Maresca Warns Against Messi Hype After Estevao Wonder Goal

After Chelsea’s superstar scored a stunning solo Champions League goal against Barcelona, Enzo Maresca downed comparisons to Lionel Messi on Tuesday.

The 18-year-old Brazilian won their third game of the competition’s five matches against Lamine Yamal, the London club winning with a dominant win over the teenage prodigies.

Ten minutes after half-time, Estevao received the ball on the right before beating two defenders and launching it into Joan Garcia’s net’s roof.

Just months into his debut at Stamford Bridge, the winger scored his 10th goal of the season for the club and country.

Jules Kounde’s own goal and substitute Liam Delap’s late strike gave Chelsea the lead.

Estevao captivates Chelsea’s 10-Man Barcelona Fold with his stunning performance.

Late in the second half, when captain Ronald Araujo was shown a second yellow card, the Spanish side was reduced to 10 men.

When asked if Estevao’s strike resembled Messi’s of the Argentine great, Chelsea boss Maresca responded that it was a strike that the forward had scored for Palmeiras before the Club World Cup in July.

Maresca tried to relieve his young player’s workload, and he quickly became a favorite among fans, claiming he needed to “relax” and enjoy his game.

If you start talking about Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo, you might as well say, “Him, Lamine, they are so young, at age 18, and I think it’s too much pressure for young boys to like them.”

Eighteen, they must enjoy and be content when they arrive at the training facility. But I believe it’s too much for them when you start to compare them to Messi or Ronaldo.

Estevao praised the “best moment” of his career thus far, calling it “the best moment” of his career on Tuesday as he was serenaded by Chelsea’s supporters.

He told Amazon Prime, “I don’t really have any words to sum up how I’m feeling right now.” The night was truly perfect. I’m just thankful for everything that has happened to me, God.

He continued, “I felt such a connection with the fans from the moment I arrived here.”

“I’m just so happy that I can win their hearts and make them happy,” she said. I want to keep them content and help them get more goals.

Despite his incredible form, Maresca claimed that playing Estevao would not put him under additional pressure.

He said, “Tonight, we decided to play with Estevao,” which is probably the most challenging game of the season.

“I don’t allow players to play minutes because I’m not a manager,” he said. The game plan alone determines the first eleven, not the last eleven.

Trump administration moves to roll back limits on deadly soot pollution

Environmental groups have criticized the administration of US President Donald Trump’s decision to rescind stricter regulations on deadly soot pollution.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) filed a court motion to challenge the Trump administration’s latest attempt to weaken environmental standards after it submitted that former president Joe Biden’s administration had overstepped its bounds when they tightened air quality standards in 2024.

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The tougher standard was introduced without the “rigorous, stepwise process” required by the 1963 Clean Air Act, according to lawyers for Trump’s EPA in a motion filed on Monday.

In response to numerous legal challenges from Republican-led states and business groups, the EPA initially defended the stricter standard before changing its course under Trump’s appointing director Lee Zeldin.

According to the EPA’s attorneys, the agency should “complete a thorough review of the underlying criteria and corresponding standards” before revising the cap, according to the filing’s filing.

Under the direction of Biden’s successor Michael S. Regan, the EPA significantly reduced acceptable soot levels from 12 micrograms per cubic meter to 9 micrograms per cubic meter.

By 2032, the agency predicted that the stricter standard would prevent 4,500 premature deaths and 290,000 lost workdays, according to the organization’s earlier assertions.

Zeldin, a former Republican lawmaker, pledged to reverse dozens of environmental laws as part of what he termed the “largest deregulatory action in the history of the United States” when he took office earlier this year.

Lowering air quality standards, according to environmental lawyer Patrice Simms of the nonprofit organization Earthjustice, would be harmful to public health.

Trump has made it abundantly clear that his goal is to save money for corporations, and his administration’s EPA does not care about safeguarding people’s health, saving lives, or promoting children, families, or communities, according to Simms in a statement.

This life-saving standard will be upheld for good in the future.

The Sierra Club’s director of climate policy, Patrick Drupp, also criticized the EPA’s decision, calling it “reckless” and “a complete betrayal” of the organization’s purpose.

The Flashes – will the Ashes be played on fast forward?

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  • 11 Comments

In the blink of an eye, it was over.

England’s crushing first-Test defeat by Australia was done in two days, the first two-day Ashes Test in 104 years.

With four more stops before the urn is lifted in Sydney in January, have events in Perth set the tone for the rest of the series?

What’s going on?

As quite a sweeping generalisation, Test matches across the world are getting shorter. England’s home series against India in the past summer, when all five matches went into a fifth day, was something of an outlier.

Australian Test cricket has hit the fast forward button harder than most. There have been two two-day Tests in this country in the past three years. Prior to that, there had been none since 1931.

Whether lasting two days or more, Tests in Australia are getting shorter.

In the two decades between the year 2000 and 2020, matches in Australia had an average length of 335.4 overs – almost four days if we work on the schedule of 90 overs per day (yes, over-rates are slower in reality, but we’ll park that issue for now).

Since the start of 2020-21 season, the average length of a Test in Australia has fallen to 278.1 overs, barely more than three days.

Have the balls made a difference?

How often has the Kookaburra ball been highlighted as a point of difference between cricket played in the UK and the cricket played down under?

The Kookaburra was even introduced to the County Championship to prepare English players for overseas assignments. It resulted in some dull cricket.

The accepted wisdom is the Kookaburra traditionally offers less assistance to bowlers. A machine-made ball, it can feel bigger in the hand and has a smaller seam.

However, five years ago a new version of the Kookaburra ball was introduced to Australian cricket, with consequences to batting averages and the length of Test matches.

This new model, with a bigger seam, has offered pace bowlers more movement off the pitch. Swing – the ball moving in the air – has not usually been a fast bowler’s weapon in Australia. Seam movement has been the key, and it is increasing.

If that were not hard enough for batters, the new Kookaburra offers movement for longer.

Whereas a batter can usually expect to be rewarded with easier conditions the longer they stay at the crease, the new Kookaburra ball still offers seam movement when it is 50, 60 or 70 overs old.

What about the pitches?

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There was a time in the middle of the previous decade when Australian pitches offered next to no encouragement for bowlers.

On England’s Ashes tour of 2017-18, the fourth Test in Melbourne yielded more than 1,000 runs for only 24 wickets. The Melbourne Cricket Ground was given a warning by the International Cricket Council for what the governing body deemed a ‘poor’ surface.

Since England last visited Australia in 2021-22, pitches have given much more to the bowlers.

For the past four years, pitches in this country have been rated as faster, bouncier and more inconsistent than anywhere else in the world. Pace, bounce and inconsistency is the perfect recipe for tough batting.

At this point, it is worth stating there is a subjectivity to what constitutes a ‘good’ pitch.

Quite often, a pitch can be described as ‘good’ when it is friendly for batting, yet that does not always produce the most thrilling spectacle.

Perhaps it is better to describe a ‘good’ pitch as one that produces an even contest between bat and ball.

Pitches also change over the course of a Test, offering different challenges to batters and bowlers as a match progresses.

Take the first Ashes Test as an example. In the first three innings, the highest total was 172 and batting looked devilishly difficult.

In the final innings, Australia’s run chase, Travis Head made a target of 205 look minuscule. The run chase could have been much more difficult on the fifth day of a Test, when a pitch would be at its oldest and most worn.

Because of the rapid nature of the first Test, Head was batting on the second evening, when the pitch may have been at its best for run-scoring.

“The pitch was brilliant,” said former Australia opener Simon Katich on BBC Radio 5 Live.

    • 1 day ago
    • 1 day ago

Is it not down to the bowling and batting?

Ah, yes, the age-old debate between batters and bowlers.

Blame for low scoring is often attributed to conditions or poor batting, often doing a disservice to the quality of bowling.

Mitchell Starc, who took 10 wickets in the match at Perth, made this point and was keen to talk up the quality of the bowling from both teams.

In terms of wickets falling more regularly and cheaply in Australia in recent years, some credit must be given to the home attack, one of the finest of all time: Starc, Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon.

The art of batting has also changed because of the influence of shorter formats of the game.

A modern player is more likely to tackle difficult conditions with aggression than try to survive with solid defence, patience and determination.

Writing on X before the first Ashes Test, former England batter Kevin Pietersen said: “Batters grow up now to hit sixes and play switch-hits. They don’t grow up to build an innings and learn the art of survival.

“The player is not to blame at all as it is exactly where the modern day game is. The game of cricket is now about bright lights, loud music and a financial return for cricket boards, private equity and private ownership.

What happens next?

In the short-term, probably some more rapid Test cricket.

Next week’s second Test in Brisbane is a day-nighter. The last pink-ball Test in Australia – India’s visit to Adelaide last year – was over in the first session of the third day.

Earlier this week, Queensland won a day-night Sheffield Shield match against Victoria at the Gabba inside three days.

Since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took over the England team in 2022, the Bazballers have thrived in batter-friendly conditions. England have pulled off some of their best wins on flat pitches.

When the ball has been on top, England have often struggled and matches have accelerated quickly. On nine occasions in the Bazball era, England have been bowled out in fewer than 40 overs.

Australia are vulnerable, too. In the first innings in Perth the home side tried to blunt England’s attack and were bowled out in 32.5 overs.

If the antidote is keeping the explosive Head at the top of the order and bringing an aggressor like Josh Inglis into the team, it creates the possibility of runs and wickets happening quickly.

Related topics

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 16 August

The Flashes – will the Ashes be played on fast forward?

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

  • 11 Comments

In the blink of an eye, it was over.

England’s crushing first-Test defeat by Australia was done in two days, the first two-day Ashes Test in 104 years.

With four more stops before the urn is lifted in Sydney in January, have events in Perth set the tone for the rest of the series?

What’s going on?

As quite a sweeping generalisation, Test matches across the world are getting shorter. England’s home series against India in the past summer, when all five matches went into a fifth day, was something of an outlier.

Australian Test cricket has hit the fast forward button harder than most. There have been two two-day Tests in this country in the past three years. Prior to that, there had been none since 1931.

Whether lasting two days or more, Tests in Australia are getting shorter.

In the two decades between the year 2000 and 2020, matches in Australia had an average length of 335.4 overs – almost four days if we work on the schedule of 90 overs per day (yes, over-rates are slower in reality, but we’ll park that issue for now).

Since the start of 2020-21 season, the average length of a Test in Australia has fallen to 278.1 overs, barely more than three days.

Have the balls made a difference?

How often has the Kookaburra ball been highlighted as a point of difference between cricket played in the UK and the cricket played down under?

The Kookaburra was even introduced to the County Championship to prepare English players for overseas assignments. It resulted in some dull cricket.

The accepted wisdom is the Kookaburra traditionally offers less assistance to bowlers. A machine-made ball, it can feel bigger in the hand and has a smaller seam.

However, five years ago a new version of the Kookaburra ball was introduced to Australian cricket, with consequences to batting averages and the length of Test matches.

This new model, with a bigger seam, has offered pace bowlers more movement off the pitch. Swing – the ball moving in the air – has not usually been a fast bowler’s weapon in Australia. Seam movement has been the key, and it is increasing.

If that were not hard enough for batters, the new Kookaburra offers movement for longer.

Whereas a batter can usually expect to be rewarded with easier conditions the longer they stay at the crease, the new Kookaburra ball still offers seam movement when it is 50, 60 or 70 overs old.

What about the pitches?

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

There was a time in the middle of the previous decade when Australian pitches offered next to no encouragement for bowlers.

On England’s Ashes tour of 2017-18, the fourth Test in Melbourne yielded more than 1,000 runs for only 24 wickets. The Melbourne Cricket Ground was given a warning by the International Cricket Council for what the governing body deemed a ‘poor’ surface.

Since England last visited Australia in 2021-22, pitches have given much more to the bowlers.

For the past four years, pitches in this country have been rated as faster, bouncier and more inconsistent than anywhere else in the world. Pace, bounce and inconsistency is the perfect recipe for tough batting.

At this point, it is worth stating there is a subjectivity to what constitutes a ‘good’ pitch.

Quite often, a pitch can be described as ‘good’ when it is friendly for batting, yet that does not always produce the most thrilling spectacle.

Perhaps it is better to describe a ‘good’ pitch as one that produces an even contest between bat and ball.

Pitches also change over the course of a Test, offering different challenges to batters and bowlers as a match progresses.

Take the first Ashes Test as an example. In the first three innings, the highest total was 172 and batting looked devilishly difficult.

In the final innings, Australia’s run chase, Travis Head made a target of 205 look minuscule. The run chase could have been much more difficult on the fifth day of a Test, when a pitch would be at its oldest and most worn.

Because of the rapid nature of the first Test, Head was batting on the second evening, when the pitch may have been at its best for run-scoring.

“The pitch was brilliant,” said former Australia opener Simon Katich on BBC Radio 5 Live.

    • 1 day ago
    • 1 day ago

Is it not down to the bowling and batting?

Ah, yes, the age-old debate between batters and bowlers.

Blame for low scoring is often attributed to conditions or poor batting, often doing a disservice to the quality of bowling.

Mitchell Starc, who took 10 wickets in the match at Perth, made this point and was keen to talk up the quality of the bowling from both teams.

In terms of wickets falling more regularly and cheaply in Australia in recent years, some credit must be given to the home attack, one of the finest of all time: Starc, Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon.

The art of batting has also changed because of the influence of shorter formats of the game.

A modern player is more likely to tackle difficult conditions with aggression than try to survive with solid defence, patience and determination.

Writing on X before the first Ashes Test, former England batter Kevin Pietersen said: “Batters grow up now to hit sixes and play switch-hits. They don’t grow up to build an innings and learn the art of survival.

“The player is not to blame at all as it is exactly where the modern day game is. The game of cricket is now about bright lights, loud music and a financial return for cricket boards, private equity and private ownership.

What happens next?

In the short-term, probably some more rapid Test cricket.

Next week’s second Test in Brisbane is a day-nighter. The last pink-ball Test in Australia – India’s visit to Adelaide last year – was over in the first session of the third day.

Earlier this week, Queensland won a day-night Sheffield Shield match against Victoria at the Gabba inside three days.

Since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took over the England team in 2022, the Bazballers have thrived in batter-friendly conditions. England have pulled off some of their best wins on flat pitches.

When the ball has been on top, England have often struggled and matches have accelerated quickly. On nine occasions in the Bazball era, England have been bowled out in fewer than 40 overs.

Australia are vulnerable, too. In the first innings in Perth the home side tried to blunt England’s attack and were bowled out in 32.5 overs.

If the antidote is keeping the explosive Head at the top of the order and bringing an aggressor like Josh Inglis into the team, it creates the possibility of runs and wickets happening quickly.

Related topics

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story

    • 16 August

How Prince Albert could help bring NFL to Paris and Monaco

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  • 2 Comments

NFL 2025 season: Week 13

Sao Paulo, London, Berlin, Madrid – some of the world’s biggest cities have showcased the NFL this season.

Paris could soon follow as the Stade de France is bidding to become Europe’s newest host for a regular-season game.

If the French capital is awarded a game in 2026 or 2027, the New Orleans Saints have said they want to play in it.

But, as the NFL’s international expansion continues, it could be heading to an even more glamourous location.

How Saints made their move into French market

New Orleans Saints

The NFL launched its global markets programme in 2022, giving teams marketing rights outside the US, and the only region the Saints have ventured into is France.

Given the country’s cultural and historical links with New Orleans, Greg Bensel, a senior vice-president with the Saints, told BBC Sport that “it was a natural market for us to go grab”.

The Saints are the only NFL team with marketing rights in France, so set about building business and community links virtually from scratch.

They reached out to the respective ambassadors before looking at “what they have established on the tackle football front”, and learned about the Paris Musketeers.

Owned by an American trio, the team started playing in the European League of Football in 2023. Led by former NFL head coach Jack del Rio, the Musketeers feature mainly French players and in May they and the Saints announced a strategic partnership that will include joint initiatives in New Orleans and Paris.

Why Prince of Monaco has begun working with Saints

Greg Bensel with New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson, Billy Idol, Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene in Monaco in July 2025New Orleans Saints

While building contacts in France some mutual friends introduced the Saints to the Prince of Monaco, Albert II.

Not only is he the son of Oscar winner Grace Kelly, who left behind a Hollywood movie career to marry his father Prince Rainier III, but Albert is a keen sportsman and competed at five Winter Olympics for Monaco in bobsleigh.

He was a guest of the Saints at this year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans so, when Donald Trump became the first sitting US president to attend the NFL’s championship game, Prince Albert was sat immediately behind him.

His most recent visit to his mother’s native Philadelphia was in 2023 and, while in New Orleans in February, he wore an Eagles cap during a tour of the city.

“He loves the American lifestyle and sports,” said Bensel. “He loves the NFL, he loves the Saints and the city of New Orleans and he’s like ‘what can I do to help and be a part of this?'”

Prince Albert invited Bensel and Saints owner Gayle Benson to the prestigious Red Cross gala in Monaco in July, where they discussed having an off-season mini-camp in the principality.

They typically take place in May or June, and the most likely venue would be AS Monaco’s football stadium.

“We got a chance to spend some time with Charles Leclerc and other influential Monegasque folk,” Bensel added. “We’ve been welcomed with open arms, in Paris and Monaco.

“Mrs Benson has struck up a wonderful relationship with Prince Albert and she’s gone to visit him a number of times.

    • 20 October

Will there be an NFL game in Paris – or a Dublin return?

Demario Davis shouts into a megaphone surrounded by fans at a Paris Musketeers gameNew Orleans Saints

Holding a training camp in Monaco would certainly help boost the Saints’ profile in France before a potential game in Paris.

The NFL has carried out a site visit of the Stade de France and is set to announce its next international games.

“We are fully supportive of that bid and would like to play in that game,” said Bensel. “If we get a game in 2026 or 2027, we’d love to do a large run-up to that.

“But we’ve done enough legwork in the market so that we can hit the go button and be prepared.”

The Saints are in talks with the French Federation of American Football (FFFA) and plan to implement school flag football programmes in five or six cities across France, plus a league structure, before any Paris game.

Benson also own the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans, so the Saints’ leadership group already has some media partners in France and know that “the NBA is more prominent than the NFL”.

“We did it with eyes wide open,” added Bensel. “In the United Kingdom and Germany, they love the NFL. In France, not as much. We entered the market knowing that.”

The NFL is also discussing potential games in the Middle East and Asia, while Ireland and Spain staged their first games this season.

Brett Gosper, the NFL’s head of Europe & Asia-Pacific, told BBC Sport that the league has “identified 13 markets that are our priority on a number of criteria, and our goal is to invest in those markets because we believe there’s a fanbase. We believe there are partners there that can increase our footprint.”

Gosper said that international games “serve as a lightning rod for new fans in the new markets that we’re expanding into.

“We just want to make sure that all of the elements are lined up for those games to be a success when we enter those markets, and continue to work them with a local presence as we go forward.”

And Gosper provided some positive news for any fans hoping for a Paris game, or a return to Dublin or Madrid.

    • 7 days ago

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Related topics

  • American Football

More on this story

    • 16 August
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

How Prince Albert could help bring NFL to Paris and Monaco

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

  • 2 Comments

NFL 2025 season: Week 13

Sao Paulo, London, Berlin, Madrid – some of the world’s biggest cities have showcased the NFL this season.

Paris could soon follow as the Stade de France is bidding to become Europe’s newest host for a regular-season game.

If the French capital is awarded a game in 2026 or 2027, the New Orleans Saints have said they want to play in it.

But, as the NFL’s international expansion continues, it could be heading to an even more glamourous location.

How Saints made their move into French market

New Orleans Saints

The NFL launched its global markets programme in 2022, giving teams marketing rights outside the US, and the only region the Saints have ventured into is France.

Given the country’s cultural and historical links with New Orleans, Greg Bensel, a senior vice-president with the Saints, told BBC Sport that “it was a natural market for us to go grab”.

The Saints are the only NFL team with marketing rights in France, so set about building business and community links virtually from scratch.

They reached out to the respective ambassadors before looking at “what they have established on the tackle football front”, and learned about the Paris Musketeers.

Owned by an American trio, the team started playing in the European League of Football in 2023. Led by former NFL head coach Jack del Rio, the Musketeers feature mainly French players and in May they and the Saints announced a strategic partnership that will include joint initiatives in New Orleans and Paris.

Why Prince of Monaco has begun working with Saints

Greg Bensel with New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson, Billy Idol, Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene in Monaco in July 2025New Orleans Saints

While building contacts in France some mutual friends introduced the Saints to the Prince of Monaco, Albert II.

Not only is he the son of Oscar winner Grace Kelly, who left behind a Hollywood movie career to marry his father Prince Rainier III, but Albert is a keen sportsman and competed at five Winter Olympics for Monaco in bobsleigh.

He was a guest of the Saints at this year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans so, when Donald Trump became the first sitting US president to attend the NFL’s championship game, Prince Albert was sat immediately behind him.

His most recent visit to his mother’s native Philadelphia was in 2023 and, while in New Orleans in February, he wore an Eagles cap during a tour of the city.

“He loves the American lifestyle and sports,” said Bensel. “He loves the NFL, he loves the Saints and the city of New Orleans and he’s like ‘what can I do to help and be a part of this?'”

Prince Albert invited Bensel and Saints owner Gayle Benson to the prestigious Red Cross gala in Monaco in July, where they discussed having an off-season mini-camp in the principality.

They typically take place in May or June, and the most likely venue would be AS Monaco’s football stadium.

“We got a chance to spend some time with Charles Leclerc and other influential Monegasque folk,” Bensel added. “We’ve been welcomed with open arms, in Paris and Monaco.

“Mrs Benson has struck up a wonderful relationship with Prince Albert and she’s gone to visit him a number of times.

    • 20 October

Will there be an NFL game in Paris – or a Dublin return?

Demario Davis shouts into a megaphone surrounded by fans at a Paris Musketeers gameNew Orleans Saints

Holding a training camp in Monaco would certainly help boost the Saints’ profile in France before a potential game in Paris.

The NFL has carried out a site visit of the Stade de France and is set to announce its next international games.

“We are fully supportive of that bid and would like to play in that game,” said Bensel. “If we get a game in 2026 or 2027, we’d love to do a large run-up to that.

“But we’ve done enough legwork in the market so that we can hit the go button and be prepared.”

The Saints are in talks with the French Federation of American Football (FFFA) and plan to implement school flag football programmes in five or six cities across France, plus a league structure, before any Paris game.

Benson also own the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans, so the Saints’ leadership group already has some media partners in France and know that “the NBA is more prominent than the NFL”.

“We did it with eyes wide open,” added Bensel. “In the United Kingdom and Germany, they love the NFL. In France, not as much. We entered the market knowing that.”

The NFL is also discussing potential games in the Middle East and Asia, while Ireland and Spain staged their first games this season.

Brett Gosper, the NFL’s head of Europe & Asia-Pacific, told BBC Sport that the league has “identified 13 markets that are our priority on a number of criteria, and our goal is to invest in those markets because we believe there’s a fanbase. We believe there are partners there that can increase our footprint.”

Gosper said that international games “serve as a lightning rod for new fans in the new markets that we’re expanding into.

“We just want to make sure that all of the elements are lined up for those games to be a success when we enter those markets, and continue to work them with a local presence as we go forward.”

And Gosper provided some positive news for any fans hoping for a Paris game, or a return to Dublin or Madrid.

    • 7 days ago

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Related topics

  • American Football

More on this story

    • 16 August
    BBC Sport microphone and phone