strength yet. Max Fried is picking up right where he left off in 2025, with a 1.35 ERA over three starts, and Cam Schlittler and Will Warren aren’t too far behind that mark either.
Those three alone would be scary in the playoffs, but Gerritt Cole and Carlos Rodon have all season to get healthy and join this rotation, which might be the best in baseball.
In the lineup, Ben Rice is taking a massive year three leap, holding an MLB-best 1.380 OPS, and Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, and Cody Bellinger are all having very solid starts to the year. If Jazz Chisolm or Trent Grisham could heat up at the plate, the lineup could be just as good as the Dodgers.
I can’t believe I’m saying this, but the Yankees might be underrated. I wasn’t high on them entering this season, and I’m willing to admit when I’m wrong. This is a very good Yankee squad. It’s far too early to declare that the AL East might have been overrated, but I won’t be shocked if that’s the case. Each team outside the Yankees currently sits below .500 and has far more obvious roster holes.
The Dodgers have done a great job of shielding the Yankees from “some” amount of criticism in the media entering 2026, and I think that’s great for this team. Get in on the Yankees at +800 to win the World Series, or it might end up being too late.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the throne from the New York Yankees as the…
Chennai Super Kings is likely to get a boost ahead of its next match against Delhi Capitals on April 11, with middle-order batter Dewald Brevis all set to be fit for the crucial fixture.
The South African batter hinted that he has recovered from a side strain during a sponsor event on Wednesday. “I can’t wait to see you on the 11th, every match everywhere we play,” he said when asked to give a message to the CSK fans.
The five-time champion, which finished last in 2025, has gotten off to a poor start this year, having lost its first three matches.
Brevis scored 225 runs in six matches he played last year after joining the squad as an injury replacement for Gurjapneet Singh.
Meanwhile, M.S. Dhoni, who is recovering from a calf strain in the city, is unlikely to feature on Saturday. The former skipper was ruled out of the first two weeks of the tournament ahead of the team’s first game and did not travel to the team’s away fixtures in Guwahati and Bengaluru.
The 44-year-old, though trained in Chennai before the team’s first home fixture against the Punjab Kings last week.
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Chennai Super Kings is likely to get a boost ahead of its next match against Delhi Capitals on April 11, with middle-order batter Dewald Brevis all set to be fit for the crucial fixture.
The South African batter hinted that he has recovered from a side strain during a sponsor event on Wednesday. “I can’t wait to see you on the 11th, every match everywhere we play,” he said when asked to give a message to the CSK fans.
The five-time champion, which finished last in 2025, has gotten off to a poor start this year, having lost its first three matches.
Brevis scored 225 runs in six matches he played last year after joining the squad as an injury replacement for Gurjapneet Singh.
Meanwhile, M.S. Dhoni, who is recovering from a calf strain in the city, is unlikely to feature on Saturday. The former skipper was ruled out of the first two weeks of the tournament ahead of the team’s first game and did not travel to the team’s away fixtures in Guwahati and Bengaluru.
The 44-year-old, though trained in Chennai before the team’s first home fixture against the Punjab Kings last week.
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Chennai Super Kings is likely to get a boost ahead of its next match against…
Apr 3, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels pitcher Reid Detmers (48) delivers during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images Two pitchers coming in off strong starts in which they did not gain a decision will take the mound Wednesday afternoon when the Los Angeles Angels face the Atlanta Braves in the rubber match of their three-game series in Anaheim, Calif.
Los Angeles left-hander Reid Detmers (0-0, 2.38 ERA) will start in the series finale after allowing just three singles over 6 2/3 shutout innings in his team’s 3-1, 10-inning loss to Seattle on Friday.
Detmers will oppose right-hander Grant Holmes (0-1, 2.45 ERA), who yielded just one hit and struck out four over six shutout innings in a game Atlanta won 2-0 at Arizona on Friday.
Holmes is 0-0 with a 0.00 ERA in one career start against the Angels, striking out 10 and allowing three hits over six scoreless innings in a 4-0 loss on July 1, 2025.
Detmers is 1-0 with a 0.00 ERA in two career appearances (one start) vs. the Braves. He walked four batters and struck out four against the Mariners on Friday.
“I thought he was great,” Angels manager Kurt Suzuki said of Detmers. “Under control, executed, made pitches. He freaking pitched his butt off.”
Los Angeles, behind home runs by Zach Neto and Jo Adell and eight dominant innings from Jose Soriano, won the series opener with the Braves 6-2 on Monday. Atlanta bounced back for a 7-2 victory on Tuesday.
Ozzie Albies hit his third homer on Tuesday, but the story of the night was a fifth-inning fight between Braves starter Reynaldo Lopez and Los Angeles designated hitter Jorge Soler.
Soler hit a two-run shot in the first inning, his fifth home run in 23 career at-bats against Lopez. Soler was hit on his wrist in his next at-bat in the third and then saw a head-high fastball sail to the backstop in the fifth.
It was after that pitch that Soler decided to confront Lopez, his teammate with the Braves in 2024. The two squared up and began swinging wildly, with neither landing a solid blow as the dugouts emptied. Soler eventually was tackled to the ground by Atlanta manager Walt Weiss, who was a bench coach with the Braves when Soler garnered World Series MVP honors in 2021. Meanwhile, Mike Trout grabbed a hold of Lopez.
“It wasn’t over his head, but it was head-high coming in,” Suzuki said. “I don’t blame Jorge one bit. Words were exchanged and Jorge came out. Any time you get thrown at your head … you have a family, your career, it’s dangerous. I know it’s part of the game, it happens, but ask any hitter, ball gets thrown near their head, especially after hitting a homer, it’s not good.”
“He didn’t miss with the other hitters like that, like he missed to me,” Soler said through an interpreter. “So I think it was intentional.”
Lopez, also via an interpreter, called the incident “a misunderstanding.”
“We spend time together as teammates, and so I just think it was a misunderstanding because I would never do anything,” Lopez said. “I wasn’t trying to hit him, and there was never any intent on my part to hit him at all at any point.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 3, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels pitcher Reid Detmers (48) delivers during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images Two pitchers coming in off strong starts in which they did not gain a decision will take the mound Wednesday afternoon when the Los Angeles Angels face the Atlanta Braves in the rubber match of their three-game series in Anaheim, Calif.
Los Angeles left-hander Reid Detmers (0-0, 2.38 ERA) will start in the series finale after allowing just three singles over 6 2/3 shutout innings in his team’s 3-1, 10-inning loss to Seattle on Friday.
Detmers will oppose right-hander Grant Holmes (0-1, 2.45 ERA), who yielded just one hit and struck out four over six shutout innings in a game Atlanta won 2-0 at Arizona on Friday.
Holmes is 0-0 with a 0.00 ERA in one career start against the Angels, striking out 10 and allowing three hits over six scoreless innings in a 4-0 loss on July 1, 2025.
Detmers is 1-0 with a 0.00 ERA in two career appearances (one start) vs. the Braves. He walked four batters and struck out four against the Mariners on Friday.
“I thought he was great,” Angels manager Kurt Suzuki said of Detmers. “Under control, executed, made pitches. He freaking pitched his butt off.”
Los Angeles, behind home runs by Zach Neto and Jo Adell and eight dominant innings from Jose Soriano, won the series opener with the Braves 6-2 on Monday. Atlanta bounced back for a 7-2 victory on Tuesday.
Ozzie Albies hit his third homer on Tuesday, but the story of the night was a fifth-inning fight between Braves starter Reynaldo Lopez and Los Angeles designated hitter Jorge Soler.
Soler hit a two-run shot in the first inning, his fifth home run in 23 career at-bats against Lopez. Soler was hit on his wrist in his next at-bat in the third and then saw a head-high fastball sail to the backstop in the fifth.
It was after that pitch that Soler decided to confront Lopez, his teammate with the Braves in 2024. The two squared up and began swinging wildly, with neither landing a solid blow as the dugouts emptied. Soler eventually was tackled to the ground by Atlanta manager Walt Weiss, who was a bench coach with the Braves when Soler garnered World Series MVP honors in 2021. Meanwhile, Mike Trout grabbed a hold of Lopez.
“It wasn’t over his head, but it was head-high coming in,” Suzuki said. “I don’t blame Jorge one bit. Words were exchanged and Jorge came out. Any time you get thrown at your head … you have a family, your career, it’s dangerous. I know it’s part of the game, it happens, but ask any hitter, ball gets thrown near their head, especially after hitting a homer, it’s not good.”
“He didn’t miss with the other hitters like that, like he missed to me,” Soler said through an interpreter. “So I think it was intentional.”
Lopez, also via an interpreter, called the incident “a misunderstanding.”
“We spend time together as teammates, and so I just think it was a misunderstanding because I would never do anything,” Lopez said. “I wasn’t trying to hit him, and there was never any intent on my part to hit him at all at any point.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 3, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels pitcher Reid Detmers (48) delivers during…
With 3:25 left on the clock Sacramento came to the realization they were actually leading the game due to some horrific Warriors’ shooting, which meant it was time to tank like nobody has tanked before.
Doug McDermott was so far away from the play that it was comical, and fouled Seth Curry for absolutely no reason other than intentionally trying to lose the game while up by one point. It was part of some simply incredible work in the clutch by the veteran McDermott to achieve the franchise goal of losing.
Following this foul he made a three, and needed to pull himself back in. He immediately committed a turnover on a bad pass, then missed two threes early in the shot clock with under a minute left to kill any potential Sacramento offense and ensure the Warriors could pull away.
It worked, as the Kings went from leading 101-100, to losing the game 105-110.
This is the entire raison d’être for Sacramento this season. They are currently tied with the Utah Jazz for 4th worst in the NBA, and they absolutely cannot afford to finish and better. If they were to win on Tuesday night their No. 1 lottery pick odds would have dropped from 11.5% to 8.3%, and their Top 4 pick offs would have fallen from 45.2% to 34.8%. The 2026 NBA Draft is loaded with talent, but there is serious suck competition to try and get one of the big three prospects in the class between Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson, and AJ Dybantsa.
Even with the stake being this high the tanking in the NBA is out of control, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Adam Silver levies some sort of penalty for committing such a brazen, unnecessary foul.
With 3:25 left on the clock Sacramento came to the realization they were actually leading the game due to some horrific Warriors’ shooting, which meant it was time to tank like nobody has tanked before.
Doug McDermott was so far away from the play that it was comical, and fouled Seth Curry for absolutely no reason other than intentionally trying to lose the game while up by one point. It was part of some simply incredible work in the clutch by the veteran McDermott to achieve the franchise goal of losing.
Following this foul he made a three, and needed to pull himself back in. He immediately committed a turnover on a bad pass, then missed two threes early in the shot clock with under a minute left to kill any potential Sacramento offense and ensure the Warriors could pull away.
It worked, as the Kings went from leading 101-100, to losing the game 105-110.
This is the entire raison d’être for Sacramento this season. They are currently tied with the Utah Jazz for 4th worst in the NBA, and they absolutely cannot afford to finish and better. If they were to win on Tuesday night their No. 1 lottery pick odds would have dropped from 11.5% to 8.3%, and their Top 4 pick offs would have fallen from 45.2% to 34.8%. The 2026 NBA Draft is loaded with talent, but there is serious suck competition to try and get one of the big three prospects in the class between Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson, and AJ Dybantsa.
Even with the stake being this high the tanking in the NBA is out of control, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Adam Silver levies some sort of penalty for committing such a brazen, unnecessary foul.
The Sacramento Kings almost achieved the unthinkable on Tuesday night: Win a game. Locked in a stunningly close battle with the Golden State Warrior, the 21-59 Kings had to make sure they lost to keep their draft dreams alive, and damn if they didn’t go above and beyond the call of duty.
With 3:25 left on the clock Sacramento came to the realization they were actually leading the game due to some horrific Warriors’ shooting, which meant it was time to tank like nobody has tanked before.
Doug McDermott was so far away from the play that it was comical, and fouled Seth Curry for absolutely no reason other than intentionally trying to lose the game while up by one point. It was part of some simply incredible work in the clutch by the veteran McDermott to achieve the franchise goal of losing.
Following this foul he made a three, and needed to pull himself back in. He immediately committed a turnover on a bad pass, then missed two threes early in the shot clock with under a minute left to kill any potential Sacramento offense and ensure the Warriors could pull away.
It worked, as the Kings went from leading 101-100, to losing the game 105-110.
This is the entire raison d’être for Sacramento this season. They are currently tied with the Utah Jazz for 4th worst in the NBA, and they absolutely cannot afford to finish and better. If they were to win on Tuesday night their No. 1 lottery pick odds would have dropped from 11.5% to 8.3%, and their Top 4 pick offs would have fallen from 45.2% to 34.8%. The 2026 NBA Draft is loaded with talent, but there is serious suck competition to try and get one of the big three prospects in the class between Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson, and AJ Dybantsa.
Even with the stake being this high the tanking in the NBA is out of control, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Adam Silver levies some sort of penalty for committing such a brazen, unnecessary foul.
The Sacramento Kings almost achieved the unthinkable on Tuesday night: Win a game. Locked in…
Young Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) pacer Kartik Tyagi on Wednesday said he got a lot of help from team mentor Dwayne Bravo about the implementation of one’s skills in match situations.
On the eve of KKR’s Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 match against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) at Eden Gardens, Tyagi said, “Everyone knows about one’s skill set. Sometimes you make plans, but when you are under pressure, and you are playing after a long time, then you are not able to think properly. At such a time, when you have so much experience outside, that helps us a lot on the ground.”
The 25-year-old said he was aware that several key KKR pacers would not be available due to injuries, and he might get chances to play.
ALSO READ | LSG vs KKR, IPL 2026: ‘Pant is a bowlers’ captain,’ says Lucknow Super Giants bowling coach Crowe
“Long before, everyone knew that Harshit (Rana) bhai was injured. And there was a chance of (Matheesha) Pathirana being injured. So we prepared (accordingly),” he said.
Tyagi, who got a chance to play in the IPL after taking 11 wickets in the 2020 Under-19 World Cup but later struggled with fitness issues, said he worked on his fitness and bowling.
“When I was in Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH), Dale Steyn was there. I was having an injury-related problem. There was an issue of shin splints, which was not getting sorted. Then I went to the physiotherapist, who had been with me from under-16 days, and did the treatment there. I made a lot of changes. I had to fix everything so that I could become a better bowler,” said Tyagi.
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Young Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) pacer Kartik Tyagi on Wednesday said he got a lot of help from team mentor Dwayne Bravo about the implementation of one’s skills in match situations.
On the eve of KKR’s Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 match against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) at Eden Gardens, Tyagi said, “Everyone knows about one’s skill set. Sometimes you make plans, but when you are under pressure, and you are playing after a long time, then you are not able to think properly. At such a time, when you have so much experience outside, that helps us a lot on the ground.”
The 25-year-old said he was aware that several key KKR pacers would not be available due to injuries, and he might get chances to play.
ALSO READ | LSG vs KKR, IPL 2026: ‘Pant is a bowlers’ captain,’ says Lucknow Super Giants bowling coach Crowe
“Long before, everyone knew that Harshit (Rana) bhai was injured. And there was a chance of (Matheesha) Pathirana being injured. So we prepared (accordingly),” he said.
Tyagi, who got a chance to play in the IPL after taking 11 wickets in the 2020 Under-19 World Cup but later struggled with fitness issues, said he worked on his fitness and bowling.
“When I was in Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH), Dale Steyn was there. I was having an injury-related problem. There was an issue of shin splints, which was not getting sorted. Then I went to the physiotherapist, who had been with me from under-16 days, and did the treatment there. I made a lot of changes. I had to fix everything so that I could become a better bowler,” said Tyagi.
Published on Apr 08, 2026
Young Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) pacer Kartik Tyagi on Wednesday said he got a lot…
08:46 PM, 08-Apr-2026 DC vs GT Live Score: शुभमन गिल का शानदार पचासा शुभमन गिल…