Best figures by a spinner, Australia's highest at No. 7

Stats highlight from the first ODI between England and Australia at the Ageas Bowl

Shiva Jayaraman03-Sep-20155 Number of consecutive ODIs England have now lost at the Ageas Bowl. The last time they won here was in 2012 against West Indies. This was also their fourth consecutive loss while chasing at this venue. The last time they won chasing here was against India in 2011, when they successfully chased down a target of 188 in 23 overs in a rain-affected game.0 Number of times spinners had taken a four-wicket haul at the Ageas Bowl before Adil Rashid’s 4 for 59 in this ODI. The previous best by a spinner at this ground was Graeme Swann’s 3 for 26 against Pakistan in 2010.71* Runs by Matthew Wade in this match – equalling the highest score by an Australia No. 7 against England in ODIs. Two other Australia batsmen – Simon O’ Donnell and Brad Hogg – have scored an unbeaten 71 batting at No. 7 against England. It also equals the second-highest score by a No. 7 batsman in ODIs between Australia and England. Jos Buttler’s 75 at Old Trafford in 2013 is the highest. As many as five different batsmen have scored exactly 71 batting at No. 7 in ODIs between Australia and England.142.00 Wade’s strike rate in his innings of 71 – the third best by a No. 7 batsman to score 50 or more runs in an ODI in England. Andrew Flintoff’s strike rate of 178.57 in a 28-ball 50 – against Sri Lanka at Trent Bridge in 2002 – is the highest strike rate in an ODI innings by a No. 7 batsman in England.2 Number of century stands for the seventh wicket in ODIs in England before the one between Wade and Mitchell Marsh in this match. The partnership in this match was the third highest ever for the seventh wicket in ODIs in England. The highest such stand also came this year – a 177-run partnership between Buttler and Rashid against New Zealand at Edgbaston.0 Century partnerships for Australia’s seventh wicket against England in ODIs before this match. The most Australia had added for the seventh wicket against England in ODIs was 95, which was by the stand between Ian Healy and Steve Waugh at the MCG in 1991.40* Runs made by Marsh batting at No. 8 – equalling the second highest at the Ageas Bowl in ODIs and the highest since Kenya’s Brijal Patel made against India here in the 2004 Champions Trophy. Heath Streak’s unbeaten 50 against South Africa in 2003 is the highest by a No. 8 at this venue.1 Number of Man-of-the-Match awards won by Wade in 48 ODIs before this match. The last time before this he had won this award was in 2012, against India at the MCG.70 England’s opening partnership in this match – their highest in 13 ODIs at this ground. The previous highest was a 67-run stand between Alastair Cook and Craig Kieswetter against India in 2011.72 Runs conceded by Mark Wood in this match – equalling the third most by a bowler at this venue in ODIs. Rashid had also conceded exactly 72 runs in an ODI against New Zealand here earlier this year. Jade Dernbach had conceded 87 against New Zealand in 2013 which are the most by any bowler at this venue. This is also the most Wood has conceded in an ODI.7 Number of fifties in 12 international innings on the current tour by David Warner including the one he made in this match. Warner has made a fifty in all but one of the eight matches he has played on this tour: he fell for 4 in the T20I in Cardiff. Warner has made 565 runs at an average of 47.08 on this tour.8 Wickets lost by both the teams in the seven-over period between the 31st over and the 37th over. Australia lost four wickets for 38 runs during these overs, and England returned the favour losing four for 35. The eight wickets lost equals the most in an ODI in these overs since 2001. While Australia recovered from this period through the stand between Wade and Marsh, England failed to put up a rearguard effort.

How to solve the over-rate problem

Enough of the dawdling. It’s time to make 15 overs an hour mandatory

Andy Zaltzman17-Jun-2014Test matches are often compared to novels, with their sinuously evolving plots, their elongated development, and, let us be honest, their varying quality. For every , there is a . The Lord’s Test, which concluded in such dramatic mayhem yesterday, would have made a very strange book – mostly interesting enough, occasionally dull, apparently heading nowhere in particular, riddled with flaws, all leading to a mind-blowingly brilliant final chapter that brought all of the disparate plot and character strands together in one of the finest endings to a story ever written. Overall: 8 out of 10. A recommended read, but not a prize-winner.The explosive conclusion to a quite-interesting contest played out on a dull pitch was a glorious moment of cricket at its riveting, soul-gripping best. England, led by the rested and rejuvenated James Anderson, did superbly to come within an inch of forcing a result on a somnolent surface; Sri Lanka, led by Kumar Sangakkara, who touched perfection in a masterclass of batsmanship, and Angelo Mathews, resolute in defence, majestic in attack, did superbly to save the match after conceding 575, and despite having a fragile tail.England played some excellent cricket. There were notable individual successes from both new and old players. But essentially they threw away a victory. They could have declared earlier in their second innings. They could have bowled their overs faster. They did neither, and in doing so, probably denied themselves an almost certain win.Did it make any difference to how impressive Gary Ballance’s second-innings performance was, or how firmly established his position in the team, that he ultimately scored 100-odd not out rather than 75 or 80, out? I hope not. The last 20 or 30 runs were the least important. England, I think, should have accelerated, and declared, slightly earlier on the fourth evening, to give themselves at least four or five overs to try to make the first breakthrough. It might not have made any difference. It might have won the match. For a side that has recently fired a player seemingly for being insufficiently team-oriented, it was curious, and ultimately counterproductive, to place a personal milestone above the collective need. (This is no criticism of Ballance, it was not his decision.)The over-rate issue, however, really irritated me. Seventeen overs were lost in the match. On day three, England, in a position of dominance, bowled for the entire day, and managed only 84 of the possible 90 overs in the six and a half hours of play allowed. Why the missing overs are simply discarded from the game is inexplicable – the most logical justification for the jettisoning of a significant portion of the match is that it is a covert signal to summon an alien invasion. But England knew the regulations, and chose not to be bothered about them.There are a number of reasons why slow over rates, and the rampantly ineffectual quarter-arsed regulations that surround them, irritate cricket fans.1. It is borderline theft. If you have paid, say, £60 for a ticket, expecting 90 overs of cricket, and you are only given 84 of those overs, Cricket has basically stolen £4 from your wallet/purse/piggy bank/secret stash under the floorboards / offshore bank account/chainmail tabard made of £1 coins. Perhaps if cricket’s administrators were forced to pay for their own tickets to matches every now and again, particularly at the prices charged in England, they might (a) notice, and (b) care that the endemic dawdling in their sport is deeply annoying. They might also stop deducting two overs for no logically explicable reason at the change of innings. And tell the umpires to stop walking as if they are carrying a favourite goldfish to a premature funeral in the local lake.2. It is completely unnecessary. It is true that there are many more breaks in play in modern cricket, compared with bygone days when over rates of 20 per hour were commonplace, and 23 or 24 per hour not unusual. Also, a higher proportion of overs is bowled by pacers, and run-ups are generally longer. Some of these breaks are now unavoidable – DRS referrals are now part of the game, as, it seems, are sponsored, advertisement-filled drinks breaks, even on non-thirst-inducing days. However, there is also a formidable amount of what might technically be termed “needless fannying around”, from tortuous chats over minor field- placement alterations, via random incursions by 12th men, 13th men and 14th men, to fielders putting shin pads on underneath their trousers, as if putting padding on the lower legs is so shameful and cowardly that it must be hidden from the vengeful eyes of Zeus. And the umpires. Why can players not put those shin pads on outside their trousers? England should not be heavily faulted for their failure to bowl all their available overs – the general absence of urgency and dilatory tempo has been ingrained in professional cricket for decades now.

And tell the umpires to stop walking as if they are carrying a favourite goldfish to a premature funeral in the local lake

Which leads to reason three:3. It is strategically insane. Genuinely tactically deranged. For a team trying to win the match, at least. Sri Lanka were, in essence, rewarded for their tardiness, and, more pertinently, for the umpires’ failure to make them bowl their overs at the required rate (or, given the extra half hour allowed, at slightly below the supposedly required rate). England, in essence, punished themselves for their own failure to ignore the temporal lassitude given by the umpires and administrators and to drive the game forward.To bowl 90 overs in six and a half hours, you only need to bowl 13.5 overs an hour. England’s tardy over rate on Saturday was, strategically, the equivalent of bowling six overs of underarm daisy-cutters. It made as much tactical sense as letting off all the fire alarms in the stadium six overs before the scheduled end of play.If England had just marched off six overs from the end of the game on the fifth day, they would have been sectioned. Yet that is effectively what they did on Saturday, when in control of the match, on a wicket that screamed: “You will need as many overs as possible to win this match.”Fifteen overs per hour should be an absolute minimum, and given what previous generations proved was possible, it should be easily achievable. It should be legislated and officiated in such a way that it is not a matter of choice, as it currently is. But in the likely event of continued apathy by the cricketing powers that be, surely there will come a time when teams will realise the strategic advantage that could be had in bowling, say, 95 overs in a day instead of 85. Or even of bowling 90 overs instead of 89.Since the start of 2009, teams have finished nine wickets down in the fourth innings to salvage a draw on five occasions, and eight wickets down in three other Test matches. There was also the scores-level, nine-wickets-down draw between India and West Indies in Mumbai in November 2011, and the 2009 Cardiff Ashes Test, when England finished nine down in the third innings, just 13 runs ahead. On most of these occasions, even one extra over earned by a faster over rate – or not lost by a sluggish one ¬- could have changed the outcome of the match, and in most of these cases, the series.As Stuart Broad showed yesterday, and as Ryan Harris demonstrated in Cape Town in March, one over is enough to take (or, in Broad’s case, almost take) the final two wickets of a Test. An extra six overs – one over per hour faster on just one of the five days – would surely have turned some, perhaps most, of those draws into wins.In a sporting world in which science, computers, analysts and coaches are in perpetual search of the mythical “one per-centers”, it is baffling that such an obvious and easily attainable potential marginal gain should be actively (and universally) overlooked.A possible solution to the over-rate issue
If a side does not bowl 15 overs in 60 minutes of play (excluding referrals, injuries, drinks breaks and wickets), it should lose a fielder for the next hour. Exceptions could perhaps be made for the latter stages of a match – say, the final two hours of a fifth day, or the last 50 runs of a chase. No fielding team would want to leave itself shorn of a fielder. It would be a law/regulation that should work in the same way as timed out – as a deterrent that never, or almost never, actually has to be applied.England’s new generation report
Chris Jordan had a promising all-round debut, contributing with bat and ball at important times. With his oddly lop-sided run-up – probably the most athletic hobble ever seen in world sport – he also rocketed straight to the top of the Test Bowlers Who Most Look As If They Are Coming In To Bowl With One Pocket Full Of Fabergé Eggs.Moeen Ali played beautifully for a couple of hours in the first innings, and sumptuously for one glorious ball in the second. His two dismissals were loose, but his strokeplay could wake the dead. He bowled adequately on an unhelpful surface without suggesting he can be more than a fifth bowler. Which is fine, for now.Liam Plunkett was decent if not especially wickety on his second debut, and if he bowled too short too often, it seemed to be in accordance with team orders, rather than a unilateral decision based on the fact that, since the ECB had paid for the whole of the pitch, he might as well make sure the middle couple of yards was well utilised.Sam Robson was unimpressive on his first debut, although little can be surmised from his two short innings, other than that he is unlikely to provoke too many poets to pick up their quills and scribble out a sonnet about his ravishing strokeplay and Laxmanian finesse.Ballance, in his debut-in-a-team-not-in-a-state-of-advanced-meltdown, suggested in his first innings that he was anything but a Test No. 3, as he prodded uncertainly from strangely deep in his crease. He suggested in his second innings that he was a natural Test No. 3, able to withstand pressure, accumulate deftly, and unleash a more expansive range of shots when necessary. From strangely deep in his crease. He calmed the second-innings carnage, and, with Jordan, batted England into a winning position, and explained his stellar first-class stats.Pointlessly obscure stat of the day
Kaushal Silva, with his excellent innings of 63 and 57, became just the third right-handed opener to reach 50 twice in a Lord’s Test against England. The previous two were Stewie Dempster (53 and 120 for New Zealand in 1931) and Vinoo Mankad (72 and 184 for India in 1952). All three instances happened in the month of June. Seven visiting left-hand openers have achieved the feat, most recently Bangladesh’s Tamim Iqbal, in 2010. Please do not use this stat in everyday conversation. It could cause social awkwardness.

India's bowling not a new problem

India’s bowlers, especially the spinners, had perfect conditions in Mumbai yet fluffed their lines dramatically. However, it wasn’t a one-off. The bowling has been a problem for a while

Sidharth Monga30-Nov-2012The defeat at the Wankhede Stadium last week was arguably India’s worst in Test cricket. Not in terms of margin, but in how almost everything was stacked in their favour: the pitch, the toss, the combination, the runs. The illusion they have tried to create through countless interviews that they were done in on “green tops” and they were still world-beaters at home has come crashing down. If ever there was a match set up for the bowlers to win, it was this, with 327 on board on a square turner. And as it has been happening over the last 18 months, India’s bowlers came up short again; in the case of their lead spinner’s length, literally so.Starting July 21 last year, India have been the worst bowling unit of all Test sides bar Bangladesh. At least statistically so. Not only have they averaged 40.39 with the ball, better only than Bangladesh, they have give away more runs per over than any Test side over that period. And whisper it, for most of this period India have bowled on “green tops”. With the bat, their average – 30.80 – is better than that of Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. Needless to say, they have lost more Tests than any other side over the period.There is no denying that India’s batting hasn’t been ideal over this period, but it has neither been as bad as the bowling nor as crucial to this slump. If Test cricket were a spin bowler, batting would be its line and bowling its length. The former optional, the latter mandatory. Pakistan are a glaring example. Even during their most turbulent period, with non-existent batting and wicketkeeping, they have still managed to survive as a Test side purely through their bowling. In 2010 alone, they won two Tests in England, as many as India have in 26 years.However, the main focus of most of the debates around India’s defeats, even in Mumbai, has been around the batting. Even when India were No 1, the bowling hung by a thread. A brittle, not-always-fit, but highly skilful thread. The captain’s statement that this thread was the Sachin Tendulkar of bowling was spot on. Ever since Zaheer Khan has gone into what seems like a terminal slump, all others have been brutally exposed. In the two to three years since Anil Kumble’s retirement, Zaheer carried the bowling on his own. He brought the control the unit badly needed; when he was injured, India would look lost in the field.Zaheer is not the same any more. He has not even been there for six of those 15 Tests. With other bowlers, you never know what you will get. In Mumbai, for example, when Kevin Pietersen felt comfortable enough to boss the bowlers, chances are even the best would have suffered, but it was the easy period of easy singles that let him feel comfortable. That’s where Indian spinners failed on two counts.On a pitch that was calling for them to exploit the turn, they didn’t put in enough effort to spin the ball. Spin here is not just the sideways turn, but action on the ball, which gets you drift and dip. They didn’t do it on purpose, it’s their techniques. They don’t put enough shoulder or hip behind the delivery, they have hardly any follow-through. R Ashwin, especially, ends up relying too much on his variations. In so doing, he bowls a release ball almost every over, which is the bowling unit’s second shortcoming. MS Dhoni has copped a fair deal of criticism for his defensive fields over this period, but his bowlers haven’t done him any favours with their inconsistency.The desperate part, though, is that there are no replacements in sight, except for a hospital ward full of tried-and-tested bowlers missing the Ranji Trophy. Which is why somebody like Harbhajan Singh can walk right back into the squad without having done anything at the domestic level to earn a comeback, although when he did make that comeback he bowled better than Ashwin and got only half the overs. Outside the squad, only Pankaj Singh and Jalaj Saxena have both the wickets and the fitness. Neither of them seems to enjoy the faith of the selectors and the team management.After Wankhede, Dhoni made what seems like a fair point on paper when asked about the direness of the situation. “I think we have got replacements,” he said. “It’s not like we don’t have replacements. But you don’t chop and change players on the basis of one or two Tests. We have to give them a fair run.” Apart from the fair run, they also need a huge improvement, especially in their discipline.

Guptill's dipping form, and battling Watling

Plays of the Day from the second ODI between Sri Lanka and New Zealand in Dambulla

Siddarth Ravindran in Dambulla13-Aug-2010Guptill’s dip continues
With an unbeaten 122 on one-day debut against West Indies early in 2009, Martin Guptill instantly secured a regular spot in the New Zealand top order. He hasn’t missed a game since, but that’s not something he’ll be able to boast of for very long if his lean run continues. His CV was blotted today by his maiden ODI duck, looking to whip his first ball to the leg side but only managing an edge to backward point, making Lasith Malinga the quickest Sri Lankan to 100 ODI wickets, a week after the bowler had captured his 100th Test wicket.The hunt for the first run
Another man who didn’t score a run was Kane Williamson, who unlike Guptill had got his maiden duck in his very first game. On Tuesday he had lasted nine deliveries; today it was just two before nicking Angelo Mathews to first slip for a second consecutive blob. If he’s looking for inspiration, though, he should look no further than Sachin Tendulkar, who started with zeroes in his first two ODIs before going on to own most of the batting records in the format.Battling Watling
BJ Watling had a far better start to his one-day career than Williamson. After surviving a difficult spell against the new ball, he got going with a couple of fours against Angelo Mathews. He persevered in spite of the wickets tumbling at the other end to bring up his half-century with a cracking one-bounce four straight down the ground.Watch your step
When Gareth Hopkins was foxed by a slow, full teaser from Malinga, New Zealand were hobbling at 123 for 6. The new batsman, Daryl Tuffey, had made decent contributions in his previous matches, but he lasted only one delivery this time – a pacy, pinpoint yorker zeroed in on leg stump and Tuffey just about managed to save his toes, but not his wicket.Guptill’s grab
With the silken effortlessness that is his signature, Kumar Sangakkara was taking the game away from New Zealand, dominating an 85-run stand for the second wicket with Upul Tharanga. The target was fewer than 100 runs away with more than 30 overs remaining, but New Zealand’s hopes were lifted by an outstanding catch at short cover by Guptill, who flung himself low to his right to snap the ball inches from the ground and see off Sangakkara for 48.

A lull before another storm?

The sponsorship row in the Caribbean is far from over

Martin Williamson28-Apr-2005


Brian Lara in Digicel-branded kit
© Getty Images

Although the dispute between sponsors in the Caribbean has been on the back-burner for a few weeks, it is likely to rear its ugly head again at the end of the forthcoming Test series against Pakistan. The board’s interim contracts with the players end early in June, and between then and the squad’s departure for Sri Lanka in July, it has to be hoped that the West Indies board will put in place a more structured system of central contracts.Given the potentially disastrous events which preceded the South African series, and overshadowed the Guyana Test, the board knows that it has to have a solution done and dusted before naming the touring squad. While Cable & Wireless appears to have backed down in releasing most players from their personal deals, sources close to the situation have suggested that Cable & Wireless see the current state of affairs as a lull in hostilities rather than a ceasefire.The board, meanwhile, has continued to come under fire for its handling of the whole contract imbroglio. Critics accuse the board of failing to plan for the future and of acting with arrogance. It simply cannot get to mid June without something concrete – and financially appealing – ready to bring to the table. But, in fairness, a statement by Teddy Griffith, the WICB president, in March highlighted the problems it had encountered in trying to resolve outstanding issues.The board’s public handling of matters in the early exchanges left something to be desired, although of late, possibly emboldened by some discreet backing from Digicel, its sponsor, and because of its growing frustration with negotiations with West Indies Players Association, it has adopted a more uncompromising approach. A year ago, taking a hard line against high-profile players, including Brian Lara, would have been inconceivable, but in March the board suspected it had the better hand and called the rebels’ bluff – and won. Digicel itself has continued to come under fire from some elements in the Caribbean, but it has made it quite clear that it has no intention of scrapping its five-year deal and is here for the duration. United they stand.In the local media, battle lines have been drawn, with both sides holding strong views. Recent articles in some quarters have suggested that the deal between the board and Digicel was not in fact as attractive as it might have been. The Trinidad Guardian claimed that the US$20 million deal was, in fact, worth as little as $17 million as, it claimed, the board had paid $2.5 to 3 million to an agent to secure the Digicel contract in the first place.The basis for this argument appears to be that Griffith referred to a “net sponsorship amount of $3.4 million to be received by the board annually over the five years of the agreement,” a total of $17 million. But closer scrutiny reveals that this figure does not include a sponsorship package which provides up to $1.7 million annually in incentives for the team, based on performance. Nor does it include investment in youth cricket and other associated areas. Under the contract, Digicel will also help the WICB bid for TV rights for overseas series.So there was no middle man creaming off millions.Meanwhile, the hitherto vociferous Dinanath Ramnarine, the chief executive of the WIPA, has been strangely quiet after his outburst to the effect that the board was a “tyrannical and despotic” organisation which had threatened players and was “prepared to sacrifice West Indies cricket and the development of a successful team on the altar of commercial expediency.”Ramnarine continues to polarise opinion between those who believe he is doing a good job defending players’ rights, and those who ask whose best interests he is actually representing. At the end of last week, Viv Richards, who has repeatedly crossed swords with him in the past, nailed his colours firmly to the mast when he said that Ramnarine was “one of the laziest individuals you could ever find – more of a taker than giving.”The whole issue continues to be clouded by half-truths and rumour, and that is only likely to get worse once the Pakistan tour ends and thoughts turn again to player contracts.

No DRS as teams battle it out for final two World Cup spots

The qualifying tournament to be held in Zimbabwe in June-July is the final stepping stone for teams still in contention for the 2023 ODI World Cup

Firdose Moonda06-Apr-2023

A decision has been taken on whether we’ll have the DRS at the World Cup qualifiers in Zimbabwe•IDI via Getty Images

There will be no DRS system in place for this year’s 50-over World Cup qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe in June-July, but the ICC has confirmed to ESPNcricinfo that there will be a third umpire monitoring run-outs.The absence of DRS mirrors the 2019 World Cup qualifiers, also held in Zimbabwe in March 2018, but is an improvement on the availability of a third umpire. In 2018, the third umpire was deployed in only 10 of the 34 matches – those that were televised. The 2023 edition will see a third umpire available for all games but there will be no other review tools, such as UltraEdge or ball-tracking, which may be a concern for teams considering how the 2018 tournament played out.Related

Men's ODI World Cup 2023 – all teams set to have different captains from 2019

West Indies and Afghanistan advanced to the 2019 World Cup in England, but not without controversy. West Indies booked their places after beating Scotland by five runs in a rain-reduced encounter which saw Scotland’s face a reduced target of 131 in 32.5 overs. They were well-placed on 105 for 4 in the 32nd over when Richie Berrington was given out lbw to an Ashley Nurse delivery that looked to be sliding down leg. With no DRS, Berrington could not review.There was also no DRS at the just-concluded Cricket World Cup Qualifier Playoff in Windhoek, Namibia, where the standard of umpiring was under scrutiny in several games. Namibian captain Gerhard Erasmus responded to a Twitter user who commented on a decision made in the match between Jersey and the USA, saying associate teams were made to “eat last” when it came to officiating. Namibia finished third in the tournament and will not compete in the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe.

This year’s 10-team World Cup Qualifying tournament will take place in Zimbabwe between June 18 and July 9. It includes the five teams who finished at the bottom of the World Cup Super League (Netherlands, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, West Indies and one of Ireland or South Africa), the top three teams from the ICC’s World Cup Cricket League 2 (Nepal, Oman and Scotland) and the two teams from the Qualifier Playoff (USA and UAE) that was completed in Namibia this week. The top two teams from the qualifier will advance to the ten-team field at this year’s 50-over World Cup. The ICC has confirmed that the 2027 and 2031 editions of the showpiece event will be expanded to 14 teams.DRS was introduced by the ICC in 2009 (called the Umpire Decision Review System or UDRS back then) and is funded by host broadcasters outside of World Cup events, which means that not every country makes use of it. It has been used in 50-over World Cups since 2011.

Tottenham close to selling midfielder disciplined by Thomas Frank with loan to buy transfer lined up

Yves Bissouma is close to sealing a Tottenham exit with a loan move to Galatasaray gaining pace after he was disciplined by new manager Thomas Frank.

  • Bissouma close to Tottenham departure
  • Move to Galatasaray advancing
  • Dropped from Super Cup squad
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to The Telegraph's Mike McGrath, Tottenham are in talks with Galatasaray as they look to engineer an exit for Bissouma. The Mali midfielder, who was dropped from Frank's squad for the UEFA Super Cup against Paris Saint-Germain due to ill-discipline, could join the Turkish giants on loan with an obligation for the deal to be made permanent next year.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Bissouma was a key figure in Spurs' Europa League triumph under Ange Postecoglou. However, he has not played in any of their three competitive games so far this season, with the likes of Joao Palhinha, Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Sarr, Lucas Bergvall and Archie Gray all ahead of him in the pecking order.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Bissouma impressed during his previous stint with Brighton before completing a move to Tottenham in 2022. However, he never managed to build up a consistent run of form during a few tumultuous years for Spurs and now looks set to leave as the club try to move players on during the final week of the summer transfer window.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR TOTTENHAM?

    After opening wins against Burnley and Manchester City, Tottenham will look to build on their positive start to life under Frank when they host Bournemouth on Saturday. Should Bissouma complete a move to Galatasaray, he will soon be playing alongside the likes of Victor Osimhen, Leroy Sane and former Spurs defender Davinson Sanchez.

Harris, Hamza share eight wickets to limit Sussex

Fynn Hudson-Prentice top-scores as visitors recover from 140 for 6 to 278 all out

ECB Reporters Network10-May-2024Wickets came in clusters on the first day of the Vitality County Championship match between Glamorgan and Sussex in Cardiff with the visitors posting 278 in their first innings after a middle-order collapse left them in trouble.Four wickets apiece from James Harris and Mir Hamza were the highlight for Glamorgan but Sussex did well to recover from 140 for 6 thanks to late-order runs from Jack Carson, Ari Karvelas and Jayden Seales.Several Sussex players got starts but none went on to make a big score on a pitch where it seemed difficult to get fully settled, Fynn Hudson-Prentice producing the top-score with 48. In recent years this Cardiff square has flattened out as the match wears on, so those extra runs could prove vital.Glamorgan faced six overs before the close of play and finished on 21 for 1 with Eddie Byrom falling lbw to Karvelas for 12.Glamorgan’s decision to bowl first on a beautifully sunny day in Cardiff was a matter of some debate before the game started, and a quick start from the Sussex opening pair of Tom Clark and Tom Haines only added to those questions. Haines had reached 19 from just 22 balls when he was trapped lbw by Hamza and that slowed things down.Clark was dismissed playing a pull shot that took a top edge and was easily caught by Chris Cooke, the first of a number of wickets that suggested that there was a two-paced nature to this Sophia Gardens surface.A stand of 50 between Tom Alsop and Cheteshwar Pujara steadied things after the loss of both openers but a flurry of wickets after the lunch break justified Glamorgan’s decision at the toss. A brilliant 18-ball spell from Hamza saw him claim three wickets while conceding just four runs as Sussex went from 131 for 3 to 136 for 5.One of those wickets was that of Pujara who was caught behind to a ball that Hamza got to seam away. Despite his sustained success in county cricket, Glamorgan were something of a bogey team for Pujara before this match. He had made just nine runs in four innings, his last outing against them resulting in an 11-ball duck. His average of 2.25 going into this game was the worst of his career against any first-class opposition. The 41 runs he made in this were well put together but he could not go on.Harris claimed his third wicket when he had Danny Lamb caught at third slip by Andy Gorvin to leave the visitors 140 for 6. A 66-run partnership between Carson and Hudson-Prentice took Sussex past 200 but when Harris forced a second drag on to the stumps it saw the end of Hudson-Prentice.Crane took the ninth wicket when he had Carson caught at slip by Colin Ingram for a well-made 39 before a last-wicket stand took Sussex past 250 for their first bonus point. Karvelas and Seales eventually put on 43, but they were aided by Glamorgan fielding. Karvelas was dropped on 18 and 32 and finished undefeated on 39.The final wicket was claimed by Gorvin who was playing in his first game for Glamorgan this season on his 27th birthday. He bowled Seales for 17 as Sussex finished 278 all out.The one Glamorgan wicket to fall before the close was Byrom who was trapped by a lovely ball from Karvelas which swung in to leave him leg before.

Stoinis to play SA20 after BBL, says ODI omission makes 'complete sense'

Australia allrounder was aware he would not be part of the one-day squad but has sights firmly set on T20 World Cup

Alex Malcolm11-Jan-20241:13

Stoinis: ‘I’ve got every intention to play T20 cricket for Australia’

Australia allrounder Marcus Stoinis has signed to play in the SA20 for Durban’s Super Giants, the affiliate of his IPL club Lucknow. He is comfortable with being left out of Australia’s ODI squad to face West Indies after speaking regularly to the selectors for six months, but still hopes to be part of the T20 World Cup campaign.Stoinis had known for some time he would not be part of Australia’s first bilateral ODI squad after the World Cup but he is not retiring from ODI cricket and is still preparing himself to be part of the T20 squad in the build-up to June’s World Cup where he has been a mainstay in the middle order since the 2021 triumph in the UAE.Even prior to missing out on selection in the XI for the ODI World Cup final in Ahmedabad, Stoinis had been talking regularly with coach Andrew McDonald and chair of selectors George Bailey about what the transition period would look like for Australia’s one-day team, and he supported Aaron Hardie’s selection as a second allrounder in the 13-man squad alongside Cameron Green with Mitchell Marsh rested. Stoinis’ omission gives him the chance to play more franchise cricket in South Africa after the BBL, before he hopes being part of the T20I series against West Indies and New Zealand later in February.Related

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“I had a few conversations with Andrew McDonald over the last sort of four to six months,” Stoinis said. “Spoke to George as well. In terms of selections, in terms of the fact that Hardie’s coming in, I think that’s brilliant. I think it makes complete sense after a World Cup. There needs to be a balance between keeping a core, and bringing new guys in. The next tournament that they’re looking forward to is the Champions Trophy, which is 18 months away.”I’ve got no intention of retiring from international cricket or anything like that. I think it makes complete sense. He’s [Hardie] been playing brilliantly. He also needs to be exposed in international cricket which I think he’s ready for. I’ll be going to South Africa to play for my IPL franchise Lucknow over there which Cricket Australia has been in the loop with the whole time. So I think all makes sense to be honest.”Stoinis is currently with Melbourne Stars and his side are on the verge of playing finals. Stars have two more home and away games on January 13 and 15 to qualify for the finals which will be played from January 19 to 24.Marcus Stoinis is hopeful of being selected for the T20Is against West Indies and New Zealand•ICC/Getty ImagesDurban’s Super Giants start their SA20 season on January 12. If Stars don’t make the finals, Stoinis could be available for as many as seven SA20 games or as few as four if Stars reach the BBL decider on January 24. But he will still be available, and is hoping to be selected, for Australia’s three-match T20I series against West Indies in Australia starting on February 9, which would rule him out of the SA20 finals which run from February 7 until February 11.”I’ve got every intention to play T20 cricket for Australia as long as I can, as long as they want me,” Stoinis said. “I feel like my international and T20 [franchise] cricket has been good over the last whatever period. And I’ve got a great relationship with the boys in the team and also with the likes of Timmy David and Wadey [Matthew Wade] and Ingo [Josh Inglis], that group that bat in the middle order, which I think is what we’re trying to nurture as a team to build towards the big tournaments.”But then also there needs to be a transition to get people into the team as well and expose people. I can only really speak for myself, but I think things are getting to a great stage where…we don’t want to give up a spot, but we understand the landscape of cricket and there’s opportunities at the moment everywhere so you need to be incorporating a group of cricketers into these teams, I think.”The club versus country debate continues to rage in Australia with David Warner likely to be recalled from the ILT20 for the same T20I series against West Indies. The selectors and CA have made it clear they will work with each individual on a case-by-case basis in terms of selection for international series when they have conflicting T20 franchise contracts.Stoinis believes the understanding between the players and CA on franchise cricket is very strong.”I think it’s the best it’s been,” he said. “I think every individual is probably a bit different. I’m very lucky with my relationship with Ron [McDonald]. We’re super open and clear. I think also he understands that cricket is going that way.”You can either push against it really or just work with it. Everyone wants the right thing for the players individually, but also for Cricket Australia and the Australian cricket team. So as long as we’re on that page, I think most situations should be able to resolve themselves.”Stoinis appeared in two Sheffield Shield matches for Western Australia last February after returning from the ILT20 and has not ruled out playing more first-class cricket, despite just two appearances in four years, although he is unlikely to be available to do so this summer.”I have spoken to Western Australia about that,” Stoinis said. “I don’t know whether it’s my stubbornness, but I can’t say no. I enjoyed it. I played it last year. I loved it. I love the different challenge. I love being around the group and being able to have more banter rather than a T20 game where you just run around the field by yourself. Nothing’s off limits.”

Treinador Higo Magalhães projeta grande temporada para 2023

MatériaMais Notícias

O treinador Higo Magalhães aguarda ansiosamente pelo início da temporada que está por vir. Após realizar bom trabalho à frente do Vila Nova, o profissional optou por aproveitar o restante do ano para estudar. Em negociações avançadas com um novo clube, Higo fala sobre o que espera de 2023.

– A minha expectativa é excelente. Estou extremamente motivado e ainda mais preparado para realizar um trabalho sério e que dê resultados concretos. Espero que nos próximos dias já possa anunciar a equipe que irei dirigir na próxima temporada – disse.

Com apenas 40 anos, Higo é um dos bons técnicos que surgiram neste início de década. Com perfil sério e tranquilo, o goiano tem metas claras para o ano que começa daqui a pouco mais de dois meses.

– Desejo realizar um grande estadual. O foco é levar meu time à decisão. Os títulos serão consequência de um trabalho sério e certamente virão. O mais importante é ter a certeza de estar produzindo o melhor possível – definiu.

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