Sky Sports have selected 10 eye-catching deals made since Wednesdays free agency opening. Kelechi Osemele to Oakland RaidersThe numbers: Five-year deal worth a maximum of $60m. The veteran of five NFL seasons can play left tackle, right tackle or guard and has benefitted from the Raiders being one of the teams with the most money under their salary cap. Osemele, who played in the Super Bowl three years ago for Baltimore Ravens, is shy of his 27th birthday and the Raiders have placed a lot in faith in his run-blocking abilities. Free agency LIVE! All the news as it happens Brock Osweiler to Houston TexansThe numbers: Four-year deal worth $72m.Having started just seven career NFL games, Osweiler has cashed in, with the Texans seemingly placing more faith in him than the Denver Broncos wanted to. He was benched for Super Bowl 50 in favour of Peyton Manning, then the Broncos prioritised other star players who were free agents, so they have lost a potential starting quarterback to Houston. Details on Brock Osweilers contract Lamar Miller to Houston TexansThe numbers: Four-year deal worth $26m, with $14m guaranteed.The Texans were built on a solid defence last year but have spent big to prop up their offensive options, with ex-Miami Dolphins running back Miller now a leading receiver for Osweiler. NFL.com believe Miller could have earned half-a-million dollars extra elsewhere per season, but opted to join Houston. He has rushed for 1,971 yards in the last two years combined.Jason Pierre-Paul staying at New York GiantsThe numbers: One-year extension worth a maximum of $10.5m.A year after his horrifying fireworks accident, JPPs career is back on the right side of the tracks. Aged 27 and a reliable run-defender, he thanked Arizona Cardinals via Instagram for pursuing him but never wanted to leave New York. NFL.com believe Pierre-Paul stood to earn more in 2016 with the Cardinals, but opted to stay put. Free agency has begun Mario Williams to Miami DolphinsThe numbers: Two-year deal worth a maximum of $17m, with $11.9m guaranteed.Released by the Buffalo Bills, he was able to beat Wednesdays free agency opening and sign on Tuesday. Aged 31, he endured a difficult 2015 and will be pressurised to replace Olivier Vernon in the Dolphins defence.Chris Ivory to Jacksonville JaguarsThe numbers: Five-year deal, $6m per seasonThe New York Jets wide receiver has been recruited by the Jags to replace the released Toby Gerhart. Ivory has gained a minimum of 800 rushing yards in each of the last three years, so Jacksonville hope he will be a better recruit than Gerhart proved to be.Olivier Vernon to New York GiantsThe numbers: Five-year deal worth a maximum of $85m, with $52.5m guaranteed.The former Dolphins player has become the highest-earning defensive player in the NFL, collecting more than JJ Watt, after swapping Miami for New York. He had a franchise tag hanging over him until the Dolphins signed Mario Williams as a replacement. The deal represents a major commitment from Miami to improve their poor defence. Olivier Vernon had a choice to make Doug Martin stay at Tampa Bay BuccaneersThe numbers: Five-year deal worth a maximum of $35.75m, with $15m guaranteed.Tampa Bay opted not to secure Martins long-term future last year after a pair of underwhelming seasons, but have now shelled out after his changing fortunes. He rushed for 1,402 yards in 2015, second only to Adrian Peterson, and has been rewarded by the Buccs.Malik Jackson to Jacksonville JaguarsThe numbers: Six-year deal worth a maximum of $90m, with $42m guaranteed.The defensive end who scored Denver Broncos first touchdown in their victorious Super Bowl 50 has reaped the rewards by switching to Jacksonville. The Jags entered free agency with the most cap space in league history, more than $80m, and nobody has benefitted more than Jackson. Malik Jacksons Super Bowl touchdown Danny Trevathan to Chicago BearsThe numbers: Four-year deal worth a maximum of $28m.Trevathan has left Super Bowl-winning Denver to re-join coach John Fox who initially drafted him to the Broncos. He is another defensive talent who has jumped ship after a stunning Broncos campaign to get paid elsewhere. Also See: NFL Video Rookies guide NFL on Sky Sports Pundits Kawhi Leonard Clippers Jersey .Y. - Detroit goaltender Jonas Gustavsson has earned NHL first star of the week honours after winning in his first three appearances of the season. Amir Coffey Clippers Jersey . -- Jaye Marie Green shot a 4-under 68 on Thursday to increase her lead to five strokes after the second round of the LPGA Tours qualifying tournament. https://www.clipperslockerroom.com/Wesley-Johnson-City-Edition-Jersey/ . - Chris Tierney snapped a tie with a power-play goal late in the third period as the London Knights rallied from a 3-0 deficit to beat the Erie Otters 5-3 in Ontario Hockey League action on Wednesday. Wesley Johnson Clippers Jersey . McCarthy, a player who played some games in the second tier for Wigan at the start of this season, would go on to shine inside Evertons midfield, outplaying the man he was brought in to replace, on one of the grandest stages in English football. On Saturday, it was fitting that Manchester Uniteds most recent dagger into the chest was delivered by Frenchman Yohan Cabaye, a wonderfully gifted central midfielder who put on an outstanding effort for Newcastle at Old Trafford. Los Angeles Clippers Jerseys . Takahashi, who had a 10-point lead after the short program, received 268.31 points after the free skate to finish 15 points ahead of second-place Nobunari Oda. In the afterglow of the London Olympics, Sport Englands funding allocation for the next four years was always going to be a tough one for cricket. The emphasis was on Olympic medals, legacies, and the importance of minority sports, which were suddenly held to be a vital part of the nations fabric.That the ECB emerged with some relief, with a reduced grant of £20m - and with a further £7.5m awarded to the Chance to Shine initiative to promote cricket in State schools - owed much to the boards strengthened commitment to engage with South Asian cricketing communities. Easy to say, difficult to make a real and lasting impact.That both professional and recreational cricket is becoming more multi-racial is undeniable. Integration is happening. But progress has been patchy, slowed variously by old-school league officials or clubs with little appetite for change, and by the itinerant nature of many cricketers with Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan antecedents, many of whom still play ad-hoc cricket in Sunday park leagues, where facilities are poor and pitches are rarely of a quality for players to progress.Sport Englands Director of Sport, Phil Smith, outlined the challenge when he told ESPNcricinfo: Participation in cricket has traditionally been very strong within South Asian communities. Over 40% of current regular cricketers in England are non-white, making cricket one of the most diverse sports already.Some individuals are playing regularly in informal settings or unaffiliated leagues outside the realm of formal cricket structures of the county cricket boards, so the challenge for the ECB is to bring this community into the mainstream of the game.The ECB has worked in the past with the traditional club sector, queasily aware that a vibrant yet informal Asian catchment was largely passing them by. Nick Marriner, policy and research manager at the ECB, said: Theres a massive untapped demand for more participation amongst the South Asian community. We know a lot of South Asians play cricket outside the traditional affiliated club network. Previously weve not really engaged in that way.The solution is both imaginative and unproven. With the help of the Club Cricket Conference, the ECB will focus on five target cities: London, Birmingham, Leicester, Leeds and Bradford, where research has shown there is most potential for progress.Paul Bedford, head of non-first-class cricket at the ECB, said: There was the highest level of latent demand for playing cricket in the South Asian community than in any other group. In a high proportion of cases, we werent as close to [tapping that demand] as we should have been. We have also identified the cities where people wanted to play cricket more than anywhere else.The Club Cricket Conference is little known outside the Home Counties, but a programme of fixtures and tours against Affiliate and Associate nations has recently shown it has an appetite for regaining its influence of half a century ago, when it would produce representative sides to face touring teams.Two years from its centenary, the Club Cricket Conference has the chance to re-establish itself as a driving force in Englands club network. It has been asked to act as a catalyst to persuade South Asian park cricket to become more mainstream and to awaken the county boards, run largely by well-meaning elderly white middle-class men, to the untapped potential on their doorstep.The county boards responsible for the five cities chosen have until October 1 to prove themselves fit for investment. Good things are happening in Leicester already, according to Bedford, and they need to be, because, strikingly, the Leicestershire Premier League does not include one club from the city itself.Land in Birmingham has been identified that can be developed, but Yorkshires passive approach at amateur level has yet to show the foresight of the county club itself, which in the past 15 years has made giant strides in terms of minority ethnic communities. Announcing that you are from the ECB in Yorkshire league circles is not always a passport to popularity; heaven knows what they will make of the Club Cricket Conference.ddddddddddddThe task is to win over hearts and minds, to find community leaders who can instil the right virtues, and to prove to the traditional clubs and the tens of thousands of informal South Asian cricketers that the pace of integration will be quickened. For a body with only a handful of full-time paid employees, it is an onerous task.Gulfraz Riaz, the conferences development manager, says eight leagues representing 2300 cricketers have been persuaded to affiliate in the past eight months. We are not saying it is a takeover, he said. We are saying there are certain guidelines that must be followed for the good of cricket.Representatives of communities need to understand their responsibilities. There is the need for a player pathway, there are welfare issues, there is the need for child protection and first-aid training, there are constitutional issues, insurance, community cohesion, player registration, coaching opportunities. That is where the conference, under the umbrella of the ECB, can provide guidance.The conference is most recognised these days as a fixture bureau, helping clubs arrange friendly games outside the normal league structure. It can also offer representative cricket for men and women against county 2nd X1s and a developmental U-21 side, and is building links with university cricket, all of which offers opportunities for the best players from park leagues who are willing to embrace a more integrated future. The next task is simple but potentially hugely beneficial. They plan to develop an online ground-sharing scheme in which traditional clubs, which tend to play league cricket on a Saturday, will hire out their grounds on a Sunday to South Asian cricketers seeking better facilities either because council upkeep of their squares has deteriorated, because their grounds have been closed, or simply because the thriving parks cricket scene is simply outgrowing the facilities available. Ground shares are already happening, but the possibilities are much greater. Ground shares are the first stage to a sense of belonging and, for the best players, a pathway to a first professional contract.Asian guys will be able to play on better grounds, traditional clubs will get a bit of revenue, and equally importantly, we will encourage integration, Riaz said. Some players will say, We would like to be part of this club and still have our own identity on a Sunday.We see traditional English clubs struggling financially and we have these thriving cricket communities looking to better themselves. Ground shares can be the first stage in closer relationships. Once you get junior members from an Asian background involved in traditional clubs then change quickens. Parents want to sit on the committee. They say, I might not drink alcohol but I can help organise a barbeque with halal food, I can support fund-raising events. The knock-on effects are potentially huge.My club in Watford has about 20% Asian membership. At the time of the Pakistan floods we raised £4000 in an afternoon of cricket, food, auctions and raffles and collected donations of 150 bags of clothes. Times are changing and we are working together. The sense of a cricketing family is absolutely vital. It is about the right people from the right communities saying the right things at the right time.Riaz accepts the argument that many South Asian cricketers have been too itinerant for their own good. Players do tend to join and leave clubs in fours and fives. Thats disruptive and thats a fact, he said. Our brief is to achieve sustained integration, which will provide a pathway for park cricketers and will help to sustain traditional English clubs. In some places the mindset hasnt changed from 30 years ago. In wanting to be recognised, sometimes you have to meet halfway.Tomorrow in our series on engaging with South Asian communities in England: Tim Wigmores profile of Shiv Thakor, the exciting young Leicestershire allrounder and England U-19 captain ' ' '