Former MLB All-Star and World Series champion Nick Swisher joins Baseball United ownership group

Former MLB All-Star Nick Swisher (center) with Baseball United CEO Kash Shaikh (right). (Supplied)
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Updated 03 August 2023
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Former MLB All-Star and World Series champion Nick Swisher joins Baseball United ownership group

  • Swisher is the latest addition to the Dubai-based group that includes MLB legends Barry Larkin, Mariano Rivera, Adrian Beltre, and Felix Hernandez

DUBAI: Baseball United, the first-ever professional baseball league focused on the Middle East and Indian subcontinent, has announced that former Major League Baseball outfielder and first baseman Nick Swisher has joined its investment and ownership group.

Swisher’s 12-year career included a champion season with the New York Yankees in 2009.

The Ohio native hit at least 20 home runs in each of nine consecutive seasons from 2005 to 2013 and earned an All-Star selection in 2010. He hit 245 total home runs during his career.

“Our team and I are so grateful and excited to welcome Nick into our ownership team,” said Kash Shaikh, president, CEO, and majority owner of Baseball United. “He not only was an All-Star and a champion on the field, but he’s also one of the most charismatic baseball personalities of this generation. You can feel his passion for the game each time he speaks, and I can’t wait for him to share that love for the game with our fans in the Middle East and South Asia.”

Baseball United’s Dubai-based league launches this November with a showcase event hosted at Dubai International Stadium. The showcase will include the league’s first four franchises, two representing the UAE, as well as the Mumbai Cobras and Karachi Monarchs, which were revealed in recent weeks. The Mumbai and Karachi franchises are the first professional baseball franchises in the history of India and Pakistan, respectively. The names of the UAE-based franchises will be announced on Thursday in Dubai.

“It’s such an honor to be able to grow the game of baseball alongside Kash and this legendary ownership group,” said Swisher. “I’ve spent my entire life in and around the game, and I truly believe that Baseball United is a game-changing opportunity to transform baseball into a global sport. We have the right team, the right plan, and the right culture in place to go make history."


Djokovic edges Kovacevic to reach Indian Wells last 16

Updated 5 sec ago
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Djokovic edges Kovacevic to reach Indian Wells last 16

  • With five Indian Wells titles Djokovic is tied for the record with Swiss great Roger Federer

INDIAN WELLS, United States: Novak Djokovic clawed out a 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 victory over 72nd-ranked American Aleksandar Kovacevic on Monday to reach the fourth round at Indian Wells for the first time since 2017.
Djokovic, playing his first tournament since falling to Carlos Alcaraz in the Australian Open final, had all he could handle from the 27-year-old New Yorker, who peppered the Serb superstar with 16 aces.
Djokovic made an early break stand up to take the first set, but Kovacevic had found his groove and rolled through the second against a clearly frustrated Djokovic.
Djokovic regrouped in the third — finally finding the break he needed in the final game.
“I knew coming into the match that if he serves well and if he picks his spot in the box it’s going to be tough to break him,” Djokovic said.
“I wasn’t maybe feeling my rhythm on that return very well today, but he was just making my life very difficult, returning the serve.
“He was just acing me all over, getting a lot of free points.
“Today was really anybody’s game until the last couple of points. That last game in the third where he missed some first serves, gave me looks on the second and I used it. That’s pretty much it.”
With five Indian Wells titles Djokovic is tied for the record with Swiss great Roger Federer.
But the Serbian superstar hasn’t made it to the quarter-finals in the California desert since his last title run in 2016 and now he’s had to come through a pair of three-setters to return to the last 16.
He’ll face defending champion Jack Draper for a place in the quarter-finals after the Briton beat Argentina’s Francisco Cerundolo 6-1, 7-5.
Draper’s victory here last year — featuring a semifinal win over Carlos Alcaraz — launched his rise to fourth in the world.
But he then missed the better part of six months with an arm injury and arrived in California ranked 14th, his win over Cerundolo marking the first time since June that he’s posted back-to-back ATP victories.
Cerundolo served for the second set at 5-4, but a few mistakes gave Draper an opening and the Briton broke back, saving a pair of break points in the next game before finishing it off on Cerundolo’s serve.
A pair of top-10 seeds were sent packing as Britain’s Cameron Norrie ousted eighth-ranked Australian Alex de Minaur 6-4, 6-4 and Aussie qualifier Rinki Hijikata 10th-ranked Alexander Bublik 6-7 (3/7), 7-6 (7/3), 6-3.
Hijikata, ranked 117th in the world, claimed his first win over a top-10 player to advance to a meeting with Norrie.
Alcaraz, riding a 13-0 match winning streak as he chases a third Indian Wells title, headlined the night session, taking on France’s Arthur Rinderknech.
The 22-year-old Spaniard’s Australian Open triumph made him the youngest man to complete a career Grand Slam, and he followed up with a title in Doha in February.
Now Alcaraz is aiming to return to the winner’s circle in Indian Wells, where his bid for a third straight title last year was derailed by Draper in the semifinals.