'I was 11 and the poster boy for Scotland strip'

Calum MacLeod, Richie Berrington, Majid Haq and Kyle Coetzer talk George Dobell and Melinda Farrell through their World Cup memories and pick out their stars – past and future – of ODI cricket

Inteviews by George Dobell and Melinda Farrell12-Feb-2015What is your earliest World Cup memory?
Calum MacLeod: I remember sitting side on at Worcester watching the Scotland v Australia game in 1999. I was 11 years old and I was obviously the poster boy for the Scotland strip because Dad [Donald MacLeod, a well known photographer with an illustrious career in journalism] was taking the pictures. That’s probably my earliest memory of live cricket events I’d gone to, seeing the greats like Warne and McGrath. Gav Hamilton got some runs. I think James Brinkley had the lowest strike rate of all the bowlers in the tournament so I remember sitting there and watching that and getting quite excited.Richie Berrington: It was watching Lance Klusener in 1999 when he was smashing a few against the Aussies in the semi-final.Majid Haq: Watching the 1992 final between England and Pakistan. Pakistan batted quite slowly and it didn’t look as if they had enough. But Imran Khan knew what he was doing. And then Mushtaq Ahmed and Wasim Akram bowled brilliantly. Was I supporting England? What do you think?Kyle Coetzer: The one springs to mind is when South Africa didn’t quite get through. 1999, wasn’t it?Who will be the breakthrough player in this World Cup?
CM: Matt Machan has got a lot about him since he came in. He’s certainly very talented, and hopefully it’s a good chance for him to showcase what he’s got.RB: For us, Matt Machan is very talented. I’ve played with him now for a couple of years and he’s still fairly young but he’s got a lot of experience from playing with Sussex. I’ve seen him score some brilliant hundreds so I’m confident he’ll do well.MH: Calum MacLeod has done very well of late. He could make a name for himself. He has had an amazing story: a seamer who batted XI and now opens the batting and doesn’t bowl. Matt Machan is looking good, too.KC: Calum MacLeod has gone from strength to strength in these last couple of years. It would be nice to see him do well.Who is the best death bowler you’ve seen?
CM: Lasith Malinga is pretty hard to beat.RB: Umar Gul is probably up there. He went through that stage about a year or so ago when he was just bowling unbelievably well at the death.MH: Wasim Akram could do anything. He could bowl over or around the wicket. He could bowl slower balls or bouncers, yorkers or reverse swing. He had it all. I faced Shoaib Akhtar back in 2003, too. He was very quick.KC: Darren Gough wasn’t too bad, you know. I suppose Malinga is the obvious answer, but Gough bowled a lot of important death owners.Who are Scotland going to play in the final?
CM: Australia are looking pretty strong in their own country. India are reigning champions and have a seriously good ODI side. They’re probably the two teams.RB: Australia playing in their own country have got a very good chance. South Africa is probably another one, they’ve been in good form recently.MH: I think we’ll play South Africa in the final.KC: You can’t go far wrong with South Africa, Australia or India – they all have the ability take each other down on their day – but I’m going to go for Australia.Who is the most destructive batsman you’ve seen?
CM: AB de Villiers. Lance Klusener in 1999. He kind of changed it didn’t he? As a lower-order hitter.RB: AB de Villiers.MH: It has to be AB de Villiers.KC: I’d probably say Chris Gayle.What’s the best World Cup match you can remember?
CM: It’s probably not the best contest but Ricky Ponting’s hundred in the 2003 World Cup against India, I think it was in the final, and then Andrew Symonds got some runs as well. I remember watching that and thinking it was something special.RB: Australia v South Africa in 1999. Just the drama.MJ: The semi-final of the 1999 World Cup between South Africa and Australia. Everyone is saying that, aren’t they?KC: It’s pretty hard to look past that semi-final in 1999, isn’t it?Have you ever had a proper job?
CM: Only part-time jobs. I was quite lucky. I was a sandwich artist at Subway for a while, when I was out here. They gave me a little certificate. And I worked at a local restaurant.RB: Early on I had a part-time job, working a few hours in Tescos on the tills. It was something I did while I was trying to continue playing a bit of cricket but I’ve been professional now for a few years.MH: I worked as an accountant for six months before I became a full-time cricketer. That’s the career I’ll go back to after cricket, too. My family had a restaurant in Paisley for 35 years, too, and I helped out there at the weekends, but my dad retired about five years ago, so we have it away.KC: I used to work in a theatre. I was a concierge. You know, showing people to their seats with a torch and that. Does that count as a proper job?Who is the best finisher?
CM: James Faulkner is doing pretty well at the moment. MS Dhoni does it time and time again. He’s calm in big games. We sat as a team one day, it was a T20 match, and the run rate was going up and up and he left a couple of balls and we thought how do you have the calmness to leave those balls under that pressure?RB: I remember Michael Bevan bashing it. In more recent times I’d say Mike Hussey. He was always good to watch the way he’d come in in the middle order and just one minute ticking by and then all of a sudden he was destructive at the end.MH: Michael Bevan, of Australia, was superb. He orchestrated so many run chases.KC: Michael Bevan’s record was unbelievable. He won so many games. If he was there, you always felt Australia were going to win.

AC Milan now want shock Sandro Tonali return in major blow for Newcastle

As if their recent frustrations couldn’t increase any further, Newcastle United could now lose one of Eddie Howe’s best players with a European giant reportedly plotting a move to seal a dream deal.

Newcastle transfer news

Injuries quickly catching up to a Newcastle side who were not given nearly enough reinforcements during the summer transfer window always felt like the narrative that the Magpies’ season would follow. And after four games without victory in the Premier League, that is very much the case.

Howe: "Incredible" Newcastle ace may feature vs Chelsea after training well

Eddie Howe has provided a positive verdict.

By
Henry Jackson

Oct 22, 2024

Without the likes of Sven Botman, Callum Wilson and Kieran Trippier, Howe’s side suffered a 1-0 defeat against Brighton & Hove Albion and extended their run without a goal from open play to 360 minutes in all competitions. With Chelsea in the Premier League and then the Carabao Cup up next too, things aren’t set to get any easier for a squad already struggling to keep up with such a hectic schedule.

Now, recent reports suggest that those at St James’ Park may yet suffer another blow away from the action. According to reports in Spain, AC Milan now want to hand Sandro Tonali a dream return in 2025 after sanctioning a move worth a reported £55m to Newcastle in 2023.

Newcastle have of course only just welcomed the return of Tonali after he missed the majority of last season through suspension. It would, therefore, be a major blow if he departed back to Milan as early as next year, given how the Magpies remained patient amid a start to life at St James’ Park that was full of turbulence.

The concern from a Newcastle perspective should be that rejecting his boyhood club may well prove to be an impossible task for £120,000-a-week Tonali, who admitted himself leaving San Siro was the “toughest decision” of his life.

Newcastle must keep hold of "great" Tonali

Whilst Newcastle haven’t exactly made the greatest transfer decisions in the last year, allowing Tonali to return to Milan not even two years after he arrived in Tyneside would be their worst decision of all. Should the Italian depart back to his boyhood club next summer, then he’d have spent the majority of his Newcastle career on the sidelines through suspension before bidding farewell in what should be seen as the worst-case scenario for the Magpies.

Newcastle United midfielder Sandro Tonali.

Howe, like many at St James’ Park, should be desperate to keep Tonali. The Newcastle boss was full of praise for the Italian when he made his return against Nottingham Forest earlier this season, saying via Yahoo Sport: “I thought he did well fitness wise considering the lack of match action he’s had. I think he can be really pleased with the reception he got from the Newcastle supporters at the end.

“You could see the amount of Italian flags in the crowd, that embrace with the supporters. A lot of emotion coming out from Sandro’s side and, of course, from the supporters’ side back. That connection is so important for any player, and he will be hugely boosted by that. But a great day for him, a great return and a positive result.”

Inscrutable, infuriating and in control

MS Dhoni’s tactical moves could make you pull your hair out but off the field, he brought trust to the Indian dressing room. He could let Test matches drift, but his control of his team was absolute

Sidharth Monga01-Jan-20153:28

The longest reign of a wicketkeeper-captain

There is a little story from the World Twenty20 in South Africa in 2007 that tells you as much as any about MS Dhoni the captain. He was leading a side of young unknowns into the unknown – a format India hadn’t accepted yet – when news came from India that Rahul Dravid had given up the captaincy and that Dhoni had been made the ODI captain. Captains usually publicly accept the job. Steven Smith did four press conferences in the first week of his Australia captaincy. The first two were on successive days: first he was unveiled as captain, and on the next day he showed up for the pre-Gabba Test discussion.Smith is 25. Dhoni was 26 back then. And ODI cricket is big deal in India. You just couldn’t get him to do a press conference or talk about captaincy. He was reluctant to the point of being shy. The team manager tried, some senior journalists tried, phone calls from home arrived, and eventually he gave in, agreeing to read out a statement while coming out of the nets in Durban. He didn’t take any questions.The template was being set. Dhoni was taking up a job that would ask him questions every step of the way, but he wanted to answer few of them. He hadn’t gone out seeking the job. He saw it as any other job that he wanted to end at stumps. He wanted to enjoy the captaincy, not the paraphernalia that comes along with it.Dhoni’s Test captaincy began similarly, without much scrutiny or intrusion, but not by design. Anil Kumble was on his last legs, missing as many Tests as he was playing. Dhoni didn’t even do a press conference on the eve of his captaincy debut, for Kumble pulled out only later. India won easily in Kanpur. To the toss Dhoni wore a blazer two sizes too big. He’d soon get one made for himself, but he was never a blazer man.Later that year Dhoni and Kumble shared the reins in a series once again. The matches that Dhoni captained, India won. Kumble managed draws. It is instructive again that in his first Test as full-time captain, against Australia in Nagpur, Dhoni was hailed as a tactical genius for a move bedded essentially in defence. Australia were trailing in the series, they had to do all the running, and Dhoni gave them an 8-1 off-side field and asked Ishant Sharma to bowl well out of their reach. Frustrated, Australia threw away their wickets, and 1-0 became 2-0.It was a clever move. There are many ways to skin a cat. This one was skinned through denial. Then again this was a finite environment. Dhoni knew if he could deny Australia runs for long enough, he would ensure a series win, and then take the rest as a bonus. Dhoni is spectacular when cricket is finite. Limited to 20 overs. To 50 overs. When there is a result in sight. It was when the possibilities were thrown wide open that he showed he was limited.Dhoni’s ambition was limited too. He showed a great fear of losing. In Wellington, in the last Test of his first away series as captain, Dhoni sat on the series lead again, and set New Zealand 617 to win with forecast of rain on the final evening. Until then New Zealand had scored 600 only three times in their history. And only one team had ever scored 600 in the fourth innings: England in the timeless Test in 1939. In the first innings of this Test, New Zealand hadn’t even reached 200. India had taken eight wickets when rain arrived, giving them just the draw.Dhoni expressed no regret at setting New Zealand such a ridiculous target. Some New Zealanders still rib India about their declaration. This was pragmatism taken to frustrating extremes. This was the story of a majority of Dhoni’s career as Test captain. Too easily he would let games drift, control his only means of taking wickets. Sometimes the batting bailed him out, like at P Sara Oval, when he had let Thilan Samaraweera and Ajantha Mendis run away with the game. Sometimes he let golden opportunities go, like at Newlands when he sat back on defence too early in the injured Jacques Kallis’ second dig. Sometimes it worked, but mostly at home, when his spinners and Zaheer Khan provided him the control he was after.Dhoni’s fast bowlers have rarely given him what is required of Test bowlers•Getty ImagesThere would be passages of play when Dhoni would make you want to pull your hair out. In Nagpur, December 2012, India were behind in the series against England. This was the last Test of the series. India had to do everything to force a result. It was a slow pitch that made run-scoring extremely difficult. In response to England’s 330 in 145.5 overs, India were 297 for 8 in 130.1 overs at the end of the third day. We were getting into the moving day, the fourth day. India spent the first hour, 62 golden minutes, scoring just 29 runs. The lack of match awareness was mindboggling. In the previous Test England had brought the fields up for R Ashwin for the last two balls of the over. Here Ashwin said he was surprised they didn’t. The dressing room remained cool.This cool became infuriating. Dhoni had taken India to soaring heights in limited-overs cricket by remaining cool. In Tests, sometimes, you have to make things happen. Under him, India didn’t make things happen. They accepted fate too easily. They accepted too easily that some of the seniors had the right to decide when they wanted to go. They accepted too easily that some players had the right to choose IPL even if it jeopardised their chances of winning or drawing Tests. They accepted too easily that a 1-0 series lead was enough in the West Indies, and they called off a chase with 86 required in 15 overs and seven wickets in hand. You felt like holding Dhoni by the shoulders and shaking him up.There is more, though, to India’s captaincy than just tactics, bowling changes and field sets. The previous long-term captain quit because he couldn’t handle all that. Sachin Tendulkar’s recent book has proved how difficult even such a consummate professional could be to handle at most times. Dhoni managed all that brilliantly. He rid most of his players of any insecurity. Players found it hard to break into the side, but once they did they were assured decent runs before playing themselves out of it. Outsiders ceased to be a factor in the dressing room. Trust was a big factor. A regular occurrence in the past, players now hardly sulked to journalists. A youngster was left out of the side because he leaked what happened in a team meeting to a journalist.Dhoni could demand all this because his control was absolute. He had a board president in whose company he was a vice-president, for whose company’s team he played IPL, and who vetoed a move to sack him as captain after 8-0. Dhoni was untouchable now. He stopped squatting in his wicketkeeping stance. He stopped going for catches between him and first slip. This is not about integrity and commitment, but sometimes you need a nudge from the rest of the team and the selectors. You wondered if he was being reminded of this. Trevor Penney, the fielding coach at one time, said in a press conference that the slips have to realise that Dhoni won’t go for those catches.As a batsman he applied himself much more even though he didn’t seem to always trust himself outside Asia. He showed his more talented batsmen what could be achieved through application. In England, in 2014, he took the responsibility of batting at No. 6 in order to force results, and faced the second-highest number of balls among India batsmen. At home, he could set up declarations, he could counterattack as he did in his superb double-century to take the series decidedly away from Australia in 2012-13. He became a regular No. 6 at home, allowing the luxury of another spinner. That will surely be missed now.**Dhoni was India’s captain. He let others bask in glory when matches were won. He gamely took all responsibility for losses, although he still didn’t answer questions. A lot of it he deserved, but no appraisal of his Test career will be complete without looking at the other side of the story. Since he took over the captaincy full time, against England at home in 2008-09, India have spent 120 overs or more in the field on 36 occasions. That’s six more than the next-worst, Sri Lanka. Over the same period, only Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have been more profligate than India.Dhoni’s fast bowlers have rarely given him what is required of Test bowlers. The quick ones don’t remain fit, the fit ones don’t bowl quick, and the in-between ones keep bowling loose balls to release the pressure. His spinners were outplayed by England’s at home. Did they fail to respond because the captaincy was defensive, or was the captaincy defensive because the bowling was ordinary? The circle of Dhoni’s Test life.In a period of seven years, Dhoni has gone up and down in his keeping stance 1,13,120 times with captaincy also on his mind•Getty ImagesNo other wicketkeeper in the history of Test cricket has captained in 20 Tests. Dhoni did so in 60. All the while he also captained in as many ODIs, T20Is and IPL matches as he could. In a period of seven years, Dhoni has gone up and down in his keeping stance 1,13,120 times with captaincy also on his mind. Slow fielders at times. Inconsistent bowlers almost always. Fading seniors. Erring juniors. Over-rates. Overenthusiastic sledgers. Around fifty squats per day, without counting IPL matches.No other player has put himself through this strain over the period. The price of this effort is paid by the body. For a long time towards the end of his Test career, Dhoni has been shaking hands softly and carefully so as to not hurt his fingers. His lower back has begun to give him trouble, which he has kept to himself and to the team. He has continued, though. He has maintained he doesn’t want a long career in the sport. He wants to make the most of it while his body supports the strain, play as many games as possible before it gives up.By all means it is a super-human effort. But was it necessary, was he so indispensable in Tests?**On the last tour of Australia, Dhoni was asked pointblank why he was still captaining, what excited him about the job. He had lost seven away Tests in a row. His captaincy was being panned. There were issues in the dressing room. Dhoni didn’t get flustered. He didn’t shoot back. He waited and then said, “It’s an interesting responsibility given to me. The challenge excites me. The challenge to be with the senior guys, the challenge to groom the youngsters, to keep the dressing-room atmosphere good. Leading a side is all about when the team is not doing well.”Dhoni had been inconspicuous as the team rode the success of the seniors and of Zaheer to rise to No. 1 in Test cricket. The foreign tours broke the team’s back. Dhoni had now decided to become more in charge. He wanted to build his own team. To win home Tests and then given a better account of himself and of his side in the next cycle of away tours.Dhoni asked for turning wickets at home. The ordinariness of his spinners cost him the series against England, but they whitewashed Australia. On the away leg he came a desperate man. He pushed himself up to play another bowler, who always turned out to be ordinary. His bowlers weren’t giving him much control, but Dhoni had become too funky. Leg slips, silly mid-offs, fly slips, all kinds of positions would be tried too early in an innings. The bouncer became his new friend. It won him a Test at Lord’s, but cost him two in Australia, including his last. It seemed a bit of an admission that he doesn’t have the bowlers who can win him away Tests in conventional manner.Apart from that he has left a mostly settled team behind him. The last four debutants were signs of desperation, but 10 of the 12 previous ones were and will continue for some time to be part of India’s Test squads. There is continuity to the side. Dhoni deserves credit for facilitating this transition. The near-misses over the last year will rankle him. Maybe they took a heavy toll on his mind. Maybe his body just couldn’t take it anymore. Maybe he wanted to end it after this series, but his body gave him signals he could risk his World Cup prospects if he kept straining his lower back or bad hands for another Test. We don’t know. We have never known with Dhoni.**It was about time, too, many think. India needed newer ideas on the field. They had come as far as Dhoni could bring them. It was now time for someone else to see what he can do with these bowling resources. Resolve the egg-and-chicken situation. Every time India have let a Test slip, every time India have lost an away series, every time there have been tactical errors, we have said to Dhoni what rebellious adolescents say to their parents: you are old school, we can look after ourselves better, we are better off without you. And he has smiled back like all-knowing parents, infuriating us further. He is no longer there now. We’ll soon find out how much better off we are without him, but that smile will be missed.

'He is human' – Enzo Maresca addresses Cole Palmer's slump in form after Chelsea star's goal drought continues

Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca backed star player Cole Palmer amid his sudden slump in form.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Maresca opened up on Palmer's poor form
  • Has not scored in last seven league games
  • Chelsea next face Copenhagen on March 6
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Cole Palmer, who started the 2024-25 campaign on a high, saw a sudden dip in form at a time when the Blues saw their ambitions for a top-four Premier League finish falter. The England star has now gone seven straight matches without a goal, which has raised a few eyebrows at Stamford Bridge.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Maresca, however, is not worried about his star player's performance as he jumped to the attacker's defence. The Italian coach also informed that Palmer is not under any pressure and believes he will regain his form soon. Before the goal drought started, the 22-year-old had recorded 14 league goals and six assists.

  • WHAT ENZO MARESCA SAID

    Speaking to , the Blues manager said: "We are all former players. All of us went through some bad moments. You cannot expect Palmer to be like he was last season or how he was in the first part of the season. It's normal. He is human. I was telling him it was normal. He is happy. He is OK. He has shared the changing room with some top players and he knows that every top player goes through bad moments. It's about how you react. Keep working, keep laughing, keep calm, be happy and enjoy the football. It's the only thing you have to do."

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

    The West London side will be back in action next Thursday as they take on Copenhagen in the first leg of their Europa Conference League round of 16 fixture.

Mark Wood in doubt for first Test after World Cup hip injury

Fast bowler currently in UK, and unlikely to be risked with series beginning on December 1

Vithushan Ehantharajah25-Nov-2022England fast bowler Mark Wood is a doubt for the first Test against Pakistan.Wood has been in the UK recovering from a hip injury sustained during England’s successful T20 World Cup campaign and will join up with the Test squad in Rawalpindi this weekend. Though the injury ruled the 32-year-old out of the semi-final against India, he was considered fit to play in the final against Pakistan before it was decided not to take a risk with selection for such a high-profile match.His rehabilitation is said to be tracking well. However, with just three training days ahead of the start of the series on December 1, it seems unlikely he will be able to accrue the necessary number of overs at a high enough intensity to prepare himself for the rigours of a Test match.Wood returned to international duty in Pakistan during the T20Is after missing the 2022 summer and showed how crucial his pace was as a point of difference, with six wickets at 7.33 in his two appearances in the seven-match series. He carried that form into the World Cup, with nine wickets at 12.00 in four matches, bowling the fastest spells and even walking away with the fastest delivery of the tournament – a full delivery at 154.74kph to New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips.Wood’s absence from the Abu Dhabi leg of this winter, where the squad has been warming up alongside England Lions ahead of their first Test series in Pakistan for 17 years, is unrelated to his injury. Both he and Yorkshire batter Harry Brook were given two weeks at home after the World Cup to rest as they were the only two players in all three first-team squads (Pakistan T20Is, World Cup, Pakistan Tests) before the end of the year.Speaking on Friday after the final day of England’s warm-up match, which was swapped for a two-hour training session, England captain Ben Stokes was optimistic on Wood’s fitness and said there will be no cover drafted into the squad.”No, we’re sticking with it,” said Stokes. “We’re not going to call up another seamer to this group.”We took the decision to let Brooky and Woody spend that time at home, obviously being at Pakistan and the World Cup,” Stokes said. “We felt a week at home for them would be more beneficial, just to get their batteries recharged, and obviously with Woody’s injury, getting home and being around his wife and child would be better than being out here and getting all his rehab, which he could do at home.Ben Stokes looks on during England’s practice session in Abu Dhabi•ECB Images

“We’ve let them go home. I haven’t had much contact with them, just to let them chill out and relax. From all reports, Woody’s coming on nicely and we’ll see how he is when he gets out here.”One addition to the original party of 15 has been Rehan Ahmed. The leg-spinning allrounder was part of the Lions, and officially called up to the main squad on Wednesday. Director of cricket Rob Key revealed on Thursday that this had been the intention all along.It was a huge show of faith in an 18-year-old with just three first-class matches to his name, but those at the ECB, particularly performance director Mo Bobat, are convinced he is ready for this elevation.Stokes evidently feels the same. When asked if he would have any qualms selecting Ahmed in an XI this winter, he was unequivocal in response: “No, absolutely not. That was one of the things where we said ‘yes, we are bringing him into the squad to give him that experience and get him involved’. If anything came down to it and we felt like we wanted to select him, then we definitely would.”He’s obviously not the finished article yet, but we feel with someone like that – the way that he bowls, the way that he bats – getting him into this environment will do him the world of good. Being around all the senior players and getting to work with the best coaches in the world, in my opinion, is only going to do him the world of good.Related

  • Ollie Pope to captain England in warm-up as Ben Stokes sits out

  • Rehan Ahmed could become youngest man to play a Test for England after call-up for Pakistan tour

  • Jofra Archer makes encouraging return to England colours after long injury lay-off

  • Rob Key: Rehan Ahmed's Test fast-tracking was the plan all along

“I don’t think this should be looked at as a huge amount of pressure put on his shoulders. I think it should be looked as a great opportunity for a young lad to come in, to be in this environment, and be able to work on his skills. And then hopefully, who knows where the next two or three years will take him. We just wanted to get him in and make him feel comfortable around the ground.Stokes himself has been stepping up his work since the World Cup. He took no part in the first two days of the match between the Test squad and England Lions, instead opting to net and bowl in the middle during the intervals.”I looked at this fixture here in particular, and honestly thought I’d get more out of these three days training,” Stokes said. “Getting my bowling workloads back up again after having a break after the World Cup in particular. I like working on my skills in the nets rather than being out there in the middle. I’ve really benefited from these three days, definitely, and just because I’ve missed this game, I don’t feel like I’ve missed a trick or feel underprepared. We’ve still got three days out in Pakistan to prepare for the first Test.Liam Livingstone has been dealing with a sore ankle this week. But after getting through eight overs of bowling on the field on Thursday, as well as a few more out in the middle during the breaks, Stokes was happy to report a clean bill of health.”There’s no injury within the group which is great – the first time in a while, so that’s good. We’ve had a few lads on the Test tour be out here with the Lions a couple of weeks before we met up. It’s all about peaking at the right time and the message at the start of the camp was to build up towards two days before that Test, and still have something left in the tank to get going, because you don’t want to burn yourself out now and almost be ready a week too early.”

England face dilemma in fine tuning attack

With Chris Jordan blowing more cold than hot, England could turn to Steven Finn or Harry Gurney at Trent Bridge but both present their own issues

David Hopps29-Aug-20142:41

Hope Cook and I feed off each other – Hales

The ability to play tunes on your teeth, which occasionally found its way onto the bottom of the bill in the old Music Halls, is now most commonly seen from bored teenagers on YouTube. England’s bowling coach, David Saker, has so far only been seen scratching his, but he might well be playing a tune or two by the end of the Royal London one-day series if England’s pace bowlers give him any more cause for angst.If Saker does rap out a tune on his molars then Elvis Presley’s might be a good place to start. “If you are looking for trouble, you came to the right place” is a suitable warning as England consider the attributes of the three pace bowlers thought to be contesting the final place in the third Royal London ODI against India at Trent Bridge.Steven Finn is an option for England at Trent Bridge•PA PhotosSaker’s teeth scratching on the England balcony was caught by the TV cameras during India’s trouncing of England at Cardiff as Chris Jordan purveyed an over including five leg-side wides. He bowled 12 in all, treating his loss of line firstly with smiles and then with baffled shakes of the head.That Jordan blows hot and cold is something England might have to get used to. The question is how hot and how cold. His technical oddity in which he often places an additional finger behind the ball has always been with him and has been blamed for occasional forays down the leg side. One or two can be forgiven as long as his hot spells continue, but 12 wides is more than England would want their entire attack to bowl in a series.The defence for Jordan is that to some extent MS Dhoni was old-manning him by moving across to the off side as he prepared to release, but if that sometimes made his line look more exaggerated, it did not make the calls of wide any less justifiable. Jordan lost his line at a critical time and was wayward enough, in normal circumstances, for his place to be jeopardised as a result.The issue for England is that the potential replacements, Harry Gurney and Steven Finn, have had issues of their own. Finn’s have been well chronicled – the collapse of his action in Australia last winter which meant that he did not play a single Test and left the tour early for remedial work on his action back at Middlesex.Finn’s progress throughout the county summer has been solid, if unspectacular. By mid-July, he was able to discuss it for the first time, telling ESPNcricinfo that he began to over-analyse every aspect of his action and that Saker, who is generally regarded as a tactical rather than a technical coach, was unable to find a solution.At some point in this series, England surely must play Finn. There has been so much emphasis upon stable planning, particularly when the subject turns to the one-day captaincy of Alastair Cook, that it has been overlooked that the build-up to the World Cup offers England not just the chance to plan, but the chance to discover.If there is a limited appetite for discovery when it comes to England’s batsmen, such a policy is essential for Finn. England’s next one-day series is against Sri Lanka in November and December and that is hardly the easiest place for an out-and-out fast bowler to make an impression. To take Finn to Australia – the scene of his technical torment – in January for the tri-series against Australia and India still not road-tested would be a failure of planning and, if his problems recurred, would throw England’s plans into disarray a few weeks before the World Cup. Only by thrusting Finn into the pressure of international cricket can England measure the extent of his recovery.That leaves Harry Gurney, who would add variety to England’s attack by virtue of being a left-armer and who would also be a natural call-up on his home ground at Trent Bridge. Gurney played in England’s Spring ODIs, making his debut against Scotland in Aberdeen, playing five ODIs against Sri Lanka and returning nine wickets at 22.55. He hit his yorkers more reliably, but there is a lot that could go wrong in such an idiosyncratic action.But Gurney’s form has not been short of concerns. He was unimpressive during Nottinghamshire’s Royal London domestic campaign and in his last outing disappeared at eight an over against Warwickshire, a match Nottinghamshire won thanks to one of four recent one-day hundreds for Alex Hales. His net sessions have not made an irresistible case for his recall.It is a tough choice for England. That Jordan has displayed star quality is incontestable. Finn must be given a chance to prove himself. Gurney has logical hopes of a recall in front of his home crowd. Outside the squad, Northants’ allrounder David Willey has not entirely given up hope of making a late push. Which one to recommend? Even now. Saker’s teeth must be beginning to grind.

Jose Mourinho makes a friend: Fenerbahce boss cozies up to steward during feisty Europa League clash against Anderlecht that was suspended for 15 minutes after fight broke out in stand

Jose Mourinho huddled up to a steward during the Europa League tie between Anderlecht and Fenerbahce that was marred by fighting in the stands.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Fenerbahce vs Anderlecht paused due to fighting
  • Mourinho wrapped his arm around a steward
  • Turkish side into last 16
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The game in Belgium was paused for 15 minutes due to scrapping between fans but it was all love for Mourinho, who was later seen with his arm around a steward and seemed relaxed before half-time.

  • Advertisement

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Mourinho's good mood might have had something to do with the way the match was panning out, with his side cruising into the last 16 of the Europa League. Fenerbahce earned a 3-0 aggregate lead in the first leg last week and a 2-2 draw at Anderlecht was enough to seal comfortable qualification.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The crowd trouble was cleared up after a 15-minute delay, when the players were sent inside into the dressing rooms having initially attempted to reason with the fighting fans themselves. Fenerbahce's Bright Osayi-Samuel was seen demanding that security staff break up the incident but was dragged away by team-mates.

  • WHAT NEXT FOR FENERBAHCE?

    Fenerbahce led 1-0 when the game was stopped, the eventual 2-2 draw suiting them nicely. They now progress to the last 16, where they will take on Rangers or Olympiakos.

Signed for £27m: Everton flop is now worth millions less after leaving

Everton have fallen victim to a number of expensive misfires in the transfer market over recent years, especially under the topsy-turvy running of the club from higher up in the form of Farhad Moshiri.

Significant fees have been chucked around with little to no care attached, with Moise Kean joining the Toffees for an eye-watering £29m back in 2019, only for the Italian striker to go on to bag a paltry four goals playing in England.

The incomings of Jarrad Branthwaite and Dwight McNeil in recent times – to name a few – have at least shown that the Toffees can operate astutely, but there are far more blots than positives on Moshiri’s CV, with this flop one that Everton fans will curse remembering.

Moshiri's costly Everton signing

Cenk Tosun goes down as another costly mistake on the end of Moshiri and Co, costing £27m to get in through the door back in 2018.

The Turkish striker would also join with a reputation for being a deadly finisher, one that he was expected to uphold in Merseyside as a new hero for Everton fans to cheer, having bagged a mightily impressive 20 goals from 33 league appearances during his final full season at Beskitas.

Despite initially impressing the Goodison Park masses with five strikes from 14 league games during the 2017/18 campaign, after joining mid-way through the campaign as a statement January acquisition, Tosun’s goals would eventually dry up.

In total, the former Blues number 14 would only fire home 11 goals from 61 appearances, which resulted in football journalist Luke Gardener once describing Tosun as being “toothless” when Crystal Palace picked him up on loan in 2020.

The Turkish attacker has since relocated to familiar shores back in the Beskitas ranks, with a move to Super Lig giants Fenerbahce even coming his way this summer off the back of finding his shooting boots once more, but that hasn’t stopped his transfer value from falling off a cliff compared to his previously flashy £27m price-tag.

Tosun's transfer value in 2024

It’s fair to say Everton paid well over the odds for Tosun at the time, with his value now all the way down at a bleak £1.4m according to Transfermarkt.

Of course, the hit-and-miss forward is considerably older now at 33 years of age compared to his Everton stint, but he will feel equally shamed by how far his value has fallen since being regarded as a bumper buy for the Toffees.

Tosun’s transfer value over the years

Date

Value

October 2024

£1.4m

June 2023

£2.6m

June 2022

£1.6m

March 2021

£5m

April 2020

£10m

December 2019

£12.5m

January 2018

£27m

Sourced by Transfermarkt

This fall in value hasn’t just occurred overnight, however, with Tosun’s price falling throughout his poor time playing in England, with his price plummeting from that much-talked-about £27m price-tag all the way down to £12.5m barely two years into his spell.

Now, the veteran marksman will be worried about the amount next to his name crashing even more playing in his native country, with Tosun experiencing a goalless start with Fenerbahce to date from five clashes.

Tosun did have some wretched luck with injuries during his lacklustre time in England, with the ex-Everton number 14 missing for 16 games during the 2021/22 season owing to a tendon rupture, but Frank Lampard wouldn’t extend any sympathy towards the Toffees dud when he let him walk away in 2022.

Everton will just hope they don’t fall victim to any more shockers like this when the transfer window reopens in January, as Sean Dyche aims to keep his troops afloat in the Premier League for another season.

Everton dud who left for £0 has been way better than Calvert-Lewin in 24/25

One Everton flop is amazingly outperforming Dominic Calvert-Lewin this season.

By
Kelan Sarson

Oct 14, 2024

Harmanpreet Kaur out of WBBL with back issue

She was initially supposed to miss only the first two games because of her international commitments

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Oct-2022Melbourne Renegades allrounder Harmanpreet Kaur has been ruled out of the ongoing season of the WBBL with a back issue.”Harmanpreet was fantastic for us last season and we were looking forward to having her as part of our squad again this year, but unfortunately she has been ruled out through injury,” James Rosengarten, Renegades’ general manager, said.Harmanpreet, the India captain, was initially supposed to miss only the first two games because of her international commitments, with India playing in – and winning – the women’s Asia Cup final. Simon Helmot, the Renegades coach, was confident of her joining the side for the rest of the campaign and had said that her workload would be carefully monitored after she reached Australia.England batter Eve Jones was signed as an overseas replacement last week.”Eve will stay on with our squad for at least the next couple of matches, as we work through the best strategy for our squad for the remainder of the tournament,” Rosengarten said.Harmanpreet was named Player of the Tournament last season after scoring 406 runs at a strike rate of 130.96, in addition to taking 15 wickets in 13 games. Renegades lost the Challenger against Adelaide Strikers and missed out on a chance to make the final.In the ongoing season, they have one win from two games so far.Harmanpreet’s India team-mate Smriti Mandhana had earlier withdrawn from this season of the WBBL to manage her workload.

Gloucestershire condemned to the drop as rain wrecks faint victory chance

Somerset inch clear of Warwickshire in bid to avoid relegation

ECB Reporters Network08-Sep-2022Gloucestershire 343 and 278 for 7 dec (Charlesworth 64, O. Price 53, Hammond 53) drew Somerset 248 (Imam-ul-Haq 90, Rew 44*, T. Price 5-75) and 11 for 0Gloucestershire’s bid for a first LV= Insurance County Championship win of the season was thwarted by the weather on the final day of the match with Somerset at Taunton.The visitors began the day by extending their second innings total from an overnight 246 for five to 278 for seven before declaring with a lead of 373.But soon the rain that had been forecast for much of the first three days set in and the match was condemned to draw at 3.10pm, with Somerset 11 without loss in their second innings.While Gloucestershire dominated the match from the opening morning, they took only 12 points, having two deducted for a slow over-rate, while their neighbours also picked up 12.That lifted Somerset seven points clear of second-from-bottom Warwickshire, while their arch-rivals are doomed to relegation, 30 points adrift at the bottom of the table with only two games to play.With the weather forecast suggesting showers, Gloucestershire’s decision to bat on at the start of the day was surprising.Skipper Graeme van Buuren skied a catch to fine leg off the first ball of the day, sent down by Josh Davey, and Jack Taylor followed suit in the second over, lofting Jack Brooks to mid-off.David Payne hit a couple of big sixes before the declaration came after 15 minutes, with rain starting to fall.The initial shower delayed the start of Somerset’s innings by 15 minutes. When it got underway the hearts of home supporters in a small crowd were soon in their mouths.Iman-ul-Haq, so solid in the first innings, aimed an expansive back-foot shot off only the third ball, bowled by Payne, and survived a massive appeal for a catch by wicketkeeper James Bracey.More frustration for Gloucestershire followed when, with only 3.5 overs bowled, the rain returned, with Somerset openers Tom Lammonby and Imam on six and five respectively..Umpires Tom Lungley and Nigel Llong decided that an early lunch would be taken at 12.20pm with a view to restarting the game at 1pm.But the rain became heavier and the next announcement was of a 2.15pm pitch inspection, which also proved optimistic.Tea was taken at 2.40pm, by which time the main item of interest appeared to be whether Gloucestershire would have time to correct a minus two over-rate.Half an hour later it was clear that wouldn’t happen and Somerset had by far the greater cause for satisfaction at the outcome.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus