Prolific Joe Root races to 10,000 Test runs in record time

Still only 31, he has a realistic shot at Sachin Tendulkar’s all-time record for most runs in Tests

S Rajesh05-Jun-2022When Joe Root clipped Tim Southee for a couple in the 77th over of England’s chase at Lord’s, not only did he reach his 26th Test hundred, he also became only the 14th player to score 10,000 runs in Test cricket. The 10k milestone came in his 218th innings, which means there are nine others who have got there in fewer innings. The quickest is 195 innings – by three batters – while Steve Waugh’s 244 is the slowest.

The fact that he made his debut early – when he was a couple of weeks short of his 22nd birthday – coupled with the amount of Test cricket England play, means that while others have reached the landmark in fewer innings, Root is the quickest to 10,000 runs in terms of time, and is the joint-youngest too. Alastair Cook, the only other Englishman on the list, was also 31 years and 157 days old when he reached the mark (though in terms of days, he was one day older).ESPNcricinfo LtdRoot’s journey to the milestone has had its share of ups and downs, as is inevitable in a Test career which has lasted almost 10 years. Through the first five years of his career, he averaged a terrific 52.45, after 64 Tests. Then came the inevitable slump, as his average dropped to 39.70 over the next three years. In 33 Tests during that period, he managed only four hundreds; in fact, 2020 remains the only calendar year when he hasn’t scored a century despite playing more than one Test.Since 2021, though, the floodgates have opened again – 2192 runs in the last 21 Tests at 56.20. This, despite an underwhelming Ashes series in 2021-22, when he averaged only 32.20 in 10 innings. Even more impressive is his rate of scoring hundreds: nine in these 21 matches, which is an average of one every 2.3 Tests compared to his career average of one every 4.5.

The graph of Root’s cumulative average after each Test brings out these ebbs and flows in his career. Leave aside the turbulence of his first 20 Tests, and his highest average was 57.11 after his 24th Test, in April 2015. In about four-and-a-half years, it had dipped by nearly 10 runs, to 47.35 after his 87th Test, against New Zealand in November 2019. The good news for his fans is that since then, the graph has been going in the right direction: the career average now stands at 49.57. If he gets out in both innings in the next Test, he needs to score 185 more runs for his average to touch 50 again.

Root is also the first among the current Fab Four to get to 10,000 runs. That, as mentioned earlier, is a function of the number of Tests England play: Kane Williamson has played only 87 Tests despite making his debut a couple of years before Root. Since Root’s debut, England have played 120 Tests, compared with 79 by New Zealand, and 95 each by India and Australia.

Among these four, Root has the lowest average (though he is fast catching up with Kohli). However, Root’s overseas average of 46.47 is second among these four, next only to Steven Smith’s 57.06. Both Williamson (43.76) and Kohli (42.81) have poorer records when playing away from home. However, the home numbers for Root pale when compared to those of the other three: he averages 52.93, while the other three average more than 60.

Currently on 10,015 runs, Root is in 14th position in terms of overall Test aggregate, but he is on top among active players. The gap between him and Sachin Tendulkar is 5906 runs, which, given Root’s average of around 1000 runs per year, is roughly six years worth of Test cricket. Considering Root’s current form and the fact that he has recently been freed from the burden of captaincy, it is entirely possible that he makes a strong push for Tendulkar’s record in the years to come.

The Most Significant Moments From MLB’s Wild Regular Season Finale

The 2025 MLB season has come to a close, and it was capped off by a wild weekend.

While most of the playoff spots had been earned before the weekend, a lot happened over the season's final three days to get us to the final playoff picture. What follows is a chronological look at all the biggest moments from the weekend, starting on Friday.

Tatis Sinks the Snakes

The Diamondbacks somehow stayed in the NL wild-card race over the season's final two months after selling at the deadline. It was a valiant effort from Arizona that ended with a bang on Friday evening.

The Dbacks led the Padres 2–1 in the fourth inning with rotation stalwart Zac Gallen on the hill. The veteran righty loaded the bases, then tried to slip a 95 mph fastball past Fernando Tatis Jr. on a 3–2 count. He immediately regretted it. The ball left Tatis’s bat at 111.7 mph and landed in the second deck at Petco Park for a grand slam.

The Padres took a 5–2 lead en route to an eventual 7–4 win. The loss eliminated Arizona from playoff contention.

Red Sox Walk Off Into the Playoffs

Boston entered the bottom of the ninth of Friday's game against the Tigers locked in a 3–3 tie with their magic number down to one. A two-out single by Romy Gonzalez gave Ceddanne Rafaela the chance to be a hero. He delivered.

Rafaela blasted a 1–0 pitch from Tommy Kahnle off the center field wall. It kicked around in the outfield, and Gonzalez raced home with plenty of time to spare to send Boston to the postseason.

The Red Sox will travel to Yankee Stadium to face their bitter rivals in what should be a blockbuster wild-card series.

Busch Goes Deep Twice as Cubs Clinch

Michael Busch homered twice in the first five innings on Saturday against the Cardinals; the second gave the Cubs a 3–1 lead they never relinquished.

Busch hit a home run, double, and another home run to rack up 10 total bases in his first three at-bats. He ended the game 4-for-4, with two home runs, a double, and a triple, leaving him a single short of the cycle. More importantly, he launched the Cubs to a 7–3 win, which clinched the top wild-card spot and a home series against the Padres in the opening round of the playoffs.

Jahmai Jones Clutch Single Lifts Tigers to Playoffs

After a horrible September that saw them lose their massive lead in the AL Central, the Tigers were able to salvage a playoff spot thanks to a 2–1 win over the Red Sox on Saturday night.

Jahmi Jones had the big hit with a two-out, fifth-inning single that scored two runs and put Detroit in the lead for good.

They closed out the game to finally earn some good news by clinching a playoff spot.

Guardians Unconventional Walk-Off Clinches Spot

The Guardians joined the Tigers in the playoffs in one of the weirdest ways possible Saturday night. Cleveland's remarkable march back into the AL Central race overcame the longest of odds, and what happened in the ninth inning against the Rangers Saturday night only added to the surreal nature of their September surge.

After Rangers reliever Robert Garcia got the first two outs in a 2–2 game, Johnathan Rodriguez walked and Kyle Manzardo singled, sending pinch runner Petey Halpin to third. Texas intentionally walked Gabriel Arias, putting CJ Kayfus at the plate with two outs and the bases loaded.

After getting strike one, Garcia hit Kayfus, forcing in a run and sending the Guardians to the playoffs.

Incredible.

Red Sox Win Central for Cleveland

On Sunday, the Tigers entered Fenway Park on Sunday with a chance to win the AL Central. All they needed to do was beat the Red Sox and hope Cleveland lost. Neither of those things happened.

The Tigers took an early 3–1 lead, but in the bottom of the fourth, Chris Paddack gave up a two-run home run to light-hitting infielder David Hamilton, then back-to-back doubles to Nick Sogard and Jarren Duran.

That gave Boston a 4–3 lead, leaving Detroit with five innings to get another run. The Tigers couldn't do it. They put two on base in the top of the ninth but couldn't bring anyone across and surrendered the division to the Guardians with the loss.

Cleveland's players found out it had won the AL Central during their game with Texas and celebrated.

To top it off, Brayan Rocchio launched a walk-off, three-run home run in the bottom of the 10th against the Rangers to enter the playoffs in style.

Alejandro Kirk Leads Blue Jays Blowout For AL East Crown

Toronto's task was simple on Sunday: beat the Rays and clinch the American League East and the top seed in the AL. The Blue Jays did that. Emphatically.

Alejandro Kirk stepped to the plate in the bottom of the first inning with the game tied 1–1. It didn't stay that way for long. On a 2–2 pitch from Ian Seymour, Kirk sat on a changeup and annihilated it. He sent the ball 387 feet into the left-center field stands at the Rogers Centre, and sent Blue Jays fans into a frenzy.

The rout was on after that, and Toronto wound up taking a 13–4 win. That relegated the Yankees to the AL’s top wild-card slot, setting up a series against the Red Sox.

Mets Complete Collapse, Exit Postseason Picture

The Mets needed to win and get help on Sunday. One of those things happened, the other didn't. The Reds owned the head-to-head tiebreaker with New York, and the two teams entered the day deadlocked with identical 83–78 records. Cincinnati lost to the Brewers 4–2, which meant all New York had to do was beat the Miami Marlins. You can guess what happened.

Miami and its $67 million payroll team bested the franchise with a $323 million payroll by the score of 4–0, as the Mets went out with a whimper. They only mustered five hits off of Edward Cabrera and four relievers. The game and the team's season ended when Francisco Lindor grounded into a double play in the top of the ninth. New York's broadcasters lamented the team's epic collapse.

The Mets had MLB's best record on June 12 at 45–24. They went 38–55 after that. A deserved, depressing ending to the season.

Smith stalls talk on Head's permanent role as Ashes opener

Stand-in captain backs Khawaja to bounce back from back spasm; hopeful of Cummins return at Brisbane

Tristan Lavalette22-Nov-2025

Travis Head made a flying start to Australia’s fourth innings•Getty Images

Still in a whirlwind following a frenetic first Ashes Test, skipper Steven Smith was non-committal over whether Travis Head would continue to open the batting after his 69-ball century powered Australia to a crushing eight-wicket victory at Perth. Head opened the batting for the first time in a Test innings outside of South Asia, replacing Usman Khawaja who had spent some time off the ground in England’s second innings due to back spasms.His elevation, after Marnus Labuschagne had been given the task in the first innings, proved a game-changer and he smashed 123 off 83 balls to knock England’s all-out pace attack off the lengths that had proved so effective on the opening day.The opening positions have been a cause for concern for Australia for some time. With Khawaja, 38, under pressure and Jake Weatherald posting scores of 0 and 23 in his debut, there could be a push for Head to take the role on an ongoing basis in this series.”Let’s just digest this first, the last couple of hours have been pretty incredible,” Smith told reporters after the match. “It’s probably too early to say anything on that, but what we just witnessed was quite incredible. I’m glad to have been in the house to see it.”We didn’t like how things functioned in the first innings with Marn going up top and me batting three. So Trav took it on and played one of the great Ashes knocks.”Related

Khawaja's back issues to be examined as Australia float flexible batting order

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Travis Head's 69-ball ton secures remarkable two-day win for Australia

Khawaja was forced off the field during England’s second innings in a recurrence of back spasms he first experienced on day one. He was fit to take the field on day two, but felt further pain after stretching high for a ball that flew above him in the slips.”He was reasonable this morning. I actually thought it was his knee at one point,” Smith said. “Fortunately, it was the same thing [back spasms]. He [Khawaja] said before that it’s probably one of the best back spasms he’s ever had given the circumstances [of Head’s century].Smith said the circumstances around Khawaja’s ill-timed absence in the field in England’s first innings, making him ineligible to open the batting, was a “little frustrating”. Khawaja eventually batted at No.4 and was dismissed for just 2.”Wasn’t ideal, it all happened pretty quickly,” he said. “I got told, I think just before we got the last wicket….that he needed to be on the field to go and bat.”I think that’s why we landed where we landed yesterday [with Labuschagne opening]. Today we had a little bit more time to go through it and work it out.”I mean, those things can happen in the game. No one’s fault. Move on.”Much like Cricket Australia CEO Todd Greenberg, Smith defended Khawaja’s decision to play golf prior to the Test match. “He’s not moving particularly well in there, the old fella, but his preparation was the same as it’s been for every Test match I think that he’s played,” he said.”There was nothing out of whack there by any stretch. Unfortunately, he just pulled up a bit lame early in the game. That happens when your back goes.”I’ve been there myself when your back seizes up and it’s not a nice place to be. So I can feel his pain right now.”Offspinner Nathan Lyon had very little to do in the match, bowling just two overs in the seam-friendly conditions. But he did cop a blow to his hip while batting and was visibly wincing in the field.”He’s got a few bruises, keeps showing them off. He’s tough though, he’ll be fine,” Smith said.There has been no update on quick Josh Hazlewood amid fears that he might miss the entire series with a hamstring injury. But Pat Cummins has revealed that he’s a chance of returning for the second Test in Brisbane starting on December 4, as he progresses well from a lower back injury.”It’s on track and pulling up pretty well. [I’m] half a chance for the next game,” Cummins said on the Fox Sports broadcast. “I’m pretty hopeful and it’s probably better than it was a few weeks ago.”

Navgire smashes fastest T20 hundred in women's cricket

Navgire finished on a 35-ball 106 for Maharashtra against Punjab in the Women’s T20 Trophy on Friday

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Oct-2025Kiran Navgire, the India and Maharashtra opener, has smashed the record for fastest hundred in women’s T20s. She hit her record-breaking blitz in the Women’s T20 Trophy on Friday, hammering a 34-ball century while finishing on a 35-ball 106. It helped Maharashtra crush Punjab with eight overs to spare in Nagpur.Navgire broke Sophie Devine’s record for the previous fastest women’s T20 century, in 36 balls. That came in Wellington’s ten-wicket win over Otago in January 2021 where Devine scored 108 not out in 38 balls. An incredible strike-rate of 302.86 makes Navgire’s performance the only women’s T20 century to have a 300-plus strike-rate.It was all one-way action from Navgire’s bat. In the unbeaten 103-run second-wicket partnership, No. 3 Mukta Magre needed to contribute only six runs as Navgire plundered 14 fours and seven sixes. Maharashtra’s team total of 113 for 1 – the chase completed in eight overs – is now the lowest total to include an individual hundred in women’s T20s, going above the previous lowest of 123 in a CSA T20 game where Annerie Dercksen scored 106 not out.

Navgire, from Mire in Maharashtra’s Solapur district – nearly 200km south-east of Pune – first turned heads during the 2022 edition of the Women’s T20 Trophy, when she smashed 35 sixes for Nagaland. She also became the first Indian to hit a 150-plus score in a women’s T20 match during her 76-ball 162 against Arunachal Pradesh. In an interview to ESPNcricinfo, she said she wanted to bat like MS Dhoni and credited much of her strength from helping out on her family’s farm as a child and from the variety of sports she played growing up.Her big-hitting exploits earned her an India T20I debut in Chester Le-Street against England in 2022, but she has not found a place in the national side since the Women’s Asia Cup of October 2022. In her six outings for India, she has batted four times, cumulatively scoring 17 runs across 19 balls, with one not out.In the WPL, she has been a regular at UP Warriorz, scoring 419 runs in 24 innings across three seasons. Her WPL strike-rate is 140.13, but she has averaged less than 18.

Newcastle sensation showed why he's an even bigger talent than Lewis Miley

Newcastle United’s wait for a first away win of the season is now over.

On Saturday night, the Magpies demolished Everton 4-1 on Merseyside, enjoying their first-ever visit to Hill Dickinson Stadium.

Malick Thiaw broke the deadlock inside 60 seconds, with Lewis Miley lashing home a second and then Nick Woltemade making it three in first half stoppage time, before Thiaw bagged his second shortly after the interval, rubber stamping victory.

Before this, Eddie Howe’s side had failed to win any of their six Premier League away games this season, losing each of their last three on the road, their most recent away league victory coming at a hopeless Leicester in April.

Now, ahead of back-to-back home games this week against Tottenham and Burnley, which Newcastle player put in an excellent performance at Bramley-Moore Dock, suggesting he may be the club’s best young talent?

Can Lewis Miley break into Newcastle's midfield?

For so long, the backbone of Newcastle’s rise, twice qualifying for the Champions League and winning last season’s EFL Cup, has been their midfield trio of Bruno Guimarães, Sandro Tonali and Joelinton.

However, attempting to balance both domestic and continental commitments, Howe has started to rotate his team a bit more, ahead of a jam-packed December featuring eight fixtures, so could Lewis Miley force his way into the starting lineup on a more regular basis?

Still a teenager, Miley started in the Premier League for just the second time this season on Saturday evening, scoring his first goal since netting during a 4-3 victory over Nottingham Forest in February.

Dominic Scurr of the Shields Gazette awarded him a 9/10 for his performance against Everton, stating that it was ‘so good to see him shining’ having been handed a rare start, getting the nod over Tonali.

For a long time now, Miley has been viewed as the brightest young talent in this Newcastle squad, becoming the second-youngest player in the club’s Premier League history to both score and record an assist in a single match, behind only Charles N’Zogbia.

Meantime, almost two years ago, Jacek Kulig of Football Talent Scout asserted that he is a “special talent”, labelling him “technical, elegant, composed, and hardworking” who is an “absolute unicorn in midfield”, emphasising that he’s been in the spotlight for quite a while.

However, did another player come to the fore at Hill Dickinson Stadium and underline that he is Newcastle’s brightest young thing?

Newcastle's bigger talent than Lewis Miley

Given their side’s inconsistent form, the Geordie faithful have been calling for Howe to tinker with his lineup, and they may be getting their wish.

Aaron Ramsdale displaced Nick Pope this weekend, while full-back is the other positions supporters have wanted to see a change, with Tino Livramento and Lewis Hall both starting too, and the latter certainly caught the eye.

The 21-year-old has now started back-to-back Premier League games, having been included in the lineup only twice this season in any competition beforehand, and underlined why supporters have been eager to see more of him, as the table documents.

Assists

1

1st

Successful dribbles

3

1st

Passing accuracy

91%

7th

Key passes

2

1st

Accurate crosses

2

2nd

Big chances created

2

1st

Ground duels won

5

1st

Tackle win %

100%

1st

Touches

87

3rd

Match rating

7.8

4th

As the table notes, Hall ranked first in a wide variety of statistics on Merseyside on Saturday evening.

He registered an assist, created two big chances and completed 91% of his 55 passes, while also winning five ground duels and 100% of his tackles.

For the majority of this season, Dan Burn has been the first-choice left-back, but the 6 ft 7 in hometown hero has been massively exposed in recent weeks.

This was particularly the case when he met Dango Ouattara of Brentford earlier this month, conceding a penalty and being sent off for fouling the Burkinabé winger during a 3-1 defeat in West London.

Thus, against both Man City and now Everton, Hall has proved he has to be Howe’s first-choice going forward, while the same may not yet be the case for his namesake in midfield.

Joelinton upgrade: PIF pursuing £44m Newcastle move for "one-man army"

Newcastle are planning to sign a centre-midfielder in 2026.

ByAngus Sinclair Nov 28, 2025

The Top 25 MLB Story Lines, Milestones and Trends to Watch in 2025

It’s been 25 years since a World Series winner repeated as champion, 50 years since Carlton Fisk ended one of MLB’s greatest games and most important telecasts, 75 years since baseball introduced the first bullpen car and the rule to mandate the home team bats second and 100 years since Pittsburgh beat Washington through the worst weather conditions of a World Series Game 7: rain, mist, fog and a field described by the as a “swampy bog.”

Happy new year, baseball fans. No sport is as informed by its past like baseball. While the Los Angeles Dodgers look fully capable of going back-to-back, the odds say you’re still better off taking the field rather than the Dodgers.

The biggest joys of a baseball season are always found in the surprises. But until then, to get you ready for 2025 here is what we know is coming. Be they milestones, schedule highlights, comebacks or trends to watch, here are 25 for ’25:

1. The return of Shohei Ohtani to the mound

You didn’t forget, did you? Before he blew out his elbow, Ohtani was one of the best pitchers in baseball. From 2021–23 he was 24–16 with a 2.84 ERA and 11.4 strikeouts per nine innings. In that span he ranked second in ERA+, third in ERA, third in strikeout rate and fifth in winning percentage (for a Los Angeles Angels team without a winning record). The Dodgers will slow-play his return, especially since surgery to repair his non-throwing shoulder set back his rehab timeline. You might not see Ohtani on the mound until late April or May and he probably will make only about 20 starts in Los Angeles’s six-man rotation. But imagine if the Dodgers get to October with a rotation of Ohtani, Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow. Good luck, world.

2. The challenge system for balls and strikes

A sneak peek at the future of baseball is here. Every team (but not every ballpark) will get a trial run in spring training with the major league version of the system that has been used in the minors. The pitcher, catcher and batter each can challenge the pitch call by an umpire. Each team gets two challenges per game. (Challenges are retained if the appeal is successful.) Quickly, a video on the scoreboard shows whether the path of the pitch entered the strike zone, similar to line calls in tennis. The speed, accuracy and fan engagement should lead to calls to implement the system in the regular season this year. That’s not happening. But after proper review by MLB and the players, it should be in place for 2026.

3. The Decision, Roki Sasaki version

It’s coming between Jan. 15 and Jan. 23. Sasaki is not a finished product, and he will be under an innings limit in 2025, but the 23-year-old righthander with sick fastball movement and a nasty split has the ceiling of being one of the best pitchers on the planet. And he could be had for an international signing bonus no greater than $7.5 million and pitch this year in the majors at a minimum salary. Twenty teams sent interest to his agent, Joel Wolfe, which begs the question: why are 10 teams not even trying? Sasaki will soon narrow the field down in Round 2 and may visit the cities of teams that make the final cut. With careful handling, Sasaki has the stuff to be an instant sensation.

4. The first full season of Paul Skenes

The way Skenes finished the season (four earned runs and eight walks in his final seven starts) validated how well the Pittsburgh Pirates guided him through his rookie year. He averaged only four innings per start in his seven minor league outings, then pitched with at least five days of rest in all his major league starts. Will they pitch him on four days occasionally in 2025? Will they let him throw 180–190 innings this year, as he should have no problem reaching? His command, more so than his velocity, is what sets him apart. He could dominate MLB in 2025, starting with Opening Day, March 27 against the Marlins in Miami.

5. The Baseball Hall of Fame vote

Will Ichiro Suzuki be a unanimous selection? Will fellow first-ballot candidate CC Sabathia join him at what would be a huge induction ceremony in July? Will Billy Wagner, who fell five votes short last year, make it in his final try on the writers’ ballot? Will Carlos Beltrán (up 10.6% last year) continue to gain momentum after getting dinged for his role in the 2017 Astros’ sign-stealing scandal? How much support is there for first-time candidates Dustin Pedroia and Félix Hernández? The answers will come Jan. 21.

Soto switched New York teams to sign the biggest contract in sports history last month. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

6. Juan Soto returns to the Bronx

Circle May 16–18. This should be fun. Maybe Plan B for the New York Yankees turns out better than Plan A, which was to re-sign Soto. (Mets owner Steve Cohen was not going to be outbid.) That requires Max Fried and Devin Williams to stay healthy and Paul Goldschmidt to bounce back at age 37 from the worst season of his career. One thing is for sure: Soto is going to hit. Always has, always will. He has the highest floor of any hitter in baseball.

7. Rivalry weekend

In a schedule change, MLB increased the key interleague rivalry games (such as Mets-Yankees) from four to six. Eleven of the 15 series the weekend of May 16–18 are matchups between such key interleague rivals.

8. Major league baseball in minor league ballparks

The Athletics (no city affiliation; just the team nickname) are playing in West Sacramento and the Tampa Bay Rays are playing at the Yankees’ spring training site, George M. Steinbrenner Field. Both venues will be retrofitted to major league standards (lighting, clubhouses, training facilities, etc.) but it’s not a good look, especially given weather challenges (summer heat in West Sacramento, heat and rain in Tampa).

9. The return of Mike Trout

He is 33 years old and has not played more than 140 games in nine years. Over the past four years, injuries have kept him out of 59% of the Angels’ games. But don’t forget that in those four years Trout slugged .575 with a .951 OPS. There is plenty left in the tank, though in a different form than the classic version of Trout. He is a pull-side slugger who should hit 40–50 home runs—if he stays healthy.

10. 2,000 hits for Manny Machado

The San Diego Padres third baseman is 100 hits short of 2,000. He would become only the 55th player to reach 2,000 hits by age 32. Of the previous 10 players this century to get there at that age, five made it to 3,000 (Miguel Cabrera, Albert Pujols, Adrián Beltré, Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter) and five did not (Robinson Canó, Edgar Rentería, Iván Rodriguez, Ken Griffey Jr. and Roberto Alomar).

11. 1,000 RBIs for Bryce Harper

With 24 more RBIs, Harper will become only the fourth player with 1,000 RBIs, 1,000 walks and 100 stolen bases by age 32. The others are Mickey Mantle, Carl Yastrzemski and Barry Bonds.

12. 1,000 RBIs for Trout

Trout needs 46 RBIs for a grand, so why not get it in the same year as Harper, his fellow 2012 Rookie of the Year? Through 2019, Trout led Harper in WAR, 72.5 to 32.2. Since then, Harper leads Trout, 18.8 to 13.8.

13. The MLB Speedway Classic at Bristol

The Atlanta Braves play the Cincinnati Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway on August 2. Lefthanded pull hitters will take aim at Turn 1. Righthanded pull hitters will try to go deep into Turn 2. Very cool. The idea of Elly De La Cruz stealing bags at the Speedway is perfect.

Freeman could cement his Hall of Fame candidacy this year after bolstering his case in a major way during the 2024 World Series. / James Lang-Imagn Images

14. 4,000 total bases for Freddie Freeman

He needs only 134. How huge is that number? Freeman will become only the 10th first baseman with 4,000 total bases and 1,000 walks. Of the first nine to reach those thresholds, all are in the Hall of Fame except Albert Pujols, who is not yet eligible, and Rafael Palmeiro, whose candidacy was sunk by PED taint.

15. The Tokyo Series: Dodgers vs. Cubs

Los Angeles, featuring Ohtani (who is not expected to pitch in the series) and Yamamoto, take on Chicago, featuring Shota Imanaga and Seiya Suzuki, March 18 and 19 at the Tokyo Dome to kick off the 2025 MLB season. How much does Japan love baseball? Game 2 of the 2024 World Series, with Yamamoto as the starting pitcher, drew a bigger audience in the morning in Japan (15.9 million viewers) than in prime time in the U.S. (13.8 million). The five-game World Series averaged a bigger audience in Japan (12.1 million viewers per game) than did the five-game 2024 NBA Finals in the U.S. (11.3 million per game).

16. The twilight of Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer

Don’t count out Verlander, who turns 42 next month, and Scherzer, 40. They may not be front-of-the-rotation workhorses any longer, but they are fierce competitors who would be an asset to any contender. Verlander and Scherzer rank 10th and 11th, respectively, on the all-time strikeouts list. Next up for Verlander: Walter Johnson, 93 strikeouts away.

17. The comebacks of Jacob deGrom and Clayton Kershaw

Both pitchers are 36. They have five Cy Young Awards between them, but also only 10 starts last year. deGrom hasn’t thrown 100 innings since 2019. He should begin the year in the Texas Rangers’ rotation. Kershaw is not expected back from toe and knee surgeries until midseason.

18. 50 years of free agency

When arbitrator Peter Seitz ruled Dec. 23, 1975, in favor of pitchers Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally, he effectively ended baseball’s reserve clause. Owners appealed, and lost, forcing them to bargain with the players association on a system of free agency. Maverick A’s owner Charlie Finley wanted all players to be free agents every year, thus flooding the market and keeping prices down. Union chief Marvin Miller was too smart for that. And besides, other owners didn’t listen to Finley. The two sides came up with a threshold to qualify for free agency that exists to this day: six years of service time. The free-agent class next season is due to include Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Kyle Tucker, Framber Valdez, Zac Gallen, Bo Bichette and Devin Williams.

Stanton has a good shot to surpass two historic milestones this year—one commendable and one dubious. / Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

19. 450 home runs for Giancarlo Stanton

Sitting on 429 homers, Stanton needs 21 for 450 and another three after that to pass Carl Yastrzemski into 40th place on the all-time list. His path to 500 homers and the Hall of Fame are coming into focus.

20. 2,000 strikeouts for Stanton

With just 37 more punchouts, Stanton will become only the eighth player with 2,000 strikeouts. Goldschmidt, his new Yankees teammate, is not far behind; he is 121 strikeouts away from Club 2K.

21. The next wave of young pitchers

Technology has pushed pitching development so far ahead of hitting development. That trend continues. The next generation of plug-and-play strikeout pitchers who will impact 2025 include Jackson Jobe of the Detroit Tigers, Andrew Painter of the Philadelphia Phillies, Bubba Chandler of the Pirates, Caden Dana of the Angels and Kumar Rocker of the Rangers.

22. National League dominance

Dodgers reliever Joe Kelly wasn’t wrong when he talked about the path the Yankees had to the World Series last year. It was easier than getting through the NL, and that doesn’t change in 2025. Last year seven NL teams won 89 games. Only three AL teams did so. Of the 15 free agents who signed for $75 million or more the past two offseasons, 12 of them signed with NL teams.

23.  The 50-year drought?

This is the 50th season of MLB baseball in Seattle, including one by the Seattle Pilots. The city has never hosted a World Series, the longest such drought by any metropolitan area. Among those playing the waiting game longest, Seattle is followed by Pittsburgh (45 years), Milwaukee (42), Baltimore (41) and Cincinnati (34).

24. The Mets retire David Wright’s No. 5

It’s the 10th number worn by a Mets player to be retired by the club, the first such single digit. It’s the eighth No. 5 to be retired and the first since 2007, when the Astros retired Jeff Bagwell’s No. 5.

25. A fantastic finish?

The regular season ends Sept. 28. Eight of the 15 matchups are among division rivals, including Orioles-Yankees, Diamondbacks-Padres and Cardinals-Cubs.

James Vince 98* puts Hampshire on brink of quarter-finals

James Vince hit the turbo button to smoke 98 not out to beat Sussex Sharks and put Hampshire Hawks on course for the Men’s Vitality Blast quarter-finals.Captain Vince led from the front in a magnificent 49-ball knock to chase down 168 and secure a third straight Hawks victory – and only failed to reach figures by hitting the winning runs with a four rather than a six.James Fuller supported with three wickets before Joe Weatherley partnered up for 62 – and 43 himself – as Hampshire found form at the right time of the competition.They now have seven wins – the traditional benchmark for qualification – while Sussex have stalled. They have lost their last three matches.Vince has blown hot and cold in the Blast, with three half-centuries but plenty of single-figure scores. This was a boiling day for him.The second ball he faced flew over the square ropes, with two more joining it to go with 12 other boundaries – it was vintage Vince, punishing anything that wasn’t an A-class delivery.A record 12-ball half-century looked temporarily on before settling for 19 balls, and from there he found a rhythm to tick off the runs quickly and risk-free.Toby Albert put 54 on with him at the top before frustrating himself with a pull to midwicket and Danny Lamb snuck one past Tom Prest. But in-form Weatherley provided the firmest support, while also plundering a quartet of sixes to make sure there was no pressure on the chase and Vince.He fell for 43, and Hilton Cartwright followed before Fuller helped Vince to get over the line.Sussex’s innings came in three acts. The cagey start, the run-frenzied middle and then the run drought at the death.Having chosen the bat, neither side could get an advantage in what felt like an ‘eight-pointer’ match due to their positions in the table and their closeness to qualifying.The Sharks probably edged the powerplay with a six off the last ball taking them to 51 for 1 – with Daniel Hughes been and gone after cutting to cover.That maximum sparked Tom Clark and George Thomas into life as they whacked 63 in the following six-and-a-half overs. Clark’s pair of sixes off Benny Howell was the apex of the innings, as the duo ran hard and piled the pressure onto the hosts.But both departed in the 13th over, Fuller dislodging each of them to spark a slow down – with only 60 runs coming from the last eight overs.Scott Currie repeated Fuller’s trick by seeing off Tom Alsop and James Coles in the 16th over, before only conceding four runs in the 18th over.Chris Wood also only went for four runs in the following over with two more wickets – the latter of which a controversial boundary catch which caused a fracas at the interval – as Hampshire took control.The visitors snared 15 runs from the last to take them to 167 for 7. But it was far from enough as Hampshire won with 16 balls to spare.

'There's only one Rose Lavelle' – After helping define an era, the USWNT veteran is crucial as Emma Hayes ushers in a new one

Once a young star and now a veteran leader, Lavelle continues to play a key role as the next generation of U.S. players develops

There was no moment of celebration or, in reality, even reflection for Rose Lavelle. Almost exactly 45 minutes after she'd scored the U.S. women's national team's opening goal against Portugal, Lavelle showed up for her halftime interview totally out of breath. Exhausted, huffing and puffing, Lavelle talked of the need to be better, of the need to push harder.

It didn't happen that way. After conceding from a corner kick just before halftime, the USWNT conceded from another in the second half and went on to lose, 2-1 on Thursday night. It was, in many ways, a stunning loss, even for a friendly. Portugal were an opponent that seemed to be overmatched. Instead, it was the USWNT that struggled to create positive moments in a game that was crying out for them.

The one they did generate was Lavelle's goal, and the performance of the veteran midfielder was a key takeaway, despite the defeat. After missing so much time earlier this year due to injury, Lavelle seems to be fit and fully back, which is massive news for a USWNT currently undergoing a generational shift. 

In this kind of form, the 30-year-old's role cannot be ignored. As USWNT boss Emma Hayes so eloquently put it, "There's only one Rose Lavelle." Thursday was a reminder of that, and why the veteran star still has a major part to play in this World Cup cycle.

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    Returning to form

    Since the Olympics, the USWNT has dealt with a number of major absences. The "Triple Espresso" attacking core of Sophia Wilson, Mallory Swanson and Trinity Rodman have been almost entirely out since announcing themselves to the world in that gold medal run. Naomi Girma has missed significant time, robbing the U.S. of its defensive leader.

    And Alyssa Naeher retired from international play, kickstarting a USWNT goalkeeping competition.

    For much of the year, Lavelle was missing, too. After undergoing ankle surgery in December, Lavelle missed the first seven games of 2025, a run that included USWNT losses to Japan and Brazil in the spring. She returned with a bang, netting and assisting in the 4-0 rout of Ireland on June 26. After making a cameo in her hometown of Cincinnati in another blowout of the Irish team,  Lavelle then started against Canada on July 2 as Hayes seemed content to ease her back into the fold.

    "We're all delighted for Rose because there's only one Rose Lavelle," Hayes said over the summer. "There really is, both on and off the field, as a character, as a football player, as a human being. [It's] been a tough injury to recover from, but she's such a professional, also a perfectionist.

    "I think Rose is a special player, I always have. I did before I took this job, but now I work with her and I've been able to put her in positions where she can thrive even more, giving her the right structure, and I'm looking forward to many more of those moments."

    Those moments are, ultimately, what have come to define Lavelle's career. It's what put her on the world's stage at the 2019 World Cup, at which she won the competition's Bronze Ball. In truth, though, those moments haven't happened quite as often in recent years.  She struggled with a knee injury at the 2023 World Cup, limiting her impact, and was then overshadowed by the younger goalscorers at last summer's Olympics. She featured in every match, but then did not appear in the final.

    This week seems something of a reminder, then, of what those Lavelle moments can look like.

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    Magical moments

    With just a few minutes left in their NWSL regular season, Gotham FC needed a goal. They'd assembled something of a superteam in recent years, yes, but the Bats knew they needed at least a point in their regular season finale against Racing Louisville if they wanted into this season's playoffs. And, in that moment, Lavelle stepped up as only she does.

    Given a set piece just outside of the box, Lavelle made the most of it. With her side down 2-1 and desperately needing a goal, the midfielder provided it, turning a dead-ball situation into one of those moments of magic that can, ultimately, define a season. It did that for Gotham, who are now into the playoffs.

    "I think the profile of Rose Lavelle is probably the most rare to find when it's a player that can basically do everything at such a high level," Gotham FC head coach Juan Carlos Amoros said earlier this season. "And then on top of that she does the special things on the ball that create – it's why we all watch the sport.

    "Obviously, you want to see goals, but those actions that she produces and how she understands the game is something very different to everyone else and that's what makes her special."

    That free kick was on Sunday. On Thursday, Lavelle didn't have to wait until the game's final moments to make her mark. She did it instantly. Although it should be acknowledged that she was almost certainly offside on her finish, the goal just 33 seconds into the match it was another example of what Lavelle adds to the team: game-defining moments.

    Unfortunately for her, it didn't ultimately define Thursday's game. The U.S. shut off after that opening goal, never really getting back in the game after conceding in the first half.

    "I think it felt like a good, fun start," Lavelle said. "I think we needed to keep on that momentum. Unfortunately, we weren't able to. But I think it's always good to get an early goal. I think it helps set the tone. But I don't think we were able to really keep up with it after that."

    It was a bitter defeat for the USWNT, but also a valuable one that sets the team's leaders, including Lavelle, up for a chance to guide the group's younger stars.

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    The value of experience

    It's easy to forget just how inexperienced this current USWNT group is. Of the 26 players on the roster, 18 have 12 or fewer caps. Only four have played in multiple major tournaments. Only three are over the age of 30. Lavelle is one, alongside Lindsey Heaps and Emily Sonnett. Their leadership, particularly coming out of a loss, is vital.

    "You can't compete to win without experience. You cannot. Some of that experience is not just in the things you see on the pitch, it's the sort of things you do not see," Hayes said earlier this week. "I think about Lindsey. Since I've come to this country, what an unbelievable leader she's been, in terms of driving standards, I would say, alongside Emily Sonnet, alongside our Rose in different ways.

    "And not just upholding standards, but actually bringing people into it, so people belong, so they feel valued. And also adapt with the changes that come with the differences in generations, to be able to meet them where they're at. I always say to our less experienced players, 'Look up to these people.'"

    For anyone who has followed Lavelle's career, it is difficult to grasp her status as a USWNT vet. She burst onto the scene so spectacularly during that 2019 run, cementing her place as a rising star next to legends such as Megan Rapinoe, Becky Sauerbrunn, Tobin Heath, Carli Lloyd, Julie Ertz and Alex Morgan.

    She's cemented her place among them already but, at 30, she's now heading towards the place in her career where those players were at that 2019 tournament. She's no longer the hot prospect, but the experienced leader, one who, ultimately, will have a big part to play going forward.

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    Lessons from Portugal

    Lavelle said it after the match: she's looking forward to Sunday's rematch, as the USWNT and Portugal will meet again in East Hartford, Connecticut. It'll be a chance to bounce back, and an opportunity for this evolving group to show how they respond to adversity.

    "That's the lucky part about this: we have another opportunity to go out, be better and play more as a team and get on the same page," Lavelle said. "I think we're excited for that opportunity to grow over these next three days and talk about what went right and what went wrong."

    What went wrong, in Hayes' eyes, was clear: the team's play was too individualistic. As Portugal continued to put pressure on the U.S., players tried to break through by themselves, not as a unit. It led to a disjointed performance, one that Hayes is eager to see her team learn from.

    "We didn’t look like a team the whole evening, on both sides of the ball," the USWNT boss said. "We didn’t press together, we didn’t possess together, it felt like a yard off in our brain. I could see that.”

    Unsurprisingly, as a veteran leader, Lavelle agreed.

    "I think we've got to play more together," the midfielder said. "I think we need to find better spacing for everybody to get on the ball. Again, credit to them, they're a great team. But we need to be better in a lot of areas and make little adjustments."

    Only Hayes knows whether or not Lavelle will get that opportunity on Sunday. Rotation is surely coming, and that was guaranteed even before Thursday's performance. With a game on Sunday and then another on Wednesday, Hayes may look to change things up.

    Going forward, though, expect to see more of Lavelle. The U.S. continues to grow as a unit, finding young, exciting players to fill gaps and, in some cases, seize roles previously held by veterans. As long as Lavelle keeps providing moments of magic, though, she'll remain a key part as she helps usher in a new era after being so vital to defining the previous one.

Forget Kudus: Spurs have already signed Frank's new Mbeumo-type player

After becoming synonymous with Brentford, Thomas Frank would have been forgiven somewhat if he had teething problems adjusting to the Tottenham Hotspur hot-seat.

Indeed, the much-loved Dane was a mainstay for the Bees for seven years. Yet, he has instantly hit the ground running as Ange Postecoglou’s replacement in North London.

So far, only one defeat has come his way from 11 games at the Spurs helm, leading to Frank guiding his new team all the way up to third spot in the early league standings, before the international break came into play.

One of Frank’s men so far has, of course, been Mohammed Kudus, who has spearheaded plenty of points so far, including the victory over Leeds prior to the break.

Why Kudus looks like one of Spurs' best players

Amazingly, Frank wasn’t the only coup Spurs managed to pull off this summer when directly stealing from some of their London neighbours.

Much to the anger of West Ham supporters, the tricky forward excited the London Stadium at West Ham for Tottenham, moving across the capital in a deal worth £55m, a price tag that made him the club’s fourth-highest transfer of all time.

While West Ham loiter towards the bottom of the division, Kudus has become an instant hit donning Spurs white near the top of the competitive league, with one goal and five assists already falling into his lap from ten contests.

Already, that £55m looks to be money well spent, with Wayne Rooney even hailing the purchase as a “real top signing” after the Ghanaian’s match-winning effort at Elland Road.

There could be bold comparisons forming, too, between Kudus and one of Frank’s favourites at Brentford in Bryan Mbeumo.

Indeed, the Scandinavian boss has now potentially unearthed another blistering output machine he can rely on as his main marksman, with the 25-year-old also capable of playing all across the forward positions, like his Manchester United counterpart.

Yet, there is be a different member of Frank’s camp slipping under the radar as his next Mbeumo-style figure.

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Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

An Mbeumo-like figure for Frank to rely on

Mbeumo and Frank would be seen as two key elements to Brentford’s unbelievable Premier League success story when the pair were still together at the GTech Community Stadium.

Staggeringly, 242 of Mbeumo’s 297 career appearances to date fell under the Dane’s long reign at the Bees, with 70 goals and 51 assists picked up along the way, winning him the label of being Frank’s “main man” as the now Spurs manager stated in April of this year.

While Kudus has gained a lot of plaudits at Spurs to date to now be seen as Frank’s main spark, there is another glue holding the North Londoners together that could be viewed as the 52-year-old’s most reliable asset: Joao Palhinha.

Kudus does offer up a similar exciting, hard-to-contain attacking presence as Mbeumo, but in Palhinha, Frank might well have uncovered another talent that allows his side to tick, with the loan-to-buy deal of £27m that’s on the table continuing to stand out as a masterstroke in this regard.

Palhinha’s PL numbers (25/26)

Stat (* = per game)

Palhinha

Games played

7

Goals scored

2

Assists

0

Touches*

49.4

Accurate passes*

30.3 (82%)

Tackles*

3.6

Ball recoveries*

2.0

Total duels won*

6.7

Stats by Sofascore

Football London’s Alasdair Gold has even hailed the deal to bring him in as “one of the bargains of the summer”, and it’s not the wildest shout when you assess the ex-Fulham man’s standout numbers to date back in the Premier League.

Away from hammering home two goals for his new employers already, Palhinha has also more than lived up to this previous billing as a “defensive monster” which was once handed to him by analyst Marcus Bring, winning a mighty 6.7 duels per game across his seven top-flight outings.

Already, it appears that Frank has stumbled across another vital commander he can rely on in a similar vein to Mbeumo, with Palhinha hopeful of many more happy seasons under his new boss, if his excellent start to life at Spurs is anything to go by.

After all, his former manager in Marco Silva, would go as far as to herald him as a “leader” at Craven Cottage and despite not donning the armband at Brentford under Frank, that’s exactly what Mbeumo was too.

Not every star man needs to bundle in the goals like the new Man Utd signing to make themselves a hero under Frank and Palhinha has certainly found that out already. Forget Kudus, the Portuguese has been their most important player to date this term.

Move over Spence: Spurs must unleash "one of the best talents England have"

Frank manages at Tottenham some of England’s finest up-and-coming talent.

2 ByAngus Sinclair Oct 12, 2025

Palmeiras chega a mais uma final na base com protagonismo que já dura seis anos; relembre conquistas

MatériaMais Notícias

O Palmeiras chegou a mais uma final nacional na base. Depois de eliminar o Corinthians na semifinal do Brasileirão sub-20, o Verdão vai disputar o título diante do Flamengo. A presença alviverde na busca por essas principais taças do país tem virado rotina nos últimos anos. Depois da “virada de chave” de 2014 para 2015, as Crias da Academia passaram a receber mais atenção e investimento, em contrapartida revelaram algumas joias e deram muitos troféus para a galeria do clube. Esse desbloqueio nas conquistas começou em 2017, na Copa do Brasil sub-17.

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+ Veja tabela e classificação do Brasileirão-2023 clicando aqui

A fama palmeirense era de um clube que não tinha muito cuidado com suas categorias de formação. Sem títulos de expressão e sem grandes atletas revelados, ficava muito para trás na comparação com os demais clubes do país. No entanto, quando o Alviverde passou por sua grande reestruturação sob o comando de Paulo Nobre, as coisas começaram a mudar. Em 2015, chegou João Paulo Sampaio, que coordena a base do Verdão até hoje, e foi aí que a sementinha passou a crescer.

No mesmo ano de 2015, Gabriel Jesus, Cria da Academia, subiu para o profissional, foi protagonista, ganhou títulos e foi vendido ao Manchester City-ING naquela que, até Endrick, era a maior venda da história do Palmeiras. Apesar do “case Jesus”, ainda faltava levantar taças nacionais na base palestrina. A Copinha era um sonho, mas a hegemonia precisava começar de alguma forma.

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+ OPINIÃO: Entre um Pedro Lima e um Jhon Jhon, a dor da transição no Palmeiras

Foi aí que em 2017 o time sub-17 bateu o Corinthians na final da Copa do Brasil e levantou o primeiro título nacional de expressão para a base alviverde. Curiosamente, Gabriel Menino já era um grande nome daquela equipe e cerca de três anos depois estava comemorando, como um dos protagonistas, a Libertadores de 2020 com o elenco profissional. Vitão, atualmente no Internacional, e Lucas Esteves, que fez parte dessa atual fase vitoriosa de Abel Ferreira, também eram titulares do grupo que “desbloqueou” a hegemonia.

Dali em diante, se não ganhou título, o Palmeiras esteve entre os quatro melhores de pelo menos uma competição nacional na base. Em 2018, foi campeão Brasileiro sub-20 e campeão da Copa RS sub-20. Na Copa do Brasil, foi semifinalista no sub-17 e no sub-20.

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Em 2019, o sub-17 voltou a ser campeão da Copa do Brasil e ainda levou a Supercopa do Brasil. Já o sub-20 foi vice-campeão brasileiro, perdendo a final justamente para o Flamengo, adversário na decisão da edição 2023.

+ Pedro Lima se despede do Palmeiras pintando Itaquera de verde

Os anos de 2020 e 2021 foram atípicos. Com a pandemia de Covid-19, alguns campeonatos não foram realizados e muitos atletas da base foram usados no profissional, desfalcando algumas vezes os torneios nas categorias de formação. A falta de competições também acabou prejudicando a sequência de alguns jovens no clube. Assim, nesses dois anos, o Verdão não conquistou títulos nacionais. Foi no máximo semifinalista da Copa do Brasil sub-20 e sub-17.

No entanto, ainda estava por vir o ano da consolidação palmeirense como a melhor base do Brasil. Em 2022, veio a tão sonhada conquista da Copinha, sob o comando de Endrick, Giovani, Jhon Jhon e outros. E de lá para cá, todos os títulos nacionais foram conquistados pelo clube. Campeão Brasileiro sub-20 e sub-17 (2022), Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-20 e sub-17 (2022), o que levou também aos troféus da Supercopa do Brasil das duas categorias, por ter “varrido” as competições.

Em 2023, novamente a Copinha foi conquistada, depois veio a Copa do Brasil sub-17 e agora a final do Brasileirão sub-20. E podemos ter ainda mais títulos, já que o Alviverde segue vivo e favorito no Brasileirão sub-17 e vai começar a disputar a Copa do Brasil sub-20. Ou seja, a hegemonia começou tarde, mas parece não ter hora para acabar.

+ Com mais um título, Palmeiras confirma hegemonia nacional na base

Confira as principais conquistas da base do Palmeiras desde 2017:

2017

Campeão Paulista sub-20
Vice-campeão Paulista sub-17
Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-17

2018

Campeão Paulista sub-20
Campeão Paulista sub-17
Semifinalista Copa do Brasil sub-17
Campeão Brasileiro sub-20
Semifinalista Copa do Brasil sub-20
Campeão da Copa RS sub-20

2019

Campeão Paulista sub-20
Vice-campeão Paulista sub-17
Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-17
Campeão da Supercopa do Brasil sub-17
Vice-campeão Brasileiro sub-20

2020

Campeão Paulista sub-20
Semifinalista Copa do Brasil sub-17
Semifinalista Copa do Brasil sub-20

2021

Campeão Paulista sub-20
Vice-campeão Paulista sub-17
Semifinalista Copa do Brasil sub-17

2022

Campeão Paulista sub-17
Campeão Brasileiro sub-17
Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-17
Campeão da Supercopa do Brasil sub-17 (unificou títulos)
Campeão Brasileiro sub-20
Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-20
Campeão Supercopa do Brasil sub-20 (unificou títulos)
Campeão da Copinha (sub-20)

2023
Campeão Copinha (sub-20)
Campeão da Copa do Brasil sub-17
Final do Brasileirão sub-20

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