Liverpool plotting shock move for De Ligt

According to an Italian source, Liverpool are said to be plotting a shock move for Juventus defender Matthijs De Ligt.

The Lowdown: Strong Anfield links

The Dutchman has become a regular feature at the Allianz since joining the Italian giants from Ajax back in 2019, having made 117 appearances during his three-year spell to date.

Even though the 22-year-old still has two years remaining on his contract in the Serie A, he has been heavily linked with a move to the Premier League in recent weeks, in particular to Anfield, and after a fresh update, the Reds have now been put even more firmly into the picture for his signature.

The Latest: Liverpool join the race

In a new report published by Italian newspaper Tuttosport (via Sport Witness), it’s claimed that Liverpool have now ‘joined’ their top-flight rivals Chelsea in the race for De Ligt’s services, with the Reds ‘edging forward’ for a move.

The outlet says to ‘pay attention’ to the Merseysiders, with any big offers coming from England said to be too ‘difficult to refuse’.

It’s believed that Juventus ‘want to keep’ the £63m-rated star and have been trying to tempt him into signing a new deal, but would want him to agree to a decrease in wages, in return for a lower release clause, which opens up the chances of a cheaper move for potential suitors.

The Verdict: Not an essential signing

De Ligt, who was once hailed an “oil tanker” by Mino Raiola, will already have an established relationship with Virgil Van Dijk as a result of the pair representing the Netherlands together, but as solid as a centre-back he is, now is not the right time for Liverpool to be considering a move.

Jurgen Klopp already has the four incredible options of VVD, Matip, Gomez and Konate to choose from, and it seems unnecessary for FSG to be thinking about breaking the bank for the transfer of a player in a position that they don’t even need to cover for.

After spending a club-record £85m fee on the signing of Darwin Nunez, it would be sensible for the club to keep the rest of their pot at bay for the moment and then reassess the situation come next summer when a few individual situations may have altered.

Leeds: Big Kalvin Phillips transfer development

Leeds United could now receive an approach from Liverpool for midfielder Kalvin Phillips, according to The Sunday Mirror’s chief sports reporter Tom Hopkinson.

The lowdown

The England midfielder made 23 appearances for Leeds in the 2021/22 campaign, which for him was heavily disrupted by a serious hamstring injury.

Despite that body blow, among Whites players who started at least five matches, he had the best points-per-game record at 1.2. That suggest that he is clearly a key figure at Elland Road, but ‘with the player failing to agree a new deal, his future is very much ‘up in the air’ at the moment.

His potential sale could be the most lucrative in Leeds’ history, surpassing Rio Ferdinand’s £30m move to Manchester United in 2002.

The latest

According to The Sunday Mirror (5 June, 07:00), Leeds want to hold on to Phillips but they recognise that the ‘lure of Champions League football’ may prove too powerful for him to resist.

The Whites are bracing themselves for interest from Premier League champions Manchester City as well as runners-up Liverpool.

The Reds had hoped to sign Aurelien Tchouameni from AS Monaco, but he is seemingly bound for Real Madrid. Phillips has been identified as an alternative, and he’s expected to cost around £60m.

It’s not just the Premier League’s top two who are interested, with Manchester United and West Ham also thought to have considered moves for the 26-year-old.

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The verdict

Leeds will need to start planning for possible replacements if Phillips is lured away, and one candidate would appear to RB Leipzig’s Tyler Adams, who worked with Jesse Marsch at the Red Bull Arena.

USA national team ‘insider’ Tom Bogert has suggested that Leeds will ‘try’ to land Adams during the summer transfer window, while journalist Jacques Talbot believes that the American would be a ‘great addition’ and a ‘statement’ signing.

Adams is still pretty young at just 23 and he would bring excellent work-rate and ball-carrying ability to Marsch’s team, if his most recent seasonal figures are anything to go by.

In other news, read this journalist’s significant Phillips claim.

Everton transfer news on Alli

Everton could reportedly now sell Dele Alli alongside both Richarlison and Dominic Calvert-Lewin in the summer.

The Lowdown: Mass exodus?

Following the Merseyside club’s disappointing season, in which they are still battling relegation from the Premier League after Sunday’s disappointing result, there could well be a mass exodus at Goodison Park this summer.

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Both Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Richarlison have been recently linked with moves away, and others could follow them out of the door if offers came in.

The Latest: Alli update

As per The Sun, the Toffees could look to sell Alli as well, if they are offered anything up to £20m for the former Tottenham Hotspur ace.

However, they would have to pay 25% of any fee received back to Spurs, and they would also receive a small bonus if he plays ten times, and a further £10m for 20 appearances.

The Verdict: Sell

It just has not worked out for Alli with the Blues, where he has managed no goals or assists in his nine appearances in the top flight, and has been limited to cameos off of the bench (Transfermarkt).

Described as a ‘fantastic talent’ by former Lilywhites manager Harry Redknapp back in March, the 26-year-old seems to have fallen out of love for football in truth, as he has even been accused of ‘clubbing too much’ instead.

Nonetheless, Frank Lampard does not seem to fancy him, and so the summer would present an ideal opportunity to part ways early, before the situation gets any worse.

In other news, find out what ‘nonsensical’ EFC claim has now been made here!

Arsenal eye Champions League left-back

Arsenal are keen on a move for Benfica left-back Alex Grimaldo, according to Tutto Juve (via Sport Witness).

The lowdown

Arsenal shelled out almost £120m in the summer transfer window, bringing in five new players, but attention is already turning to January in the club’s recruitment department.

Grimaldo, who came the youth ranks at Barcelona, was a target for Manchester City this year, as per Marca. The Spaniard is out of contract at the end of the season, so Benfica know that the winter market is potentially their last opportunity to cash in on the 26-year-old.

The latest

The report from Tutto Juve (via Sport Witness) states that Juventus are interested in Grimaldo but face competition from two Premier League sides in Arsenal and Newcastle United.

Significantly, it’s said that the Spaniard would be available for ‘less than €10million’ (£8.6m) because of his contract situation.

The verdict

Arsenal already have two left-backs at their disposal in Oleksandr Zinchenko, who joined this summer, and Kieran Tierney, but it wouldn’t be a huge surprise to see the latter leave the club given that Zinchenko’s arrival appears to have pushed him down the pecking order.

Indeed, the Ukrainian has started every Premier League game for which he has been available so far this season.

The sharks will surely begin to circle if Tierney is repeatedly left out, with the likes of Real Madrid, Barcelona and Manchester City credited with an interest in him this year.

Grimaldo could be a low-cost replacement if the Scot does move on, and the 26-year-old proved his quality in Benfica’s Champions League opener against Maccabi Haifa on Tuesday.

He won the official Player of the Match award after setting up his team’s first goal, scoring the second and making three tackles (Sofascore), and there was simply ‘no stopping’ his long-range screamer, according to BT Sport’s official Twitter account.

Not out of nowhere – how New Zealand won the P Sara Oval Test

Blessed with some of the finest players in the world, you can be sure that this New Zealand team knows what it is doing

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Colombo26-Aug-2019On a dark day in Colombo, in a rain-afflicted match that has no rights to be even close to yielding a result, New Zealand are on the hunt. They have mostly been supreme predators over the last few years. Eight times they have bowled last, under Kane Williamson; on six of those occasions they’ve defended fourth-innings targets. One time, in Hamilton, when the match seemed destined to end in a comatose draw – Pakistan going to tea on the final day at 158 for 1 – the bowlers defibrillated the contest to violent life early in the last session, left-armers, right-armers, spinners, medium-pace dobblers, all snatching key wickets in twilight like a mob looting a jewellery store.This, in Colombo, is not a fourth-innings defence. But up against them are a side that had denied them from strong positions twice in the last three Tests. In Galle, eight days ago, Dimuth Karunaratne and Lahiru Thirimanne tamed a wearing surface, as Sri Lanka chased down by far the highest total at that venue. Nine months before that, in Wellington, Angelo Mathews and Kusal Mendis wore balls on their bodies before dead-batting, counter-punching and push-up-celebrating their way through an entire day, ultimately saving the Test.

When the spinners are at the bowling crease, the infield is packed with more men than molecules. Williamson would shove fielders up each of the batsman’s nostrils if he could

But, New Zealand are desperate to level this series now, and on show from them are all the fifth-day Asian-pitch tropes. With fast bowlers tearing in, there is a short cover, a short midwicket, two slips spaced wide apart, a gully and a short leg. When the spinners are at the bowling crease, the infield is packed with more men than molecules – leg slips, silly points, catching mid-offs. Williamson would shove fielders up each of the batsman’s nostrils if he could. And as soon batsman appeared to work out a plan against a bowler, Williamson would swap the bowler out, or change the field. So you think you passed that test? Try this one. A packed offside field, a spinner ripping the ball away from the bat. Dare you to sweep against the turn.Trent Boult celebrates a wicket with a his teammates•Getty ImagesFor virtually all of day four, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain Mathews sat back and had expected a notorious P Sara Oval pitch to do the wicket-taking, rarely presenting the New Zealand batsmen with a fresh examination. This was the day on which New Zealand made 186 for the loss of just one wicket and swung the Test emphatically in their favour.Essentially, Williamson was outdoing a seasoned local, but he wasn’t the only one. Trent Boult, his fast left-arm weapon, averages a respectable 31.70 in Asia, but far more importantly, an outstanding 18.05 in Sri Lanka. Tim Southee, Boult’s right-arm soulmate, has numbers that are even more monstrous, averaging 25.12 across 11 Tests in Asia, and a sublime 15.47 on the island. By the time they are done with this innings, both quicks have more than 250 Test wickets.On the spin front, Ajaz Patel and William Somerville, inexperienced though they may be, had both made outstanding bowling contributions during New Zealand’s victory in the UAE last year, sharing 20 wickets between them. On the final day, they take two apiece, Somerville bowling a drifting, dipping, ripping offbreak to wriggle between bat and pad, and clip the stumps of Kusal Mendis, one of Sri Lanka’s best players of spin.This is a stirring New Zealand victory. Even at the end of day three, no one had quite imagined it. But then maybe we should have. This team knows what it is doing. The win didn’t come out of nowhere.Tim Southee removes Dimuth Karunaratne•Associated Press****The last time New Zealand played at Test at the P Sara Oval, Ross Taylor and Williamson hit centuries. Neither of their careers are over, but for almost any observer, Taylor and Williamson will go down as two of New Zealand’s five greatest ever batsmen, or even perhaps two of the best three, alongside Martin Crowe. At Galle, Taylor had hit 86, and Williamson had made two single-figure scores, but still, New Zealand put up two good totals.

Their being “greater than the sum of their parts” is now such a cliche, banks should let New Zealand cricketers withdraw more money than they have in their accounts, without going into overdraft

At the Sara, these two great batsmen made 43 runs between them in the only batting innings the weather had left to New Zealand’s disposal. And yet, they could hardly have dealt with the situation better. Tom Latham, swept intelligently – almost always with the spin – picked the right balls to defend, pounced on the short deliveries, and fought his way to 154. This was his biggest hundred in Asia, but not his first, two tons in the UAE having come before. This might have been his highest-quality innings of the past nine months, but not inarguably so – scores of 264 not out, 176 and 161 also having come in his eight most-recent innings. In fact, since the start of 2017, no opener can even come close to Latham’s numbers – his average up at 58.03, the second-best – Shikhar Dhawan – down at less than 45.BJ Watling and Tom Latham get together•Getty ImagesBJ Watling, who also hit a hundred at the Sara, had previously made a century in India, and now averages 37.45 on the continent. Aside from one missed stumping in Galle, his wicketkeeping has been characteristically immaculate, and he also claimed maybe the catch of the series – a delayed, full-length dive to have Suranga Lakmal caught off the gloves in Sri Lanka’s first innings. Henry Nicholls, meanwhile, had hit a vital hundred in Abu Dhabi last year, and currently sits fifth on the Test batting rankings. He didn’t cross 50 in this series but was involved in important stands, both in Galle and at the Sara.Colin de Grandhomme’s ballistic 83 off 77 balls, without which this victory may not have been possible, was perhaps a breakout performance. He had never hit a fifty away from home. But his was the only one. In New Zealand’s top order, they had batsmen ranked third (Williamson), fifth (Nicholls), 12th (Taylor) and 13th (Latham). Taylor and Williamson may not have made runs in this match, but someone was going to. This team knows what it is doing. The win didn’t come out of nowhere.****New Zealand weight above their punch. They stop never fighting. No matter how much you garble those sentences, you know what they mean. We’ve heard these things about New Zealand before. Their being “greater than the sum of their parts” is now such a cliche, banks should let New Zealand cricketers withdraw more money than they have in their accounts, without going into overdraft.William Somerville is overjoyed after a key wicket•Getty ImagesThe only area of bona-fide excellence many would grant to New Zealand was their fielding. “One of the best,” most say. Only “one of” even in eras in which New Zealand were at the cutting edge of the craft, clinging to impossible chances in the gully like cartoon characters cling to speeding trains. On the last day at the Sara, it had been Latham’s brilliance at short leg that effectively sealed victory, as he sprinted toward leg slip when he saw Dickwella go down for a paddle sweep, before intercepting the shot beautifully. Even this was no fluke, though. He’d taken a far more impressive catch, in exactly the same position, in virtually the same fashion, off Faf du Plessis, in 2017. On that occasion, the ball had been flying faster and higher, to his right – his off-hand.In Colombo, New Zealand claimed a draw to claim their sixth undefeated Test series in a row. The previous five, they had won outright, including against Pakistan in the UAE, where the likes Australia and England have had infamous troubles. They’ve done all this, because whatever New Zealand outfits of the past have been like, this team’s “parts” are genuinely outstanding now.In the next eight months, they will play series against the most high-profile sides on the planet – England first, then Australia, then finally India. If they pull off victories there, there’s genuinely no need to resort to old cliches. Blessed with some of the finest players in the world, you can be sure that this New Zealand team knows what it is doing. Their wins don’t come out of nowhere.

'I stopped caring about results and really enjoyed the game'

Fast bowler Ben Laughlin on all the T20 teams he has played for, dismissing AB, and a future career as a celebrity carpenter

Vishal Dikshit15-Apr-2017What was the experience of playing T20Is for Australia at two different points – in 2009 and 2013 – of your career like?
The experience is obviously amazing, playing for your country. But the T20 team is not always our full-strength team, with a few guys coming in. It can be a bit disheartening when you’re not in the best team. But you always play for your country when the opportunities pop up. So good fun.Why do you think the Australian T20 team has not done very well despite so many clubs and the BBL there for a few years now?
I think it’s because our big guys, like Steve Smith and Davey [David Warner], are always away. They don’t actually play a bulk of T20 cricket during our T20 time. They’re always playing Test matches and we’re playing Big Bash. They come in and they’re probably not as sharp as they need to be and it’s normally a one- or two-game series. I think it’s one thing Australia is pretty disappointed about back home, that we haven’t performed very well in the World Cups and these bigger tournaments.You retweeted a stat that since the start of 2016 you’ve taken 18 wickets at an economy rate of 6.58. In the second innings, your economy rate was 5.57. What have you done differently recently?
Yeah, I was a bit shocked when that stat came through. They are pretty good, aren’t they (laughs)? I think it’s [about me] getting a bit older and being really comfortable in life and almost stop caring about results, just really enjoy playing the game and competing and going well. It seems funny that when you stop caring so much, things [turn out well]. It’s funny way to say “not care”. It’s more like not putting so much pressure on yourself. I’m in a pretty comfortable place where [if] things finish tomorrow, I can go home and spend time with my family. Keep riding while it’s going. It’s good fun, but if things finish, so be it. I’ll move on to the next chapter.What were your expectations from the IPL auction this time round and how were you following it back home?
It’s always a bit hard to get IPL stuff in Australia. It doesn’t seem to get much free-to-air coverage. I ended up just watching the Twitter feed. I thought I had a pretty good Big Bash and if I was going to get picked up again, this was going to be the year. So I was a little bit disappointed and annoyed after the first round had gone through. I think my wife and I were a bit depressed, eating dinner quietly. And then I refreshed the screen and saw that I got through. Almost woke my son up, which wasn’t great, but I was very excited when I got picked.Which Australian player is going to perform the best this IPL? Will Warner do it again?
I was talking to Kane [Williamson] the day before the first game and I said, “Davey can’t do this again, can he?” Just trying to jinx him. We’re so early in the tournament and we’ve already seen Steve Smith play amazing, Glenn Maxwell play amazing, Davey is playing amazing. There’s definitely a lot of talent coming from Australia and these boys can turn it on.”I’ve been a carpenter and a builder since I was about 17, so I’ve done a few renovations over the time. You never know, one day I might pop up on the TV, doing a few renovations”•Getty ImagesWho are the players you have gelled with in your first couple of weeks in the Sunrisers set-up?
I’ve spent a bit of time with Kane, which is really good. Our thought process is very similar. I actually play for Kane’s local team in New Zealand [Northern Districts], which is cool. Shikhar Dhawan’s an awesome and really funny guy. Bipul [Sharma] and even Vijay Shankar, who I spent some time with at CSK [Chennai Super Kings], is here and he’s a great guy to hang out with.What do you miss the most about Chennai Super Kings?
I think CSK was a pretty amazing squad, having MS [Dhoni] and [R] Ashwin and [Ravindra] Jadeja and [Suresh] Raina. An amazing squad, which probably won’t be seen together again with the way it’s all panned out. Just seeing the kind of culture in India compared to back home, like MS can’t go out anywhere. But they are all such normal people when you get to know them and talk to them.You’ve bowled in different parts of the world in recent times. Which ground did you not like?
I really don’t like bowling at the Gabba, which is weird because I’m from Queensland and I’ve played a fair bit of cricket there. The Gabba has got one very short end and I always bowl from that end. Chris Lynn is at the other end, which isn’t great fun. Internationally, I did get to play one game in Mumbai for CSK and didn’t fancy it. It’s quite a small ground. I haven’t had the pleasure of bowling at Bangalore. The boys say it’s not a great place to bowl. So those are the top three which are a bit scary.Your Twitter bio has three words: “future block contestant”. Is it about the TV series in Australia?
It is about a TV show called , which is about renovating houses on TV. I’ve been a carpenter and a builder since I was about 17, so I’ve done a few renovations over the time. It’s a bit of tongue in cheek. You never know, one day I might pop up on the TV, doing a few renovations. We’ll see.Do you fix and renovate things in your house too?
I do. I’m renovating at the moment and I’m almost finished with a phase. A couple of months to do when I get home and this one will be finished, which will be nice. It’s good fun.Did you study carpentry or was it a hobby?
I wasn’t very good at cricket till I got to the mid-twenties, so I did my carpentry apprenticeship and worked up until then and have been chipping away ever since.My best: Laughlin leaps at the boundary to take a catch to dismiss Albie Morkel, Johannesburg, 2009•Associated PressDale Steyn once tweeted: “I enjoy watching Ben Laughlin bowl. Plenty skill, skiddy pace, always smiling.”
That was a nice tweet from such a legend of the game. I’ve only met Dale once or twice and he’s an amazing person. He has a really good outlook on life. I’ll say I’ve been taken away with the way Dale plays. He’s always hard and aggressive but always happy and just loves being in the contest.He was your first wicket in ODIs. Do you think he remembers that?
Probably not, knowing Dale. I do. It was a little slower ball, which he popped up to Mike Hussey. So I put that one in the bank. Would have been nice to get AB [de Villiers] as my first ODI wicket, but I’ll take Dale.But you did dismiss AB twice in four international matches.
I don’t want to talk that one up too much. One was a full toss that he missed somehow and hit to cover. Not amazing wickets, but I’ll definitely take them.Who was a bigger batsman to dismiss for you in 2009 – AB or Younis Khan?
AB was pretty good still but the Younis one was actually a pretty good ball. It kicked away and he nicked it through to the keeper. But probably AB – there was pressure in that game.Which batsman has been the hardest to bowl to for you?
One of the main reasons I signed for Adelaide [Strikers] was because Brad Hodge was going to Adelaide. I’d hate to see my stats against Hodgy, they’d be horrible. He just whacks me everywhere. At least now it’s only in practice games or in the nets, so no one gets to see on TV, which is good. But then Hodgy is an exceptional player.You’ve taken some stunning diving catches over the years. Which is your favourite?
I took one in an ODI – the one in which I got AB out – caught Albie Morkel with a jump sort of a thing at the boundary. It was by far my best catch. I took a good one this year for Adelaide in front of a full stadium but the one in South Africa sticks in my mind.Do you scream at yourself when you put one down?
Yeah, I get pretty shattered when that happens. I am a firm believer that if you can touch it, you can catch it.How would you advise Ben Laughlin of 2009 to become a better player overall?
When I went on the Australian tour, I felt like I had made it and that I was done. I probably switched off mentally a little bit when I got there instead of realising that I’m here now and I’ve got to go again and train harder and get better and better. It was quite interesting that I was playing grade cricket nine months before that and I had a pretty good one-day tournament for Queensland and got picked for Australia. So it all happened quite fast and I didn’t have massive experience in training and preparing and all those things. In hindsight, I would have knuckled down a bit more and worked a lot harder. But hindsight is a great thing.”I am a firm believer that if you can touch it, you can catch it”•Getty ImagesWhat was it like to play an international match in 2013 after 2009?
It was probably a personal goal. I got picked early in 2009 and sort of got discarded. It was always a goal to prove to everyone that I wasn’t just a one-hit wonder and that I could get back in there. So that was really satisfying to get back in there. I didn’t perform too well in the last couple of games, which was really annoying so I was looking to get back in. You never know, hopefully I can get another couple of T20 games for Australia. That would be lovely. Just show the world that I can be better.If you could change one rule in T20s in favour of the bowlers, what would it be?
One rule that annoys me is that you can bowl one above the shoulder and if you bowl another one above the shoulder, it’s a free hit. It’s a no-ball and it’s a free hit. I think it’s pretty harsh on missing your length by an inch maybe. So maybe fair enough to call it a wide but having a free hit for a second bouncer is pretty harsh. Not a huge tinker of the rule, but I think that would be better.Of all the colourful jerseys you’ve worn, which is the closest to you?
I actually really enjoyed my time in New Zealand, playing for Northern Districts. That’s probably my longest-standing contract; I’ve been there four seasons in a row now. It’s the place I most correlate with home. I’ve kept a jersey from every team I’ve played with. It’s all in the closet. One day I’ll get them all up in the bar and stuff. I spent a lot of time in New Zealand. I really enjoyed it there. There’s not a lot of money in cricket in New Zealand but the boys play because they love it. The passion is there and I found it a very nice environment to come in and compete in.Do you remember all the T20 teams you have represented?
I can probably rattle them off. I started playing for Queensland, then I played for Australia, I played for Hobart Hurricanes, Adelaide Strikers, I played for Nagenahira Nagas in Sri Lanka. I played one game for Canterbury in New Zealand, then Northern Districts. And then CSK, Antigua Hawksbills. I don’t know if we can count this but I’m with Sunrisers now. Then in the MCL, I played for the Capricorn Commandos. Am I missing any?Nope, all done. So who was the messiest in the Strikers dressing room?
Travis Head.Who was always late for training or the team bus?
Not late but probably cutting it very fine – Polly’s (Kieron Pollard) on the minute. So if you’ve to be there at 5.30 then he’s there at 5.29. So he’s never early.And who was the quietest?
Some of the young kids are quite quiet, but from the experienced players, Polly’s pretty quiet. And Dizzy’s (Jason Gillespie) quiet too – the coach. So there’s a few different characters there.You’ve played with George Bailey at Hurricanes. Is there any moment when he’s not smiling?
No, George has a really good outlook on life and cricket. Once or twice maybe when Tasmania have had some bad games, he got a little bit grumpy. But the smile’s always back in ten minutes. He’s a lovely person and it’s great to see him still do very well in first-class cricket.

The return of Dilshan's midas touch

Plays of the day from the Asia Cup match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Mirpur

Alagappan Muthu04-Mar-20161:06

Akmal’s 7th T20I Man of the Match award

The topsy-turvy bowlerMohammad Amir has had a habit of landing his very first ball at the very last spot a batsman wants it. A week ago, he nearly took out Rohit Sharma with a searing yorker. Tonight he pinned Dinesh Chandimal’s front pad with a full and fierce inswinger even as the batsman was barely ready to play a shot. The lbw appeal was shot down on height. The final ball of the over was a wide half-volley and Chandimal bashed it through cover. Usually, bowlers tend to err at the start of their spell and then slowly gather rhythm, in Amir’s case, it was all spectacularly topsy-turvy.The unintentional imageryShahid Afridi decided to bowl himself in the Powerplay and Tillakaratne Dilshan top-edged the fourth ball of the fifth over towards short fine leg. It was all perfectly set up for an early wicket, except the fielder was Mohammad Irfan, and it all went comically wrong. He ran forwards when the ball was comfortably sailing over him, then came the frantic change in direction and finally a desperate lunge with his hands. All to no avail. Afridi, who had been watching this precarious sequence, was buckled over with his hands on his knees, as if he felt the entire weight of the criticism back home about his captaincy suddenly and squarely on his shoulders.Daring DilshanWith pundits clamoring that his hand-eye coordination has left him, the 39-year old Dilshan offered his humble reply by reverse-scooping Amir to the boundary. It didn’t seem premeditated either. He’d gone down only after the ball had been released – perhaps because it was the 19th over and runs took precedence over wickets – kept his eyes on the ball and his head perfectly still before those magic wrists gave the ball just enough power to beat short third man.The left-armers’ lowThree balls after that outrageous shot, Dilshan went for a slog across the line and outside edge flew to deep third man. Once again Irfan was in the wrong place at the wrong time and this time, he couldn’t even get two hands to a relatively simple catch. Meanwhile, Amir, the bowler, was wringing his hands in anger. Perhaps the memory of that incident was still fresh on Amir’s mind as he became party to another fielding mishap off the very next ball. Dilshan pushed the penultimate ball of the over to mid-off, but Wahab Riaz slipped on the outfield in his haste to stop the ball beating him. Amir cautioned his fellow left-arm quick not to throw, and so Wahab took his time to stand up and just stare at his team-mates. Dilshan decided to take advantage of Pakistan taking some impromptu downtime and stole a second run.Dilshan’s dayHe was dropped twice; given easy runs; played the shot of the tournament against the bowler of the tournament, so why not try his luck with the ball? Chandimal, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain, brought Dilshan on in the eighth over and it began with a short ball that Sharjeel Khan – who had spanked four beautiful, back-to-back fours off fast bowler Dushmantha Chameera – plopped straight to Chamara Kapugedera at long-on.

Calendar-year sixes, and ODI records in NZ

Plus, Sangakkara’s prolific 2014, players with stumpings and caught-bowled dismissals, and losing despite high first-innings totals

Steven Lynch06-Jan-2015Kumar Sangakkara scored nearly 3000 international runs in 2014, was this a record? asked Hemachandra de Silva from Sri Lanka
In all, Kumar Sangakkara scored 2868 runs in international cricket in 2014 – 1493 in Tests, 1256 in ODIs, and 119 in T20 internationals (this excludes his 16 in the first innings of the Test against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi, which started on December 31, 2013). This is indeed a new overall record: Ricky Ponting scored 2833 international runs in 2005. Sangakkara’s Sri Lankan ream-mate Angelo Mathews is in third place, after a crowded year: he made 2687 runs in 2014. Ponting also scored 2657 international runs in 2003, Rahul Dravid 2626 in 1999, and Sangakkara 2609 in 2006. For the full list, click here.Brendon McCullum hit 33 Test sixes in 2014. Was this another record? asked Tushar Mukherjee from the United States
That’s a good spot, as Brendon McCullum’s 33 sixes in 2014 improved the previous calendar-year record by 50%! Adam Gilchrist hit 22 sixes in 2005, and Virender Sehwag equalled that in 2008. Andrew Flintoff smote 21 sixes in 2004, and Matthew Hayden 20 in both 2001 and 2003. McCullum’s 164 fours in 2014 was another New Zealand record, but well short of the overall one: Mohammad Yousuf hit 234 fours in 2006, breaking Viv Richards’ old mark of 230 in 1976.This year Brendon McCullum joined the group who have both a caught-and-bowled and a stumping in their Test career. How many players have managed that? asked Jeremy Hall from New Zealand
Brendon McCullum’s first Test wicket – Sarfraz Ahmed caught and bowled in Dubai in November – made him the 16th man to have both a wicket and a stumping to their credit in Tests. Among the others on the list are AB de Villiers, Tatenda Taibu and Mark Boucher of recent vintage. Another New Zealander, John Reid, is also there: his 85 Test wickets (a record for anyone who also made a stumping) included two caught-and-bowleds, Denis Atkinson of West Indies and South Africa’s Peter Pollock. But Reid wasn’t really a wicketkeeper – he stumped England’s Peter Richardson at Old Trafford in 1958 while briefly deputising for the injured Eric Petrie. Clyde Walcott, who kept wicket regularly in his early Tests, later managed two caught-and-bowleds (Vijay Hazare and Tom Graveney); he’s the only man to manage double figures for stumpings and wickets, with 11 of each. Another occasional West Indian wicketkeeper, Robert Christiani, took 3 for 52 against India at Delhi in 1948-49, and one of those (Dattu Phadkar) was caught and bowled.At what number did the Don bat in Tests ? asked Arinjaya Khare from India
Don Bradman scored most of his Test runs from No. 3: in all he made 5078 of his eventual 6996 runs from there, at an average of 103.63. He did occasionally go in further down: in ten innings at No. 4 he scored 485 runs at 53.88; from three knocks at No. 5 he made 427 runs at 142.33 (including a triple-century at Headingley in 1934); in six appearances at No. 6 there were 681 runs at 97.28; and in three outings at No. 7 he made 325 runs at 162.50, most notably a series-turning 270 against England in Melbourne in 1936-37, when he held himself back in the order while a wet pitch dried a bit.What is the highest first-innings total in a Test that resulted in defeat? asked Pete Abrahams from South Africa
There have been 13 occasions in Tests when a first-innings total of more than 500 hasn’t been enough to prevent defeat. The highest of all is 586, by Australia against England in Sydney in 1894-95, in the first of only three Tests which have ever been won by a side that followed on. Pakistan declared their first innings at 574 for 8 against Australia in Melbourne in 1972-73, but still ended up losing. There’s only one instance of a team scoring more than 500 in their second innings but losing: India amassed 510 against England at Headingley in 1967, but they were up against a first-innings deficit of nearly 400.With reference to the recent question about the imminent World Cup, it’s also being played in New Zealand: who are the best performers in ODIs there? asked Tim Pate from New Zealand
Yes, I was dimly aware that I’d left New Zealand out last time. The leading visiting batsman in one-day internationals played there is Mark Waugh, with 891 runs; Sachin Tendulkar had 821, and Ricky Ponting 752. Leading the way for the bowlers is Javagal Srinath, with 43 wickets, ahead of Wasim Akram (37). The leading New Zealand batsmen in home ODIs are Nathan Astle (3348 runs) and Stephen Fleming (2975), with Brendon McCullum third on 2406 at the moment. Their leading bowler is Daniel Vettori, with 113 one-day wickets; Chris Cairns and Chris Harris both took 94. Taking Australia and New Zealand together, the leading overseas batsman is still Desmond Haynes, with 3276 runs, while the top bowler is Wasim Akram (124 wickets).

Save Test cricket, sacrifice the one-day game

I don’t think it’s any coincidence that many international Test sides are experiencing batting fragility; a solid technique is often sacrificed in limited-overs cricket, in favour of a bit of extra power and the subsequent higher likelihood of boundaries

Jacob Astill25-Feb-2013I recently read an article from ESPNcricinfo’s assistant editor, Sidharth Monga, entitled “Why pay lip service to Test cricket?”, where he listed his very strong viewpoints about the possibility (or lack thereof) of successful coexistence between Test matches and Twenty20 cricket, specifically the IPL. Honestly, I found this article fascinating. As an Australian, I’ve never understood the IPL. I’ve never watched it, never had any interest in it, and genuinely could not even tell you if it’s televised in Australia or not.To hear an Indian vilify what many fanatical supporters consider to be the cricket world’s entertainment centrepiece, though, made me sit up and take notice. Sidharth made many points that I inherently agreed with, specifically that Twenty20 cricket has ruined what are considered ‘classical’ cricketing skills. I don’t think it’s any coincidence that many international Test sides are experiencing batting fragility; a solid technique is often sacrificed in limited-overs cricket, in favour of a bit of extra power and the subsequent higher likelihood of boundaries being scored. The consistent line and length valued in Tests, meanwhile, supposedly makes bowlers easier to hit in these shorter games.Sidharth then went further than I thought I’d ever see any Indian fan go when speaking of the IPL: he showed insight in stating that “Twenty20 is killing Tests”, while also comparing the competition to a parasite, stating “the IPL is taking from Indian domestic cricket and is giving back nothing.To end, Sidharth said with a hint of sarcasm that rather than ‘pretending to care’, we might as well let Test cricket ‘die with dignity’. But why should the original format of cricket, the game from whence all other games stemmed, be the one to step aside? I liken this to asking the sophisticated, cultured, eternal genius of Sachin Tendulkar to step aside in favour of a brash, aggressive 17 year old who can plonk the ball over the pickets a couple of times a season, but who is ultimately is an unsustainable attraction.For those of us who have an unblinkered view of the world of cricket, Test matches, when played properly, are the ultimate cricketing contest. The skills, stamina, and concentration levels of 22 players are tested to their fullest extent for five days. A close Test match (of which there are many examples if you know where to look) can be more exciting than a dozen close finishes in Twenty20 cricket.On the reverse, the boundary rainfall that we inevitably see in Twenty20 cricket ends up becoming, well, boring. The bowlers end up looking like bowling machines for batsmen to have their way with, in what no one can deny is a lopsided contest between bat and ball. And while a last-over finish in Twenty20 may be exciting when taken individually, when you consider that the teams only have 240 balls in which to find a difference between themselves, then it’s not surprising that these close finishes are a dime a dozen.Now all this is not to say that Test cricket is faultless. There are boring Test series, but that has more to do with the quality of pitches than the bowlers. The Edgbaston Test match in England against West Indies has featured some interesting management of the playing-light situation, but we’ve still managed to see some enthralling cricket between a team looking to instil itself as the best in the world, and a West Indies side that is a genuine underdog.One-day cricket has no potential to bring in new markets like Twenty20 does, nor does it have the gravitas of Test cricket•AFPOne thing Sidharth neglected to take into consideration is that outside India and the West Indies, the vast, vast majority of Test cricketers would sacrifice their pay-packet from the IPL to be allowed to fulfil the highest honour: to represent the country in Test cricket. Yes, nearly every player ‘desires’ to play the IPL. But this desire is not a ‘want’, it is often a ‘need’.The West Indies and New Zealand boards seemingly don’t pay their international players a decent wage, and therefore they need to play in the IPL. Australian cricketers don’t play in the IPL because it has been a lifelong dream, but they do it because they can get a few hundred thousand dollars for eight weeks’ work. Just because Virender Sehwag and some other Indian cricketers don’t set any store in Test cricket that doesn’t mean the rest of the world doesn’t either.While the IPL remains popular, Twenty20 cricket is most likely not going anywhere. And Test cricket should not be made to go. If the manufactured clash between these two forms of the game is not an ideological dispute but a genuine concern for player workload and welfare, then I present a compromise. We need to remove 50-overs cricket from the international schedule.I consider the fact that the one-day form of the game has been neglected in the conversation about player workload means that it has been forgotten, because 50-overs cricket is absolutely not the format that is “here to stay”. As I write this, the Australian side are preparing to head to England and Ireland for a few weeks, for six one-dayers in a four week period. No Test matches, just another meaningless one-day series. And this is after England play three one-dayers in a week against West Indies following the Tests. Nothing like England playing eight one-dayers in a month to lessen the oppressive workload on their players …This upcoming period is not the only example over the last few years of international teams neglecting the Test matches and playing just one-dayers. And don’t think showpiece tournaments like last year’s World Cup are untouchable. Yes, India won and they did very well to put all the pressure from their home fans aside, and it made us all feel warm and fuzzy deep inside. But the tournament took six weeks to conclude. Meanwhile, this year’s Olympic Games will host approximately 300 events, packing them into just two weeks.Australia’s end-of-season tri-series seems to take twice as long as the World Cup, and what is the Champion’s Trophy (which, mercifully, will be scrapped after the 2013 edition) but an excuse to try and get more cricket on the calendar every two years? All this and yet Australia and South Africa have to square off in a two Test series (predictably finishing 1-1).Wise men like Kevin Pietersen have seen the writing on the wall, with the naturalised Englishman saying that he quit 50-overs cricket because he feared “falling out of love with cricket”. He’s still going to play Test cricket. Of those players who decide to pick and choose international formats when nearing the end of their careers, you don’t see anyone opting not to play Test cricket if they actually believe they’d keep getting picked.Since the commencement of Twenty20, the 50-overs version is no longer the cool younger brother to Test cricket, the format you take your girlfriend or your kids to while the national board sits back and counts the money. It has no potential to bring in new markets like Twenty20 does, nor does it have the gravitas of Test cricket, the traditional game for lovers of cricket.In short, the 50-overs format is irrelevant, and it should be treated as such. Test cricket does need some work, with some experimentation with night-time Test matches hopefully coming soon. But those who consider the IPL be brilliant and faultless and the only way to entertain the cricketing public should remember there are others out there who still love their Test cricket. So why get rid of it?

The comedy of errors and the Sohal show

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the IPL game between Chennai Super Kings and Deccan Chargers in Chennai

Abhishek Purohit01-May-2011White’s contagious form
Cameron White has been struggling to get bat on ball for quite some time now. Even a forward defensive appears like an achievement at the moment. In such a frame of mind, there can be days when the contagion with the bat spreads to other areas of a player’s game. Two deliveries after M Vijay’s dismissal, Michael Hussey pulled a long hop from Pragyan Ojha straight to White at square leg. It came at a catchable height, White got both hands to it, and dropped it. Hussey went on to add 36 more in a 60-run stand with Suresh Raina that laid the foundation for Chennai’s innings.Morkel goes massive
Despite a late flourish from Chennai, Deccan had managed to keep them to 139 with nine balls to go. Ishant Sharma had conceded 23 off 21 deliveries and would have looked to end on a tight note against new man Albie Morkel who had faced just three deliveries. But Deccan were taken aback by what came next. Morkel smashed the next three deliveries, all on a length, into orbit over long-on. Each six was bigger than the previous one, and the last two were the biggest in the IPL, at 109 and 114 metres. Chennai surged to 165, and tellingly, their winning margin was 19.The comedy of errors
What happened off the last ball of Doug Bollinger’s first over is something that would have had few parallels even on a school ground. Shikhar Dhawan cut towards point and trotted out of his crease. Sunny Sohal, meanwhile, had assumed that there was a single, and rushed towards the other end. Dhawan was ball-watching, and Sohal had almost crossed him before he realised what was happening. He turned back, and both batsmen were now aiming to make the same crease.The point fielder, in his haste, went for the striker’s end. Had he hit, both batsmen would have been caught short, but he missed. The man backing up at midwicket, fumbled while trying to collect the ball as well. He recovered, and seeing one batsman try to make his way to the non-striker’s end, lobbed the ball to Bollinger, who was some way from the stumps. Bollinger gathered cleanly but his first attempt to disturb the bails did not find them. Panicking, he threw the ball at the stumps, but astonishingly, missed again from close range. At that moment, Chennai wouldn’t have found a needle in a haystack full of them. Sohal was on 13 then and went on to add 43 more.The one-trick show
Right from the start, Sohal had made his intentions clear. He was going to back away outside leg stump, and hope to clear cover. Sometimes he missed, sometimes he connected, and mostly the results were hilarious. On either side of a six and a four in a Morkel over, Sohal played two shots that made the big screen flash: “You can’t teach that.” He made lots of room only to find the ball eating it up and hurrying on to him. One the first occasion, he fell away and managed to edge the ball wide of Dhoni. On the second, he got it in the same direction, this time off a delicate dab. Both times, he collected boundaries. Morkel went for 20 in that over, and Chennai weren’t finding Sohal’s effort funny at all.

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