Saints suffer injury blow ahead of Leeds

Southampton have endured a very difficult start to the new Premier League season and have suffered another setback ahead of their home game against Leeds United this weekend.

Following their 4-1 defeat against Tottenham Hotspur last weekend, the Saints sit bottom of the Premier League, and rumours of unrest at the club have quickly surfaced.

It has been reported that manager Ralph Hasenhuttl has lost the dressing room, with a number of players surprised that the Austrian was able to keep his job after a shocking end to the 2021/22 campaign.

The former RB Leipzig boss opted to deploy a five-at-the-back formation against Spurs, with Yan Valery a surprising choice at centre-back.

Unfortunately for the Saints, Hasenhuttl’s gamble did not pay off as they shipped four goals, meaning they sit bottom of the Premier League ahead of the visit of Leeds United.

The Austrian confirmed in his pre-match conference that Brazilian centre-back Lyanco will miss the game against Jesse Marsch’s side, in what is another blow to Southampton’s chances.

He said:

“We had only Lyanco during the week not training with the team because he had a problem with his knee.”

Since joining from Torino last summer, the 25-year-old has made 18 appearances for the Saints, and with Hasenhuttl opting for a five-at-the-back, there are likely to be more opportunities for the defender this season.

Hasenhuttl was full of praise for the Brazilian last season after a 1-0 win against Aston Villa last season, saying:

“This guy is a fantastic character.

“You see how he was celebrating his first Premier League game and now again he is happy, you know how much it means to him to play for us.

“This is exactly the kind of player we want in our team.”

However, he will be without the centre-back as the Saints look to turn their fortunes around on Saturday, and not having him available in defence will undoubtedly come as a blow to the Austrian, especially when you consider how defensively poor they were against Spurs.

Newcastle could land Memphis Depay for free

An update has emerged on Newcastle United target Memphis Depay and his future at Barcelona in the summer transfer window… 

What’s the talk?

Italian journalist Fabrizio Romano has claimed that the attacker is in talks with his club to become a free agent in the coming weeks.

He Tweeted: “Excl: Barcelona and Memphis Depay lawyers are in negotiations to reach an agreement on free agency. No way for €20m fee. Depay will accept to leave Barça only in case he’ll find the right option for his future. #FCB Memphis Depay will only consider top clubs.”

90min reported last month that the striker was offered to the Magpies as the club look at strengthening their attacking options before the end of the window.

Chris Wood upgrade

Newcastle could now land the Netherlands international without having to pay a penny in transfer fees if this agreement between him and Barcelona goes through.

By bringing in the forward for nothing, PIF could land Eddie Howe a big upgrade on misfiring striker Chris Wood for the 2022/23 campaign.

The Magpies signed the New Zealand international from Burnley in the January window but he struggled to prove his worth for the club in the second half of the season.

He was given plenty of opportunities to catch the eye of Howe as he played 17 matches in the Premier League. However, he ended that run with two goals and zero assists to his name – with one of his strikes coming from open play.

Meanwhile, Memphis produced 12 goals and two assists in 20 starts in La Liga for Barcelona. His former manager at international level, Ronald Koeman, previously hailed his quality at the top end of the pitch, saying:

“He has freedom here, that’s what he needs to be the best Memphis. He can do that in this team. When he’s a lone striker he tends to drift back too much, so we have a hole up front.

“But when he plays between the lines, like in the last part, he was so strong. He’s turning, attacking, he’s a joy to watch.”

The gem also caught the eye when he was playing in France for Lyon. In his last two campaigns in Ligue 1, he managed to rack up 29 goals and 14 assists, which shows that he has the ability to make a huge impact in the final third – having proven himself in two major European leagues.

He would, therefore, be a considerable upgrade on Wood as his statistics suggest that he would offer far more to the team both in terms of finding the back of the net and setting up teammates.

Tottenham: Conte clear ‘top player in the world’ can leave

Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte is swinging his axe behind-the-scenes as he makes it clear a ‘top player in the world’ is not part of his north London plans.

The Lowdown: Conte preparing…

The Lilywhites are aiming to give Conte their full support ahead of his first full Premier League season in charge of the club over 2022/2023, as evident by their flurry of transfer activity.

Indeed, Ivan Perisic, Fraser Forster, Yves Bissouma, Richarlison, Clement Lenglet and Djed Spence have all arrived at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in time for Conte’s pre-season.

However, while there has been a lot of movement in terms of incomings, the same really cannot be said for outgoings despite sporting director Fabio Paratici’s alleged efforts this week.

The Latest: Conte clear ‘top player in the world’ can leave…

As per The Evening Standard, as Spurs look to balance out their books after a series of investments, many players could leave – including midfielder Giovani Lo Celso despite his brilliant loan spell at Villarreal.

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The Argentine played a key role in their run to the Champions League semi-finals, but according to ES, Conte has ‘made it clear’ that the former Real Betis star is ‘not part of his plans’.

The Verdict: Stick or twist?

Described as a ‘top player in the world’ by compatriot Geronimo Rulli, Lo Celso’s form for Villarreal over the player’s spell on loan last year certainly backs that the South American’s real quality at times.

As per WhoScored, he proved a real threat, attracting more fouls per 90 than anyone in Unai Emery’s squad whilst also completing the third-highest amount of successful take-ons domestically.

However, given Conte’s reliably reported behind-scenes decision and his remarkable transformation of Spurs, it’s perhaps wise to let the Italian take full control and green-light a move away for Lo Celso – even despite the midfielder’s previous fine form at the Estadio de la Cerámica.

Newcastle close to sealing Nick Pope deal

A major update has emerged on Newcastle United and their pursuit of Nick Pope in the summer transfer window…

What’s the talk?

Northern Echo journalist Scott Wilson has revealed that the Magpies are set to make the giant shot-stopper their second signing of the month, after bringing Matt Targett in from Aston Villa.

He Tweeted: “NUFC close to completing a deal for Nick Pope. Fee for England international will be around £12m, with Burnley keeper set to battle with Martin Dubravka for number one spot next season…”

In the accompanying article, it is claimed that the England international has told the Clarets that he would like to move on following the club’s relegation from the Premier League.

The Athletic’s David Ornstein has since added: “Newcastle understood to have agreed fee in principle with Burnley for Nick Pope. 30yo England int’l GK now set to undergo medical. Hope is deal will be completed by end of week.”

Forget Hugo Ekitike

Whilst talks are reportedly set to take place with the Stade Reims striker this week, it is time to forget about Ekitike for now and focus on how good of a signing Pope can be for the club.

The Burnley star is set to join to provide competition to Martin Dubravka and his statistics suggest that he can be a big upgrade on the current Toon number one when it comes to sweeping up.

Pope ranks in the 99th and 98th percentiles for defensive actions outside of his box and the average distance of those actions respectively per 90 over the last 365 days. This shows that he is one of the best goalkeepers in Europe’s top five leagues in terms of successfully coming off his line to prevent danger.

Dubravka, meanwhile, ranks in the 11th percentile in both categories. He was reluctant to leave his penalty area too often in the 2021/22 campaign and his statistics look poor in comparison to the man who may end up replacing him at St. James’ Park.

When it comes to shot-stopping, there was not a great deal of difference between them as Pope saved 73.6% of the shots against him in comparison to the Slovakian’s save percentage of 67.9%.

These statistics suggest that the Englishman will be a sublime addition to the team as he will put real pressure on Dubravka and offer the head coach a different style of goalkeeper – with his ability to sweep up behind the backline – to utilise in games.

Therefore, Howe will be elated by the Burnley giant’s imminent arrival and will now be looking forward to working with him next season, assuming the deal goes through.

AND in other news, PIF plotting NUFC swoop for “infectious” £50m “class act”, just imagine him & Trippier…

Moshiri plots Everton deal for Gilmour

Everton have been heavily linked with a move for Billy Gilmour this summer, and now a new update has emerged on Farhad Moshiri’s pursuit of the young player.

What’s the latest?

According to The Telegraph’s Matt Law, Everton remain interested in signing Chelsea midfielder Billy Gilmour.

As well as Law’s article, Sky Sports pundit and former Toffees player Kevin Campbell has spoken out on the potential transfer.

Campbell told Goodison News: “I think what Frank Lampard’s trying to do is obviously get somebody in that centre of the park who can dictate the tempo of a game.

“And Billy Gilmour’s done that. He’s done that for Chelsea. I’ve seen him do it at times for Norwich, and I’ve seen him do it for Scotland.

“So is it something that he might pursue? Yeah he might pursue it, that’s for sure.”

Gilmour is a big Allan upgrade

It’s fair to say that Everton have had their fair share of troubles over the most recent Premier League campaign, completing the joint-worst season in terms of points per game, so Frank Lampard will definitely looking for ways to improve his team next season.

Despite being relegated with Norwich City during his season-long loan at Carrow Road, Gilmour has been showing glimpses of his potential and talents during his time at the club.

The £28k-per=week gem who was hailed “fantastic” and a “talent” by Roy Keane, was ranked the third highest-rated player for Norwich in the Premier League last season according to SofaScore and for good reason.

Gilmour delivered one assist and created one big chance, making one key pass, 1.7 tackles, 1.2 clearances, taking 61.9 touches and winning 3.8 duels on average per game and was successful in the majority of his dribbles (68%), proving he was an effective presence in his midfield role.

The £10.8m-rated youngster would be a big upgrade on Brazilian midfielder Allan who has disappointed in his performances this season, with a fewer percentage of his total duels won, fewer touches taken and a lower number of key passes on average per game than Gilmour in the Premier League last term.

There have also been reports of Allan making a move away from Goodison Park, with the midfielder named as one of the players Everton would be willing to sell this summer.

With that being said, Farhad Moshiri must get the deal done for Gilmour to strengthen the midfield, giving Everton the best opportunity to compete in the Premier League next season, leaving the problems of last season behind them by adding quality to the squad.

AND in other news: Lampard now “keen” on Everton deal to sign £50m machine, he’s “Kante with goals”

Newcastle have scouted Brennan Johnson

An update has emerged regarding Newcastle United’s interest in Nottingham Forest winger Brennan Johnson heading into the summer transfer window…

What’s the talk?

Daily Mail reporter Craig Hope has revealed that the Magpies sent scouts to watch the forward in action against Huddersfield in the Championship play-off final last weekend.

He tweeted: “Diaby has been on Newcastle radar since January & is again on shortlist of wide targets (Brennan Johnson also watched, including at Wembley on Sunday). Schick staying & Hlozek arriving at Leverkusen might see movement on Diaby.”

It has been reported that the 21-year-old is valued at £20m but it remains to be seen whether or not that is still the case following Forest’s promotion to the Premier League.

Ryan Fraser upgrade

Dan Ashworth must now work hard to get a deal done for Johnson, as he would be a big upgrade on Scottish winger Ryan Fraser.

The Welshman’s former boss Michael Appleton once dubbed him “exciting”, and that is what he can be as a replacement for Fraser on the wing at Newcastle.

The former Lincoln manager went on to say about Johnson: “When you’re the opposition manager in League One or the Championship, hopefully soon the Premier League, he’s someone you’d take note of because he’ll always be one of the two or three teams that you’ll be aware of and be wary of.

“His development and the way it’s happened for him over the last couple of years suggests to me that he’s only going to end up going in one direction and that’s the Premier League.”

In the 2021/22 Championship, Johnson produced an astonishing 16 goals and 10 assists as he created a whopping 15 ‘big chances’ and averaged a SofaScore rating of 7.10. The 21-year-old phenomenon has shown that he can regularly deliver at the top end of the pitch in the second tier, and at his young age, he may have the potential to make the step up to the top flight.

Meanwhile, Fraser managed just two goals and three assists in 27 Premier League outings for the Magpies this term. He failed to contribute in the final third on a consistent basis and this is why Johnson – if he can adapt to the top-flight – could be an exciting upgrade on him in the wide areas if Newcastle sign the Welsh youngster.

Whilst the Scotland international could still be a useful option for Eddie Howe to call upon off the bench, the Nottingham Forest dynamo’s statistics suggest that he has the scope to make a much larger impact on results with his ability to score and create goals.

AND in other news, “I’m told…”: Journalist drops “exciting” NUFC transfer claim that supporters will love…

Ibrahim Sangare: Spurs’ next Dembele?

Tottenham Hotspur could find a new midfield monster in Ibrahim Sangare…

What’s the word?

According to Darren Lewis of the Mirror, the north London outfit are among the Premier League teams interested in the PSV Eindhoven star heading into the summer transfer window.

Chelsea and Manchester United are also linked with interest by the report, which also claimed that the Ivory Coast international is valued at around £30m.

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Dembele-like tank

The 6 foot 3 powerhouse has made a name for himself in the Eredivisie, impressing with his calm composure on the ball and impressive ball-winning skills.

As per WhoScored, Sangare averaged a whopping 3.3 tackles and 2.5 interceptions per game in the Dutch top-flight, the most of his team by quite some margin, whilst he also registered a passing accuracy of 86.1% from over 70 attempts each outing.

He’s also capable of driving the ball forward from the engine room, averaging 1.7 dribbles and 1.5 shots per match, too.

Such performances highlight his ability as a Mousa Dembele-like beast in the heart of the pitch. It’s true that Spurs have solid options with the likes of Oliver Skipp, Rodrigo Bentancur and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg all impressing under Antonio Conte.

But none compare to Sangare.

Dembele was very much a ball-winning animal, one that was hard to dispossess as he carried the ball up the pitch, and this is exactly what the Ivorian would offer Tottenham.

By comparison, as an example, Hojbjerg averages 2.2 tackles and 1.4 interceptions per game in the Premier League.

Sangare has been likened to two Premier League greats in terms of playing style by African journalist Alpha Balde to Goal.com, where he claimed:

“Physically, he’s like Yaya Toure but he reminds me of Michael Essien.

“I saw Essien at the start of his career and they had the same physical strength at an equal age. Sangare is also passionate, and I think that Toulouse supporters will enjoy his fighting spirit and desire to move forward.”

Also lauded as “very complete” and capable of playing a variety of midfield roles, it would make sense for Spurs to secure an upgrade if it became available and in Sangare, Conte could well find the next Dembele.

AND in other news, Fabrizio Romano issues Spurs transfer update…

Review gives CA Board more than it bargained for

Australian cricket has been left with a review that all but calls for the removal of CA’s leadership, and no discernible indication that the Board accepts this finding

Daniel Brettig30-Oct-20182:19

The brutal findings for Cricket Australia

It’s often said, in circles both corporate and sporting, that the findings of a review are seldom as important as the process by which they are reached. Should the process of the review or the credibility of the reviewer be open to question, then the document itself falls over. The Cricket Australia cultural review presently rattling around the country and opening many questions about the governing body’s leadership is as much a product of this truism as it is of the era it seeks to understand.Seven months ago, at the time the joint reviews of CA were commissioned, plenty of questions were immediately raised about process and credibility – in marked contrast to the two previous reviews, of team performance by the Don Argus panel and of governance by Colin Carter and David Crawford, that were themselves subject to the spotlight of this year’s inquiry. This may have been due to the enormity of events in Cape Town, or perhaps a more cynical public view of CA than existed in 2011 when the earlier reviews were conducted. Either way, they were not put together in a vacuum.Cursory glances of the website of the Ethics Centre, commissioned to conduct the wider organisational review of CA, showed that the two organisations shared a Board director in common, Michelle Tredenick. And only a handful of background checks were required to discover that Peter Collins, facilitator of the Australian men’s team review to be led by the former Test opening batsman Rick McCosker, had been a paid leadership consultant of CA for years.Add to the mix the fact that the Ethics Centre’s previous dalliance with elite sport in Australia, a 2017 review of the culture of the Australian Olympic Committee, had been widely seen as an exercise all too favourable to its president John Coates, and there was a healthy level of skepticism about what its director, Dr Simon Longstaff, might be compiling. Questions, too, were raised about the fact that the reviews, under the guise of “complete independence”, did not feature any panelists or interviewers with a background in cricket administration – something the Argus review, for all its faults, most certainly did.So just as CA was under enormous pressure to respond swiftly and fully to the fiasco of Cape Town in March this year, so too were Longstaff, McCosker and Collins duty-bound to produce findings that looked unstintingly at cricket’s governing body. In the febrile environment of April, when CA’s broadcast rights team, executive and Board tried to secure new television and digital deals while losing sponsors left and right, the phrase “honest and unmerciful” sprang readily to mind.Jacquie Hey, chair of the review sub-committee, alongside David Peever•Getty ImagesBy the time interviews commenced, on May 28, the new deals with Fox Sports and Seven had been sewn up, and the national team had a new coach in Justin Langer. Even so, that earlier heat was to be evident in the way the reviews were pieced together, while cynicism about their conception was written all over the remarkably low response rate of current players to the reviews – some 24% as opposed to the 94% response rate from the CA Board itself. Presumably the missing 6% belonged to Bob Every, among whose many reasons for resigning as a Board director was the choice of the Ethics Centre to conduct the review.What is now clear about the organisational review in particular is that by the time interim updates began rolling in, as required by the terms of reference set out by CA, they quickly demonstrated that this would be, by the governing body’s own euphemistic terms, “challenging” and “confronting”. While the chief executive James Sutherland made his decision to quit after 17 years and give 12 months’ notice without any advance sighter of the review, his precise departure date would have been clarified by what CA would be dealing with in terms of its rollout. Similarly, the team performance chief Pat Howard’s intentions not to seek a contract renewal began to filter into wider circles the closer its release date crept.Of most contention was the fact that the CA AGM, and the re-election of the chairman David Peever, would take place without the review being shared with anyone beyond the Board itself. Had there been any urgency about doing so, whether initiated by the Board or insisted upon by the state associations’ owners, then at the very least it would have been possible for sharing to take place in the 48 hours between its Tuesday, October 23 delivery and the Thursday, October 25 AGM. In the aftermath of the review’s release, and Peever’s wooden attempts to explain its findings, there lurked the strong sense of a chapter being closed. CA’s directors, largely present for the release press conference, seem intent on sailing on to summer without looking back any further.But that would be to reckon without the many findings and statements of the review itself, which will be harder to sidestep than any press conference question. The central thesis, that in becoming more corporate and corporately ruthless CA did not counterbalance the new approach with recognition of cricket’s status as much more than a dollars-and-cents operation, is sound. Particular focus on the Argus and Carter/Crawford reviews does not hammer their authors, but rather their implementation.”To better understand the broader ecosystem which may have contributed to the circumstances in South Africa, CA may find it useful to reflect on the impact of these two reports in shaping its culture since 2011,” the review states. “The sense of urgency that was generated around the need for the Australian men’s team to perform and the univocal equivalence of performance with winning constituted a new business model that inadvertently formed a culture to support it.”CA is a not-for-profit organisation. However, the effect of both reports served to graft on a corporate model designed exclusively to generate a profit for the sport’s ‘shareholders’ (the States) that was positioned as critical for the very survival of the sport in Australia. The combined effect of these reports was to create the conditions for much of the success enjoyed by CA to date – success that is widely and freely acknowledged by cricket’s stakeholders. What CA failed to address adequately was the need for a ‘balancing narrative’ to offset some of the potentially corrosive effects of an unmediated corporate model.”

The central thesis, that in becoming more corporate and corporately ruthless CA did not counterbalance the new approach with recognition of cricket’s status as much more than a dollars-and-cents operation, is sound. Particular focus on the Argus and Carter/Crawford reviews does not hammer their authors, but rather their implementation.

This unmediated model has brought plenty of successes, whether in dollar figures, spectator and participation numbers, the creation of new revenue streams via the Big Bash League, or new growth areas for the game in terms of better targeting female followers or Australia’s increasingly diverse population. Yet the soul of the thing has been lost somewhere along the way, as the organisation itself has grown well and truly beyond the dimensions first experienced by Sutherland and his then chairman Denis Rogers when he began as CEO in 2001. Where ends have justified means in a sport where the “spirit of cricket” was meant to be held sacred.”Good intentions and positive outcomes are not enough to meet the exacting expectations of cricket’s stakeholders,” the review states. “As CA recognised, when framing the Terms of Reference for this Review, Australians want to be proud of the national game and the means by which it has achieved success. The ‘cultural assets’ of cricket – so wonderfully captured in stories, images and artefacts at the cricket museum at the MCG – are one of the sport’s greatest strengths and potential weaknesses.”By virtue of its history, cricket inspires (and in some sense trades on) high expectations. However, this elevated position increases the potential harm caused by any falling short. So, the strong endorsement of CA’s commitment to diversity and inclusion is matched by disappointment that more progress has not been made in matching rhetoric to reality.”Likewise, admiration of the results achieved by CA is undermined by criticism of the way those results have been achieved. Here it is worth noting that the most recent MOU negotiations with the ACA are viewed not just as a test of industrial strength or commitment. It was also seen as an opportunity for both sides to put their ethics into practice for the good of the game.”Ethics, however, had long since been left behind. Sutherland, an honourable if not always publicly polished operator, had for some years been managing an increasingly large and capricious collection of executives, many of whom had designs on his job. Equally, the Board, no longer composed of state delegates from the six associations, was comprised instead of a collection of corporate figures of varying levels of accomplishment, supposedly balanced by the former international players Mark Taylor and Michael Kasprowicz. While cricket had adopted a structure akin to that of the AFL Commission, they had not followed up by choosing people to match the structure. And with weakness at the strategic top, assumptions were made – one of them catastrophic.The Australian team walks out•Getty Images”CA seems to have simply assumed that the core values and principles of cricket would generate the ethical restraint needed to offset the focus on competition – and that this self-correcting aspect of the game would apply automatically and without the investment of any special effort or skill,” the review states. “This was CA’s fundamental mistake.”As the Hayne Royal Commission into Banking and Finance has shown so clearly, the remuneration policies of business have been notoriously effective in driving a ‘win at all costs’ performance culture that has seen fees levied from dead people and for services never provided. That a financial institution ‘robbed the dead’ is as unthinkable as an Australian cricket player taking sandpaper onto the field of play – and has prompted a similar response from the Australian public.”For some, at least, within the world of banking and finance – the drive for performance has been relentless and has lacked ethical restraint. A singular focus on performance produces exactly what it is meant to do – a singular focus on performance! What CA has failed to do is focus just to an equivalent degree on actively building and sustaining a capacity for ethical restraint amongst individuals and the organisation as a whole.”In this duly unregulated environment, all sorts has gone on, manifested most glaringly in Cape Town but plenty of other areas, too. Right down to the commissioning of the dual reviews without any clear sense that their findings might reflect the need for consequences at the Board and executive levels, just as Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft accepted their penalties for ball tampering, covering up and then lying once more in the public arena. CA did not reckon with the possibility that the Longstaff and McCosker reviews would do as they have – returned the Australian cricket public to a state of disbelief akin to that of April. Accountability, so ardently espoused by Argus, must run upwards as well as downwards.”One of Argus’s main themes was the need to foster a culture of accountability. It was an admirable aim – but one that has not been realised,” the review states. “While those who lead ‘on the field’ are held personally accountable for their performance – liable to be ‘dropped’ for poor results or dismissed for bad conduct. The same standards do not apply to those who administer and govern the game. The issue here is one of consistency in relation to the obligations of leadership. One of the ‘hard truths’ of leadership is that a person may need to accept responsibility for matters over which they do not exercise direct control – both for acts and omissions in the conduct of one’s leadership.”In some respects, this is a ‘sign of the times’. In general, standards of personal responsibility are lower than in times past e.g. when Government Ministers accepted responsibility for the conduct of their Departments. This is first and foremost a matter for individuals; under what circumstances will they accept and declare personal responsibility. It is the age-old question of cricket … are the leaders of the game like the batsman or batswoman who outsources responsibility to the umpire or do they take their cue from the fielder whose integrity is their own?”What does that passage sound like, other than a thinly-veiled call for senior heads to roll? Australian cricket has thus been left with a review that all but calls for the removal of CA’s leadership, and no discernible indication that the Board accepts this finding. Longstaff and McCosker have sought a level of credibility in their findings that was not readily discernible at the time they were commissioned, leaving CA’s leaders looking the other way while the public renews its rage. It is not a pretty picture.

Misbah: Pakistan's most successful captain

Pakistan had six Test captains in the six years before Misbah-ul-Haq took over. He gave the team stability and his numbers are indicative of his success

Bharath Seervi29-Oct-201649 Misbah-ul-Haq’s Tests as captain – the most for Pakistan – when he walks out to toss against West Indies in Sharjah. Imran Khan had led Pakistan in 48 Tests between 1982 and 1992. Among Asian captains, only MS Dhoni and Arjuna Ranatunga have led in more Tests than Misbah.24 Misbah’s wins as captain – ten more than Pakistan won under Imran Khan and Javed Miandad.55.38 Misbah’s average as captain, the best among 11 Pakistan captains to have batted in at least 20 innings. The next best is Saleem Malik’s 52.35. Misbah has made the most runs and centuries as well among Pakistan captains. Of the 20 captains to have played 75 or more innings, only Brian Lara (57.83) averages more than Misbah.

Misbah’s numbers as captain and player
Mats Inns Runs Ave 100s/50s
As non-captain 19 33 1008 33.60 2/4
As captain 48 83 3766 55.38 8/31
Career 67 116 4774 48.71 10/35

21.78 The difference between Misbah’s average when captain and not captain. He averaged 33.60 before becoming captain in November 2010 – scoring 1008 runs in 33 innings with two centuries and four fifties. He began his captaincy career in terrific form, scoring six consecutive fifties in his first seven innings.48 All of Misbah’s Tests as captain came after he was 35 years old; no one over 35 has led in more Tests. Clive Lloyd is second on the list with 45 matches as captain after age of 35. Misbah has led in 21 Tests after turning 40, which is eight more than WG Grace.1.714 Pakistan’s win-loss ratio under Misbah – won 24 and lost 14 out of 48. In the six years prior to Misbah taking over, their win-loss ratio was 0.545 in nearly the same number of matches – won 12 and lost 22. Pakistan had six captains in those six years and only one of them led in more than 10 matches. Misbah missed only once match after becoming Pakistan’s Test captain, because of a suspension for a slow over rate.

Pakistan before and after Misbah became captain
Mats Won Lost Drawn W/L ratio
6 years before Misbah 48 12 22 14 0.54
Since Misbah took over 49 24 14 11 1.71

10 Misbah’s series wins as captain – the most by an Asian captain. MS Dhoni and Sourav Ganguly had nine series wins (in which they captained in all matches). The next best among Pakistan captains is eight by Javed Miandad. Graeme Smith led South Africa to 22 series wins.39 Misbah’s scores of 50 or more as Pakistan captain. Only one batsman, captain or not, has made more 50-plus scores over the same period – Alastair Cook has 45 such scores, but in 134 innings compared to Misbah’s 83.3557 Runs scored by Misbah at No. 5 as captain – the most among Test captains, with Steve Waugh being the only other one with more than 3000. Misbah scored those runs at an average of 57.37.

A bat with less of an edge, to give batsmen an edge

A group of Indian technology students have produced a bat that has the potential to change the caught-behind as we know it

Sidharth Monga09-Jun-20155:43

Mirik Gogri talks about the Gladius bat

It is an issue big enough for the ICC’s technical committee to discuss. During the recently concluded World Cup – the most lopsided towards the bat so far – it made Ian Chappell worry about the safety of the bowler and the umpire. Rahul Dravid is not sure how net bowlers have managed to avoid injuries.The steady increase in the thickness (but not weight) of bats has altered the balance between bat and ball. The ball is being hit harder than it has ever been, and edges are travelling farther than they ever did. Yet the latest innovation in bat-making to fall foul of the traditionalists might just be one that actually takes wood off the blade, making some parts of it thinner. It should be welcome, except that this new bat primarily intends to make sure edges don’t carry – or at least not as far as they do now. And the increased bat speed, a by-product of the innovation, might just end up sending the ball even further when it is middled.When Mirik Gogri, Ayush Jain and some of their friends at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay – students when they began, entrepreneurs in their mid-20s now – began work on this bat, called Gladius, which they have since trademarked, during India’s horror run in away Tests in 2011 and 2012, they wanted to come up with a tool that could reduce the number of wickets that India lost to catches behind the wicket. In the process they might have stumbled upon an aerodynamically enhanced overall design.The edges first. Imagine a damp pitch on an overcast morning in England. The openers have to see out the first session, in the course of which the moisture will dissipate, as the sun comes out. You need to survive this session to accumulate through the rest of the day. Enter the Gladius bat.In layman’s terms, Gogri and Co. have tapered the edges. Under MCC laws, a bat face cannot be wider than 10.8cm. Now imagine if the back of the bat remained at its maximum width of 10.8cm and the front was made narrower by 0.75cm on either side. If the ball now hits the slanted edge, it won’t travel as far back as it would off a normal bat edge.

This new bat primarily intends to make sure edges don’t carry as far as they do now. And the increased bat speed, a by-product, might just end up sending the ball even further when it is middled

The simplicity of the idea is astonishing. It makes you wonder why nobody thought of it before – including the lawmakers. The MCC can’t find a flaw with the bat under the laws as they stand, but this innovation has forced it to tighten the law. It is now considering a stipulation that the face of the bat not be narrower than 8.8cm, which means the slant cannot be more than 1cm on either side.The bat offers more than just a smaller face. Its developers first produced a bat with sawtooth edges, which they used during their intra-university matches. They found the serrated edges made the bat too unpredictable, so they continued refining it – including trying to have sawteeth only on the outside edge, because that’s the problem area – until they zeroed in on the tapered-edges design (on both sides, because shaving off only the outside edge took away the bat’s balance).In more scientific terms, in the words of Gogri, this is how the bat works: “When an edge hits a normal bat, the only direction a force acts on it is perpendicular. In this case [with the tapered edge] that force is slightly forward and slightly downward. This is not a huge directional change, mind you, but it can be the difference between the ball carrying and not carrying.”He and his colleagues have performed various tests on the bat in simulated environments, but the results may not match those in actual play, where no two deliveries can be identical and hit the edge on the same spot and with identical bounce and pace. Science, though, says that overall the tapered sides ought to make outside edges weaker but give leading edges more legs.It’s the weight of a bat that defines how much a ball travels, not the thickness, but big hitters are still attached to their big bats•Getty ImagesA better balance, claims Gogri, was a pleasant offshoot of the tapering, as a result of improved airflow. “When the air hits a normal bat it flows in a turbulent fashion,” he says. “With our bat obviously there is turbulence, but it eases through.” In fact, the players who have used the bats in local and domestic cricket – Bhavin Thakkar, who has played Ranji Trophy for Mumbai and Himachal Pradesh, and Shashank Singh, who has played Under-23 cricket for Mumbai – are talking mainly of the improved bat speed.The bat has been handed out to a few coaches, including Praveen Amre and Sanjay Bangar. While coaches find it to be better aerodynamically, the bat has – as expected – hit a stonewall that has to do with perception. Every bat-maker in the world talks of a batsman’s psychology. Gray-Nicolls, the sports-equipment manufacturer, has done tests that prove the thickness of a bat has little to do with how much the ball travels, weight does, but some of the biggest hitters in cricket today like to use chunky bats. Just the sight of a big bat empowers batsmen, bat-makers feel, and most are fairly set in their ways in terms of what they want. And here is a bunch of kids asking them to reduce the width of the face of the bat. The nerve.In the process of trying to convince batsmen, Gogri and friends have discovered that hardly anyone uses a bat that is 10.8cm wide anyway. Most bats are about 10.4cm wide. They are now looking at procuring bats – using the same willow – that are 10.8cm wide so that they can do their thing on it and see how players respond. However, it has been difficult to convince big bat companies to create wider bats for the makers of Gladius to experiment with.If this bat is to succeed, there will eventually have to be a psychological trade-off between the confidence derived from looking at a full-faced bat and one with softer edges – to be used when the conditions demand more circumspection, when scoring runs is not the prime objective. The simplicity of the idea means there is no need for a bat to be specially manufactured: existing bats can be modified for the purpose. On the face of it neither the developers of the bat nor the batsmen who might want to experiment with it have much to lose, but the bowlers might have a thing or three to say.

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