Manchester City crush Liverpool to mark Guardiola’s 1,000 match

Liverpool’s Virgil van Dijk in action with Manchester City’s Erling Haaland during the match at the Etihad Stadium. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Updated 09 November 2025
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Manchester City crush Liverpool to mark Guardiola’s 1,000 match

  • Liverpool have now lost five of their last six league games to leave the defending champions down in eighth, eight points off the top

MANCHESTER: Manchester City celebrated Pep Guardiola’s 1,000th game in management with a statement 3-0 win over Liverpool to close to within four points of Premier League leaders Arsenal.
Erling Haaland shrugged off missing an early penalty to head in his 99th Premier League goal before Nico Gonzalez’s deflected effort and a wonder strike from Jeremy Doku confirmed City’s status as Arsenal’s major title rivals.
Liverpool have now lost five of their last six league games to leave the defending champions down in eighth, eight points off the top.
Arsenal’s 10-game winning run came to an end in a 2-2 draw at Sunderland on Saturday and Guardiola’s men took full advantage in the battle of the two sides that have dominated the Premier League over the past decade.
“Thank you to the players and staff for giving me that incredible present,” said Guardiola on marking his 1,000th game in style.
“I said to the players ‘guys, don’t do it because yesterday Arsenal didn’t win. Let’s do it to believe ourselves’.
“We play against the champions of England. Show them that we are able to be there with them (Arsenal) this season and today I think we proved it.”
Even if decisions went against Arne Slot’s men, this was another show of how far they have fallen since cruising to a 2-0 win at the Etihad in February.
The Reds showed signs of a revival in beating Aston Villa and Real Madrid in the past eight days, but had no answer to the slickness of a rejuvenated City, who have won 11 of their last 14 games in all competitions.
“We need to improve and that’s obvious,” said Slot.
“The first focus is getting results. The last thing we should focus on right now is the title race.”

- Doku bamboozles Bradley -

Conor Bradley shut down the threat of Madrid’s Vinicius Junior on Tuesday but was given a torrid time by the pace and trickery of Doku down City’s left.
Doku made the most of Ibrahima Konate’s clearance off Bradley to round Giorgi Mamardashvili before his trailing leg was clipped by the Georgian.
Referee Chris Kavanagh was initially unmoved but pointed to the spot after a VAR review.
Haaland has struck 28 times already this season for club and country, but is yet to score for City from the spot as Mamardashvili redeemed himself by getting down low to his left to save.
But the Norwegian has still only failed to score in two of his 18 appearances this season and duly delivered with a looping header to meet Matheus Nunes’ wicked delivery on 29 minutes.
Liverpool thought they were level nine minutes later when Van Dijk’s header from a corner arrowed into the far corner.
However, Andy Robertson ducked out the way of his captain’s effort and was deemed to have interfered with Gianluigi Donnarumma from an offside position.
Instead of going in all square, City rubbed salt in the wounds of Liverpool’s perceived injustice.
The visitors were slow to get out from a corner and Gonzalez had time to take aim before his shot deflected off Van Dijk to wrong-foot Mamardashvili.
Liverpool only had themselves to blame for not getting back in the game early in the second period as Cody Gakpo blazed over with the goal gaping at the end of a fine move involving Mohamed Salah and Bradley.
Doku fittingly rounded off arguably his best performance in three seasons at City in style to seal victory just after the hour mark.
The Belgian jinked inside the leaden-footed Konate before curling into the top corner from outside the box.
Salah then summed up Liverpool’s day and season so far when he dinked wide a glorious chance 10 minutes from time.


The perils of comparing T20 franchise cricket leagues

Updated 12 sec ago
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The perils of comparing T20 franchise cricket leagues

  • By most criteria, major cricket outlets consider the IPL the top league, but elsewhere factors such as entertainment and viability play a role in the rankings

LONDON: On occasion, I am asked to compare the franchised cricket leagues — a subjective exercise, given there are no agreed criteria on which to base such analysis.

It was interesting, therefore, to discover last week that The Cricketer magazine has published its own ranking of the leagues. It is not the first to do so — in August 2025, the BBC produced an assessment under the heading “Which franchise league is most entertaining?”

There is an understandable tendency for such rankings to focus on the biggest leagues. According to the World Cricketers Association, there are just short of 50 active short-form cricket leagues around the world. The Cricketer drew up its rules of engagement to include leagues that it judged to be “franchise-style,” excluding the T20 Blast in England and Wales which features the same county clubs that compete in other forms of domestic cricket. Only men’s leagues were included, whilst competitions that were not the biggest within a certain country or territory were excluded. This meant, for example, that the ILT20 was chosen as the UAE's primary league rather than the Abu Dhabi T10.

This pruning reduced the number of leagues under consideration to 10. Three criteria were set: the quality of cricket, entertainment value and viability.

The quality criterion related to the on-field spectacle, including the standard of players on show and the competitiveness of the league. Entertainment related to crowd engagement and spectator experience, both in-ground and through the league's broadcast. Viability focussed on whether each league was likely to not only survive, but tthrive in the long run.

In order to truly apply these criteria, a range of relevant metrics needs to be available. They vary in sufficient quantity and quality, breadth and depth. The BBC analysis did adopt imaginative metrics to create an entertainment index, based on data from CricViz. These included the average number of fours and sixes per game, dot-ball percentage, the impact of home advantage, average strike-rate, the style of bowling taking the wickets and how many games went down to the last over or even the last ball.

The whole ethos of T20 cricket is that it should be entertaining. My observations are that spectators respond most enthusiastically to six-hitting, followed by spectacular catching, the sight of ball breaking wicket and close finishes. One of the criticisms of T20 cricket is that it has become weighted too much in favor of batters, encouraged by the provision of pitches and balls which offer little help to bowlers, along with restrictions on the number of boundary fielders. No bowler likes being hit for six, so they have had to hone new skills in their attempts to reduce the incidence. These attempts may have gone unnoticed by those who only wish to see sixes hit.

This comes back to how should the quality of cricket be defined. Instinctively, it might be assumed that it equates with the quality of the players. Both The Cricketer and the BBC place the Indian Premier League first on this metric. The Cricketer focussed on the IPL’s commercial might and its lasting ability to pull spectators and viewers in over eight long weeks. It is difficult to distinguish whether its attraction is the quality of cricket, the charisma of the players or the entertainment value.

All of India’s best players and emerging talent are available for the whole IPL. Four overseas players are allowed per playing XI. No Pakistanis are invited and, in 2026, no Bangladeshis. It could be argued that their exclusion means that the IPL does not maximize its quality. If an inclusivity criterion were added then the IPL’s rating would be negatively affected.

The BBC’s assessment of quality, as distinct from entertainment levels, focussed on the quality of player in each league, based on international caps across all formats. This was expressed as the average number of international caps held by the starting XIs in each game. Significant variation exists. The IPL had 335 but was behind ILT20 with 423 and the Pakistan Super League with 351. Australia’s Big Bash League was way below with an average of 145. There are structural reasons for these differences.

During the BBL, in which teams are allowed three overseas players in a playing XI, Australia’s best cricketers play an international series. Their unavailability was a factor in the BBC’s seventh placed ranking for the BBL, compared with third place by The Cricketer. Conversely, the PSL was ranked sixth by The Cricketer and third by the BBC. This is despite the challenges which it has faced in its 10 years. One of those challenges is its scheduling in relation to international commitments and other franchise leagues, with which it competes for players.

In 2026, it runs from March 26 until May 3, overlapping with the IPL. Its need for international players has increased with its expansion from eight to 10 teams. In recent days, several high-profile players have announced that they have reversed their original intention to participate, citing personal reasons.

In the ILT20, nine overseas players, one of whom must be from an associate country, are allowed per XI, with the other two places mandated for UAE players. The league had a salary cap of $2.5 million per franchise in its first three seasons, the highest outside of the IPL. In the recent fourth edition, the salary cap was reduced to $2 million, plus $250,000 for two wildcards. Other factors now come into a player’s decision making, such as the length of tournament and being in one place for its duration.

South Africa’s SA20 has a secure base in high quality local talent and a strong base in spectator attendance and involvement. ILT20 does not have that, yet, and it will take time to build up. It was this factor that was influential in The Cricketer placing SA20 second in its overall ranking and ILT20 in eighth place. The panel also downrated ILT20 in terms of its viability. This was based on its reliance on a broadcast deal with an Indian TV company and its dependency on overseas players, suggesting that UAE players “hardly feature beyond fielding.” In the most recent tournament, a UAE player scored the second highest number of runs and another took 13th spot. Two UAE bowlers were in the top four leading wicket-takers.

ILT20 has a clear strategy to develop local talent and has domestic structures in place to underpin this. On the surface, franchise leagues may look as if they have only one goal — to make money and achieve self-sufficiency for the national board. What is not so readily apparent is their investment in talent-hunt programs. Cricket South Africa was quite open about its reasons for introducing SA20. It was in serious financial difficulty and deliberately prioritized the franchise league to address not only that problem but also reawaken interest in the game and uncover new talent. In the last two years the performance of its national team has improved dramatically. Perhaps an additional criterion for ranking franchise leagues should be their success in contributing towards domestic cricket development.

There has been no space to discuss the Caribbean Premier League, The Hundred, the US’s Major League Cricket, the Lanka Premier League or the Bangladesh Premier League. The Cricketer ranked them fourth, fifth, seventh, ninth and 10th, whereas the BBC placed The Hundred at four and the CPL at five. It did not consider the leagues in the US, Sri Lanka or Bangladesh. These variations reflect the use of different criteria and the subjective nature of the assessments. However, by available criteria, it is obvious to all that the IPL is the top league. Until a more rigorous set of criteria is developed, the debate about the relative positions of other leagues will occupy many a cricket conversation.