Eriksen deal progressing for Man United

Manchester United are reportedly getting closer to their second summer signing, as they remain in talks with Christian Eriksen over his move to Old Trafford.

What’s the word?

After his impressive performances in the second half of last season with Brentford, Eriksen has been a man-in-demand so far this summer, with the vast majority of the Premier League linked with signing him at one point or another.

The 30-year-old is available on a free transfer having only signed a six-month deal with the Bees in January and while they are understandably keen on keeping him, it seems as if United are in pole position to bring him in.

Sky Sports journalist Dharmesh Sheth recently revealed that:

“I’ve been told today that the signing of Christian Eriksen is progressing positively. Three-year deal we know has been agreed in principle, it will formally be signed off once Christian Eriksen completes that medical with Manchester United.”

The news comes amid United’s pursuit of Frenkie de Jong with talks ongoing in Barcelona between the respective parties.

Ten Hag will love him

Eriksen has proven himself to be a world-class player over the past decade, contributing 69 goals and 90 assists during his time at Tottenham Hotspur, and to sign him on a free transfer represents excellent business for United.

The Denmark international was in inspired form for Thomas Frank’s side last season, helping them comfortably avoid relegation, as he contributed one goal and four assists in 11 Premier League appearances, averaging a superb 7.37 rating from WhoScored for his performances.

No player in United’s side would average as many key passes (2.7) per game than Eriksen last season, which emphasises just what he will add to Erik ten Hag’s midfield.

 

Considering the Dane came through Ajax’s famous academy, he will already be aware of how Ten Hag will want to play at United next season, and his immense ability on the ball suggests that he could be a perfect midfield player for the new manager.

If he can carry on his form with Brentford at Old Trafford next season, he will surely prove to be a quality signing for the Red Devils.

AND, in other news: BBC journalist drops big Man United transfer update, supporters will be buzzing…

Manchester United in pole position to sign Matthijs de Ligt

Manchester United and Chelsea are thought to be in pole position to sign Juventus defender Matthijs de Ligt.

The Lowdown: Talks held

De Ligt, who Italian football expert Carlo Garganese described as an ‘absolute monster’ after ‘physically bullying (Andrea) Belotti’ in a match against city rivals Torino, has recently been linked with a move to Old Trafford.

The Red Devils have reportedly taken ‘concrete steps with the defender’s entourage’ but are yet to make an official offer. Erik ten Hag knows all about De Ligt after working with him at Ajax before he signed for Juve in a deal worth £76.95m in 2019.

The Latest: Transfer update

Sports Witness relayed an update from Corriere dello Sport regarding De Ligt on Friday.

They claimed that De Ligt has asked to move on this summer, with United and Chelsea ‘ready to intervene’ and ‘in pole position’ to secure his services.

De Ligt reportedly has a €120m (£103m) release clause, something which Juventus would expect to be met.

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The Verdict: Would be brilliant

De Ligt is still just 22 years of age but already has plenty of experience at the highest level for club and country, with former United goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar even likening him to Cristiano Ronaldo for his mentality and application in the gym.

You’d expect that Ten Hag may want to strengthen his defensive ranks after a leaky 2021/22 season, so bringing in De Ligt would certainly be an eye-catching move and one that could transform United’s backline.

It looks as if it could be a costly one, though, and with Chelsea firmly in the race, any interested club may have to pay his £103m release clause.

Spurs: Romano drops Bergwijn update

Fabrizio Romano has dropped an update on the future of Tottenham Hotspur forward Steven Bergwijn.

What’s the talk?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Italian journalist revealed that, following reports that suggest the 24-year-old could be set to leave Spurs this summer, there is indeed a serious chance that the Netherlands international moves onto pastures new in the coming weeks – particularly since Fabio Paratici’s capture of Ivan Perisic.

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In his tweet, the transfer insider said: “There is a serious chance for Steven Bergwijn to leave Tottenham in the summer, as Perisic is joining the club too. The plan is still the same. Ajax have his name on their list since January but there are many clubs interested in him, race still open.”

Supporters will be buzzing

While it is undeniable that Bergwijn is a player who boasts a great deal of talent and potential for future growth, when considering his current market valuation, hefty weekly wage and lack of game time under Antonio Conte, the news that the winger is set to depart north London this summer is sure to have left the Tottenham faithful buzzing.

Indeed, the £26m-rated forward has started just one Premier League fixture since the Italian’s appointment as Nuno Espirito Santo’s successor last November, playing a total of 275 league minutes over the past six months.

Furthermore, with the Dutchman reported to be earning around £75k-per-week at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium – ranking him as the club’s seventh-highest paid player – it is clear that if the 24-year-old is set to remain a backup option for Conte in 2022/23, this is money that could easily be put to better use by the 52-year-old in the summer market.

As such, while Bergwijn has provided Spurs with some memorable moments during his two and a half year stay – including a stunning volley in a 2-0 win over Manchester City on his debut and a stoppage-time brace to seal an incredible 3-2 comeback victory over Leicester City earlier this season – the fact that the former PSV Eindhoven starlet looks set to move on to pastures new this summer is undoubtedly a good move by Paratici, Conte, Daniel Levy and the club.

AND in other news: Contact made: Paratici in talks for £99k-p/w Spurs target, he’s “similar to Laporte”

Southampton: Italian report makes Bale transfer claim

An interesting Southampton transfer claim has now come out of Italy involving former Saints favourite and Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale.

The Lowdown: Bale set for move…

The Wales international is set to leave his current club this summer and is being tipped as one of the big-name free agents who could make a move to the Premier League.

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Bale’s contract at the Bernabeu expires in late June, with Tottenham, Cardiff City, Newcastle, Rangers and AC Milan all having been previously linked with a move (90min).

In a possible boost for interested clubs from the top flight, his agent Jonathan Barnett recently told Record (via Evening Standard) that Bale is likely to make a return to England. However, much will depend on Wales and whether they qualify for the World Cup in Qatar later this year.

The Latest: Saints enter mix…

According to Calciomercato, Southampton have now been added to the list of interested clubs as Ralph Hasenhuttl’s side join the race to sign Bale.

The Italian news outlet claimed that they are ‘on his trail’, alongside Championship club Cardiff City.

The Verdict: Seal reunion?

If his national team are to seal a place at Qatar, we believe that a return to St Mary’s for Bale cannot be ruled out.

While the 32-year-old has started just four La Liga matches all season, it’s clear that the former Spurs star still possesses the ability to threaten – averaging three shots at goal per 90 over those limited minutes (WhoScored).

Only big name striker Karim Benzema has averaged more in the Real Madrid squad with Bale also finishing 2020/21 as Tottenham’s third-best player in terms of goals and assists combined during his north London loan spell (WhoScored).

It’s little surprise that talkSPORT host Andy Goldstein claimed that Bale is still ‘world-class’ despite entering his twilight years and Southampton’s interest in the 183-goal star seems perfectly justified.

In other news: Hasenhuttl has now personally set his sights on signing ‘absolute beast’ for Southampton! Find out more here.

Ward-Prowse backed to stay at Southampton

Southampton midfielder James Ward-Prowse could stay at St Mary’s for the rest of his playing career, according to transfer insider Dean Jones.

The Lowdown: Ward-Prowse committed to Saints

The 27-year-old committed his future to the club by signing a new five-year deal last summer and has been in scintillating form this season, having netted ten goals and registered eight assists in all competitions, via Transfermarkt.

The Saints star was heavily linked with a move to Aston Villa at the end of last season, with Manchester United also believed to be interested in securing his services.

However, whilst plenty of speculation is expected during the upcoming transfer window, Jones can’t imagine Ward-Prowse ever leaving his boyhood club.

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The Latest: Jones makes big Ward-Prowse prediction

When asked about the ten-cap England international’s future under Ralph Hasenhuttl at Southampton, the transfer insider made a rather big claim.

He told GiveMeSport: “I don’t know if James Ward-Prowse is ever going to leave Southampton. It feels to me like he’s not.”

The Verdict: Repaying the faith

Even if the opportunity arose to join a fellow Premier League club in order to compete at European level, you couldn’t argue if the £28.8m-rated talisman decides that he wanted to finish his career with Southampton after everything that they have done for him.

The Saints made Ward-Prowse captain of the club, which gave him the platform to make the breakthrough into Gareth Southgate’s England squad.

The local maestro, who has been hailed by Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola as one of “the best” free-kick takers in the world, is clearly a fan favourite at St Mary’s, having recently picked up three trophies at the Saints’ end of season awards. Therefore, it sounds like it would take a lot for prospective suitors to try and prise him away from his beloved Southampton in the coming months.

In other news… Southampton are reportedly keen on signing a new shot-stopper this summer

For England's batters, the heart seems unwilling and the mind unconvinced

England’s batting line-up no longer resembles a side playing with a single-minded purpose and utter conviction in their approach

Matt Roller08-Dec-20250:53

Finch: ‘England’s shot selection has been horrible’

It was like being offered a mouthful of the meal you wish you had ordered.Ben Stokes and Will Jacks’ tenacious – if ultimately futile – resistance on the fourth day at the Gabba served only to underline just how wrong England had already got it, a bite of someone else’s steak that left them wondering how they had ended up with nothing more than a bowl of soggy chips.Stokes and Jacks’ partnership for the seventh wicket was worth 96 in 221 balls, the longest stand of the series on either side, and felt like England’s captain directly rebuking his batters for their shot selection during a collapse of 5 for 38 on the third evening. They hit six boundaries between them, one every half-hour: “I just wanted us to fight,” Stokes said.Throughout his captaincy, Stokes has seen batting as an opportunity to make a point to his team-mates. In his first summer in the job, he would start in fifth gear and rarely change back down, scoring at a strike rate of 73.45; in 2025, he has slammed the brakes on, highlighting the need for some middle-order ballast with his strike rate dipping to 47.67.Related

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“I said last night, ‘we are where we are’. We talked about taking the scoreboard out of the equation,” Stokes said. “Nothing’s guaranteed in life, and nothing’s guaranteed in sport, but as long as you walk out there and think in your head, ‘I’m going to fight all the way to the end here’, that’s all you can focus on.”What you saw from me and Will Jacks was me saying, ‘anyone who’s got responsibility left in this game, just show fight’. Sometimes, that doesn’t show in the output of what you’re trying to do. It’s all in the mind.”For all that conditions were easier – the ball had gone soft, and there were no visibility issues in the daytime – it provided a stark contrast to England’s approach the night before. The return catch that Zak Crawley chipped back to Michael Neser had summed up the ineptitude, a carbon copy of Ollie Pope’s dismissal, which showed a total failure to learn from others’ mistakes.0:50

Stokes: ‘If we lose hope, we might as well not turn up’

Jacks had a few sketchy moments during his innings of 41, most notably when Australia attacked him with the short ball. He may well have faced more bumpers on Sunday afternoon than in his 54 first-class appearances for Surrey but, after a handful of plays-and-misses, developed a method as he gradually grew in confidence. Put simply, he learned on the job.Yet, far too many of his more experienced team-mates seem incapable of doing so: Crawley and Pope most obviously, who are both still making the same mistakes after more than 60 Tests each, but so too Harry Brook, whose decision to play a booming drive at the first pink ball he had ever faced from Mitchell Starc under lights was indefensible.But the most galling aspect of England’s struggles is that their batting line-up no longer resembles a side playing with a single-minded purpose and utter conviction in their approach. Brook aside, most of their dismissals in Brisbane came from half-hearted shots ill-suited to the Gabba’s pace and bounce.

“We are a much better team at applying it than we are at absorbing it at the moment”Ben Stokes

Australia have outperformed England across every main batting metric in the first two Tests: they have lost a wicket every 50.3 balls to England’s 32.9; they have averaged 38.20 runs per wicket to England’s 22.77; and they have even outscored England, going at 4.55 per over to England’s 4.15. Really, this is barely even Bazball Lite.Pope inadvertently summed up the confusion that has crept into the England dressing room two days out from the Test, providing a barely comprehensible answer when asked about their approach. The thrust was that “complete clarity” as to whether to attack or defend was vital, but he batted as though totally unclear – particularly in his skittish second innings.Stokes and Brendon McCullum have attempted to “refine” their set-up – in terms of both method and personnel – over the past 18 months, an admission that beating the best Test teams demands nuance and nous. But the most notable effect appears to have been to dull England’s attacking strength without improving at all on their shortcomings.6:09

‘Australia have sat back, waited for England and pushed them over’

It was a theme that Stokes himself acknowledged after England’s defeat, looking physically and emotionally drained after four gruelling days. Stokes said that he was “definitely not doubting” England’s approach but made an unusually candid admission that his team has lacked the resilience and character to withstand pressure in this series.”I remember my first team chat with Baz. It was, ‘our blueprint is about applying pressure to the opposition, but also understanding that we do need to absorb that at moments’. I will agree, and say that we are a much better team at applying it than we are at absorbing it at the moment.”You’ll always see us chase the ball hard to the boundary, and you’ll always see people leave everything out there on the field. That is the blueprint of this team. And we can definitely look to improve on the moments where we need to absorb [pressure], and just understanding a lot better what that looks like.”The fear is that it is too little, too late. England are already 2-0 down in the series, a deficit that has only once been overturned to win the urn in Ashes history. Stokes has a four-night stay in a Noosa resort and three training sessions in Adelaide to ensure that the message he tried to send has got across to his batters, but is it the right one?With every passing week, England’s early success under Stokes and McCullum – the heady run of 13 wins in their first 18 Tests, including the intoxicating comeback from 2-0 down in the 2023 Ashes – looks increasingly like a cricketing equivalent of football’s new-manager bounce. Since then, they have been a coin-flip team who have lost as many Tests as they have won.

India and Kohli make the most of home comforts

A subcontinent-type pitch in Port-of-Spain actively worked in favour of the visitors

Alagappan Muthu21-Jul-20231:09

Dasgupta: Kohli ‘wired in’ for his 76th century

There was once a time when it felt like abject cruelty to stick a 21-year-old in the middle of a giant green field only 22 yards away from a West Indian fast bowler.Things are a bit different now. Yashasvi Jaiswal was moved to defence a mere seven times in the first hour of play. It wasn’t like he had made a conscious effort to bat this way. He was just reacting to the knowledge that the conditions were entirely in his favour.Rohit Sharma took even more liberties. Once he combined the ills of playing away from his body and against the swing all for the meagre reward of one run through square leg. But he absolutely middled the shot.Related

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The hundred came up in the 21st over. It should’ve felt manic but never really did. At least, not until the collapse.India racked up 32 false responses in the morning session in Port-of-Spain. None of them led to a wicket. By the time they offered 12 more, they’d lost not one, not two, not three, but four of their best men.Into this mess walked Virat Kohli. He spent 20 balls on zero and in that time Kemar Roach got two to straighten past his outside edge. The tempo of the game had changed and it needed an experienced hand to ride it. Good thing that he’s done this 500 times.Kohli stood firm because he knew that was all he needed to do. The urge to get off the mark was there. He tried to drop and run to point several times but the field was too close in. He had to wait, but it didn’t throw him. West Indies played on his patience and they lost, emphatically too because his first runs came through a gorgeous straight drive that went all along the ground and all the way to the boundary.From 0 off 20, Kohli was suddenly 41 off 72. He held the pose on his cover drives. He took pride in his running between the wickets. He even returned to the pavilion with a souvenir, the front of his shirt and his trousers muddied from a dive to complete a second run that few would have made. On 87 not out, this was Kohli just bubbling. An innings with enough of his signature moments but still very much incomplete.It helped, perhaps, that he knew the route to take to lead India’s recovery mission. The pitch bore striking resemblance to those found in the subcontinent – there were already footmarks outside the left-hander’s off stump for R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja to work with – and West Indies extended their hospitality further by opting to bowl when they won the toss.In the era of the World Test Championship, almost every team has been trying to maximise home advantage and give themselves the best chance of accumulating enough points to make it to the top of the table and then the final. But here was a Test match in Port-of-Spain being played on India’s terms. There was spin on the first day, Jomel Warrican pressed into action as early as the 10th over and made to shoulder nearly 30% of the bowling workload.A focused Virat Kohli dug India out of a hole•AFP/Getty ImagesBack in the day, batters visiting these parts were owed ballads if they could merely resist the fury that was headed their way. Even one of the greatest ever never really tamed this place, or this team. In fact, the most memorable innings that Sachin Tendulkar ever played in the Caribbean yielded only 44 runs.Here’s the current India coach talking about it. “I saw so many great innings but if I could pick one it would be an innings of 40 he made in a one-day match against West Indies in Trinidad and Tobago.”It was a tough wicket, we lost the toss and the Windies had excellent fast bowlers in Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh and Ian Bishop. The ball was moving all over the place, some were bouncing, taking off, and we were struggling.”Sachin decided to take them on and he got 44 off 43 balls. He played all sorts of shots, he cut them, pulled them, hit over the top and this was against a formidable attack. In the end he got a poor decision but it was great to watch. It’s an innings I always remember.”Rahul Dravid might be hard pressed to say the same about this pitch. The Queen’s Park Oval showed none of the venom it had 26 years ago. In fact it was in open war against the fast bowlers, offering no pace and barely any movement. Roach, Alzarri Joseph and Shannon Gabriel combined for 16 overs in the first session and came away with an economy rate of five or worse.West Indies have greeted other subcontinent teams with much spicier pitches, most notably against Bangladesh in 2018 and 2022. Pakistan in 2021 and Sri Lanka in 2018 were cut up by the quicks too. Not doing the same against India, especially when their own fast-bowling firepower is limited with both Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami absent, seems sub-optimal.

From 167 for 0 to 231 all out: a record collapse for India Women

All the stats from India’s collapse in the first innings

Sampath Bandarupalli18-Jun-202172.29 – Percentage of contribution of the 167-run partnership between Shafali Verma and Smriti Mandhana in India’s total of 231. Only once a completed innings in women’s Tests had a higher percentage contribution from a partnership – 74.11% by Jodie Fields and Rachael Haynes, sharing 229 runs for the sixth wicket during Australia’s 309 against England in 2009.ESPNcricinfo Ltd64 – Runs by India between the fall of the first and tenth wicket, their second-worst ten-wicket collapse in women’s Tests. India’s worst collapse came against West Indies in 1976 when they were bowled out for 65 after a 28-run opening partnership.20 – Partnership runs for the second to seventh-wicket stands in India’s innings, the fewest by them in a women’s Test innings. It is also the third-lowest in a women’s Test innings for the second to the seventh-wicket stands.Related

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6 – Instances of a team getting bowled out following a century opening stand in women’s Tests, including India’s collapse in Bristol. There have been only 31 century opening stands in women’s Tests. Of those six occasions, India’s 231 is the lowest total. The previous lowest was 285 by England against New Zealand in 2004, following an opening partnership of 163.1 – Number of all-out totals lower than India’s 231 after a 150-plus opening stand in Test cricket (men or women). The lowest is 228 by Zimbabwe’s men’s team after a 164-run opening stand during their second innings against West Indies in 2001.167 – The opening partnership between Verma and Mandhana, the highest in Tests for India Women and the fourth-highest opening stand in women’s Tests. The previous highest for India was 157 between Gargi Banerji and Sandhya Agarwal against Australia in 1984.8 – Runs collectively scored by India’s Nos. 3 to 6 in the first innings, their lowest for those batting positions in a women’s Test innings. The eight runs are also the third-fewest in a women’s Test innings scored together by the Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6 batters.

Bill Simmons’s Red Sox Tweets Timeline Captures Rollercoaster Second Half of Season

The Boston Red Sox are back in the hunt for the postseason for the first time since 2021 and it's gotten Bill Simmons back into baseball. After a 30-35 start and a big shift in vibes following the Rafael Devers trade, Simmons has been tweeting more frequently about his favorite baseball team.

Unfortunately, that has often led to immediate consequences for the team on the field. Almost as if his being happy about the team on social media has resulted in some sort of jinx. Here's a quick recap of how things have been going for the team as he has posted through the second half of the season.

The Bill Simmons Boston Red Sox Second Half Tweets Timeline

July 18

The Red Sox had won their last 10 games before the All-Star break and are just a game behind the New York Yankees in the AL East standings. (Both teams trail the Blue Jays) The day the season resumed Simmons tweeted that he was excited about the team. They lost to the Cubs that afternoon.

July 21

Boston suffers a "new dumbest loss of the season" in a bizare walk-off loss to the Phillies. They're now two games behind New York.

July 22

Boston loses for the fourth time in five games. "Was way more fun when the Red Sox were playing the sh—- NL teams."

July 28

The Red Sox had just won two games against the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers, but there's chatter about a lockout. just as "MLB is getting its mojo back."

August 1

Boston has won three straight, but they didn't do anything at the trade deadline. Simmons hopes "the Red Sox owners get explosive diarrhea this weekend."

August 5

The Yankees drop their fifth straight game. The Red Sox win their seventh straight. Boston now has a 3.5-game lead over New York and are three games behind the Blue Jays. Doctor Bill (his father) is very excited about . After sending this tweet the Red Sox would drop four of their next five games. Meanwhile, the Yankees have won eight of their last 11 since this tweet.

August 9

The Red Sox had won 10 of 12 games and Roman Anthony hit a double in the ninth inning against the Padres to tie the game 4-4. Simmons hit send shortly before the Padres scored in the 10th to win the game. They have dropped seven of 10 games since he tweeted this:

August 11

Roman Anthony hits a two-run home run in the seventh inning to bring the Red Sox within one of the Astros. After an all-caps "WE ARE ALL LIVING IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE" tweet no one else scores in the game and the Astros win 7-6.

August 17

The Red Sox took a 3-1 lead into the eighth inning and lost 5-3 to the Miami Marlins. It's the "Worst Red Sox loss in awhile!"

August 19

The Orioles, who can "f— off," beat the Red Sox 4-3 in 11 innings. It is the Red Sox's third straight loss.

Meanwhile, Aaron Judge returned to the Yankees lineup and hit one of the team's nine home runs against the Rays as New York won their fourth straight game. New York is now back ahead of Boston in the standings.

Mooney, King book Perth Scorchers' spot in WBBL final

Sydney Sixers started 184 chase promisingly in the Challenger, but fell 11 short in the end

Andrew McGlashan11-Dec-2025

File photo: Beth Mooney scored 76 after being given a life on 9•Getty Images

Beth Mooney continued her outstanding form, and Alana King came to the fore with the ball, to lead Perth Scorchers into the WBBL final, where they will face Hobart Hurricanes on Saturday.Mooney’s 76, the second-highest score in WBBL finals, was the centrepiece of Scorchers’ total, which proved too much for Sydney Sixers. The home side lost Ellyse Perry, Alyssa Healy and Sophia Dunkley in quick succession, although were given some hope by a 53-run stand between Ash Gardner and Amelia Kerr.However, King produced a superb second over in the power surge, conceding just six runs and having Gardner taken at mid-off. King struck again to remove a dangerous Maitlan Brown, and finished with match-winning figures of 3 for 17 as 21 runs needed by Sixers from the last over gave Scorchers a cushion.It has been another impressive WBBL from Mooney, who had struck a century in the second match, and then made an unbeaten 94 to lead Scorchers into the finals. Against Sixers on Thursday, she was given a life on 9 when Healy missed a leg-side stumping, and made Sixers pay despite at times not having a vast amount of the strike. At the end of the four-over powerplay, Mooney had faced only three deliveries.But once Katie Mack, who had also been dropped on 9, fell for a well-constructed 40, Mooney took charge. She launched Gardner for six, and then next ball moved to her fifty off 27 deliveries.As Mooney took consecutive boundaries off Kerr at the start of the 17th over, there was an outside chance of a remarkable century. But she fell lbw to Brown in the 19th over as part of a late stutter by Scorchers.When Paige Scholfield slog-swept Kerr for consecutive sixes, Scorchers looked set for an onslaught. But Kerr, who has struggled this season, gained some revenge when Scholfield fell to a top edge. Scorchers then lost 5 for 21 late in their innings.Sixers started promisingly in the chase as Perry and Dunkley, given a life on 15 when she skied King in the covers, added 58, although the asking rate was rising.Perry, who scored a magnificent century in the final regular-season game to book Sixers’ spot in the finals, chipped King to midwicket. Healy was then cleaned up by exciting young quick Chloe Ainsworth.After back-to-back ducks, Healy had at least managed to get off the mark, but couldn’t go any further in what has been a difficult season for her, which ends with 119 runs at 13.22.Gardner and Kerr started to rebuild, and they took the power surge with 75 runs needed from 36 balls. When the first over of it cost 16, a Sixers comeback appeared possible. King, though, ensured it was Scorchers’ night.

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