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Archive June 3, 2025

Oxtoby sees NI’s ‘growth’ after securing play-off

Eye-Press

Tanya Oxtoby, the manager of Northern Ireland, believes that her side’s 1-1 draw with Bosnia-Herzegovina in Zenica demonstrates her side’s “growth.”

Sofija Krajsumovic’s equalizer for Bosnia ended Captain Simone Magill’s composed effort, but NI won the draw, which resulted in second place in the group and a promotion play-off.

Despite the nerve-wracking nature of the draw, Oxtoby praised the players’ persistence in getting a result, which is an improvement over their third-place finish in the previous edition of the Nations League.

“It’s always a challenging place to travel because we should have scored a few more goals in the first half, and we conceded a sloppy one,” she said. “But to show the character that the game is out is all that matters at this point,” she said.

Every game was going to be competitive in this group, and you have to show the character and resilience, I said. “In international football there are no easy games.

Everyone must be successful, according to NI.

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After finishing third in their respective League A groups, Northern Ireland will now face one of Austria, Belgium, Denmark, or Iceland in the play-offs in October. The draw will take place on Friday.

Oxtoby emphasized that a whole squad effort is required to reach League A for the first time, especially after a challenging trip to Bosnia.

Everyone contributes and adds value to what we’re doing, she said when you discuss the culture of the group.

It takes everyone, I told the players, regardless of whether you played or not you contributed to the group’s success.

related subjects

  • Northern Ireland is a sport
  • Women’s Football Team from Northern Ireland
  • Football
  • Women’s Football

Oxtoby sees NI’s ‘growth’ after securing play-off

Press Eye

Northern Ireland boss Tanya Oxtoby believes their 1-1 draw with Bosnia-Herzegovina in the Nations League in Zenica shows the “growth” of her side.

Captain Simone Magill’s composed finish was cancelled out by Sofija Krajsumovic’s equaliser for Bosnia, but NI saw out the draw which secured second place in the group and a promotion play-off.

That is an improvement on their third-place finish in the last edition of the Nations League, and despite the nervy nature of the draw, Oxtoby praised the application of her players to grind out a result.

“It’s always a difficult place to come with the travel, I thought we should have scored a few more in the first half and we conceded a sloppy one, but to show the character to see the game out that’s all that matters at this point,” she said.

“In international football there are no easy games, I said all along every game was going to be competitive in this group and you have to show the character and resilience.

NI success ‘takes everyone’

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Northern Ireland will now face one of Austria, Belgium, Denmark or Iceland in the play-offs in October after those four sides finished third in their respective League A groups, with the draw taking place on Friday.

Oxtoby was keen to stress that NI being in a position to reach League A for the first time takes a whole squad effort, particularly after a difficult trip to get to Bosnia.

“When you talk about the culture of the group, everyone adds value and contributes to what we’re doing,” she added.

“I said to the players whether you played or not you have contributed to the success of the group, it takes everyone.

Related topics

  • Northern Ireland Sport
  • Northern Ireland Women’s Football Team
  • Football
  • Women’s Football

How Bazball’s baby showed merit in England’s thinking

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  • 18 Comments

Beginning on Tuesday, traffic in England became sluggish.

Jamie Smith was in charge of preventing any potential for them to grind to a halt in the interim.

A freewheeling Smith, who followed a duck in Cardiff with an electric 64 from 28 balls, gave the team that arrived at The Oval on e-bikes after traffic issues in London the boost they needed to win the series.

After the seven-wicket win, Smith, 24, said, “I wanted to push out my chest a little and say that I’m good enough to open the batting.”

On the surface, England’s choice to use Smith as the series opener is straight out of the script from the Brendon McCullum era of English cricket.

Smith was the obvious choice in reality despite regular 50-over openers Will Jacks and Tom Banton initially appearing to be the team’s front-runners; after all, he is Bazball’s favorite son.

In India in 2024, Ben Foakes performed well, but Smith was replaced by Smith in England’s opening Test.

After scoring 70 on his debut and 95 in his third Test, Smith’s performance was encouraging.

There were already suggestions that he should take a job after making his first Test century against Sri Lanka, which Old Trafford- England’s Test number three.

Although Jacob Bethell’s emergence has put that one on hold, Smith was unavoidably called back when McCullum became England’s white-ball coach in September.

Before incumbent Phil Salt was shown the door, Captain Harry Brook made it clear that McCullum was considering opening for the Champions Trophy in Pakistan last week.

Before the series, Brook and Baz said, “We think Smudge might be an unbelievable white-ball opener.”

Brook has started to sound like a jammed cassette when identifying his ideal batter since taking the job, which is not to be criticised.

He has said it repeatedly from Leeds to London, “We want batters who can put their best balls under pressure.”

In the third ODI, Smith could have done it much better.

The Surrey academy graduate scored 20 runs with a strike-rate of at least 200 on a “good length” under the lights at his cricketing home. His bat bat counterparts managed 56 runs off 71 balls in the match against these deliveries.

England is enthralled by Smith because he is only 24 years old and has all of the restrictions of his international career, which include knowing that he can presumably do it all at his best.

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

He drives through the covers with ease and has a technically strong defense. He can pick the ball off a length and deposit it over midwicket, as he did on Tuesday.

“He’s not a slogger, is he?” He’s playing the right shots, Brook succinctly stated.

England are aware of the value of an opening partnership if Jos Buttler’s final 18 months as captain’s successor are to succeed.

Without Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow’s setting platforms that would have been too big for the 1970s, none of that would have been possible without Buttler’s fireworks and Joe Root’s calmness, which Eoin Morgan’s World Cup-winning team had had.

Under McCullum’s leadership, England’s best performances in tests have always been based on significant opening partnerships, whether it has been in Rawalpindi, The Oval, or Edgbaston.

Similar to Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley’s assault on the red ball, Duckett and Smith attack the white like they are competing in different sports.

Technically speaking, Duckett’s average interception point against seamers is 1.77 meters, 33 cm behind Smith’s.

While Smith tries to hit boundaries in the right field, left-hander Duckett has only 18% of his career runs against pacers in the “V.”

An ideal sounding board would be needed in McCullum, who has a coach who opened 107 times in ODIs and did so in a New Zealand side that reached the World Cup final.

Smith has largely been left to make his own plans during his first week in charge, as one might expect from England’s relaxed style.

Brook remarked, “He knows how to bat.”

He has played for periods in Test cricket, as I have stated so many times before.

Everyone is eager to see how he fares and he’s going to have a good time at it at the top of one-day cricket.

related subjects

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Surrey
  • Cricket

How Bazball’s baby showed merit in England’s thinking

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

  • 18 Comments

Beginning on Tuesday, traffic in England became sluggish.

Jamie Smith was in charge of preventing any potential for them to grind to a halt in the interim.

A freewheeling Smith, who followed a duck in Cardiff with an electric 64 from 28 balls, gave the team that arrived at The Oval on e-bikes after traffic issues in London the boost they needed to win the series.

After the seven-wicket win, Smith, 24, said, “I wanted to push out my chest a little and say that I’m good enough to open the batting.”

On the surface, England’s choice to use Smith as the series opener is straight out of the script from the Brendon McCullum era of English cricket.

Smith was the obvious choice in reality despite regular 50-over openers Will Jacks and Tom Banton initially appearing to be the team’s front-runners; after all, he is Bazball’s favorite son.

In India in 2024, Ben Foakes performed well, but Smith was replaced by Smith in England’s opening Test.

After scoring 70 on his debut and 95 in his third Test, Smith’s performance was encouraging.

There were already suggestions that he should take a job after making his first Test century against Sri Lanka, which Old Trafford- England’s Test number three.

Although Jacob Bethell’s emergence has put that one on hold, Smith was unavoidably called back when McCullum became England’s white-ball coach in September.

Before incumbent Phil Salt was shown the door, Captain Harry Brook made it clear that McCullum was considering opening for the Champions Trophy in Pakistan last week.

Before the series, Brook and Baz said, “We think Smudge might be an unbelievable white-ball opener.”

Brook has started to sound like a jammed cassette when identifying his ideal batter since taking the job, which is not to be criticised.

He has said it repeatedly from Leeds to London, “We want batters who can put their best balls under pressure.”

In the third ODI, Smith could have done it much better.

The Surrey academy graduate scored 20 runs with a strike-rate of at least 200 on a “good length” under the lights at his cricketing home. His bat bat counterparts managed 56 runs off 71 balls in the match against these deliveries.

England is enthralled by Smith because he is only 24 years old and has all of the restrictions of his international career, which include knowing that he can presumably do it all at his best.

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

He drives through the covers with ease and has a technically strong defense. He can pick the ball off a length and deposit it over midwicket, as he did on Tuesday.

“He’s not a slogger, is he?” He’s playing the right shots, Brook succinctly stated.

England are aware of the value of an opening partnership if Jos Buttler’s final 18 months as captain’s successor are to succeed.

Without Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow’s setting platforms that would have been too big for the 1970s, none of that would have been possible without Buttler’s fireworks and Joe Root’s calmness, which Eoin Morgan’s World Cup-winning team had had.

Under McCullum’s leadership, England’s best performances in tests have always been based on significant opening partnerships, whether it has been in Rawalpindi, The Oval, or Edgbaston.

Similar to Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley’s assault on the red ball, Duckett and Smith attack the white like they are competing in different sports.

Technically speaking, Duckett’s average interception point against seamers is 1.77 meters, 33 cm behind Smith’s.

While Smith tries to hit boundaries in the right field, left-hander Duckett has only 18% of his career runs against pacers in the “V.”

An ideal sounding board would be needed in McCullum, who has a coach who opened 107 times in ODIs and did so in a New Zealand side that reached the World Cup final.

Smith has largely been left to make his own plans during his first week in charge, as one might expect from England’s relaxed style.

Brook remarked, “He knows how to bat.”

He has played for periods in Test cricket, as I have stated so many times before.

Everyone is eager to see how he fares and he’s going to have a good time at it at the top of one-day cricket.

related subjects

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Surrey
  • Cricket

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

Images courtesy of Getty

Gabby Thomas, a three-time Olympian champion, is the subject of an investigation by Grand Slam Track over the weekend at a meet in Philadelphia.

The American sprinter claimed on Monday that a man had followed her around the track before insulting her as she signed autographs for fans.

In a later post, Thomas, 28, wrote, “Honestly, the heckling is tolerateable; it’s following me around the stadium that’s crazy.”

She continued, “anyone who allows him online is disgusting.”

A man responded to a previous Thomas post by sharing a video of him heckling the sprinter at the 200-meter start, where he was eluded by Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, and claimed the outcome helped him win a bet.

“I heckled Gabby, and I made her lose.” And it won, he wrote.

The event’s organizers stated in a statement to The Athletic that “Grand Slam Track is conducting a thorough investigation into the reproachable behavior that was documented on video.

We are looking for the person responsible and will take appropriate action as needed.

related subjects

  • Athletics

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

Images courtesy of Getty

Gabby Thomas, a three-time Olympian champion, is the subject of an investigation by Grand Slam Track over the weekend at a meet in Philadelphia.

The American sprinter claimed on Monday that a man had followed her around the track before insulting her as she signed autographs for fans.

In a later post, Thomas, 28, wrote, “Honestly, the heckling is tolerateable; it’s following me around the stadium that’s crazy.”

She continued, “anyone who allows him online is disgusting.”

A man responded to a previous Thomas post by sharing a video of him heckling the sprinter at the 200-meter start, where he was eluded by Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, and claimed the outcome helped him win a bet.

“I heckled Gabby, and I made her lose.” And it won, he wrote.

The event’s organizers stated in a statement to The Athletic that “Grand Slam Track is conducting a thorough investigation into the reproachable behavior that was documented on video.

We are looking for the person responsible and will take appropriate action as needed.

related subjects

  • Athletics