Addison Barger's Pinch-Hit Grand Slam Was a World Series First

There have been 120 World Series before this one, and while those Series have included pinch-hit home runs (Kirk Gibson!) and grand slams (Freddie Freeman!), the Fall Classic had never seen a home run that met both criteria.

Until Friday.

In the bottom of the sixth inning Friday night, the Blue Jays' Addison Barger stepped to the plate to hit for left fielder Davis Schneider. On a 2-1 pitch from Emmett Sheehan, Barger parked an 84 mph slider over the center field fence to give Toronto a 9–2 lead over the Dodgers in Game 1 of the World Series.

Barger's swing was, remarkably, the first pinch-hit grand slam in the 122-year history of the competition. It served as the centerpiece of a nine-run inning that blew open a tie game.

The 25-year-old Bellevue, Wash., native owns 28 home runs in his two-year career. None has been a grand slam.

The postseason is a different animal, however, and on Friday Barger—a .286 hitter in the postseason entering Friday—gave Blue Jays fans a moment they'll never forget.

فيديو | منتخب الجزائر يُمطر شباك البحرين بخماسية في كأس العرب

تمكن منتخب الجزائر من تحقيق الفوز على نظيره البحرين، ضمن مباريات دور المجموعات من بطولة كأس العرب. 

وواجه منتخب الجزائر نظيره البحرين، في الساعة الثالثة والنصف عصر اليوم، في الجولة الثانية من دور المجموعات من بطولة كأس العرب. 

ويقع منتخب الجزائر في المجموعة الرابعة في مجموعات كأس العرب رفقة منتخبات البحرين والسودان والعراق. 

طالع.. ترتيب مجموعة مصر في كأس العرب بعد فوز الأردن على الكويت

وحقق منتخب الجزائر الفوز على البحرين، بخماسية مقابل هدف، في المباراة التي جمعت بين الفريقين عصر اليوم. 

تقدم منتخب الجزائر بالهدف الأول في مرمى البحرين، في الدقيقة 24 من عمر الشوط الأول عن طريق اللاعب رضوان بركان. 

وعادل منتخب البحرين النتيجة بهدف في مرمى الجزائر في الدقيقة 27 من عمر الشوط الاول عن طريق اللاعب مهدي عبد الجبار. 

وفي الدقيقة 30 عاد منتخب الجزائر وتقدم مجددًا عن طريق عادل بولبينة، قبل أن يضيف الجزائر الهدف الثالث في الدقيقة 34 بواسطة نفس اللاعب. 

وفي الدقيقة 45 من الشوط الأول، أحرز منتخب الجزائر الهدف الرابع في مرمى البحرين عن طريق اللاعب ياسين بنزيا، قبل أن يضيف محاربو الصحراء خامس الاهداف في الدقيقة 48 بواسطة عادل بركان. 

وبهذه النتيجة رفع منتخب الجزائر رصيده إلى 4 نقاط، في صدارة المجموعة بفارق نقطة وحيدة عن العراق صاحب المركز الثاني، بينما يتذيل منتخب البحرين المجموعة بدون نقاط ليودع كأس العرب.  أهداف مباراة الجزائر والبحرين اليوم في كأس العرب 

'I didn't know how to do life anymore': Brendan Taylor's biggest battle

The Zimbabwe batter talks about falling down a black hole of drug abuse and then getting his life back

Firdose Moonda19-May-2025When Brendan Taylor walked out to play against Ireland in September 2021, he knew three things: his career was over, he had failed a drug test, and he had waited too long to report an approach to fix matches. The last of those earned him a three-and-a-half year ban from the game, but it was failing the drug test that changed his life in ways he could not imagine.”The walls were closing in,” Taylor says, talking about the consequences of his addiction to drugs and alcohol. “It was an absolute pressure cooker because I was dealing with the ICC and knew there was a ban looming, so the fact that I was retiring and I’d had a failed drugs test – I was just totally defeated.”Over the next four months, Taylor waited for confirmation of the ICC sanction and then began to tell his wife, Kelly, the extent of his indiscretions. She didn’t believe him, not even when he told the world and then checked himself into rehab.Related

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“I said to Kelly, ‘Everything is coming to a head and I’ve really got to get some help.’ And she was infuriated. She thought I was running away from the problem but only knew about 5-10% of what I was really getting up to.”Three days before the ICC announced Taylor’s ban, he checked himself into a 90-day programme at a rehabilitation centre in Zimbabwe’s Eastern Highlands, four hours away from Harare. For the first two weeks, he chose to give up access to his cell phone so he would have no outside noise as he started the 12-step recovery programme and discovered the depth of the work he had to do.The first of the 12 steps is admission of a problem, which Taylor had already done publicly but still needed to explain to himself. It all started with alcohol. Like many people in a country where casual drinking is part of middle-class culture, Taylor had often a few drinks and didn’t see much wrong with that. He subsequently discovered his grandmother was an alcoholic.”Alcohol is so accepted and almost encouraged. Everything is geared towards it. It’s like, ‘Let’s play golf and have a few drinks’, or, ‘Let’s have a braai and have a few drinks’, or, ‘Come around this afternoon and we’ll have a few.'”I was convinced that if I only drank on the weekend, then I didn’t have a problem, but I didn’t know what two beers was. I could hide behind the binge-drinking culture, but the reality was that I couldn’t actually predict how much I was going to drink.”With that, came drug use. Taylor first tried cocaine around 2007 or 2008, “quite heavily during periods out of international cricket,” he says but stopped in 2010. When he met Kelly, he stayed off cocaine for six years, but still drank. Though he can’t pinpoint the exact reason, he says he felt the rot starting to set in when he was on a Kolpak deal in England, away from the family and susceptible, playing for Nottinghamshire between 2015 and 2017.

“I didn’t have the courage to tell my family I had a problem. I didn’t have the willingness to go to them. I was too proud and I was too ashamed”

“My wife and kids were at home and then Kelly fell pregnant with the twins. I saw the twins once for a week and then not again for seven months,” he says. “I loved the club so much and I loved the people in the club, but I’d get to my home and I was surrounded by four walls. Just felt down in the dumps but I can’t really tell you how I got back into it [drug use]. That’s what the disease of alcohol and drug addiction does – it’s cunning and baffling and it sneaks its way back in.”Taylor failed two drug tests while in England, where there was a three-strike policy before a player’s records are made public. “The first one, the doctor came in and asked me if there was a problem, but I convinced him there wasn’t. And then the second time, I failed, the punishment was that I lost 5% of my gross income and got a three-week ban.” But no one knew because he’d split the webbing on his hand, and managed to hide the absence behind that. “I missed the pre-season tour in Barbados. The club protected me, but if I failed a third one, it would have been in the press. By then, I was already gearing up towards returning to Zimbabwe.”Back home, it was easier and cheaper to get his fix and he knew how to avoid being caught. “I was very careful and meticulous about who I did [drugs] around, who I could trust. I wasn’t out there in nightclubs or pubs and bars, but I was living a double life. It’s an exhausting way to be.” And that exhaustion fuelled the need for more cocaine.According to the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) Substances-of-Abuse guidelines, cocaine produces a “euphoric rush”, which wears off fairly quickly, leading to “a depressed mood”. Taylor experienced both ends of that spectrum and classified himself, around 2018-19, as an addict.”Out of competition, cocaine is not a banned substance, so that was music to my ears,” he says. The South African Institute of Drug-Free Sports, which is a signatory to WADA, confirmed this, and said that if an athlete tests positive for one of their four “substances of abuse” (cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy or heroin) on a non-match day, they receive only a reduced sanction (as was the case with Kagiso Rabada recently).Taylor used that knowledge to manage his cocaine use. “I’d taper off before international games and try and figure out how best to flush my system, but certainly, I was living by the sword.”During his three seasons with Nottinghamshire, Taylor twice failed drug tests•Julian Herbert/Getty ImagesIn October 2019, he travelled to India to meet a group of businessmen to discuss sponsorship and the setting up of a T20 tournament in Zimbabwe. They offered him cocaine and he accepted. The next day, they showed him that they had filmed him taking the drug and said they would release the video unless he agreed to fix. “I guess those people might have done their research, and they might have known [my history of drug use]. They must have thought, ‘Okay, this is gonna be an easy guy to extort from.”At the time, Taylor accepted money from them for a future fix and left the country.They then approached him to fix in February-March 2020, during Zimbabwe’s tour of Bangladesh, at which point he reported it to the ICC, who began an investigation. In the time they took to complete it, Taylor played five Tests, 12 ODIs and seven T20Is, and maintains that despite the threat of his drug use being exposed, he never entertained the idea of fixing. “I’ve been a lot of things in life but being a cheat is not one of them, so I can sleep a bit better knowing that.”In Ireland with Zimbabwe in September 2021, still stressed, he had become progressively more reckless in his use of cocaine over the preceding six years. When he was called to do a dope test, he knew he was cooked. “The quantities I was engaging in were too much to flush out,” he says. “I tried to detox but with 24 [hours] to go before the game, I was still feeling very dehydrated, very withdrawn and the anxiety and the depression were kicking in. I realised I didn’t know how to do life anymore. I didn’t have the courage to tell my family I had a problem, I didn’t have the willingness to go to them. I was too proud and I was too ashamed, but I knew I’d failed that test.”So he did the only thing he thought he could, and instead of waiting for the test results to be made public, retired abruptly. Four months after that, he confessed to the world what he had kept hidden for so long and decided it was time to get help.The next ten steps on the programme are a combination of building spirituality, surrendering to a higher power, and a process of constant self-reflection, to ensure you build the tools not to slip back. At rehab, Taylor did “a lot of meditation, a lot of running, cold-water plunges, reading, writing and being out in nature”, he says.

“It was quite humbling going from international cricket to trying to figure out a way to get the best out of the kid in front of me. It definitely ignited a passion for coaching”

“It was very beautiful and I had a lot of time to think and reflect, especially with the early sunrises and quiet, and to unpack the wreckage of my past.”The disease of addiction is in the mind, so I had to really re-engineer my whole way of thinking. My old ideas were chaotic and catastrophic. I needed to implement a new way of thinking. You’re dealing with something that’s so damn strong on human beings, you need something a lot stronger than you to take that away. So you develop a faith. I was asleep to God for 36 years and once I woke into that, I really sort of tapped into that.”For three months, he spent time connecting with himself, the natural environment, and his faith, and then it was time to get back into the world, where things could get messy. “I had to be ready for the big, bad world, you know, because you’re in bubble wrap at rehab and it feels manageable but then challenges and the hustle-bustle of life comes your way.”I had to understand that I had a very toxic way of living, where I wallowed in self-centeredness, dishonesty, fear, resentment, and [I had to] unpack all that. I had to realise that I had a part to play in this and I am responsible for my actions and I need to be accountable. It was quite liberating, quite tough to sit through that, but when you are rigorously honest with yourself, you can feel the weight coming off your shoulders.”He left with a plan. The final step in the programme is to be of service. “Before I went into rehab, I had installed a two-lane cricket facility at home, and I had this thing in my head [about] wanting to do a bit of coaching, but it was more for my kids. It just worked out that when I came out of rehab and I was quite limited with where I could coach, because of the [ICC] sanction, that the requests for private coaching went through the roof. I was quite inundated.”I loved that first [coaching] session. It was quite humbling, going from international cricket to trying to figure out a way to get the best out of the kid in front of me. It definitely ignited a passion for coaching. I’ve now spent thousands of hours doing it.”Taylor at a Zimbabwe T20I in Harare in January 2023•Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi/Associated PressOver the last three years Taylor has made up for lost time with his wife and sons, and now happily spends his days as a “little bit of a hermit, being at home or in the nets, or helping Kelly at the hair salon”.Occasionally he gets called to help someone else embarking on the 12-step programme, and he has raised funds for his sponsor to open up another rehab centre on the Eastern Highlands property he was at, so there are now separate male and female facilities. He does talks at schools and in communities, doing his part to fight what he calls an “epidemic” of drug abuse in Zimbabwe. A recent study at the Walter Sisulu University said that 57% of Zimbabwean youth abuse drugs. As Taylor’s ban approached its end, he hoped to become involved with Zimbabwe’s support staff. But Zimbabwe Cricket had other plans.They have asked him to continue playing as soon as he becomes available, and that’s what he is readying for. His sanction ends on July 31, the second day of the first Test of Zimbabwe’s series against New Zealand, in Bulawayo. That means Taylor can be selected from the second Test onwards, and for assignments such as the T20 World Cup Africa Regional Qualifier in September, and the home series against Afghanistan later in the year. Though he hasn’t had any competitive game time, the 39-year-old says he feels better than ever mentally, is in the physical condition he was in when he made his debut 21 years ago, and is a lot lighter than he was for most of his international career.”I’m living good, clean and healthy. I’m 85kg now, and I probably played my whole career around 105kgs. The phenomenon of craving left me long ago. Now it’s just my behaviour I work on. If any of the old things pop up, which they occasionally do, I do an inventory on that. And you actually have to do it every day. Yesterday’s shower will not keep me clean for today. Every 24 hours, it’s about getting back onto my programme and having spiritual fitness.”But weight and his need for external validation are not the only things Taylor has lost. “My ego got absolutely smashed three-and-a-half years ago,” he says. “I’m definitely not expecting to walk back into the team. It’s about what I can do for Zimbabwe Cricket. If I come back and I do okay personally, that’s a bonus, but for me, it’s about impacting the group as best as I can. I just want to fly under the radar, put an arm around someone and say, ‘I’ve got your back and I’m willing to help you.’ That’s the beautiful thing about your past becoming your greatest asset, because I can actually help someone.”And if that someone happens to be lured by substances like he was, Taylor promises to take a firm but gentle approach. “I have sympathy for people who turn to alcohol or drugs, because we don’t know their background, family dynamics, their relationships or [what] they’re dealing with [in] life,” he says. “What people tend to do is use a substance to numb pain that they’re dealing with. I will never judge.”

Charlie Mulgrew shares "big" contract Celtic should now offer Jurgen Klopp

Ex-Celtic striker Charlie Mulgrew has told the Hoops exactly what they must offer Jurgen Klopp to become their Brendan Rodgers replacement in what would be a sensational move.

The Bhoys are still looking for their next manager as Martin O’Neill continues to be a success as interim boss. The 73-year-old made it two wins from two on Sunday after defeating Old Firm rivals Rangers 3-1 after extra-time in the Scottish League Cup semi-final.

It was just like old times for O’Neill, who watched on as goals from Callum McGregor and a first goal for Callum Osmand ensured that his side got one over on their biggest rivals once again.

Relieved to earn a place in the final, O’Neill told reporters at full-time: “It was an incredible game. We were terrific and got the goal in front and got one disallowed for offside.

“We were in command, but I was saying to [assistant] Shaun Maloney we needed a goal to kill the game off and six or seven minutes later, Rangers get the penalty. I was 73 on Monday… I’m 94 now!”

Victory against Rangers has done O’Neill’s chances of becoming the next Celtic manager no harm, that’s for sure. Although the Northern Irishman was quick to admit that he’s just keeping the seat warm when first arriving, two wins from two has sparked rumours that he could yet get the job until the end of the current campaign.

With Ange Postecoglou taking a break from football and reportedly pulling out of the race and other candidates such as Nicky Hayen still in a job, O’Neill may make perfect sense. He’s more experienced than most, especially at Celtic Park, and he is already turning things around.

But he’s not everyone’s first choice. Instead, Mulgrew has urged Dermot Desmond to “go big” and turn to a Champions League winner in Klopp.

Mulgrew urges Celtic to "go big" and hire Jurgen Klopp

Speaking on the latest edition of The Warm-Up Show, ex-Hoops player Mulgrew urged Celtic to hire Klopp and offer the former Liverpool manager a contract worth as much as £7m-a-year, which works out at £135k-a-week.

There’s no denying that it would be an incredible appointment. Klopp transformed Liverpool, awaking English giants and taking them back to Champions League glory, but it seems unlikely that he would make a return to the dugout for Celtic.

Not just Osmand: O'Neill has another future superstar for Celtic's next boss

Celtic have another future superstar who is as exciting as Callum Osmand in their academy.

By
Dan Emery

Nov 3, 2025

That said, whilst unlikely, all hope isn’t lost. The Liverpool legend recently admitted on Steven Bartlett’s Diary of a CEO podcast that a return to management is still possible – saying: “I’m 58, that means I could make the decision in a few years, I don’t know. Do I have to make the decision today?

“Then I will not coach again. But thank God, I don’t have to do that. I can just see what the future brings.”

Celtic submit offer for Mark van Bommel

Man Utd offered Vlahovic in January as Juventus name bargain price tag

Manchester United have been offered the chance to sign striker Dusan Vlahovic from Juventus for a much lower price than expected.

Particularly last season, much was said about Man United. The club endured what was, in terms of points return and league finish, their worst-ever Premier League campaign. Many of the club’s attacking options, such as Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee, struggled for form.

This, no doubt, contributed to their business ahead of the 2025/26 season. In what marked their first summer transfer window with Ruben Amorim as manager, the Red Devils signed Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Sesko in what was a complete renovation of their attack.

The trio have since secured their places in the first team at Old Trafford, helping Man United record three successive Premier League wins for the first time under Amorim’s guidance before the draw at Nottingham Forest.

It would appear, however, that the Red Devils may look to further reinforce their attacking line in the upcoming January window.

Man United show interest in Vlahovic

As per TEAMtalk, Man United could pursue a move for Juventus striker Dusan Vlahovic this winter. Such a transfer, however, would only be explored if there is first a departure. Zirkzee could leave, having lost his place in the first team due to both new signings and poor form.

Vlahovic, who reportedly earns £375,000 per week in Turin, will become a free agent in July if he does not depart Juve at an earlier date, having been unable to negotiate a contract extension with the club. Were Vlahovic to remain, he would seemingly have to take a pay cut.

Having been called a “superstar” for his ability, Vlahovic would be available for just £17.5 million according to TEAMtalk, in no doubt due to his contract situation. Were Zirkzee to depart permanently, it would presumably provide Man United with the adequate funds to pursue Vlahovic. Even if the Dutchman left only on loan, it would free up a position within their first-team for the 25-year-old.

Given his lack of minutes so far this season, it can be presumed that Zirkzee has fallen down the pecking order. In Vlahovic, Man United would be signing competition for summer signing Sesko which, in turn, could benefit the Slovenian international.

Reportedly, Man United are “informed” of Vlahovic’s situation, but “that does not mean they will necessarily pull the trigger on the move” and whether a transfer materialises remains to be seen.

"Deadly" Man United academy star is another Bruno Fernandes

Dubey and Thakur seal Irani Cup title for Vidarbha

Yash Dhull’s 92 and Manav Suthar’s unbeaten 56 made life briefly uncomfortable for Vidarbha

Sreshth Shah05-Oct-2025Rest of India’s Yash Dhull produced a valiant 92 in the fourth innings to briefly threaten a come-from-behind win, but Vidarbha tore down his resistance to win the 2025-26 Irani Cup for the third time since 2017-18.Starting the final day at 30 for 2 in pursuit of a 361-run target, Rest of India lost overnight batter and captain Rajat Patidar early when he drove uppishly for a caught-and-bowled to Aditya Thakare. Ruturaj Gaikwad then lasted only 19 balls before edging Darshan Nalkande to the wicketkeeper.Ishan Kishan, the other overnight batter, lost his patience after 64 balls and came down the wicket to hole out on 35 to deep midwicket off left-arm spinner Harsh Dubey. When Saransh Jain was lbw off left-arm spinner Harsh Rakhade, Rest of Irani were reeling at 133 for 6.However, 22-year-old Dhull, batting at No. 6, gave Rest of India hope by scoring at a brisk rate alongside a more subdued Manav Suthar in a 104-run seventh-wicket stand. Dhull struck eight fours and a six for a 117-ball 92 before playing an uppercut off Yash Thakur to deep third that couldn’t clear the boundary. The frustration – and relief – was clearly visible on the faces of the namesakes as they exchanged words after the dismissal. Next ball, Thakur cleaned up Anshul Kamboj’s stumps with a length ball jagging in, and with Rest of India at 237 for 8, victory was in sight for Vidarbha.When Dubey tossed one up to Akash Deep next, his expansive cover drive found air and when he looked back, his poles were flattened. Suthar battled on with the No. 11 Gurnoor Brar to earn his sixth first-class fifty. Dubey picked off the final wicket to finish with 4 for 73.Earlier in the game, Vidarbha rode on Atharva Taide’s 143 and Yash Rathod’s 91 in the first innings to post 342. Thakur then took a four-for to skittle Rest of India for 214 despite half-centuries from Patidar and Abhimanyu Easwaran. A four-wicket haul from Kamboj in the third innings then restricted Vidarbha to 232. But a target of 361 in the fourth innings turned out to be too steep for Rest of India.

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