'Ruthless' South Africa take on a Bangladesh eager to prove their worth

Series on the line in Gqeberha with the visitors desperate to set the record straight after their collapse in the first Test

Firdose Moonda07-Apr-2022

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It’s Gqeberha, with a hard click at the start and a guttural “gha” at the end, that’s the venue for the last dance of the South African summer. Where, you ask? The place with the oldest cricket ground in the country but the newest name.Formerly known as Port Elizabeth, the city was renamed last year, but not much else has changed. It’s still about life in the slow lane in this part of the country, with the whistling of a strong wind for company. It’s been blowing fiercely in the lead up to the match, almost enough to match the fury within the Bangladesh camp.The visitors are angry with everyone, from the umpires for the eight decisions that needed to be overturned in Durban to the hosts for what they called an unacceptable level of sledging throughout the tour. They’ve lodged an official complaint about both, but have since denied raising any issue about the verbals, which South Africa insist did not cross the line.Related

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  • Donald says Bangladesh can exploit Gqeberha conditions

Bangladesh lost 14 wickets to spin on a surface that should have reminded them of home and were bowled out for their second-lowest total in Test cricket. This despite being so competitive for four full days of the match. After coups like their win in New Zealand and their ODI series victory here, Bangladesh know they are better than 53 all out and will want to use the second Test to show that.They could ask for no better place to play it than the home of their head coach, Russell Domingo, who successfully coached the Warriors franchise, based at St George’s Park, and never lost a Test here in his time with South Africa. It hasn’t hosted a Test match since January 2020, but it will return with all the usual bells and whistles. The brass band is back after their Covid-19 hiatus and a capacity of 7,500 is allowed. Although attendance is not usually that high, for South Africans who have been deprived of live sport for the last two years, it’s the perfect opportunity to see the national team up close before they head on away assignments over the winter.Bangladesh weren’t very pleased with the umpiring that was on show in Durban•AFP/Getty Images

South Africa can probably already call this Test season a success after a home series win against India and a drawn series in New Zealand but will not want to slip up after seizing the advantage in Durban. Speaking of, they’ve already had one accident this week. Dean Elgar fell when getting out of the shower a few days ago and hit his head badly enough to require stitches. The cut is above his right eye, roughly where his helmet might sit, but he batted on the eve of the match and “seems to be okay”, to lead the side.Even with an under-strength squad – five first-choice South Africa players are at the IPL – Elgar has managed to establish his style of play. “Ruthless,” was how he described it in Durban and he will want nothing less than to seal a series sweep.

Form guide

South Africa WWLWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Bangladesh LLWLL

In the spotlight

Simon Harmer surged back onto the international scene with a four-for in his first Test innings and showed the progress he has made as an attacking bowler since last playing Tests in 2015. He was humble in his success and said the return did not necessarily prove his worth but after finishing the match with seven wickets may have adjusted that opinion. Still, Harmer remains a support act to Keshav Maharaj, especially as South Africa seldom play two spinners in a Test XI and a big performance on his former home ground could go a long way to ensuring he is part of the squad that tours England this winter, and maybe even stakes a claim for the lone spinner spot, on occasion.Since he last played in South Africa in 2017 where he impressed with a score of 70 in Bloemfontein, Litton Das has become one of Bangladesh’s most dependable batters. He was the leading run-scorer for Bangladesh in 2021, with 594 from seven Tests at an average of 49.50 and is the top batter in 2022 so far, with 239 runs from three innings. His 41 at Kingsmead was a good mix of conservative batting and counter-attack and he shared in their most profitable partnership of the match, 82, with Mahmudul Hasan Joy, but will want to push on to bigger things in Gqerberha.Litton Das has been one of Bangladesh’s most dependable players recently•Getty Images

Team news

South Africa are unlikely to make any changes to the batting line-up but may look at one in the bowling department. Despite being the most experienced member of the pace pack, Duanne Olivier has failed to set the stage alight and could be benched for Lutho Sipamla, who is from this city and played his early years of domestic cricket here.South Africa (probable): 1 Dean Elgar (capt), 2 Sarel Erwee, 3 Keegan Petersen, 4 Ryan Rickleton, 5 Temba Bavuma, 6 Kyle Verreynne (wk), 7 Wiaan Mulder 8 Keshav Maharaj, 9 Simon Harmer, 10 Lizaad Williams 11 Lutho SipamlaTamim Iqbal has recovered from the stomach ailment that kept him out of the first Test and is expected to replace Shadman Islam at the top of the other. With both Taskin Ahmed and Shoriful Islam out of the series with injury, either Abu Jayed or Shohidul Islam will play.Bangladesh (probable): 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Mahmudul Hasan Joy, 3 Najmul Hossain Shanto, 4 Mominul Haque (capt), 5 Mushfiqur Rahim, 6 Yasir Ali, 7 Litton Das (wk), 8 Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 9 Abu Jayed/Shohidul Islam, 10 Khaled Hossain, 11 Ebadot Hossain

Pitch and conditions

Never mind the surface – which had a healthy grass covering two days before the Test match but will get a trim before the first ball – it’s the air that’s a major factor in Gqeberha. Westerly Winds of around 50kph have been blowing in the lead-up to the match. That’s the drying wind, which usually means it will be good for batting, but the direction will change from the first day of the match, bringing moisture but, with autumn temperatures hovering in the low 20 C, there’s unlikely to be the humidity for swing. Rain is forecast for the first three days, with the third day the most likely to be severely affected. There’s an 80% chance of showers on Sunday but by early next week, conditions are expected to clear so this Test could go the distance.

Stats and trivia

  • Mushfiqur Rahim needs 127 runs to reach 5,000 Test runs, while Tamim Iqbal needs 212.
  • South Africa have lost their last two matches at St George’s Park, to England and Sri Lanka.

    Quotes

    “The wind plays a massive factor here at St George’s. If the wind is coming over the scoreboard, they call it the swing wind. And it might assist the bowlers. If the wind comes through the gap between the change room and the stand, it’s a swirling wind, which plays a massive part with the ball when it goes up in the air and with catching. The wind is also a factor with batters because it tends to blow you a bit over your front foot and gets you to go across the ball a little bit.”

  • Paul Collingwood: 'No need to panic' as injury and illness undermine Test preparations

    Fast-bowling depth faces test but coach backs squad to cover off possible absentees

    Cameron Ponsonby03-Mar-2022Paul Collingwood, the interim head coach, has urged England not to panic after Ollie Robinson suffered a back spasm and an unwell Mark Wood was unable to take the field after undergoing precautionary blood tests during the team’s solitary warm-up fixture in Coolidge.Speaking at the close of the third day’s play, in which England’s quicks – stand-ins Saqib Mahmood and Matt Fisher included – claimed a solitary wicket between them, Collingwood insisted that England had the bowling depth to account for the possible absences of Robinson and Wood, with the first Test against West Indies looming large on Tuesday.”[Robinson]’s got a back spasm, it’s not ideal. We’ll know more about that in the next couple of days,” Collingwood said, after England’s opening bowler had left the field inside the first half-hour of the day, having just claimed the first wicket of the morning.”When someone walks off like that it doesn’t look good but these kind of spasms can heal as quickly as they come. We’ll just have to assess.I certainly don’t think Ollie will be bowling tomorrow, that would be too much of a risk.”This is the second consecutive match for England in which Robinson has succumbed to a back spasm, after experiencing the same problem during the final Test of the Ashes in Hobart. At the time, Robinson’s fitness was called into question, most notably by England’s bowling coach Jon Lewis in an end-of-day interview. However Collingwood said it was unfair to link Robinson’s current injury to those comments.”I think that’s unfair. As a bowler you do pick up injuries, it’s something we’re always on top of with Ollie and he knows that. But he’s working hard, as hard as anyone else, and it’s unfortunate something like that happens.”He’s very young in Test cricket. Test cricket is a hell of a lot different to playing a four-day county match. Sometimes we expect these guys to come from county cricket and be the finished article. They’re certainly not, not skill-wise and not physically.”Related

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    In further troubling news for England, Wood was unable to take the field for the second day running, after leaving the ground early with a non-Covid related illness. The lack of match practice is a concern for a bowler with a history of injury problems, but Collingwood is still hopeful that he will be fit to play on Friday’s final day of the warm-up, and thereafter the first Test”Mark has gone for precautionary blood tests but I’m hoping to get two or three spells out of him tomorrow,” Collingwood said. “It’s pretty much all he can get in terms of match practice, but his loads have been good in training. I can’t add any more days to the schedule so hopefully it will be enough.”If England had hoped to move the narrative on from the omissions of James Anderson and Stuart Broad, then the events of this warm-up game have been a setback. However, Collingwood is adamant that England’s 16-man squad has ample cover in Mahmood and Fisher.”We’re not going to panic,” he said. “It was a great opportunity for Saqi to come in and bowl some overs. Even Fish to bowl some overs. We have got ready replacements in terms of a squad of 16.”Collingwood also insisted that England’s so-called “red-ball reset” was going well, with a real “feel-good factor” among the squad since arriving in the West Indies.”People might think that’s ridiculous after what’s happened in the Ashes but it’s a new start, new beginning for a lot of them and it’s got a fresh feel to it,” he said.”I think it feels different to everyone. Whether you’re a player or the management. And that’s not saying anything was wrong during the Ashes but the fact is that we’ve had two years of bubble life which has tested everyone.”The fixture list, the schedule, I think it’s pushed everybody to the limits. So you know coming to a place like the Caribbean it’s a great place to play cricket and it has a fresh feel to it and a fresh start.”We want exactly the same type of thing that happened in the white-ball in 2015 and sometimes it’s just an attitude thing overnight that can make the difference.”

    ESPNcricinfo Sheffield Shield team of the season

    New South Wales were named champions when the season was brought to an abrupt end. Who stood out from the summer?

    Alex Malcolm17-Mar-2020Leading run-scorers
    Leading wicket-takersJoe Burns, Queensland (515 runs at 51.50)Burns only played six of the nine matches due to Test duty but was remarkably consistent given he played five of the six on the typically bowler-friendly Gabba surface. Only once did he fail to reach double-figures and he made three half-centuries and 135 in the fourth innings against Victoria to give Queensland a chance at a remarkable victory.Daniel Hughes, New South Wales (665 runs at 44.33)The left-hander had another consistent season for the eventual champions. He made a critical 66 not out to guide the Blues home in a nervy fourth-innings chase against Queensland at the start of the season and also made two half-centuries in a win over Western Australia plus twin hundreds against South Australia. He had a very similar year to South Australia opener Jake Weatherald but was a fraction more consistent. Weatherald mixed two big hundreds with six single-figure scores compared to Hughes’ four.Nic Maddinson, Victoria (780 runs at 86.66)Maddinson put together another phenomenal season for Victoria passing 50 in seven of his 10 innings including two centuries. He made a career-best 224 in the opening round of the season and never looked back. Even after a dismal BBL season, he was able to leave that behind and help drag Victoria into finals contention after they were winless at Christmas. He made scores of 95, 105*, 66 and 66 in wins over New South Wales and South Australia and was rewarded with Australia A selection for the second time this summer. He also made runs in three different positions for Victoria, opening, at No.3 and No.5.Cameron Green drills one down the ground•Getty ImagesShaun Marsh, Western Australia (724 runs at 48.26)Marsh started the Shield season in vintage touch with a double century against Victoria and an unbeaten hundred against South Australia. His form fell away a touch after the BBL where he was coming off a hamstring injury. He registered three ducks in a row including a pair against Tasmania, but his overall season at No. 3 for Western Australia was impressive as he passed 50 five times, the majority of which were scored as acting captain.Moises Henriques, New South Wales (512 runs at 51.20)Henriques was selected to captain Australia A and remains in calculations for Australia’s Test tour of Bangladesh (if it goes ahead) after an excellent Shield campaign where he helped the Blues to the title. He made two centuries and a 91. His 116 against Queensland earned him player of the match honours while he had two mammoth partnerships with Steve Smith in wins over Tasmania and Western Australia. He only bowled 20 overs for the season but he did pick up two wickets. Henriques squeezed out Tom Cooper who was the competition’s second-leading scorer. Cooper is unfortunate to miss out but he scored 271 not out in a farcical draw with Victoria where just 12 wickets fell in two innings over four days but averaged 35.28 in his other 14 innings for the season.Cameron Green, Western Australia (699 runs at 63.54)The 20-year-old allrounder was unable to bowl for most of the season but finished as Western Australia’s most reliable specialist batsman. His three centuries all came with WA under immense pressure and his consistency across the season in an inconsistent team was remarkable. His best came against Queensland at the Gabba where he made 87 not out and 121 not out to single-handedly save his side from defeat. Green and Doug Walters are the only two players in Sheffield Shield history to have scored three centuries and have two five-wicket hauls before turning 21.Tim Paine celebrates his second first-class century•Getty ImagesTim Paine, Tasmania (313 runs at 39.12 and 29 dismissals; capt & wk)The wicketkeeper’s role was the toughest to fill. Alex Carey and Seb Gotch could both make cases having made two centuries each but they only played six games between them. Gotch made two centuries in two games, including a player of the match performance against Queensland, but unfortunately missed the other seven through injury. Jimmy Peirson completed 40 dismissals at the bowler-friendly Gabba but made just one fifty and averaged 29.75. Paine and Peter Nevill had the dual role of keeping and captaining and Nevill led New South Wales to the title, but Paine did have a good year making his second career Shield century against Western Australia in Perth. He also made a half-century on a green seamer at the Gabba and 48 not out in a fourth innings chase to beat WA by five wickets in Hobart. Nevill had a similar output with the bat (411 runs at 37.36) making three half-centuries but benefitted from better batting conditions in Sydney and better platforms from his top order. Paine completed 29 dismissals in 12 innings for the season.Michael Neser, Queensland (33 wickets at 17.30)Neser had another phenomenal season despite playing only six games due to Australia A duty. He went wicketless just twice in 12 innings and took a five-wicket haul and three four-wicket hauls. He is a beneficiary of the seamer-friendly conditions at the Gabba but of the 10 bowlers who took 25 wickets or more this season, he had the best average (17.30) and strike-rate (43.3) by some margin.Peter Siddle, Victoria (32 wickets at 19.87)Siddle is an ageless wonder. After retiring from international cricket he was supposed to step back into a support role for Victoria’s developing quicks but instead almost carried his state to a Shield final after they were last at Christmas. Siddle was ultra-consistent and had the best economy rate (2.28) of the top 20 wicket-takers in the competition. His best performance came in the key victory over New South Wales after the BBL when he took 5 for 49 in the fourth innings as the Blues tried to save the game.Wes Agar celebrates•Getty ImagesCameron Gannon, Queensland (38 wickets at 20.92)Gannon enjoyed his best season in the Sheffield Shield and finished as the leading wicket-taker with 38. Gannon took a five-wicket haul and four four-wicket hauls and only went wicket-less twice for the season. He took eight wickets for the match against Western Australia. He also made a career-best 45 as a night-watchman against Victoria at the MCG that was critical in Queensland’s thrilling win.Wes Agar, South Australia (33 wickets at 24.21)Agar was named Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year during an excellent Shield season for South Australia. His best performance came against Tasmania in South Australia’s first Shield victory in over two seasons when he took eight wickets including a career-best 5 for 53 and was named player of the match. He took five crucial wickets across two innings in the Redbacks’ second victory of the season again Western Australia. He also took a four-wicket haul against Queensland on debut, ripping through a Test-quality top order.

    Humphreys spins Ireland to a hat-trick of Test wins

    Ireland needed just 18.3 overs on day five – with threat of rain looming – to close out the game

    Ekanth10-Feb-2025Rain was the biggest threat Ireland faced when they came to the Queens Sports Club on day five. But in 18.3 overs, they wrapped up the one-off Test against Zimbabwe with a 63-run win. They needed to create seven chances for the last three wickets, and in the process completed their first hat-trick of Test wins in their ten-match history. It is the earliest point any team has earned a hat-trick of Test wins, bettering South Africa, who needed 14 matches.Matthew Humphreys converted his overnight four-for into a career-best 6 for 57, with Andy McBrine – his spin-bowling partner – closing out the game by knocking over Richard Ngarava with the new ball.Wessly Madhevere, Zimbabwe’s last ray of hope, battled through 195 balls for his 84. When his outside edge was beaten and stumps rattled by a quicker length ball from Humphreys, he could not drag himself out of the field, covering his face with his bat in despondence as the game was effectively done.The day started 30 minutes earlier than scheduled with 37 overs lost on day four. Humphreys, who had bowled 18 overs to stumps, was handed the ball. He needed three overs to create a chance – when he got Madhevere to nearly chip a drive to cover – and one more ball to trap Newman Nyamhuri plumb in front and complete his five-for.McBrine replaced Mark Adair right after and created two chances in his second over, both of which went down. Lorcan Tucker dropped one that went low off Richard Ngarava’s edge, while McBrine failed to hold onto a low skimmer the next ball. In the next over, Paul Stirling shuffled to the right at first slip when Madhevere’s reverse-sweep went aerial but couldn’t get within reach.Ireland took the new ball in the 81st over and McBrine found extra bounce with it right away. The sun broke out but Zimbabwe’s hopes flickered off in the 84th, when Humphreys got Madhevere, his sixth scalp.Blessing Muzarabani had put on 67 for the last wicket in the first innings with Trevor Gwandu, but to put on 74 with Richard Ngarava was too much of an ask. Ngarava hung around for 39 balls and took a couple of swings. He was beaten in the 86th over and knocked over in the next.McBrine flighted a full ball on middle stump, beat the slog sweep, and set the smiles free in Ireland’s camp. When asked about the hat-trick of wins at the presentation, Ireland captain Andy Balbirnie said, “Just waiting for the DVD to come out! We are desperate to play, we don’t know when our next Test match is.”As per the FTP, they are scheduled to play Afghanistan at home in July.

    A late show from Switzerland! Geraldine Reuteler and Alayah Pilgrim both score in final 15 minutes to give Alisha Lehmann and Co a 2-0 win over Iceland and keep qualification hopes alive

    A late flurry of goals from Switzerland ensured their European Championship dream stayed alive as they beat Iceland 2-0.

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    • Switzerland win 2-0 against Iceland
    • Hosts need draw against Finland to progress
    • Iceland crash out and Norway top the group
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    • TELL ME MORE

      Switzerland beat Iceland 2-0 in their second group game to keep their qualification hopes alive in Euro 2025.

      The players kicked off to a lively atmosphere in Bern as Sveindis Jonsdottir launched the game into action with one of her trademark long throws. Cleared only as far as Ingibjorg Sigurdardottir, the defender rattled the crossbar and the Swiss crowd’s nerves with a terrific volley from the edge of the area as Iceland threatened to upset the hosts.

      Switzerland responded with chances of their own and Svenja Folmli’s powered header found its way into the back of the net via a deflection. However, a check by VAR found that as the corner was floated in, the forward had blocked off and fouled Glodís Viggosdottir and the goal was disallowed. The Swiss crowd thought they had again taken the lead when Iman Beney hit a rocket from 40 yards, but despite appearing to have flown into the top corner, the effort had only found the side-netting.

      Iceland began the second-half as they started the first – by hitting the crossbar. This time, Agla Albertsdottir’s free-kick from range skimmed the top of the upright and bounced over. Undeterred by the Icelandic threat, Switzerland continued to push for the winner. Winning the ball back in midfield, captain Lia Walti robbed the ball, held off a challenge and found Sydney Schertenleib who slipped in Geraldine Reuteler to fire low into the bottom left-corner after 76 minutes. The Swiss crowd, just shy of 30,000, erupted and their celebrations would not be halted this time.

      With time ticking away and the crowd growing more and more confident of victory, Alayah Pilgrim gave them yet more reason to celebrate – dispatching from distance in injury time to ensure the host’s took qualification to the knockout stages into their own hands.

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    • DID YOU KNOW?

      Defeat for Iceland means they are out of the European Championships. The result also means that Iceland remain without a win in this tournament since 2013 and face a tough test against already qualified Norway to put an end to that rut.

    • Getty Images Sport

      THE MVP

      It is tough to look past the match winner Geraldine Reuteler, but it takes a special performance to stand-out from right backand Iman Beney was a constant threat for the hosts. Her first-half effort would have been the goal of the tournament had it not flown past the wrong side of the post. The 18-year-old has just signed for Manchester City and her new fans will no doubt be excited to see their new star shining on the biggest stage.

    • Getty Images Sport

      THE BIG LOSER

      Iceland remain goalless and pointless in these European Championships, crashing out with a game still to play in the group stage. While it remains grim reading for Icelandic fans, they have shown heart in their two defeats against Finland and Switzerland. They may feel they created more than enough chances on Sunday to take a point from Switzerland, but it just was not meant to be.

    Shahidi wants 'one good home venue' and more Tests for Afghanistan

    Afghanistan captain hopes the ACB “will try harder to give us opportunities against good teams in the future”

    Vishal Dikshit and Daya Sagar08-Sep-2024Apart from hoping to play Test cricket more frequently going forward, Hashmatullah Shahidi wants “one good home venue” in India instead of going from place to place, as they currently cannot play international cricket back home in Afghanistan.Afghanistan will host New Zealand for a one-off Test starting on Monday in Greater Noida, near Delhi. Their other home Tests since becoming a Full Member have been in Dehradun, Lucknow and Abu Dhabi. Sticking with one home venue will make them a stronger and more effective team in red-ball cricket, Shahidi said.”If you see, India is our home and when we host teams, the other nations have played more cricket than us here,” Shahidi said while addressing the media the day before the Test. “So hopefully we will get one good venue here in India and we stick with that. If we stick with one venue, it will be more effective for us.Related

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    “And one more thing, if you see our players, they have good record in first-class cricket because we play in our own grounds [in Afghanistan]. We know our own conditions very well. So hopefully that time comes in future that teams come to Afghanistan. Then our average will be even higher than what it is right now and hopefully our cricket board and BCCI give a good venue for us in India and we play a lot of cricket in one venue.”Afghanistan have played nine Tests in their six years at this level, and even though they are slotted to play 22 Tests in the current FTP – from 2023 to 2027 – only a handful are against the top sides. In the current FTP, Afghanistan have so far played against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Ireland, and after the New Zealand game, have Tests scheduled against Zimbabwe (six), Ireland (three), India (one), Australia (one) and West Indies (one).”In six years, nine games is not, I cannot say it’s a lot,” Shahidi said. “If we get a lot more chances with the good teams, we will improve, and our cricket board is doing that job. Like with New Zealand, if you see their history of Test cricket and where they are in the rankings right now, it’s a good opportunity for us and hopefully our cricket board will try harder to give us opportunities against good teams in the future. I think if we get more chances on regular basis, we will improve a lot because if we see as a team and as a country, we are brave people and we always accept challenges.It all looked rather wet and forlorn the day before the Test in Greater Noida•Daya Sagar/ESPNcricinfo

    “If we get three- or four-match series in one time, I think it will be very good for us as a side. If you look at our past, we get one Test match and we start preparing for that ten days before. So it’s not easy to come to red-ball cricket. Playing matches will make us even better on judging the ball and playing good cricket in red-ball format, compared to playing in the nets. So if we play three-four games back to back I think it will be better.”Ranked 12th in the ICC Test rankings, Afghanistan are a force in the white-ball formats, ranked ninth in ODIs and tenth in T20Is. They took down teams like England, Pakistan and Sri Lanka in the ODI World Cup last year and made it to the semi-finals of the T20 World Cup in June this year after beating New Zealand, Australia and Bangladesh.”About Test cricket, 100% we want to improve,” Shahidi said. “We want to show to the world our best format is Test cricket. And I mentioned before that we accept all kinds of challenges, and I am telling the boys also that these opportunities are very big opportunities for us, each and every one to show our skill, to show our talent and make… if I am a batsman, make a big score, big runs. So your name will be among the big names in the future. So if you want that, this is the place and time to show. I think we have that ability to do it and need to show it.”At this stage, it’s not clear how much red-ball action Afghanistan will get from this Test as a weather threat looms over the game, with rain and moderate thunderstorms forecast for the coming week.

    The next Bruno Fernandes?! Man Utd lining up another Sporting CP star to replace club captain amid £100m Al-Hilal links

    Manchester United have lined up another Sporting CP star as they plan for life without Al-Hilal target Bruno Fernandes.

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    • Man Utd identify next Bruno Fernandes
    • Sporting star lined up to replace captain
    • Fernandes could join Al-Hilal for £100m
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    • WHAT HAPPENED?

      report that manager Ruben Amorim is keen to reunite with Pedro Goncalves, who has starred for the Portuguese outfit since signing in 2020. A fee of £70 million ($94m) could be enough to tempt Sporting to sell.

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      THE BIGGER PICTURE

      Amorim turned Goncalves into a prolific goal-scoring midfielder during their time together at Sporting. He struck 18 times in the 2022-23 season and bagged another 14 in 2023-24, while his familiarity with Amorim's 3-4-3 system would be a huge tick for the Red Devils.

    • DID YOU KNOW?

      Al-Hilal have made a £100m ($135m) play for Fernandes, who has seven days to decide whether to accept the hugely lucrative move. While United are loath to lose their captain, that fee could allow them to reinvest in several areas of the squad.

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      WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER UNITED?

      United are also set to wrap up a move for Matheus Cunha from Wolves as they aim to bounce back from a terrible 2024-25 campaign. They look set to miss out on striker Liam Delap, who is joining Chelsea.

    Want to do something big in the 2019 World Cup – Amir

    Mohammad Amir speaks to ESPNcricinfo about life since returning from his ban, getting Kohli in the Champions Trophy final, and why he needs more rest

    Umar Farooq20-Nov-20173:59

    ‘Playing against India and Australia gives me extra energy’


    Do you remember how it felt to bowl that first ball on your comeback for Pakistan, against New Zealand?
    I was playing after five years so there was pressure. Over five years, I hadn’t really played that much cricket. Before that comeback I think I had played five first-class matches [Grade 2], which is very difficult, specially for a fast bowler. In New Zealand, their conditions, which you know, are very tough. So there was pressure but thank God, I had Shahid bhai’s [Afridi] support as captain. If you have the captain’s support, then you can relax.It was good, though I couldn’t perform that well [he had returns of 1 for 31]. The first T20 was average and I thought I did all right in the ODIs. But the T20s I couldn’t do so well. Overall I just thought I was very lucky that I was making a comeback. Performance is one thing but playing again for Pakistan was the biggest thing for me, the most memorable thing.How different is Amir the bowler of 2010 to Amir the bowler now? Do you feel you have come back to a different game, or have you come back a different bowler?First, if you look around, not just at me but every single person, day by day, as he gets older, he learns things and he learns them by himself. When you are 16 or 17, you think you are right about everything. But when you are over 20, you realise the mistakes you made at 16 or 18. You learn with age. Even now I am learning things and I know what things I can do better.I think people can see that. People point out that I look more mature, that I know how to speak now. You learn these things with time but only if you want to learn. I am trying to learn things I feel I should every day. Getting older, I think, has helped me. I was young back then, now, I’m moving towards getting old! But I think things are going well.Has the game overall, and yours in particular, changed a little?Not a little, but a lot. Now there are two new balls from both ends. This 4-5 fielders restriction [outside the 30-yard circle in ODIs] wasn’t there. And cricket wasn’t as fast-paced as it is now. At that time, 290-300 was a total you could think about defending. But now even 300-plus is not secure. It’s because there’s so much T20 cricket now – there weren’t as many leagues back then. All kinds of leagues have started up – Pakistan Super League, Caribbean Premier League, Bangladesh [Premier League]. I think cricket is tougher now than before.A lot of people remember that 2010 series and the amount of swing you got, and they feel you haven’t been able to get that back since your return. Is that a technical thing that can be adjusted?I don’t think so. When a bowler gets the conditions, he will get swing. If you look at the Champions Trophy in England this year, nobody swung the ball. But when playing the Test series in the West Indies, I got helpful conditions a few times, and it did swing. When I played the Asia Cup in Bangladesh, there was something in the conditions and I got swing. When you come across a really flat pitch, where there is no swing, how can you bring swing?If you see the Champions Trophy final, even though it was a flat track, I was pushing myself a little and I got something, I got some seam as well. I bowled cross-seam, so I got bounce too.As far as this swing thing goes, I’m not sure how the idea of big swing has gotten into people’s heads. Nobody really swings it big anymore. If you look at the pitches, they’ve gone too far in favour of the batsmen. If you look at what used to be swinging tracks in Australia and New Zealand, even in ODIs in England, you get 300-plus runs [now]. In the Champions Trophy final we made 340 [338]. If you use the Duke ball in England you may get swing. In ODIs, with Kookaburra at both ends, with flat pitches, you don’t get as much.But yes as a bowler I can say that technical issues can come up because if you return after a five-year break, you can forget exactly how your shoulder and wrist positions should be. That can happen to any bowler. It happened to me, but I’m working on it and getting better. In the T20I against Sri Lanka – the last one – I got some swing. Then I played domestic cricket for Lahore Whites and the ball swung. This means the work I am doing is coming through. The main thing for a bowler is his wrist position and that, as I’ve said before, is something I’m working on. I think it will get better with time. The more I play, the more I feel my wrist and action are coming back.Mohammad Amir put his name on the Lord’s honours board with an excellent performance•PA PhotosMickey Arthur recently talked about the fact that your bowling lengths in Tests have been a bit shorter than they should be, maybe because of the limited-overs cricket you have played. Has that played a part?Yes, absolutely. When I made my comeback in Tests against England, I was playing the format after five years, so I was a little short. Before that I had played a total of five first-class games. But if you see in West Indies, I started pitching the ball further up and I got six wickets in an innings in the first Test, and got wickets in the other Tests, too. In Tests you have to pitch it a little fuller.But also over my 12-18 months of Test cricket, 16-17 catches were dropped [off my bowling] and these things matter a lot. At the end of the day, people say I am not getting wickets, but what about those dropped catches?What if, say, 10 of those 17 drops had been taken? Many times – a cricketer will understand – if you’re in the middle of a spell, you get one wicket, you get another with it. With me, catches have been dropped and as a bowler you put a lot of energy and planning into a spell to get a batsman out. If a chance is dropped, you have to try and get him out a second time and that takes 3-4 overs, and it takes energy out. People miss these things, because with a wicket, a bowler gets confidence.Had those catches been taken, my average today could have been 20 to 23. These things matter. I think people had high hopes but I know at the end of the day, in cricket you need some luck, which I think in the last year or so I haven’t had.How frustrating have the dropped catches been?It is very frustrating because of the energy a fast bowler uses – all that gets wasted. He comes running in from quite far. At the end of the day, nobody drops a catch on purpose and even the fielder gets frustrated. As a bowler, when a few catches are dropped, yeah that is frustrating. But I think ultimately it’s part of the game. Sometimes impossible catches are taken and sometimes easy ones are put down and you just wonder how that is even possible. So at the end of the day you need luck [smiles].Talk us through your emotions of the two balls you bowled to Virat Kohli in the Champions Trophy final – the dropped catch and then the wicket next ball.Everybody knows if you get Kohli, India is 50% out of the game. Until he is at the crease, India’s chances of winning are 70-80%. If you look at his chasing ratio, he is at the top of the world. He chases well, he performs well under pressure. So our plan was to get their top order – [Shikhar] Dhawan, [Rohit] Sharma, Kohli, the guys who were scoring the runs in the tournament. My plan was that I didn’t want to save runs, I wanted to take wickets. If we could get one or two from the top, we could win the match.The pitch was the kind where you couldn’t stop the runs. Even after they were six down, [Hardik] Pandya was hitting so big – the wicket was that flat. You couldn’t stop the runs flowing, you could only take wickets to win the game.My plan in the first spell was that even if I gave away 35-40 runs in the first five but took two wickets, then we were in the game. So the target was to get these two or three guys out.When Kohli was dropped, I thought half the game was gone to be honest. Because he is the kind of batsman if you give him a chance, he won’t score less than hundred. Ninety-percent of the time, you give him a chance, he gets a hundred. Recently against New Zealand, they dropped him on 15 or 20 and he scored a hundred. He doesn’t give you a second chance.I remembered Fakhar [Zaman] and how he had been out on a no-ball and had then scored a hundred. That kind of thing happens when you are walking back, it came to me immediately and I thought I hope this doesn’t happen to us now.In my mind, I thought he’ll be ready for my inswinger, because the previous ball had been an outswinger. So I thought, 80-90% he would be ready for an inswinger. But I wanted to bowl at him in the same area, and move it away again. If you look at the clips of it, you can see he shaped to play it to leg, he moved to play it to on [side], thinking I was going to bring it in. My thinking was that if I bowl again in the same area, the same ball going away, he might go to play it thinking it is coming in, and edge it to slip again, but it went with the angle to point.What is the difference playing against India and another team?There are two teams against whom my energy is always very high: India and Australia. I get a real boost that I want to do something against them. It is natural because they are two tough teams, very tough teams. You know Australia is a very tough side and India, as a Pakistani, you know everyone is thinking that if you can perform against India, your star value, your cricketing value, image and reputation goes up big time, from nowhere to very high. Even if you haven’t done anything in five games against other teams but manage to do something against India in one match, then it evens up all your performances in a year.Second time lucky: Mohammad Amir celebrates getting Virat Kohli•Getty ImagesGiven that the two sides aren’t playing regular series right now, how would you feel about ending your career without a full series against India?See I’ve always believed you have to be thankful for what you already have, that we are playing cricket, and that is enough. I am representing my country, playing against Australia, England, India, that is enough. Against India, sure, there is that edge. You perform against them, it is something that stays with you an entire career like ‘Amir did this against India, or that’. If you look at Saeed [Anwar] ‘s 194, everyone remembers it till today [because] it came against India. In India-Pakistan games, your star value increases, on both sides, and cricket benefits, cricket boards benefit. And your [ability to handle] pressure levels become very strong.These are pressure games, not about skills, I’ve always believed that. If you play against each other regularly, under all that pressure, you become so good at handling it that in other games, with lesser pressure, it doesn’t bother you, because you’ve gone through such big pressure. So you should have these games.
    How have your relations with team-mates been since your return?
    To be honest, it’s been very good, and a very relaxed atmosphere. We are all pretty young in the side, and we’ve played with each other at age levels. In Under-19s, if you look, me, Imad [Wasim], Umar Amin, Babar [Azam] was a year junior to us in U-19, Shadab [Khan], [Mohammad] Nawaz, this is all one group.Things are good with Saifi [Sarfraz Ahmed] in any case. There’s also Shan Masood. With Shoaib [Malik] , I’ve always held him in the highest regard. It’s been a very good atmosphere, and I’ve enjoyed it.Shoaib Malik was appointed as your mentor by the PCB when you returned. How has he influenced you?You know if there is one guy in the recent Pakistan teams that I want to look at and follow, it is Shoaib . I look at him and his personality. He is well-groomed, well-spoken now. He knows how to speak to juniors, how to speak to seniors. He is the only guy who you could look at and want to go on that path.What has the reception been like from the opposition when you have travelled?To be honest, when we went to Australia, I was expecting… Australians are famous for sledging but they were very nice to me. And I was surprised. With Mitchell Starc there were verbals, but with the rest, like Warner, Smith and Josh Hazlewood, they were all very good with me. And I was surprised – nobody bothered me in that sense. They were very good, smiling faces. I wasn’t expecting it.Since your return, you’ve had among the heaviest workloads of all fast bowlers [Only Kagiso Rabada has bowled more overs than Amir across formats since Amir’s comeback]. How tough has it been?Very, because after five years, I’ve been playing all three formats regularly after my return. When a fast bowler comes back after a break of five years without playing cricket – that is something I feel I overdid, I feel that was my mistake. I should have spoken to the selectors, to the management and said that I should play this and this cricket for the moment, that maybe I play ODIs and T20s, and Tests later, after I have played some more first-class cricket. I started playing leagues as well, so the workload increased. I don’t think I had done the training required for it. There are many players in the world who play all formats but after a break, my training was such that I couldn’t maintain my fitness.So when I had the injury in Dubai, I spoke to the management for a rest from the Sri Lanka ODIs. I wanted to take those 2-3 weeks to work on my fitness. I spoke to my trainer and had a plan. With T20s it doesn’t matter so much, because you bowl four overs and you can still train that day. But now I’m ensuring there is no break in training. In domestic T20, I haven’t given up my training because it benefits the longer version of the game. Now there’s the BPL – that is T20 – then New Zealand is ODIs and T20s, and I can keep up my training. You can still work in the gym for an hour or so when you play T20s.Now I’ve made a regular schedule for training, which I didn’t have earlier. For two years I was just playing cricket and not resting. Now I have time and am able to work on my fitness.Mohammad Amir struck in his first over upon return•Getty ImagesThere were some rumours recently that you wanted to set aside Test cricket and stick to limited overs.I don’t know where it came from. It wasn’t that I wanted to give up Tests, but I wanted to manage them. I have spoken to the team management about it also. There should be a rotation policy and one is now in place. Management and selectors have done that, which is very good. New guys are coming in, they are getting chances and playing. This is about bench strength. Look at Mitchell Starc, for example: if he plays a full Test series, somewhere along the way he will get a rest from some ODIs. This is a rotation policy. I didn’t say I would retire, I had said I have to see how to manage it and will speak to the seniors about it, like Inzi bhai, Mickey, Saifi bhai, I would speak to them about how to manage Test cricket, T20s and ODIs.So what is the plan? How will you manage it?For example, if we have one main bowler, he cannot play five Tests. If he can play 3-4, then he should rest. At the end of the day, we are humans, not machines, and bodies need rest. If I play five Tests, five ODIs and three T20s also, that would be too much. If I do play five Tests, then maybe I take a break from a couple of ODIs. Through that rotation, your body gets time to recover.So it isn’t just Tests, it could be ODIs as well?Yeah it is just about managing it. If I play all Tests, then maybe I rest for two ODIs. If I play ODIs and Tests, then I rest for T20s. That rest in the middle is not bedrest. It is where you do your recovery: your training, your swimming, it is the time where you rebuild yourself.Given that you were out for so long, have you come back and set yourself any personal goals now?As a bowler, goals never change because it’s always about the number of wickets and the name you make for yourself. Earlier, maybe I used to think, I want to get 700 wickets but now obviously it isn’t possible given the fact that I have lost five years of my career doing nothing. It’s not like I can play for another 15 years, it’s not possible. The amount of cricket we are playing these days means we don’t get enough rest so that’s unlikely. Also, there is no guarantee that I will not get injured or that I will play five years continuously.The 2019 World Cup is my main target. That is the dream of every player to feature in the 50-over World Cup. I missed it in 2011 and 2015, so this upcoming one will be my first and I want to do something in that tournament by which I will forever be remembered in the history of Pakistan cricket.Since your return, who have you enjoyed bowling with the most?[Mohammad] Abbas. At this time, Abbas is bowling the new ball really well with me. That was a problem we were having, in Tests especially, but seeing Abbas I’m very happy. He is very accurate, bowls really well within his limits. That means there is less pressure on me, because he contains it from his end and so at the other end, I can relax a little bit and go for wickets. Otherwise if runs are coming from the other end, you also have to try to stop runs from your end. You go to contain, not take wickets. I’ve really benefited from Abbas at one end.In limited overs, Junaid Khan has been outstanding and I’ve been really happy to have him there.How much do you miss Mohammad Asif at the other end?[]. To be honest, I can’t say anything about Asif. I’m happy right now. Ability-wise I don’t think there is any doubt that he was the most dangerous bowler in Pakistan cricket.As a pair when we bowled together, we were very dangerous for any side. He used to get wickets – fastest to 100 Test wickets for Pakistan [a record since surpassed by Saeed Ajmal and Yasir Shah]. So there is no doubt whatsoever about his ability. Whoever bowled with him enjoyed it. Abbas, I think, is a bowler like him, in that mould and I really enjoy having him at the other end.Recently Karachi Kings appointed Imad Wasim their captain ahead of you, despite your seniority. Do you ever see yourself as a captain in the future?I would hate for it to happen right now in my career. I’m very happy and comfortable as a player. To me, it is better to focus on one thing – I am a bowler, I want to bowl and I want to perform. Because it [captaincy] is such a responsibility, there is a time for it. Right now it’s not even my time to think about it.Every guy who represents his country has leadership material in him. If he is one of 15 guys from 200 million people who are playing and he representing his country, then he has the ability, that is why he is there. When I was asked by Mickey [Arthur] and Salman [Iqbal, owner of Karachi Kings] about me or Imad, I immediately said Imad, it should be him.I love his aggression, which I think a captain should have. He fights when he is playing and he can get his players to fight for him.Can you talk a little bit about the emotions of first, winning that Lord’s Test and taking the last wicket and then this year, winning the Champions Trophy final in England again?I realised in England, after the Champions Trophy final, that in the country where so many people had to bear so much sadness and worry because of me, in the face of that win, God got me to do that performance and I felt like I brought back some happiness to the same people in that country. That was a big thing for me, because I’ve always said it, this was a debt I owed. I had to do something by which the Pakistani nation would be happy with me. That was a day when all Pakistan fans were really happy – I think it was the happiest moment of my life.

    'It is so hypocritical' – Herculez Gomez questions Mauricio Pochettino's USMNT priorities after comments about 'focus'

    The former USMNT star said he perceives contradictions between the coach's words and actions

    • Gomez points to Pochettino's public activities
    • Questions lack of recruiting efforts
    • Show frustration with incomplete squads
    • Getty Images Sport

      WHAT HAPPENED

      After announcing his USMNT squad ahead of the Gold Cup, coach Mauricio Pochettino said veteran and new faces alike should expect a certain tone in this camp. Pochettino sent a warning shot for anyone who shows up lacking focus.

      "If you arrive at the camp and want to spend some nice time, play golf, go for a dinner, see your family, see your friends, that is not the culture we want to create," he said. "No, no, no. What we want to do is go to the national team, arrive and be focused and spend all focus and energy on the national team because we need to create this culture about winning."

      Former USMNT star Herculez Gomez challenged those comments on ESPN FC, saying he perceives contradictions between the coach's words and actions.

      “He talks about the players coming back to the national team and ‘It’s not about golf, it’s not about not about going out to dinner, it’s not about hanging out with your buddies’ and I agree with him," Gomez said on ESPN’s Futbol Americas. “And he says, ‘Your sole and energy has to be on the US men’s national team’. And I don’t not want to be that guy, but it is so hypocritical from this man when all I’ve seen from him is out in YouTube charity matches, when all I see from him is Newell’s Old Boys, hanging out with his buddies. When all I’ve see from him is talking about how much he would love to go back to Tottenham Hotspur.

      “I don’t see recruiting trips. I don’t see him visiting the leaders of this team in Europe. I don’t see those things… the spirit of what he’s saying, I am here for. I’m just having a hard time buying it from the messenger.”

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    • WHAT HERCULEZ GOMEZ SAID

      Gomez was critical of Pochettino for having squads at less-than full strength for both the CONCACAF Nations League and now for the Gold Cup.

      "They lack mentality, they lack heart, they were soft in the past and you would have hoped they would have grown up,” Gomez said. “But it looks like they still have some growing up to do and unfortunately for Mauricio Pochettino, in his first real test – which was the Nations League – he had an incomplete squad, missing a lot of players.

      “And now he’ll have an incomplete squad here. And he’s still yet to get the whole squad to understand what he has at his disposal… A year out from the World Cup, that’s not something you want to see.”

    • THE BIGGER PICTURE

      On Thursday, Pochettino's roster was unveiled for the upcoming matches. The USMNT, coming off a pair of disappointing CONCACAF Nations League losses in March, will head into the Gold Cup without many of its stars – including Christian Pulisic and Antonee Robinson – significantly altering the chemistry of a crucial summer.

    • Getty Images

      WHAT’S NEXT?

      The USMNT play two friendlies, against Turkey and Switzerland, on June 7 and 10 respectively, before the 2025 Gold Cup begins. That kicks off on June 14 for the USMNT with their first game against Trinidad and Tobago.

    Labuschagne battles, Renshaw out cheaply on 17-wicket day

    South Australia lost their first three wickets without a run on the board and the theme continued

    AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff16-Feb-2024Bowlers held sway on a chaotic 17-wicket first day of the Sheffield Shield match at Adelaide Oval. On a decidedly difficult green-tinged pitch, the ball reigned supreme as the home side were routed for 132 and Queensland struggled to 112 for 7, with out-of-form Test No.3 Marnus Labuschagne top-scoring with a 112-ball 38 in his first Shield match as captain.After a disappointing Test summer when his form came under the microscope, Labuschange defended for his life against the Redbacks in his only Shield match before the tour of New Zealand.Related

    • Edwards out for 99 as Sutherland claims five in tight contest

    • Goodwin leads Western Australia recovery after Green misses out

    Like most batters on day one, Labuschange looked shaky and survived multiple scares during his battling stay at the crease. He fell to Nathan McAndrew late in the day as South Australia closed in on an unlikely first-innings lead.Opener Matt Renshaw endured another failure in his last match before going on the New Zealand tour as a spare batter.Dismissed for 2 in both innings against Tasmania earlier in February, Renshaw was out for 8, caught off the outside edge by Australian wicketkeeper Alex Carey off Jordan Buckingham.Renshaw’s best score from his past 12 innings in first-class cricket, domestic one-dayers and T20s is the 40 he made in last month’s BBL final.The day started as it finished – with wickets tumbling. After winning the toss, South Australia were quickly on the ropes at 0 for 3 in the fourth over.In-form Queensland quick Xavier Bartlett carried his sparkling form from the recent ODI series against the West Indies into the Shield, dismissing maverick opener Jake Fraser-McGurk and Nathan McSweeney.But Carey and captain Jake Lehmann saved the Redbacks from complete embarrassment, putting on a crucial 64-run fourth-wicket stand. Lehmann and Carey were the only South Australian batters to reach double figures in the hosts’ 40.3 over innings.In reply, Queensland stumbled to 13 for 3 and 77 for 5 before mounting some late resistance but again lost wickets towards the close.