Baseball United chief Kash Shaikh ‘proud’ as standouts join Arabia Wolves roster

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Shortstop Chris Beyers, who has been a fixture for several years in the city, will run out this November for the Wolves. (Supplied)
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Pitcher Sean Fekete, who starred in the Dubai Little League while attending the American School of Dubai, will run out this November for the Wolves. (Supplied)
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Updated 30 September 2025
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Baseball United chief Kash Shaikh ‘proud’ as standouts join Arabia Wolves roster

  • Inaugural season of first professional baseball league focused on the Middle East and South Asia kicks off in November

DUBAI: Baseball United, the first professional league focused on the Middle East and South Asia, signed on Tuesday two familiar faces from Dubai to the Arabia Wolves roster for its inaugural season.

Shortstop Chris Beyers, who has been a fixture for several years in the city, and pitcher Sean Fekete, who starred in the Dubai Little League while attending the American School of Dubai, will run out this November for the Wolves.

The Wolves — Dubai’s new professional team — will play all their games at Baseball United Ballpark at The Sevens sports and entertainment complex.

Beyers starred for the Dhahran’s (Saudi Arabia) Little League team that made it to the Little League World Series in 2007 and 2008. He has played professionally in Germany and also represented his native South Africa in international baseball tournaments.

He was the final player selected to play in the Baseball United All-Star Showcase in November 2023 in Dubai, and also competed in the Baseball United UAE Series in February this year.

Fekete, who lived in Dubai for seven years, played Division I college baseball at Oakland University in the US, and also represented the Hungarian National Baseball Team. He also played for the Wolves during the Baseball United UAE Series earlier this year.

Both Beyers and Fekete played for the UAE National Baseball Team, which was constructed by Baseball United and competed in the Arab Classic Tournament in November 2024.

The addition of these two players on the Wolves roster is a significant milestone for baseball in Dubai and across the GCC.

The Dubai Little League, founded in 1996, has more than 500 families associated with its baseball and softball program. There are additional youth leagues in Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman.

“We are proud to have two players on the Wolves’ roster who have called Dubai home for many years,” said Kash Shaikh, chairman, CEO, and co-founder of Baseball United.

“These guys grew up competing on the fields just a few minutes outside of downtown, and now they’ll be suiting up as professionals in our league’s inaugural season in front of their families, friends, and community.

“I’m very happy for Chris and Sean, and I know their stories will inspire the next generation of great players right here in Dubai.”

The Arabia Wolves are one of Baseball United’s four founding franchises, alongside the Mumbai Cobras, Karachi Monarchs and Mid East Falcons. The Wolves roster includes a mix of international veterans, regional talents, and young prospects.

Baseball United’s inaugural season will begin on Nov. 14, 2025, in Dubai, with 21 games scheduled over four weeks.

The Wolves — Dubai’s home team — will play their first game on Tuesday, Nov. 18, against the Cobras, and a total of nine games during the regular season.

The season will conclude with the United Series — a best-of-three championship between the top two teams — held from Dec. 12 to 14 at Baseball United Ballpark.

All Baseball United games will air locally and internationally, with official broadcast partners to be announced in October. The full Wolves roster and schedule can be viewed at baseballunited.com.


Juventus ‘not for sale’ say Agnellis, rejecting crypto giant Tether’s bid

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Juventus ‘not for sale’ say Agnellis, rejecting crypto giant Tether’s bid

  • Tether bid values Turin club at €1.1 billion
  • Buying Juventus could burnish crypto firm’s image in Europe
  • Juve struggling amid financial and sporting challenges
  • Juventus ‘not for sale’ say Agnellis, rejecting crypto giant Tether’s bid

MILAN: Italy’s Agnelli family has no intention of selling Juventus to crypto group Tether or anyone else, the CEO of their holding company said on Saturday, rejecting Tether’s shock offer for Italy’s most successful football club.

“Juventus, our history and our values are not for sale,” said Exor CEO John Elkann, who wore a team hoodie in a rare video address posted on the Turin-based Serie A club’s website.

Tether, headquartered in El Salvador and run by Italian Paolo Ardoino, a Juventus supporter, said on Friday it had submitted an all-cash proposal to buy Exor’s stake in the club.

Tether said it would make a public tender offer for the remaining Juventus shares at the same price and it planned to invest one billion euros to support the club known in Italy as Juve if the deal goes ahead.

The crypto company is offering Exor €2.66 per share, a source familiar with the matter said, valuing Juventus at just over one billion euros ($1.17 billion) and offering a 21 percent premium over Juventus’ closing share price of €2.19.

Amsterdam-listed Exor said in a statement its board had unanimously rejected the offer and had “no intention of selling any of its shares in Juventus to a third party.”

Juventus has not made an annual net profit for almost a decade, and its shares are down 27 percent so far this year.

Tether stablecoin pegged to dollar

Tether, the issuer of a US dollar-referenced stablecoin dubbed USDT, has already built a stake of more than 10 percent in Juventus this year, becoming its second-largest shareholder.

By acquiring a European soccer club, Tether — whose business faces mounting EU regulatory scrutiny — could hope to gain credibility with the continent’s establishment, while boosting its wider popularity.

Tether said it is proposing to buy Exor’s 65.4 percent of the total Juventus share capital, without officially disclosing a price.

Exor, the largest shareholder in automaker Stellantis and which controls sports car-maker Ferrari , has been streamlining its Italian portfolio.

This year it agreed the sale of truck maker Iveco to India’s Tata Motors, and said on Monday it was in talks with Greek media group Antenna to sell its news operations, including two major newspapers and three popular radio stations.

A sale of Juventus would likely be seen as the clearest sign yet of the family’s gradual disengagement from their home country. The family’s ties with the club date back to 1923 when Edoardo Agnelli became chair, and Elkann said in November that the family had no intention of selling shares.

Investors, led by Exor, have poured around a billion euros of fresh cash into Juventus in the past seven years.

Juventus has sruggles in last five years

Juventus has won the Italian championship 36 times, more than any other team, but has struggled since a ninth consecutive title in 2020. It currently sits in seventh place in Serie A.

Once home to stars such as Michel Platini, Roberto Baggio, Alessandro Del Piero and Cristiano Ronaldo, Juventus has helped the Agnellis build consensus and popularity in Italy.

Its support has weathered match-fixing and financial scandals, the most recent in 2023, when a false accounting case linked to player trading led to a 10-point deduction in Serie A.

Juventus was also a driving force behind the failed attempt to launch a breakaway European Super League with a dozen other top clubs in 2021, challenging the authority of European soccer’s governing body UEFA.

Like other leading Serie A teams, it has had a hard time remaining competitive financially amid the growing dominance of England’s Premier League and European powerhouses such as Real Madrid, Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain.

Tether’s USDT accounts for more than half the market of stablecoins pegged to the dollar, the Bank of Italy says.

It had a market capitalization of around $186 billion as of Friday. The token is backed by US Treasuries and dollars, and Tether is one of the 20 largest holders of US government debt.

Stablecoins are digital tokens that aim to maintain a stable value through a one-to-one peg to a traditional currency. They are backed by reserves, government bonds or deposits.