Decision to tinker with middle order hurt Sunrisers – David Warner

Sunrisers Hyderabad had left out the out-of-form Yusuf Pathan and Manish Pandey for the match against Delhi Capitals

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Apr-20193:40

Murali Kartik: Winners have parties, losers have meetings

Kane Williamson’s return to fitness, and the lack of form of the middle-order batsmen, forced Sunrisers Hyderabad to make a raft of changes for their Sunday night exchange with Delhi Capitals, and David Warner feels that made a difference to end result – Capitals winning by 39 runs after Sunrisers went from 101 for 2 to 116 all out.”I don’t like hindsight. Today, there was a decision that they [the team management] made – I’m no longer part of that process, I don’t know what their thinking was – but when you lose that experience in the middle, it can be quite challenging and quite difficult for the new guys that come in,” Warner said of the call to leave out Mohammad Nabi, Yusuf Pathan and Manish Pandey to fit in Williamson, Ricky Bhui and Abhishek Sharma.Of those dropped, while Nabi had been impressive with the ball when given a chance, Pathan (32 runs in five innings with a strike rate of 86.48) and Pandey (54 runs in five innings, strike rate 93.10) had been struggling to score runs.

When you lose that experience in the middle, it can be quite challenging and quite difficult for the new guys that come inDAVID WARNER

That must have forced the team management’s hand, but the three men brought in scored a total of 12 runs in 23 balls on the day, failing to give the innings the solidity it needed in the middle overs after Warner (51 off 47) and Jonny Bairstow (41 off 31) had given them another great start.”But there is no excuses – we got off to a good start, we didn’t capitalise on those middle periods, there were a lot of ones, not many twos, they [Capitals] shut down the boundaries well and they bowled very well,” Warner said. “We just missed a couple of opportunities to hit boundaries through that middle period.”Sunrisers, after winning three of their first four games, have now lost three in a row to slip to sixth place on the points table, only above Rajasthan Royals and Royal Challengers Bangalore.David Warner punches down the ground•BCCI”We got off to a good start, again, without losing a wicket. You look at the overs between seven and 13, we had a fair few dots, we didn’t find too many boundaries, and from that position we were in, you should be chasing … I think it was ten an over, 11 an over towards the back end,” Warner elaborated.”I think we probably didn’t utilise those middle periods as well as we’d like. We’re generally pretty good running between the wickets, but we failed to just hit that boundary. And again, we lost wickets after a start, which is disappointing.”I take responsibility as well, as an in batsman, you try and be there at the end. Unfortunate that that’s the way I play, I tried to look for a boundary but I was unlucky,” he said of holing out off Kagiso Rabada at mid-off in the 17th over.Colin Munro, the Capitals batsman who hit a 24-ball 40 earlier in the evening, credited his team’s bowlers – Rabada, Chris Morris and Keemo Paul picked up all ten wickets between them – for giving them a win that seemed unlikely while Warner and Bairstow were in the middle.”They obviously got off to a good start, but we knew if we stayed in the game and we stayed in the contest for every ball, it was going to go down to the wire, and we got those breakthroughs and those wickets at crucial stages,” Munro said. “They got away from us in terms of the [required] run rate, so credit to our bowlers, how we fought every single ball and stayed in the contest.”The win took Capitals to ten points from eight games and the No. 2 spot on the points table, only behind Chennai Super Kings, who are well ahead on 14 points from the same number of games.

Pujara's best overseas tally vaults him to No. 3 in Test rankings

Cheteshwar Pujara’s tally of 521 runs in the four Tests in Australia, his best-ever returns on an overseas tour, has vaulted him to third spot in the ICC rankings for Test batsmen. His runs were crucial in India’s historic 2-1 series win that extended their run at the top of the team standings, while Australia remained fifth despite losing a point.Pujara struck his overseas best of 193 in the drawn fourth Test in Sydney, to follow centuries in Adelaide and Melbourne, and was named Player of the Series. Elsewhere, Rishabh Pant, who also brought up his best Test score of 159 not out in Sydney, was another big gainer, jumping 21 spots to vault into the top 20. No Indian wicketkeeper has been ranked higher in the batting rankings than Pant, who now sits at No. 17.Pant’s aggregate of 673 points are the highest-ever by an Indian wicketkeeper. MS Dhoni, who retired from Tests in December 2014, held the previous highest rating points (662), and his highest ranking was No. 19. Pant was India’s second-highest run scorer in the series with 350 runs. In addition, he also collected 20 dismissals.In the first Test in Adelaide, Pant took 11 catches to equal the world record for most catches by a wicketkeeper in a Test. He eclipsed the all-time India record of 10 catches by Wriddhiman Saha, and drew level with England wicketkeeper Jack Russell and South Africa’s AB de Villiers.Meanwhile, Ravindra Jadeja gained one place to be listed fifth among bowlers, even as he surpassed West Indies captain Jason Holder to climb to second place among allrounders. Jadeja played only the final two Tests, picking seven wickets in addition to a counter-attacking half-century in Sydney.A few South Africa players also moved up the rankings table, having taken an unassailable lead in the three-match series, with victories in the first two Tests in Centurion and Cape Town. Opening batsman Aiden Markram moved back into the top 10 after scoring 78 in South Africa’ eight-wicket win over Pakistan in the Cape Town Test. He slotted in at No. 10, while team-mate Temba Bavuma moved into the top 30 for the first time.Among the bowlers, Vernon Philander has gained one position to reach third place while Duanne Olivier, who picked 16 wickets in two Tests, continued his surge to move up to 32nd place from 36th.

Para o Flamengo, derrota no Fla-Flu vai além de 45 minutos desastrosos

MatériaMais Notícias

Arrascaeta foi curto e grosso na saída do Fla-Flu da última quarta-feira, em entrevista à “Rede Globo”: “Não merece ser campeão”. A fala do uruguaio simboliza e escancara que a derrota de virada para o Fluminense, por 2 a 1, vai além dos três pontos perdidos na briga pelo título brasileiro e dos 45 minutos desastrosos no segundo tempo, quando o Tricolor marcou os gols.

RelacionadasFutebol NacionalSão Paulo e Flamengo vacilam; Fluminense reage, Goiás sonha… Confira a classificação do BrasileiroFutebol Nacional06/01/2021FluminenseFilipe Luís reclama e Caio Paulista responde: ‘Perderam porque você errou, não porque fiquei caído’Fluminense06/01/2021FlamengoCeni analisa derrota do Flamengo: ‘Os erros que cometemos são grotescos para um time que quer ser campeão’Flamengo06/01/2021

O desabafo do uruguaio vai ao encontro de atuações inconsistentes de um time que não tem apresentado repertório capaz de permear cenários distintos ao longo dos jogos e ser imponente com organização. O segundo tempo contra o Fluminense, por exemplo, acentuou as recorrentes mexidas improdutivas deRogério Ceni – como recuar Willian Arão para a zaga.

E dá para dizer que a desorganização no decorrer dos jogos foi uma tônica dos dois últimos tropeços do Flamengo, mesmo com semanas cheias para treinar, o que é alarmante e não condiz com os méritos necessários por uma taça que coroa a regularidade.

O trabalho de Ceni, hoje, reflete mais pontos negativos do que positivos. Se por um lado o time consegue ter volume de jogo no campo adversário e criar chances forçando erro dos rivais, por outro, não sê constância e efetividade nos dois tempos de jogo. Outro ponto que nada contra a maré é o de insistentes falhas do sistema defensivo, independente de erros individuais, pesados significativamente na balança pelo treinador:

-Tivemos ótimas chance de ampliar, e o Fluminense veio para jogar bola na área de qualquer lugar, e assim conseguiu o primeiro gol, em uma falta. Sofrendo gols dessa maneira fica difícil, realmente.Tivemos falhas grandes no jogo, e por isso perdemos. De resto, posse, finalizações… fora isso não tenho como explicar – salientou Ceni, em entrevista coletiva.

OUTROS ALARMES

Ontem, apesar de ter finalizado 19 vezes e ter trocado673 passes (com precisão de86%, segundo dados do “Sofascore”), o Flamengo demonstrou linhas descompactadas, um time exposto e que ainda está distante de ter uma saída de bola à altura da qualidade de seu plantel. Contra o Fortaleza, mesmo num ritmo ainda mais lento, o panorama foi parecido.

Vai ser necessário Ceni driblar a pressão e os números ruins (aproveitamento de 48.5% e apenas quatro vitórias em 11 jogos) para mostrar que o seu dedo é compatível com a missão de, primeiro, evoluir com as fragilidades afloradas e, depois (aproveitando a fala de Arrascaeta), fazer por merecer o título, uma vez que osalarmes vistos contra o Flu estão longe de ser pontuais. Vão além.

O PRÓXIMO JOGO

Agora, o Flamengo volta a campo neste domingo, dia 10 de janeiro. Pela 29ª rodada do Brasileirão, o Rubro-Negro recebe o Ceará no Maracanã, às 16h.

> Confira e simule a tabela do Campeonato Brasileiro

Com 49 pontos, o time de Ceni segue a sete pontos de distância do líder São Paulo, que perdeu para o Red Bull Bragantino nesta quarta e está com 56 pontos. O Atlético-MG, que também tem 49, não atuará neste meio de semana.

Everton eyeing "brilliant" out-of-favour player from Aston Villa

On the pitch, Everton have enjoyed a solid season so far under Sean Dyche with results enough to leave them in mid-table and away from the relegation zone. Consequences of actions off the pitch have dragged them back into the bottom three, however, and five points adrift of Premier League safety after their point deduction for breaching financial fair play rules.

Dyche and everyone involved at Goodison Park may be incredibly frustrated after the form they found themselves in. Nonetheless, the Toffees have been forced to save themselves once again and after transfers put them in this mess, Everton could look to the winter window and one particular target to get them out of it.

Everton transfer news

Welcoming the likes of Ashley Young, Arnuat Danjuma and Jack Harrison during the summer transfer window, Everton's reinforcements were beginning to pay dividends. And if it wasn't for their point deduction, the Toffees would be sitting on 14 points right now, five points clear of the dropzone and sitting comfortably in 15th. Now, with a busy festive period of fixtures approaching, Everton must rally and ensure that the deduction doesn't result in a change of form on the pitch. To ensure that, the Toffees could reportedly turn to the January transfer window to welcome one particular player.

Everton could sign "terrific" striker with more goals this season than DCL

This “terrific” centre-forward being linked to Everton has scored more goals than DCL this season.

ByAdam Scully Nov 29, 2023

According to Wayne Veysey of Football Insider, Everton are keeping tabs on Leander Dendoncker ahead of a potential January move. The former Wolverhampton Wanderers man has fallen out-of-favour under Unai Emery and the Villans are now reportedly willing to listen to offers for their midfielder. Dendoncker very nearly completed a move away from the Midlands in the summer, only for a proposed move to Fenerbahce to collapse on deadline day.

With Everton in the market for a defensive midfielder, they could turn to Dendoncker when the winter window opens.

"Brilliant" Dendoncker needs move

Dendoncker's stats at Aston Villa so far this season don't exactly paint a pretty picture. The Belgian is yet to start a Premier League game and has managed just seven minutes in England's top flight. His only two starts have come in the Europa Conference League and Carabao Cup, as Villa defeated Zrinjski Mosar 1-0 and, ironically, lost against Everton 2-1 to exit the League Cup in frustrating fashion.

Dendoncker could get the minutes that he needs at Everton, however. As things stand, Dyche has the likes of James Garner partnering Idrissa Gueye, opting to push Abdoulaye Doucoure further forward. In Dendoncker, the former Burnley boss could have an ideal and certainly more experienced partner for Gueye than Garner; a partner that could make the difference between survival and relegation.

Aston Villa midfielder Leander Dendoncker.

Dendoncker's former teammate, Max Kilman, knows all about his quality despite his current role at Villa, telling The Express & Star via Molinuex News: “Leander’s performances always go under the radar. He does the job and gives you a good performance every time. I’m delighted for him to get his goal and glad that people realise how good he has played. He’s brilliant, nothing phases him. He knows his task and he doesn’t feel the pressure.”

Mismatch on the cards as fragile West Indies take on Kohli's India

Rishabh Pant is set to make his ODI debut as a full-time batsman after being named alongside MS Dhoni in the XII

The Preview by Sidharth Monga20-Oct-20183:33

Agarkar: Pant could very well be the floater in the middle-order

Big PictureIt is never good news for a series when the build-up talk is more around who is missing rather than who is playing. And we are not even talking about the Test series in Australia later this year. After tough tours of South Africa and England, India’s tryst with lack of competition is in full swing. The home Test series is done in six days, and they are now staring at a West Indies ODI side without Chris Gayle, Evin Lewis, Bravo brothers, Sunil Narine and Andre Russell. For the health of international cricket, look as much at this West Indies series as at the Edgbaston Test between India and England earlier this year.India will not complain. There is every chance, though, that they might not get to work on their middle-order issues in this series. Those issues crop up only when the top order doesn’t bat through, and that usually happens in close contests. West Indies will have a big challenge to make that happen against a top order in which all three ODI giants will be looking to fill their boots. Don’t bet against records being broken. There could be double-centuries and some monstrous scores.Spare a thought, though, for the West Indies captain Jason Holder. The losses all go against his name when unfortunately the best players in the islands can’t be available to play international cricket. The big guns came out during the World Cup qualifiers, but they are either on hire elsewhere right now or rusty and in a state of disrepair. While facing India’s slow wristspin will be a challenge for them, the likes of Shmiron Hetmeyer and Shai Hope should be able to give a better account of themselves against the white ball, especially if they catch India on a dew-laden evening. And it will take all that to make sure it is not one of the most one-sided ODI series in India.Form guideIndia WTWWW (most recent first)
West Indies LWLLWIn the spotlightWhat a remarkable turnaround for Rishabh Pant, who not long ago was far far away from making himself an international career before the World Cup in 2019. Having played T20Is in the Nidahas Cup in Sri Lanka, he was left out of the limited-overs sides in favour of MS Dhoni and Dinesh Karthik. He was not even originally part of the India A first-class side on the shadow tour of England, which was used for selection hints.Then it emerged that Test regular Wriddhiman Saha had not recovered from his injury in time, and India hurriedly placed Pant in the unofficial Tests side and named him in the Test squad, back-up to Dinesh Karthik. Midway during the series, Karthik was dropped, and Pant – even though still a work in progress as a pure wicketkeeper – grabbed his chance with a hundred at The Oval, the first by an India wicketkeeper in England, Australia, South Africa or New Zealand. He followed it up with a pair of attacking 92s in the Tests against West Indies, and is now set to make his ODI debut with India continuing to look for a solution to their middle-order problems.1:43

Can Marlon Samuels continue his prolific run in India?

The last man to score an ODI hundred in India, Marlon Samuels, is the most experienced player in the West Indies squad. He will need to shepherd the young batting unit in their first challenge against the limited-overs spin of such good quality.Team newsIndia have named Pant in a XII that includes six batsmen, Ravindra Jadeja as the allrounder and five other bowlers. In all likelihood, it will come down to choosing between Mohammed Shami and Khaleel Ahmed for the 11th place.India: 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 Ambati Rayudu, 5 Rishabh Pant, 6 MS Dhoni (wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Kuldeep Yadav, 9 Yuzvendra Chahal, 10 Umesh Yadav, 11 Mohammed Shami/Khaleel AhmedNeither of the regular West Indies openers is here, which leaves them a big challenge. Kieran Powell should take up one of those slots even though he played in the middle order in their last ODI.West Indies (possible): 1 Sunil Ambris, 2 Kieran Powell, 3 Shai Hope (wk), 4 Shimron Hetmeyer, 5 Marlon Samuels, 6 Rovman Powell, 7 Jason Holder (capt), 8 Ashley Nurse 9 Keemo Paul, 10 Devendra Bishoo, 11 Alzarri Joseph/Kemar RoachPitch and conditionsThe winter is just around the corner in most of India, and that means dew. Guwahati should be no exception to that. A 1.30pm start should mean only the second half of the second innings should get affected.Stats and trivia Virat Kohli is 221 runs away from absolutely smashing the record for the least innings taken to reach 10,000 runs. The record belongs to Sachin Tendulkar, who reached 10,000 runs in 259 innings. Kohli has played 56 less innings to get to 9779 runs. Not that all of Kohli’s records are safe. If Shikhar Dhawan can score 177 runs by the end of the five-match series, he will become the fastest Indian to 5,000 runs. West Indies have never been whitewashed in an ODI series in IndiaQuotes”If you see our one-day performances there’s not much to ponder on apart from that one slot [No. 4] I spoke of. The bowlers are bowling well, the batsmen are batting well, the lower order hasn’t got much batting because Shikhar, Rohit and myself have made a lot of runs. But having those experienced guys in the middle order will definitely help us and we feel quite settled as a batting unit.”
“We expect a really tough challenge from them, but it’s all about building towards the World Cup. We’ve got some youngsters here who we want to see and hopefully they can express themselves and make us proud.”

New PCB chief removes four advisors including Shoaib Akhtar

Ehsan Mani is keen on revamping the board’s structure, constitution and the pattern of day to day functioning

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Sep-2018New PCB chairman Ehsan Mani has removed the quartet of advisors, including former fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar, Islamabad regional head Shakeel Sheikh and two others, who were appointed by his predecessor Najam Sethi during his tenure.Although Shoaib had tweeted on Thursday claiming he had resigned from the position of advisor to the PCB chairman, he and the other three were, in fact, informed through an official letter that their services were no more required. While Shakeel and Aizad Sayid were serving as honorary members, Shoaib and former Test cricketer Salahuddin Sallu were paid advisors to the chairman.Sheikh, formerly a PCB governing board member representing Islamabad region, took on the role of advisor on domestic cricket and grounds upon the completion of his term last year, rendering the switch a subject of conflict of interest, as he was thought to be unfairly allotting domestic matches to a ground in the Islamabad region called the Diamond Cricket Club. He was considered the most powerful – non-cricketer – individual running domestic cricket affairs.Sayid, who was originally a director of cricket academies and game development until last year was removed from the position over issues of administration. But then he was reappointed advisor to Sethi on grassroots and club cricket affairs.Mani has, in fact, dissolved all the committees formed during Sethi’s tenure, citing conflict of interest as a major issue in all of them. Mani cited the example of the chief finance officer, who was also part of the audit committee, as one such case. “He was in the audit committee which is not a good practice because he is the one who has to face questions during audit then how can be the one in the committee,” Mani had questioned. Similarly, he felt that every working committee formed by Sethi was constituted against the basic principle of professionalism.The PCB under Mani is facing changes in the Board’s structure, constitution and the pattern of day to day functioning. Only the national selection committees at senior and junior levels for both men and women are intact. Mani also said the number of people working in Pakistan cricket – over 900 employees- was far too many.”I doubt such big number of employees are working in any cricket board of the world. It is mainly because the PCB has centralised many things and there is a need to decentralise. No cricket board in the world is running stadiums as associations are owning those.”

Mauricio Pochettino admits young Chelsea players are struggling with pressure of playing for the Blues- as he organises a barbecue to help them settle

Mauricio Pochettino has admitted some Chelsea players are struggling to deal with the pressure of playing for the Blues.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Chelsea spent big again
  • Influx of young players
  • Pochettino admits some are struggling
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Pochettino, 52, has revealed that some of the younger players at Chelsea are struggling to deal with the pressure mounting on the team throughout the 2023-24 campaign.

    The Blues underwent another summer transfer window of mass investment prior to the current season getting underway – but are yet to hit the heights that you would expect after more than £1 billion ($1.3bn) being spent on the squad. Chelsea currently sit in the bottom half of the Premier League table and squandered arguably their best opportunity to secure silverware, after suffering a 1-0 defeat in the Carabao Cup final to Liverpool.

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    WHAT POCHETTINO SAID

    Speaking to the press ahead of Chelsea's FA Cup quarter-final against Leicester, Pochettino said: “One thing we cannot change is to give time to the players to get experience and be more mature.

    “You ask me about Cole Palmer – not all the players have the same process in settling at the club or to perform. We are in a process that of course the main group, the main young players…they struggle a little bit to deal with the pressure to play for Chelsea. That is the thing we are of course aware of and we are focusing on trying to help them in all the areas.”

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    In an attempt to help the younger players settle in London – such as Noni Madueke, Mykhailo Mudryk and Nicolas Jackson – the Chelsea boss has organised a number of team bonding sessions – one of which being a barbecue at the team's Cobham training ground, where over 120 members of staff were in attendance. Describing the event, Pochettino said: “There are two nutritionists who will control what they are going to eat. We drink water, orange juice, no alcohol. We do not eat too much, (we) eat protein, green salad, no fries.

    "The idea is to share between the players and the staff. The players learn to understand what it means to play for Chelsea. Of course having a barbecue doesn’t mean that afterwards we are going to score goals but of course it is about communication, feeling better. Like it is not only a training ground where you come to work, it’s home and we want to create a good feeling between everyone. To get people to fight for the same thing – to win."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

    While there is little to nothing for Chelsea to play for in the league this season, any progress they can make in terms of the younger players settling will benefit them in 2024-25.

    The Blues enjoyed a solid 3-2 win against fellow strugglers Newcastle United in their last outing and attention can now shift to another chance for silverware in the upcoming FA Cup clash against Leicester on Sunday.

How to watch and live stream Six Nations Rugby: Teams, schedule, TV channel, streaming platforms

Everything you need to know on how to watch 2024 Six Nations rugby on US TV

Editors' pick

Peacock

Catch all of the action live on Peacock, NBC's official streaming platform.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: No

Free trial: No

Monthly from

$11.99

Get Peacock

Comprehensive coverage

fuboTV

fubo's Pro plan has everything you need to fulfil your rugby, plus plenty more from the world of sports.

Simultaneous streams: Up to 10
DVR capabilities: 1000 hrs

Free trial: 7 days

Monthly from

$54.99

Get fubo Pro

Best flexibility

Sling TV

With the ability to cancel anytime and add extras and add-ons to your package, Sling is best for flexibility.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: 50 – 200 hrs

Free trial: Sometimes

Monthly from

$40

Get Sling Blue

Editors' pick

Peacock

Catch all of the action live on Peacock, NBC's official streaming platform.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: No

Free trial: No

Monthly from

$11.99

Get Peacock

Comprehensive coverage

fuboTV

fubo's Pro plan has everything you need to fulfil your rugby, plus plenty more from the world of sports.

Simultaneous streams: Up to 10
DVR capabilities: 1000 hrs

Free trial: 7 days

Monthly from

$54.99

Get fubo Pro

Best flexibility

Sling TV

With the ability to cancel anytime and add extras and add-ons to your package, Sling is best for flexibility.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: 50 – 200 hrs

Free trial: Sometimes

Monthly from

$40

Get Sling Blue

Editors' pick

Peacock

Catch all of the action live on Peacock, NBC's official streaming platform.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: No

Free trial: No

Monthly from

$11.99

Get Peacock

Comprehensive coverage

fuboTV

fubo's Pro plan has everything you need to fulfil your rugby, plus plenty more from the world of sports.

Simultaneous streams: Up to 10
DVR capabilities: 1000 hrs

Free trial: 7 days

Monthly from

$54.99

Get fubo Pro

Best flexibility

Sling TV

With the ability to cancel anytime and add extras and add-ons to your package, Sling is best for flexibility.

Simultaneous streams: 3

DVR capabilities: 50 – 200 hrs

Free trial: Sometimes

Monthly from

$40

Get Sling Blue

While rugby union may not be the biggest sport in the United States, with thousands upon thousands of expats from the likes of Ireland, Scotland and England, it’s no wonder the sport is growing.

There’s no finer rugby tournament than the Six Nations, certainly not scheduled yearly, and once again come February it’ll be capturing the imaginations of more and more of us as we call time on the NFL season.

Ireland will be keen to defend their championship crown, and you really won’t want to miss a minute. So, if you’re keen to stream the Six Nations 2024, here’s all the info you need…

When is the Six Nations?

The Six Nations runs this year from February 2, 2024 through until March 16, with a total of 15 games across five rounds. There are three games per round, usually played across Saturday and Sunday. However, the Six Nations opener between France and 2023 champions Ireland takes place on a Friday at the Stade de France. 

The tournament is played in a league format, with no knockout phase. The team placed at the top of the table at the end of the competition wins the Six Nations.

2024 Six Nations schedule

Round 1:

  • Friday February 2, 2024: France v Ireland
  • Saturday February 3, 2024: Italy v England
  • Saturday February 3, 2024: Wales v Scotland

Round 2:

  • Saturday February 10, 2024: Scotland v France
  • Saturday February 10, 2024: England v Wales
  • Sunday February 11, 2024: Ireland v Italy

Round 3: 

  • Saturday February 24, 2024: Ireland v Wales
  • Saturday February 24, 2024: Scotland v England
  • Sunday February 25, 2024: France v Italy

Round 4: 

  • Saturday March 9, 2024: Italy v Scotland
  • Saturday March 9, 2024: England v Ireland
  • Sunday March 10, 2024: Wales v France

Round 5: 

  • Saturday March 16, 2024: Wales v Italy
  • Saturday March 16, 2024: Ireland v Scotland
  • Saturday March 16, 2024: France v England

Which channels have the rights to Six Nations rugby?

Getty Images

At present, NBCUniversal has the rights to the Six Nations Championship and streams all games live. 

Coverage generally begins from around 9am ET for the early kick-offs, with 6pm ET usually the latest for the very latest, which are scheduled to be the first and last fixture of this year’s tournament.

Best TV packages to watch the 2024 Six Nations

Of course, there are many packages you can pick up that allow you to stream NBC these days, as well as a host of other rugby tournaments, from the World Cup to World Rugby Sevens, the European Rugby Champions Cup, the Challenge Cup and more.

Below you’ll find some of the best packages currently offering NBC and Six Nations rugby…

  • Getty Images / GOAL

    Peacock

    With every fixture shown on NBC, the easiest and cheapest option is to invest in a Peacock subscription. The streaming service of NBC, it costs just $5.99 per month for the Premium Plan, which will allow you to watch all Six Nations fixtures. 

    There’s also no contract with this service, meaning you could essentially subscribe for two months while the tournament is on and cancel following it. Less than $12 for every Six Nations fixture – bargain!

    You’ll find plenty more sport on NBC too, which could well make you want to keep the service, with the likes of NFL, Premier League soccer and so much more available. In which case, you may be better off taking the yearly subscription of $59.99, making a small saving.

    The Premium Plus plan is also an option for on-demand fans, which effectively removes commercials from that content. For Premium plan holders only, you will get commercials in on-demand services.

    Stream the 2024 Six Nations action live on PeacockSign up today

  • Getty Images / GOAL

    fuboTV

    For those looking for a bit of a chunkier TV subscription, then look no further than FuboTV. It’s one of the more comprehensive packages available and will provide you with NBC. Alongside NBC, there are dozens more sports channels, including the likes of CBS Sports, Fox Sports, beIN Sports and ESPN. 

    In total, even with the Pro package, the most basic available on FuboTV, you’ll get well over 100 channels. But then you do pay much more than a Peacock subscription too at $74.99 per month. Value for money you can’t argue with though, given the huge amount of channels you do receive.

    Larger packages are also available, giving you all the rugby you could possibly want, with the Elite and Premier packages priced at $84.99 and $94.99 respectively.

    Watch 2024 Six Nations rugby with fuboTVSign up today

  • GOAL / various

    Sling TV

    SlingTV is a middle point between the two and for those wanting to watch Six Nations rugby, you’re going to need the Sling Blue package. Sling packages cost $40 per month and offer a wealth of entertainment and sports options. In terms of the latter, Sling Blue comes with Fox Sports 1, the NFL Network, USA Network and TNT.

    You can also add the Orange package to your subscription for a further $15 per month, which will also provide you with ESPN channels.

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    The Bottom Line & FAQs

    For those not wanting to miss a moment of the Six Nations Championship, then subscribing to Peacock is a no-brainer. You can stream Six Nations games either through the app, your television or your desktop devices, meaning you really can pick up the latest France or Ireland fixture no matter where you are. At $5.99 you really can’t go wrong.

    Naturally, that limits the amount of other sport you can watch, which may sway you towards the likes of Sling TV and FuboTV, where you won’t be disappointed. However, for the Six Nations alone, there’s only one option.

    Six Nations FAQs

    What countries play in the Six Nations?

    The Six Nations is competed for by six nations. These are England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, France and Italy. 

    The competition originally started life as a Home Nations tournament between England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. However, France joined in 1910 to make it the Five Nations, before Italy’s arrival in the competition in 2000.

    What do Six Nations teams compete for?

    The main goal for rugby teams in the Six Nations is the overall Championship, which is won by topping the league at the end of the competition.

    However, you can also win a Grand Slam and Triple Crown, as well as a number of different trophies. Only the Home nations teams can win the Triple Crown, which means they have beaten the other three Home Nations countries. The Grand Slam is essentially a nation winning all its games in the Six Nations.

    There are also trophies awarded to teams for winning specific games. These are:

    • Calcutta Cup: Winner of games between England and Scotland
    • Millennium Trophy: Winner of games between England and Ireland
    • Centenary Quaich: Winner of games between Ireland and Scotland
    • Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy: Winner of games between France and Italy
    • Auld Alliance Trophy: Winner of games between France and Scotland
    • Doddie Weir Cup: Winner of games between Scotland and Wales
    • Cuttitta Cup: Winner of games between Italy and Scotland

    Who are the favorites for the 2024 Six Nations?

    The sportsbooks have got the Six Nations very closely contested at present, with France the current favorites. Ireland are closely behind them, while England are third favorites and a little further adrift with the oddsmakers.

    Who are the more recent winners of the Six Nations?

    Ireland are the current champions having picked up a Grand Slam last year. France finished second placed, having won all their games except against the Irish.

    France won the competition in 2022, again with a Grand Slam while Ireland only lost against the winners. 

Ranking Every Team To Win The European Championship

Winning the European Championship and reigning victorious over the continent is something only a select group of nations can boast.

England are yet to do it and the Germans haven’t done it in nearly 30 years, showing just how difficult it can be.

The Three Lions have come close in the past two tournaments, being beaten in the final by Italy in 2021 and Spain in 2024.

But who are the best champions in the competition’s history? Football FanCast has decided to take a trip down memory lane and rank every team to win the tournament since the inaugural edition in 1960.

17 Italy – 1968

One of the very early European Championships back in 1968 saw the Italians pick up their first of two triumphs in this tournament.

Solely for the fact that Italy only made it through to the final thanks to the flip of a coin in the semi-finals after they played out a stalemate with the Soviet Union on the field, this team has to be rock bottom.

The final tournament only consisted of four teams, with England among the qualifiers after seeing Spain off over two legs. The Three Lions were beaten by Yugoslavia before securing third place in a play-off against the Soviet Union.

Meanwhile, Italy, who still had to qualify despite having hosting rights – this was chosen once the finalists had been confirmed – came from behind to beat Bulgaria in their quarter-final play-off to make the final four.

With penalty shootouts not existing until the 1970s, a coin toss gave Italy a shot at glory on home soil. A late equaliser set up a replay against Yugoslavia, and just two days later, the Italians prevailed 2-0 to claim their first European crown.

16 Portugal – 2016

Bringing it back to the modern era with a Portuguese team who weren’t expected to go all the way, in truth. Cristiano Ronaldo was of course their poster boy, but after suffering an injury during the final, he spent the remainder of the night doing Fernando Santos’ job for him on the touchline. Eder’s goal in the final was thrilling, though they never really blew anyone away.

This was best demonstrated by the fact that they only won one game within 90 minutes – their semi-final victory over Wales. Of course, this Portugal team is perhaps best known for winning the tournament despite drawing all three of their group games and scraping through as one of the best third-placed teams, having finished behind Hungary and Iceland in Group F.

A shootout victory over Poland and extra-time triumphs over Croatia and France in the final saw them write their way into footballing folklore in the most underwhelming of manners.

15 Soviet Union – 1960

The first European Championship – then known as the European Nations’ Cup – took place in France in 1960, where the Soviet Union prevailed as the inaugural winners.

Not that it is necessarily their fault, but with the tournament being much smaller and there being fewer teams in the finals (four), it is hard to put them in the same conversation as some of the more recent teams who have had to play up to seven times on their way to victory.

Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union went toe-to-toe in the final at the Parc des Princes in the French capital. It was the former who took the lead, before the Soviet Union hit back through Slava Metreveli and Viktor Ponedelnik’s winner in extra-time.

14 Denmark – 1992

Denmark’s triumph in 1992 as the ultimate dark horse has to go down as one of the greatest achievements in men’s international football.

Manchester United goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel played a major role in his country’s success whilst midfielder Henrik Larsen was joint top-scorer along with three others.

This victory is made all the more remarkable when one considers that the Danes didn’t originally qualify to take part. It was only after Yugoslavia were removed from the tournament due to the breakup of the country amid the outbreak of war that Denmark – second to Yugoslavia in their qualifying group – earned their spot, and they certainly grabbed this unlikely opportunity.

The tournament also saw the end of the backpass rule, which the Danes were all too keen to exploit – leaving them lower on this list than their victory perhaps merits.

13 Italy – 2020

Italy are the first team to feature on this list more than once and their success three years ago isn’t this low down solely because it was England that they beat in the final.

That may play a minor role, but it has more to do with the fact that whilst they were a good side that scored seven unanswered goals in the group stages, they didn’t really reach the heights of a great team, having sneaked their way to victory with just one win inside 90 minutes in the knockout stages – albeit an impressive one against Belgium.

The Azzurri won’t care whether they were good or great given that they got their hands on the trophy, and on top of that, it has to be said that they had some excellent performers including the likes of Federico Chiesa, Nicolo Barella, Leonardo Spinazzola and Gianluigi Donnarumma.

12 Spain – 1964

Our journey through time takes another major leap as we arrive in 1964, the year of the competition’s second edition.

This was the first time that Spain were able to complete a whole campaign after they were booted from the previous tournament for their refusal to face the Soviet Union four years prior whilst under the rule of Francisco Franco.

Luis Suarez was the star player for the Spaniards in ’64 and so whilst again, there were limited matches in comparison to the modern game, the Euros still bore witness to some true excellence from one of the very best.

11 West Germany – 1980

When combining the exploits of West Germany and the unified nation of Germany as they are now, it is a tie between them and Spain for the most trophies.

The second of two as West Germany came in 1980 – they beat Belgium in the final in the ancient city of Rome thanks to a brace from Horst Hrubesch, who has recently managed Germany Women and the Hamburg men’s side.

Hrubesch was second in the scoring charts for his country and the overall tournament as Klaus Allofs was the only man to reach a tally of three.

This side have ended up in the middle of the pack due to the fact that they weren’t exactly blowing any teams away – they won three of their four matches by a single goal alongside a goalless draw with Greece. Nevertheless, they still seized a great opportunity and earned a coveted European Championship title after seeing off the likes of the Netherlands and then-reigning champions Czechoslovakia along the way.

10 Germany – 1996

Sticking with Die Mannschaft as they won their third title in 1996.

After beating England in the semi-finals following Gareth Southgate’s miss from the penalty spot, the Czech Republic awaited the Germans at Wembley.

Patrik Berger, formerly of Liverpool, opened the scoring in the final with a penalty of his own. Oliver Bierhoff scored his only two goals of the tournament on the biggest stage, the first levelling things up and then the second being a momentous golden-goal winner in extra-time.

Having seen off the likes of England, Italy, Croatia and the Czech Republic (twice), it is hard to begrudge them their place as one of the better championship-winning teams.

9 Czechoslovakia – 1976

Czechoslovakia weren’t the most spectacular of teams and certainly weren’t the favourites in 1976, but for one moment alone that was truly iconic, they deserve to be remembered fondly.

This moment in question is of course the chipped finish from the penalty spot that decided the final in their favour which has now come to bear a certain name.

Antonin Panenka did something so audacious and unexpected that he is now etched into the history books of the sport, with the Panenka name carrying such significance for this action from 12 yards out alone.

8 Spain – 2024

Spain won their third European Championship in 2024, winning all seven games on their way to the trophy.

Having been dumped out of the World Cup by Morocco in 2022, La Roja had something of a point to prove as they jetted off to Germany 18 months later – and they certainly did that.

They won all their group games without conceding a goal, but came alive during the knockout stages. They came from behind to smash tournament newcomers Georgia before a dramatic 119th-minute winner saw off hosts Germany in the last eight.

Their tournament truly came alight in the semi-final stage with arguably the moment of the competition, with 16-year-old Lamine Yamal scoring one of the greatest goals in European Championship history to equalise against France, before Dani Olmo’s goal set up a grand final against England.

Spain’s winning experience appeared to serve them well as they defeated the Three Lions in Berlin to secure a third European crown in five attempts, with this iteration of the team hugely impressive and looking like favourites to defend their title in 2028.

Spurs: Ange could soon bin Emerson Royal for ‘promising’ academy star

It is also looking rather rosy as far as Tottenham Hotspur are concerned, with new boss Ange Postecoglou having enjoyed a stunning start to life in the dugout after picking up four successive Premier League victories to leave his side firmly in the mix at the summit.

The ex-Celtic boss appears to have benefitted from the bold and brave decisions he has made over the last few months or so, notably handing a reduced role to the likes of Eric Dier and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, while also replacing long-serving asset, Hugo Lloris in the sticks.

That trio are not the only figures to have suffered from the 58-year-old's appointment, with Brazilian full-back Emerson Royal another to have slipped down the pecking order of late down the right flank.

How much did Tottenham pay for Emerson Royal?

The former Barcelona man – who arrived from Camp Nou back in the summer of 2021 – has started just a solitary league game this season after losing his place to Pedro Porro at right-back, with the 25-year-old unable to build on his mini-resurgence last term.

The £25.8m signing overcame his early woes in English football to prove a standout figure in the second half of last season's tumultuous campaign, with club insider John Wenham suggesting that it looked as if the defender had initially been "spurred on" by the signing of Porro.

While also described as "unbelievable" by Wenham following his display against Manchester City earlier this year, it may be hard to forget the £40k-per-week man's prior grim performances, however, with talkSPORT's Jamie O'Hara branding him a "disaster" back in November.

Journalist Josh Bunting was even more critical of the one-time Real Betis man the previous month, having stated that Emerson is "maybe the worst player to play for Tottenham in my lifetime", such were the "dreadful" nature of his performances.

For all his possible improvement since then, there were still claims made over the summer that Spurs were looking to cash in on the player, hence why it may not be too long before he is replaced in Postecoglou's squad.

If the Greek-Aussie is looking to find a suitable alternative to challenge Pedro Porro at right-back, then he may want to consider academy sensation, Tyrell Ashcroft…

Who is Tyrell Ashcroft?

Previously described as "promising" by journalist Andy Preston after joining the north Londoners from Reading last year, the 18-year-old had been handed four senior appearances for the Royals prior to that departure, receiving hefty praise from then-boss Veljko Paunovic:

"He is a fantastic lad, young, confident and has quality. He has an engine and is a very intelligent kid, so he has it all. I think he has a big future for our club. He is a big asset so we have to keep nourishing his talent and provide him with the best possible support so he can keep growing."

While yet to feature for the first team in his new surroundings, the hope will be that the teenage right-back can also have a 'big future' at N17, having notably started all four Premier League 2 games so far this term for the club's U21 side.

That consistent run of games will come as a real bonus to the talented youngster following his injury setback last term, with the full-back having missed the majority of the campaign after suffering an ACL injury in September 2022.

Thankfully for both his sake – and for Spurs – Ashcroft is now back fit and firing in the youth set-up, with the aforementioned Emerson likely needing to watch out if the Englishman can replicate the strong early impression that he showcased during his time at Reading.

With Postecoglou already putting faith in the likes of Destiny Udogie and Pape Matar Sarr this season, it would be no surprise if another youngster, like Ashcroft, is brought into the first-team fold sooner rather than later.

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