IPL 2026: No MS Dhoni again; CSK captain Ruturaj Gaikwad says 'thanks to the legend' at the toss vs Mumbai Indians
MS Dhoni remains absent from IPL 2026; Ruturaj Gaikwad acknowledges him at the toss vs Mumbai Indians.

Khalilah Mitchell has been named the new head coach of the University of Hawaii women's basketball team, set to take over on May 1. She is focused on building a roster and planning for the team's transition to the Mountain West Conference.
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Born on a Christmas Day, Khalilah Mitchell has learned to make lists, check them twice, prioritize them.
âIâm wild that way,â she said. âI have an urgent list, a priority list. This needs to be deadline. This is family. This is personal. This is work. I can filter out and see what Iâm going to tackle first, second, third and then within the hour.â
After being announced as the next University of Hawaii womenâs basketball coach on Tuesday, Mitchell already was immersed in building a roster, planning the offseason training schedule, setting a path to an accelerated offense, and adjusting to the Mountain West. The Rainbow Wahine officially move from the Big West on July 1.
Dealing with the NCAA transfer portal? Mitchell created a metric of projections of players who want to pursue other schools and student-athletes interested in becoming Rainbow Wahine. Dealing with NIL agents? As a point recruiter, she is fluent in âagent speak.â
The thing is, Mitchell is in full sprint ahead of the starterâs gun. Mitchell, who has been on staff for the past four years, officially becomes the successor to Laura Beeman on May 1. Mitchell agreed to terms on a three-year contract. The pay range is between $150,000 and $275,000 annually. Athletic director Matt Elliott said details will be announced when the contract is finalized.
A committee screened the applicants. After consulting with screeners and administrators, Elliott made the final choice.
âWe vetted every candidate equally,â Elliott said, âand Khalilah was the choice.â
Elliott said his intent was to limit the offer to three years as the program moves into the Mountain West.
âI see the Mountain West as a new experience,â Elliott said. âAs we all go into it together, I want to make sure that we have the opportunity to assess âhow does that goâ as we go into a new conference. That was more of a department-wide thought as opposed to a specific candidate.â
Beeman, who announced her retirement from coaching three weeks ago, remains under contract through next week and has helped Mitchell through the transition.
âItâs going to be important to have her as a resource, but also understand my own voice,â Mitchell said.
Mitchell was born in Georgia but grew up in New Orleans. In tribute, Mitchell and wife Kim named their daughter Nola.
Mitchell was part of five LSU appearances in the Final Four from 2004 through 2008. She began her coaching career at Central Florida in 2009. She joined UH in 2018. After spending the 2022-23 season with San Jose State, Mitchell rejoined UH.
Mitchell fosters a teaching style directed at teamwork and individual learning.
âDoes this person learn well on film?â Mitchell said. âDoes this person learn kinesthetically? Does this person learn through communication? As a point guard, and Iâve coached guards most of my time here, I needed to know what they didnât know and what they preferred. And I needed to set them up for challenges within those things. If it was uncomfortable with their learning styles, thatâs what I wanted. Because the gameâs uncomfortable. Because youâre going to be in situations where youâre going to have to communicate a different way.â
Khalilah Mitchell is the newly appointed head coach of the University of Hawaii women's basketball team, having been on staff for the past four years.
Mitchell has agreed to a three-year contract with an annual salary range of $150,000 to $275,000.
Khalilah Mitchell will officially take over as head coach on May 1.
Mitchell is planning offseason training, building a roster, and implementing an accelerated offense to prepare for the team's transition to the Mountain West.
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Mitchell said she prefers an uptempo offensive style. The past season, the Rainbow Wahine averaged 8.0 fastbreak points per game.
âI want to score within the first 10 seconds,â Mitchell said of the increased scoring odds if a defense is not fully set. ⊠The standard is we show up, we speak up, we lift up. We were a great halfcourt team. The way the Mountain West plays, you have to be able to transition. And thatâs where Iâm going to spend the majority of my time on. I want to be able to read and react. I want them to be able to free-flow and make decisions.â
On defense, the focus will be on active hands.
âEmphasis on deflections,â she said. âTry to get three stops in a row. Thatâs a huge data in analytics ⊠instrumental in creating bigger leads.â
Mitchell has been an advocate of providing a positive atmosphere.
âYou get a college scholarship, you play basketball to play,â she said. âIf youâre not seeing the playing time, for whatever reasons they are, we still want to make sure you have the best experience you can have. Whatever makes that student happier, thatâs what weâre going to do.â
She writes thoughts, ideas and suggestions on notepads and in journals.
âI have journals everywhere,â she said. âIâm a big writer. I wrote two books. I wrote a journal for student-athletes, which definitely is about preparing mentally the demands of collegiate athletes. ⊠I just donât want to teach the game. I understand what it is. I played it. I lived it. And itâs so important they have avenues to understand itâs not just about the pressure of performance. Itâs psychological, emotional, social, all those things occur. You have to have the tools to deal with it. I donât think thereâs enough tools out there for them.â