First Muslim cricketer to represent Australia to challenge pro-Palestine shoe ban

First Muslim cricketer to represent Australia to challenge pro-Palestine shoe ban
Usman Khawaja's spikes emblazoned with slogans referencing the plight of Palestinians in Gaza. (Getty)
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Updated 13 December 2023
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First Muslim cricketer to represent Australia to challenge pro-Palestine shoe ban

First Muslim cricketer to represent Australia to challenge pro-Palestine shoe ban
  • Khawaja wore spikes featuring the phrases “all lives are equal” and “freedom is a human right,” in solidarity with Gaza

LONDON: Australian cricketer Usman Khawaja has vowed to challenge an International Cricket Council directive that prohibits him from wearing shoes with messages deemed “political” during the upcoming first Test against Pakistan, The Telegraph reported.

During training in Perth on Tuesday, Khawaja was seen wearing spikes featuring the phrases “all lives are equal” and “freedom is a human right,” in solidarity with the Palestinians suffering under Israel’s war on Gaza.

The two-month-long campaign of airstrikes and ground assaults in Gaza has killed more than 18,500 Palestinians, many of them women and children, according to Palestinian officials.

Khawaja, who was the first Muslim cricketer to represent Australia, had planned to wear these shoes in the first Test starting on Thursday. However, ICC rules allow the match referee to bar players from the field for wearing attire that violates regulations.

While Khawaja has accepted the ICC’s decision for now, he is committed to overturning it and aims to wear the shoes during Melbourne’s Boxing Day Test, The Telegraph reported.

He took to social media to voice his opinion, stating, “The ICC have told me I can’t wear my shoes on field because they believe it’s a political statement under their guidelines,” Khawaja said on social media. “I don’t believe it is so, it’s a humanitarian appeal. I will respect their view and decision, but I will fight it and seek to gain approval. Freedom is a human right, and all lives are equal. I will never stop believing that, whether you agree with me or not.”

He further elaborated on the motivation behind his shoes, emphasizing his view that the message is not political but a stand for equality and human rights.

“Let’s be honest about it, if me saying all lives are equal has resulted in people being offended to the point where they’re calling me up and telling me off, well isn’t that the bigger problem? These people obviously don’t believe in what I’ve written. It’s not just a handful of people. You’d be shocked at how many feel this way.

“What I’ve written on my shoes isn’t political, I’m not taking sides, human life to me is equal. One Jewish life is equal to one Muslim life, is equal to one Hindu life, and so on. I’m just speaking up for those who don’t have a voice. This is close to my heart. When I see thousands of innocent children dying without any repercussions or remorse, I imagine my two girls.

“What if this was them. No one chooses where they’re born. Then I see the world turn their backs on them, my heart can’t take it. I already feel my life wasn’t equal to others when I was growing up. Luckily for me I never lived in a world where a lack of equality was life or death.”

The ICC has previously stepped in to prevent players from carrying what it deems to be political messages. In 2014, England’s Moeen Ali was banned from wearing “Save Gaza” and “Free Palestine” wristbands in a Test against India.

Khawaja’s stance has garnered support from his teammates. Travis Head, Australia’s vice-captain, showed solidarity on X, formerly Twitter, posting: “We stand with Usman Khawaja! All lives are Equal.”

Captain Pat Cummins had earlier said: “Uzzie doesn’t want to make too big of a fuss. On his shoes, he had, ‘All lives are equal.’ I think that’s not very divisive. I don’t think anyone can really have too many complaints about that.”
 


Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh

Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh
Updated 29 August 2024
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Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh

Baseball United charting a course for professionalism in the region, says Kash Shaikh
  • Dubai-based organization’s founder, CEO and chairman spoke to Arab News about 3 signature events and potential for regional success
  • Teams from Saudi Arabia, UAE and Palestine will take part in the Arab Classic alongside India and Pakistan in November

DUBAI: At times, the dream of bringing professional baseball to the region must have seemed like a mirage in a desert.

The harder the man behind Dubai-based organization Baseball United tried, the more this vision seemed to fade.

But now, for Kash Shaikh, founder, chairman and CEO of Baseball United, three years of logistical challenges are almost over.

“I’m just really excited for the fans. I’m really proud of our team, grateful for the opportunity that after three years of working and grinding and building and pushing, and falling and failing and picking ourselves up, and still finding a way, that we’ve finally been able to chart a course and a path forward for professional baseball in the region,” said Shaikh.

He announced that Dubai would be the home for baseball with three “signature” events “that we have a vision for conducting every year, and hopefully growing and making bigger each year.”

The first of the three events is the Arab Classic, bringing together the biggest national teams from the region to compete in Dubai from Nov. 7 to 10, 2024.

The Baseball United Cup, with each of the current four franchises featuring professional players, follows from Feb. 22 to March 1, 2025.

Baseball United’s first full season, featuring the Mumbai Cobras, Karachi Monarchs, Arabia Wolves, Mid East Falcons, and a new, yet-to-be-announced Riyadh-based team, will then launch on Oct. 23, 2025.

“Our season, which is something that we’ve dreamed about for a long time and it sometimes didn’t seem possible, but thanks to the partners we have on the ground and just really the resilience of our team, we’ve been able to make it happen.”

In the three, often difficult years, what kept the dream alive for Shaikh was the potential he saw for baseball to grow in the Middle East and Asia.

“No doubt, I really believe that this region for sure is not only the future of sport, but it is the future for baseball. It has all the elements, all the ingredients that are needed to build a sport from the ground up, which is exactly what we’re doing.

“We’re creating the whole ecosystem, from the fields and facilities to the teams and the rosters to the equipment, the seating that’s needed, the broadcast partnerships, the sponsorship channels.”

Baseball United’s first event, the Dubai Showcase last November at the International Cricket Stadium, drew in crowds of almost 5,000 on each of its two days. The response from fans was overwhelmingly positive, said Shaikh.

“A marker of that potential is the response we’ve gotten from fans. You know, 4.7 out of 5 stars out of our showcase last year in terms of fan response.

“Thousands of people here in the UAE and Dubai messaging us saying that they believe in what we’re doing, they want to be a part of what we’re doing.”

The Arab Cup promises to attract even more fans from the Middle East with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Palestine joining India and Pakistan.

“Right now we’ve actually had 12 teams from around the region asking us to participate. We’re planning to focus on eight,” Shaikh said.

“So the hardest cut I’m going to have to make is taking that 12 teams down to eight. You know, there’s a chance we may expand it. But even if we don’t, we’ll have eight teams that truly represent the breadth and depth of this region.”

Shaikh believes that one of the highlights will be the clash between India and Pakistan, as it is often in any sporting field. Others will bring Arab teams under the spotlight.

“You’ve got teams that are representing the UAE and Saudi Arabia as well,” he added. “They’ve never played in a national team format in history. Saudi’s federation is the newest baseball federation, just formed in 2019.

“They’ve never played an official national team match game before. And now they get to here in the region. So it’s going to be a really big deal.”

“We’ve already been getting a lot of messages from embassies from each of these countries wanting to participate, wanting to get their local fans out there.”

The Arab Classic will be adopting World Baseball Classic rules and a format that sees two groups of four competing, with the top two in each advancing to the semifinals.

The Dubai Showcase last season fell on the same weekend as the Formula One Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, but Shaikh said fans can expect even more this year, including a soon-to-be-announced purpose-built ballpark.

“We’ve been figuring out where the future field is going to be,” Shaikh said.

“One thing that was very important to me and our team is that no matter what we do, we know this is a long-term play, but we’ve got to do something for the fans in 2024. That to me was the biggest factor to say, let’s host this in November.”

“(The Arab Classic) will be a little bit less than a year from our last event. It’s a great, almost ceremonial next step for the game. Now we get to do it with national teams representing some of the biggest countries here, so it’s going to be very exciting.”

On the Baseball United Cup with the Mumbai Cobras, Karachi Monarchs, Arabia Wolves and Mid East Falcons, he said: “These teams are full of some of the best professional baseball players in the world, former Yankees and Dodgers and Red Sox.”

“We drafted these teams about a year ago, but nobody has seen them in their full, kitted-out uniforms with their full teams on the field. It’s going to be historic in a lot of ways. It’s going to be a smaller format, a round-robin format, plus playoffs.”

A total of 10 games will be played across eight days in February, in many ways a dress rehearsal for the launch of Baseball United’s inaugural season later in the year.

“This is the big thing from the beginning,” he said. “The season gives me goosebumps, because it’s something we’ve been dreaming about. And trying to figure out, you know, what are the right number of franchises.”

“What we decided on is five franchises. Our first four, Mumbai, Karachi, Arabia, and Mid East, plus a new Riyadh franchise that we’ll announce in early 2025, which I’m very excited about.”

Each team will play 12 games, and then after the regular season, the top two will play in a three-game series, to crown the champions. “Overall, it’s going to be 33 games in 32 days here in Dubai, so it’s a huge sprint,” said Shaikh.

“It’s a crazy, ambitious undertaking for us. It’s funny, on one end, for baseball it’s not a lot of games because 12 games per team for baseball is really just a blink.

“I mean, baseball is typically played every day for eight, nine months out of the year. Major League Baseball teams play 162 games each. So 12 games is small, but we’re a small, growing league.

“We wanted to create the right footprint, and honestly, we wanted to learn how and if and when, and to what extent we can get folks here in Dubai to come out to support.”

The next big challenge according to Shaikh is to create a product that fans will return to repeatedly, as opposed to showing up for a once-a-year marquee event or weekend.

“If we can, there’s a huge, huge potential and a huge trajectory for this league, for the community, for young kids, for development, for the ecosystem,” he said.

“Think about how many jobs something like this creates, how many opportunities. When we talk about baseball, we’re talking about grounds crew, facilities, coaches, umpires, statisticians, scorekeepers, broadcasters, equipment managers.”

“There’s so much medical staff, nutrition staff. We’re really building the whole infrastructure from a whole economic perspective. So it’s much more than the bottom line for us.”

One of things exciting Shaikh most will be the release of the teams’ merchandise, which he calls “iconic” and a part of “Americana culture.”

“When people see the Arabia Wolves gear, Mumbai Cobras, that’s when fans’ passion really starts to come to life. That’s how I fell in love with baseball.”

Jerseys, caps and other branded products will be available online as well, thanks to a partnership with Go Sport, at Dubai Mall and Mall of the Emirates.

“We’re going to have an actual baseball team sports section where you can go buy an Arabia Wolves jersey, you can buy a Mumbai Cobras jersey, rock a baseball hat,” said Shaikh. “And we’re going to have activations in the store to try to get fans educated about the game.”

Shaikh believes Baseball United now has the “highest pedigree of ownership group” in terms of on-field play, in all of professional sports.

“Right now we have 20 of the best baseball players in history who’ve invested in Baseball United, who are co-owners of Baseball United, who’ve not only put their money, but their time, their energy, their resources, their social media accounts behind what we’re doing,” he said.

“I mean, in the early days when we started, it gave us instant credibility. Today, as we continue to grow, it creates instant fanfare for us.”

“There’s no way we’d be where we are without those guys,” he added. “They bring over 300 years of Major League Baseball knowledge and game play into the organization. And it’s just a huge blessing for us to work with them.”

Shaikh highlighted that a big part of Baseball United’s philosophy is the interaction of players with fans. This was shown at the Showcase last November when both rosters took time to sign autographs and pose for photos with young fans.

The former players are also involved in promoting the game at grassroots level. “They threw out the first pitch at Dubai Little League,” said Shaikh.

“It’s incredible, that doesn’t happen. But because of Baseball United and because these legends were able to offer fans that type of experience.

“When you come to Baseball United’s new ballpark, you probably run into some of our legends (too).”


Al-Hilal edge 5-goal thriller against Damac to lead league table

Al-Hilal edge 5-goal thriller against Damac to lead league table
Updated 29 August 2024
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Al-Hilal edge 5-goal thriller against Damac to lead league table

Al-Hilal edge 5-goal thriller against Damac to lead league table
  • Moussa Dembele winner maintains maximum for Al-Ettifaq after 1-0 win over Al-Okhdood

RIYADH: Al-Hilal maintained their 100 percent start to the season with a 3-2 win over Damac at Kingdom Arena on Wednesday night, and now top the Saudi Pro League table with three matches of the second round still to be completed on Thursday night.

With Senegal forward Habib Diallo a constant threat, Damac had several chances to go ahead as the first half progressed. But it was Aleksandar Mitrovic who opened the scoring for the champions in the fifth minute of stoppage time, heading home from Mohammed Al-Qahtani’s deflected cross.

However, Damac stunned Jorge Jesus’ men with two quick-fire goals at the start of the second half to take an unlikely lead. Guinea forward Francois Kamano equalized four minutes after the break with a looped shot that sailed over Yassine Bounou into the net.

And only four minutes later the visitors went ahead through Diallo’s close-range finish. Both goals were set up by Ramzi Solan.

Saudi Arabia international midfielder Musab Al-Juwayr leveled the score on 73 minutes with a firmly-struck volley from inside the penalty area after Damac goalkeeper Florin Nita failed to clear substitute Yasser Al-Shahrani’s corner.

The equalizer set up a grandstand finish, and it was no surprise when Mitrovic completed Al-Hilal’s comeback with his second of the match on 84 minutes.

The Serbian forward finished smartly from close range after Renan Lodi’s cross was deflected into his path by Al-Juwayr’s inadvertent touch. Despite a nervous VAR check, the officials confirmed Mitrovic’s fourth SPL goal of the season.

In the first match of the day, Al-Ettifaq claimed their second 1-0 win of the season, overcoming Al-Okhdood at home thanks to Moussa Dembele’s 63rd minute strike.

With Steven Gerrard’s team yet to concede a goal this season, they joined Al-Hilal and Al-Qadsiah as the only teams so far with six points out of six at the top of the table.

Meanwhile, Al-Wehda defeated promoted Al-Orobah 2-1 with a 93rd minute goal by Murad Khadhari at King Abdulaziz Sport City Stadium.

The home team had taken the lead through former Al-Hilal forward Odion Ighalo in the first minute, but Ziad Al-Hunaito replied for Al-Orobah just after the hour as teams went in at half-time all-square.

It looked like the points would be shared until the late intervention by Khadhari, who had scored in Al-Wehda’s season-opening 3-3 draw against Al-Riyadh last week.


Defending champions Djokovic, Gauff advance at steamy US Open

Defending champions Djokovic, Gauff advance at steamy US Open
Updated 29 August 2024
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Defending champions Djokovic, Gauff advance at steamy US Open

Defending champions Djokovic, Gauff advance at steamy US Open
  • Djokovic and Gauff missed the worst conditions of a steamy day that saw tournament organizers invoke the extreme weather rule
  • Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka, runner-up to Gauff last year, didn’t have to take advantage, polishing off Italian Lucia Bronzetti 6-3, 6-1 in an hour

NEW YORK: Defending champion Novak Djokovic reached the third round of the US Open on Wednesday as Laslo Djere retired in the third set, but said he’ll have to do better to win a fifth title on the hard courts of New York.

Djokovic was up 6-4, 6-4, 2-0 when Djere pulled the plug on a gritty encounter that saw both men summon the physio to Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“It’s not what we want to see,” Djokovic said. “He’s such a good player in these conditions and the second set should have been his, he was 4-2 up.

“I don’t know if (my) winning the second set probably put more burden on him.”

Djokovic notched his 90th US Open match victory, becoming the first man to win 90 at all four Grand Slams.

But it was a battle until the minute Djere called it quits.

Djokovic grabbed the first break of the match to take the first set 6-4 after a tense hour then sought treatment for trouble on his right side.

Djere, the only player to take a set off Djokovic at last year’s US Open, gained the first break of the second set and with a 4-2 lead had two more break points that he couldn’t convert.

But Djokovic won the next six games, Djere receiving treatment on his abdomen before Djokovic closed out the second.

“Overall it was a big fight —  over two hours for two sets,” Djokovic said.

“I served awful. So playing without the serve, you have to grind, you have to run. I had to rely on my baseline game.”

The Serbian superstar, coming off an emotional Paris Olympics triumph, next faces Australian Alexei Popyrin, who he beat at the Australian Open and Wimbledon this year.

Women’s defending champion Coco Gauff overcame her own struggles on serve to beat 37-year-old Tatjana Maria 6-4, 6-0.

It was an uneven performance from 20-year-old Gauff, who has endured an erratic season since capturing her maiden major in New York.

She put just 44 percent of her first serves in play and had nine double faults, but the 99th-ranked Maria couldn’t capitalize and Gauff won the last seven games to seal the win.

“I think I played well overall,” Gauff said. “I think if I could have served better that first set would have been a lot easier.”

Djokovic and Gauff missed the worst conditions of a steamy day that saw tournament organizers invoke the extreme weather rule allowing mid-match breaks.

Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka, runner-up to Gauff last year, didn’t have to take advantage, polishing off Italian Lucia Bronzetti 6-3, 6-1 in an hour.

“I told myself you have to stay focused from the first point to the last point and make sure you’re not going to stay here a crazy number of hours,” Sabalenka said.

Fourth-seeded Alexander Zverev of Germany advanced with a 6-4, 7-6 (7/5), 6-1 victory over France’s Alexandre Muller.

“I am happy to be done in three sets, to have some rest as it is very hot and tough conditions,” said Zverev, who said he felt fine but “was at some point very wet.”

Zverev next faces Argentina’s Tomas Etcheverry, whose efforts to stay hydrated backfired during his 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3 victory over compatriot Francisco Cerundolo.

“You had to hydrate well, try to take as many salts and hydrates as possible and I overdid it, that’s why I ended up vomiting,” said Etcheverry, who fired 23 aces to finally seal the win after more than four hours.

“It’s dangerous not only for the players, but also for the public,” he added.

Sixth-seeded Russian Andrey Rublev and Czech Jiri Lehecka both battled through five sets to line up a third-round meeting.

Rublev, a four-time US Open quarterfinalist, beat France’s Arthur Rinderknech 4-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 while Lehecka out-lasted American Mitchell Krueger 6-7 (5/7), 0-6, 6-4, 6-4, 7-5.

Rublev also called medical staff after drinking so much water he felt like he had “a baby” in his stomach.

Elsewhere, seventh-seeded Paris Olympics gold medalist Zheng Qinwen had to go the distance, rallying from a set down for the second straight match to beat Russian Erika Andreeva 6-7 (3/7), 6-1, 6-2.

But eighth-seeded Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova became the biggest upset victim of the tournament so far, bounced 6-4, 7-5 by Romanian qualifier Elena-Gabriela Ruse.


Paris Paralympics open in blaze of hope and inclusivity

Paris Paralympics open in blaze of hope and inclusivity
Updated 29 August 2024
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Paris Paralympics open in blaze of hope and inclusivity

Paris Paralympics open in blaze of hope and inclusivity
  • French President Emmanuel Macron declared the Games open during a ceremony in a balmy Place de la Concorde in central Paris
  • The 4,400 competitors from 168 delegations paraded into the arena as the sun set with host nation France entering last to a standing ovation from 30,000 spectators
  • In one of the highlights of the ceremony, French singer Lucky Love, who is missing his left arm below the elbow, performed a moving rendition of his song “My Ability”

PARIS: The 2024 Paralympics opened in Paris on Wednesday in a colorful and hope-filled ceremony, starting 11 days of competition in a city still riding the wave of the successful Olympics.

French President Emmanuel Macron declared the Games open during a ceremony in a balmy Place de la Concorde in central Paris — the first time a Paralympic opening ceremony has taken place away from the main stadium.

The 4,400 competitors from 168 delegations paraded into the arena as the sun set with host nation France entering last to a standing ovation from 30,000 spectators packed into the stands around the historic square.

The fine weather was in sharp contrast to the heavy rain which fell throughout the Olympics opening ceremony on July 26.

In one of the highlights of the ceremony, French singer Lucky Love, who is missing his left arm below the elbow, performed a moving rendition of his song “My Ability” surrounded by both able-bodied and disabled dancers.

International Paralympic Committee (IPC) president Andrew Parsons then told the athletes and spectators he hoped for an “inclusion revolution,” before Macron officially declared the Games open.

The Paralympic flag was carried into the square by John McFall, a British Paralympic sprinter who has been selected by the European Space Agency to become the first ‘parastronaut’.

French Olympian Florent Manaudou brought the flame into the arena, as the four-day torch relay reached its culmination with five French Paralympians, including 2020 gold medalists Alexis Hanquinquant and Nantenin Keita, eventually lighting the already-iconic cauldron in the Tuileries Gardens.

A total of 18 of the 35 Olympic venues will also be used for the Paralympics, which run until Sept. 8, including the ornate Grand Palais and the Stade de France.

Ticket sales have sped up since the Olympics and organizers say more than 2 million of the 2.5 million available have been sold, with several venues sold out.

Riding the wave of its Olympic team’s success, host nation France is aiming for a substantial improvement on the 11 golds it won in 2021, which left it 14th in the medals table.

Paralympic powerhouse China dominated the last Paralympics in Tokyo with 96 golds and has again sent a strong delegation.

Ukraine, traditionally one of the top medal-winning nations at the Paralympics, has sent a team of 140 athletes to compete in 17 sports despite the challenges they face in preparing as the war against Russian forces rages at home.

A total of 96 athletes from Russia and Belarus will compete under a neutral banner but are barred from the ceremonies because of the invasion of Ukraine.

Every Games produces new stars, and in this edition look to American above-the-knee amputee sprinter/high jumper Ezra Frech to make the headlines.

Away from the track, more established names go in search of glory.

Iranian sitting volleyball legend Morteza Mehrzad, who stands 8ft 1in (2.46m) tall, will attempt to take gold again and Beatrice ‘Bebe’ Vio, the Italian fencer who had to have all four limbs amputated when she contracted meningitis at the age of 11, is aiming for the third Paralympic title of her career.

The Paralympics always have a far wider message than simply sport and Parsons told AFP earlier this year he hopes the Paris edition will restore the issues that disabled people face to the top of the list of global priorities.

The Brazilian believes the Games “will have a big impact in how people with disability are perceived around the world.”

“This is one of the key expectations we have around Paris 2024; we believe that we need people with disability to be put back on the global agenda,” Parsons said.

“We do believe people with disability have been left behind. There is very little debate about persons with disability.”


AFC Wimbledon knock Ipswich out of League Cup as Newcastle edge Forest in shootout

AFC Wimbledon knock Ipswich out of League Cup as Newcastle edge Forest in shootout
Updated 29 August 2024
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AFC Wimbledon knock Ipswich out of League Cup as Newcastle edge Forest in shootout

AFC Wimbledon knock Ipswich out of League Cup as Newcastle edge Forest in shootout
  • Wimbledon goalkeeper Owen Goodman was the hero as the League Two side defeated Ipswich on spot kicks following a 2-2 draw
  • With League Cup ties that end level after 90 minutes now going straight to penalties it was visitors Newcastle who prevailed 4-3 from the spot

LONDON: Fourth-tier AFC Wimbledon knocked top-flight Ipswich out of the English League Cup in a shock second round shootout result on Wednesday as Newcastle defeated Premier League rivals Nottingham Forest on penalties.

AFC Wimbledon were then drawn against Newcastle in the third round, giving the club the chance of pulling off another giant-killing success.

Wimbledon goalkeeper Owen Goodman was the hero as the League Two side defeated Ipswich on spot kicks following a 2-2 draw.

Ali Al-Hamadi, who joined Ipswich from Wimbledon in January, scored the opener in just the third minute but Omar Bugiel equalized for the hosts just before halftime.

Mathew Stevens gave Wimbledon a 2-1 lead in the 56th minute but Conor Chaplin capitalized on a Goodman mistake in the closing stages to send the match to penalties.

Ipswich were on course to go through to the third round when Jake Reeves fired over the crossbar.

Goodman, however, made two superb saves from Jack Taylor and Omari Hutchinson before Isaac Ogundere scored the decisive penalty.

“The underdog story in football,” Wimbledon manager Johnnie Jackson told the BBC. “It’s another amazing night in another chapter in that story.

“We always have to do it the hard way as a football club, but we find a way.”

Newcastle’s Sandro Tonali made his return from a 10-month betting ban against Forest, the midfielder having served a worldwide suspension for breaching gambling rules in Italy.

Tonali was involved in the buildup to Joe Willock’s opener after just 18 seconds before home debutant Jota Silva equalized early in the second half.

But there were no more goals in normal time and with League Cup ties that end level after 90 minutes now going straight to penalties it was visitors Newcastle who prevailed 4-3 from the spot.

The first three penalties all resulted in goals before Forest goalkeeper Miguel got down low to his right to deny Brazilian compatriot Joelinton.

But Forest’s Ibrahim Sangare hit the crossbar and teammate Taiwo Awoniyi struck an awful penalty way over the bar before Sean Longstaff coolly settled the tie in favor of Newcastle.

“Massive result for us and hopefully one that kickstarts our season,” Longstaff told Sky Sports.

Two goals in added time from James Bree and Cameron Archer saw Premier League returnees Southampton to their first win of the season as they secured a 5-3 triumph at second-tier Cardiff.

Southampton led three times only to be pulled back to 3-3 by a determined Cardiff before Bree’s 30-yard drive edged the Premier League side 4-3 in front, with Archer’s second goal putting the result beyond doubt.

“I’m really happy with the win and I’m pleased for my young players,” said Southampton manager Russell Martin, who gave five of his players their first start for the club. “But there is also a lot to be annoyed about.”

Jarrod Bowen’s late strike proved the difference as West Ham advanced into the third round with a 1-0 win over fellow Premier League side Bournemouth.

Two minutes from full time a shot from substitute Mohammed Kudus appeared to hit the chest of Bowen and flew past Cherries keeper Neto.

Replays suggested the final touch may have come off Bowen’s elbow but, with no VAR in use in the early rounds of the League Cup, the goal stood.

West Ham will now play holders Liverpool in the third round — a repeat of the 1981 final that the Reds won in a replay.

Hakon Valdimarsson saved an 82nd-minute penalty as Premier League Brentford won 1-0 away to League Two Colchester, with the Bees going through courtesy of Keane Lewis-Potter’s goal.

Third-tier Wycombe defeated Championship club Swansea 1-0 thanks to Richard Kone’s first-half strike, while Goncalo Guedes struck twice as Wolves knocked out Burnley with a 2-0 win at Molineux.

League Two Barrow’s reward for beating Championship club Derby on Tuesday was a fourth-round tie away to Chelsea, with Premier League champions Manchester City at home to Watford.