Rangers lead Patrick Cutrone transfer chase

Glasgow Rangers are at the front of queue for an Italian striker, according to Calciomercato in Italy. 

The lowdown

The Light Blues have already strengthened their forward line this summer with the signing of Antonio Colak from PAOK, although another striking option in Cedric Itten has left Ibrox.

His place could now be filled by reported target Patrick Cutrone, for whom Wolves paid £16.2m to sign from AC Milan ahead of the 2019/20 season, but it hasn’t worked out for him at Molineux.

He has only made 28 appearances for the Premier League club in three years, netting just three goals for the Old Gold. The 24-year-old has had three spells out on loan, at Fiorentina, Valencia and most recently Empoli.

He is now into the final year of his contract with Bruno Lage’s side, who may consequently view this summer as their last real opportunity to cash in on him.

The latest

Calciomercato’s report stated that ‘this is the right time for a transfer’ ahead of the expiry of Cutrone’s deal. ‘Requests are not lacking’, with clubs in Serie A keen on the 24-year-old off the back of his time in Empoli.

However, as things stand, Rangers and La Liga outfit Celta Vigo ‘are in the lead’ in the race for his signature.

The verdict

Cutrone started 15 games for Empoli last season but only netted three goals. He had hardly been prolific in his previous loan spells either, failing to get off the mark for Valencia and scoring just five times in 34 outings for Fiorentina.

It’s a far cry from the player who racked up 11 goals in 25 caps for Italy at under-21 level and 27 as a youngster at Milan. His time at the San Siro still accounts for 70 (82%) of his 85 recorded career goals, and 14 (61%) of his 23 assists, across senior and youth levels.

In 2018, he featured on the same Golden Boy shortlist as the likes of Kylian Mbappe and Phil Foden.

Van Bronckhorst might believe that there’s plenty of potential to unlock based on those early days of Cutrone’s career, and the Italian might just thrive in a league which only ranks ninth in the UEFA coefficient.

Bassey set to leave Rangers for record fee

Rangers centre-back Calvin Bassey is set to leave the club for a record-breaking fee this summer, with Brighton and Ajax tussling for his signature.

The Lowdown: Bassey on the move

The Nigerian has been a dominant figure for the Gers since joining from Leicester City back in 2020, proving his mettle on the big stage by making 14 appearances in last season’s Europa League and performing heroically in the final defeat to Frankfurt.

Bassey’s influential showings in Europe have caught the eye of a number of clubs though, and a summer departure from Ibrox now looks almost guaranteed to be on the cards.

A new update suggests that the 22-year-old’s exit could be record-breaking, in what could be a big boost for the Gers.

The Latest: Key update emerges

According to a late-night update from the reliable Sam Wallace of The Telegraph, Rangers will earn a club-record amount for Bassey’s services once he moves on.

Nathan Patterson currently holds that title after joining Everton for £12.6million earlier this year, but that figure looks set to be easily eclipsed and even potentially doubled.

It is claimed that Brighton and Ajax are locking horns over a move for the central defender, who has been hailed as ‘astonishing’ by Owen Hargreaves in the recent past.

The Verdict: Spend it wisely…

Losing Bassey is clearly a big blow for anyone of a Rangers persuasion but there is an element of inevitability about it, given his potential as a player, and adding £20m or more to the coffers would be some silver lining.

The key now is that Giovanni van Bronckhorst spends the big sum of money wisely on new signings, bringing in a similarly formidable centre-back and also improving in other areas.

Sometimes, losing a star man and replacing them with three or four excellent signings can end up being more beneficial – Rangers must make sure that is the case, as they look to wrestle back their Scottish Premiership title from Celtic.

Carvalho set for pre-season role at LFC

New Liverpool signing Fabio Carvalho will be used in the front three during the Reds’ pre-season, according to journalist Dean Jones.

The Lowdown: Carvalho signs for Liverpool

The youngster joined the Premier League giants from Fulham earlier in the summer, having shone for the west London club during their promotion-winning 2021/22 season.

Carvalho scored 10 goals and registered eight assists in the Championship last term, which clearly caught the attention of Jurgen Klopp and the recruitment team at Anfield.

The 19-year-old can play in midfield or in a more attacking role, and an interesting update has emerged regarding Liverpool’s proposed use of him.

The Latest: Jones makes Carvalho claim

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Jones claimed that Carvalho would be trialled in the front three by Klopp during Liverpool’s pre-season.

The reporter suggested:

“They’re going to test out Fabio Carvalho in that frontline in pre-season, just to see whether he’s actually ready for it and it might be that he gets more of a role next season in that frontline than we might envisage.”

Darwin’s a Red! Get your special edition Darwin Nunez tee here.

The Verdict: Great option to have

Versatility is always a bonus in any player and Carvalho possesses that in abundance, which only adds to his potential brilliance as a signing.

The former Fulham man can excel in a number 10 role, which has been his main position, but it will be interesting to see him in attack, likely cutting in from the left-hand side in a similar vein to Luis Diaz.

While Carvalho is unlikely to be a regular starter straight away next season, a strong pre-season for Liverpool in attack could show that he is more than ready to be a mere impact substitute.

In other news, Liverpool are reportedly ready to sign a Premier League star. Find out who it is here.

Tottenham: The Athletic say Paratici is ‘working’ on Bastoni

Speaking in a Tottenham Hotspur Q&A, journalist Jack Pitt-Brooke of The Athletic has shared the very latest update on sporting director Fabio Paratici’s pursuit of Inter Milan star Alessandro Bastoni.

The Lowdown: Spurs hopes alive?

The defensive sensation has been a target for Spurs since the start of the summer transfer window, and despite the player’s agent seemingly ruling out a San Siro exit, reports have suggested that the Lilywhites may still have a chance of signing him.

Indeed, the Nerazzurri’s need to generate funds through player sales could hand Spurs manager Antonio Conte a glimmer of hope to sign the Italy international, who would come as a real upgrade to his back three.

Bastoni is one of many targets for the left-sided centre-back role at N17, and when asked who could be likely to join the north Londoners, Pitt-Brooke shared the latest on Inter’s rising star.

The Latest: Paratici ‘working on’ Bastoni…

Speaking in a Q&A for The Athletic, the journalist stated that attention has apparently ‘turned’ to the 23-year-old given that fellow target Josko Gvardiol of RB Leipzig could be out of Spurs’ reach.

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Pitt-Brooke explained: “My impression is that Gvardiol will be beyond what they can do this summer. Spurs are happy to spend what you might call “Romero money” for this position, but that was only €50 million (£42.5 million). Gvardiol could cost close to double that to get out of RB Leipzig. That is why attention has turned to Bastoni, which Spurs are working on, but it all depends on his club, Inter Milan. If Inter get Gleison Bremer from Torino, it will make sense for them to sell a centre-back, although that could just as easily be Milan Skriniar as Bastoni.”

The Verdict: Interesting weeks ahead…

We feel it is unlikely that Bastoni leaves Inter given the recent statement from his representative, but if Paratici somehow manages to pull off a move, it would be another stroke of genius from the Spurs chief.

After signing Premier League star Yves Bissouma, the colossal Serie A defender could be a more than impressive follow-up given his sky-high potential and likeness to Azzurri legend Giorgio Chiellini.

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Italian football expert Conor Clancy called Bastoni a ‘defensive genius’ and an ‘intelligent’ player to have at the back – further supporting the notion that he would be a brilliant capture at Hotspur Way.

In other news: The Guardian: Tottenham eyeing ‘big’ 183-goal player move, Harry Redknapp called him ‘priceless’…find out more here.

Newcastle closing in on Ekitike deal

Newcastle United are believed to be edging closer towards the signing of Stade de Reims striker, Hugo Ekitike, having previously missed out on the player in January.

What’s the word?

As per journalist Craig Hope, the 19-year-old is believed to be keen on making the move to St James’ Park this summer, albeit with the northeast side now needing to come to an agreement with the Ligue 1 outfit.

Writing on Twitter about the developing situation, the trusted insider revealed that the deal appears to be heading in the right direction: “Understand Newcastle are currently in discussions over a deal for Reims striker Hugo Ekitike. The 19-yr-old wants to join the club & there is hope of progress. Package is €30m+.”

This aligns with a report from transfer guru Fabrizio Romano, who stated that the teenager had “agreed a five-year deal” with the Magpies, leaving just “final details” to be discussed with his current side.

The young Frenchman had previously rejected the move in the winter after a £33m deal had been agreed, although appears to have had a change of heart.

Supporters buzzing

Persistence has seemingly paid off for Eddie Howe and co, with the Premier League side having not given up hope despite that rejection in January, ensuring they are now set to secure the services of one the hottest prospects in Europe and a player who has been dubbed the “next Mbappe”, as per journalist Graeme Bailey.

In a breakthrough campaign in his native France, the £25.2m-rated gem bagged an impressive ten goals and provided three assists in the league in total, despite missing a fair chunk of the second half of the season with a hamstring injury.

Although he is a relative newcomer to senior football – having only spent a brief loan stint at Danish side Vejle BK prior to the most recent campaign – the indication is that he is a talent destined for the elite level, while he already compares favourably to those in his position across Europe’s big five leagues, ranking in the top 16% for progressive carries, as well as the top 3% for dribbles completed.

Those statistics would illustrate that he is so much more than simply just a goalscorer. His speed and ability to beat a man make him a comfortable fit on either flank, opening up the possibility that the Tynesiders could still move for another striker this summer.

Such excitement over potential incomings is a far cry from the dismal story of last year, when then-boss Steve Bruce was afforded little investment from the much-maligned former owner, Mike Ashley, eventually only bringing in Arsenal’s Joe Willock on a permanent deal, having already had the midfielder on loan the previous season.

With fresh faces now in the dugout and at boardroom level, there is a great deal of optimism that the club can finally threaten at the top half of the table, having so long languished in and around the relegation zone.

As for Ekitike, the promising starlet could well prove to be just the first piece of business in a seismic summer for Newcastle. Supporters are in for a real treat.

IN other news, Eddie Howe can now help NUFC sign “spectacular” £64m “nightmare”, he’s better than Saint-Maximin

Manchester United hold Jurrien Timber transfer talks

Manchester United have held talks to sign Ajax defender Jurrien Timber, according to Sky Sports journalist Florian Plettenberg.

The Lowdown: Ten Hag meeting

Erik ten Hag has already made a head start when it comes to summer transfer business at Old Trafford, holding a meeting in Amsterdam last week.

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He has now terminated his Ajax contract six weeks early in order to get going in England, with Timber seemingly a player of interest. The 20-year-old appears to be at the top of his game, with a career-high £27m Transfermarkt valuation, and he was a regular in Ten Hag’s Eredivisie-winning team.

Timber has made 74 senior appearances for Ajax and is entering the final two years of his contract, and it looks as if United are making their move for his services.

The Latest: Plettenberg’s update on Timber

Sky Sports reporter Plettenberg provided an ‘update’ regarding Timber, who is also of interest to Bayern Munich, on Monday afternoon.

He claimed (via Twitter) that the 20-year-old could join Ten Hag at Old Trafford after ‘talks’ with his ‘management’ took place. United’s interest is reported as ‘serious’, although Bayern have made an enquiry of their own for the centre-back.

The Verdict: Needed?

United have had their struggles at the back this season, with just seven other Premier League teams conceding more goals than the Red Devils’ tally of 56. They shipped four last time out against Brighton, so a defensive rebuild could be of real interest to Ten Hag over the coming months.

His Ajax side conceded just 19 times in the Eredivisie this season, 15 fewer than the next-best defence in the division, with Timber playing a vital role in that impressive record.

Therefore, he could be a good addition in both the short- and long-term at Old Trafford, and you’d like to think that Timber will get even better over the coming years.

In other news: Man Utd now eyeing move for ‘absolutely lethal’ Bundesliga star. Read more here

Umesh Yadav, India's go-to pacer at home

Along with his incisiveness, Umesh showed his ability to shoulder extra load in the absence of Shardul Thakur, producing a career-best performance against West Indies

Alagappan Muthu in Hyderabad13-Oct-2018Umesh Yadav bowls a lot of balls down the leg side. It’s the price he pays for attacking the stumps, but without it, India wouldn’t be so invincible at home.Delve a little into his statistics, and you realise that he, too, is invincible at home. His strike rate, for example, is better than Kapil Dev’s, and places himfourth on the list of fast bowlers who have played at least 10 Tests in India.His ability to pick up quick wickets was on show in Hyderabad, where he knocked over West Indies’ tail in half an hour, and reserved his best for the centurion Roston Chase. Though Chase had batted 188 deliveries, the Umesh specialty – a straight ball at high pace and swinging into the right-hander – burst through Chase’s defence, and knocked back his middle stump. Of Umesh’s 69 wickets at home, 35 have been bowled or lbw. That’s over 50%.In an interview with ESPNcricinfo before the Tests, Umesh had spoken about a conscious effort to attack the stumps more. “Look, I know I have pace,” he had said. “And pace [If you gain something from pace, you lose something too]. Batsmen have chances to score runs, they just need to time the ball. If you stray on the pads, it’s an easy boundary. So I did some reflection about my bowling and thought that if I keep it wicket-to-wicket and swing the ball from the fourth stump, it will be difficult for batsmen to hit. And even if he goes to hit it, there is only a 50-50 chance of success. But if I bowl half-volleys or very wide, then I don’t give myself a 50-50 chance, it’s much less.”Umesh’s career-best performance came in a match where he was the only fast bowler. For the longest time, he has had to compete with Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Ishant Sharama, Mohammed Shami, and now Jasprit Bumrah, especially when India go abroad and find themselves starting at a pitch that is helpful for seam bowling.”It’s very unfortunate that Umesh didn’t get to play much in South Africa and in England,” B Arun, the bowling coach, had said before the Test. “Also, the bowlers who played performed exceptionally well. We look at Umesh as someone who is quick, and we also have a system where we rotate the bowlers so that they remain fresh. And Umesh would definitely be a part of that. And we are extremely confident of what Umesh can bring to the table.”So is he. Even though he is playing only his fourth Tests this year, Umesh steps up to the bowling crease full of energy. As importantly, he is one of India’s best outfielders. “It’s [in the] past and I am looking ahead,” Umesh said on Friday, when asked about being in and out of the side. “I don’t want to dwell on the matches that have gone by. My thinking is that I should try and perform well in the matches that I will be playing from now on. If I keep thinking about the past, then I won’t be able to focus on the future. So focus is on doing well in future games and helping my team.”Umesh had the same mentality when he realised he would have to bowl extra overs on a flat pitch, with Shardul Thakur going off the field with a groin injury. “You can’t really do anything in these situations as this is part of the game. If he is not there, I will have to bowl his quota of overs too, and I knew he was not going to come back. I didn’t want negativity to creep inside. So as much as you discuss and deliberate, if I have to bowl, then I have to bowl. So my thought process was if the team asks me to bowl I am ready for that.”In all home Tests since 2010, India have benefited from 36 five-wicket hauls from a spinner – R Ashwin has contributed 20 of them – but only three from fast bowlers. Umesh joined those ranks on Saturday, and celebrated with a bonus wicket as well, recording the first six-for by an Indian fast bowler at home since Javagal Srinath in 1999. When the second innings starts, he has the chance to become only the third Indian to pick up a hat-trick in Test cricket.

Testing times for Bangladesh's pace attack

Their impressive limited-overs form has been based around quick bowling but Bangladesh currently struggle to field a two-man pace attack in Tests

Mohammad Isam in Dhaka27-Oct-2016A Bangladesh Test line-up that included Mashrafe Mortaza, Mustafizur Rahman and Taskin Ahmed would have been ideal against any team in any conditions. Against England in the Dhaka Test, the inclusion of these three bowlers would have meant the country’s most experienced, its most skilful and its fastest bowler playing in an attack that already has the stability of Shakib Al Hasan and the exciting Mehedi Hasan. But when it comes to Bangladesh’s Test team, the reality isn’t kind.Instead, Bangladesh are likely to field one of the least-experienced pace attacks in recent memory, whether or not Subashis Roy makes his Test debut. Kamrul Islam Rabbi, who made his debut in Chittagong, was far from convincing as a viable option with new or old ball. Captain Mushfiqur Rahim said in Chittagong that he wasn’t “that bad”, which was hardly a glowing endorsement.Ahead of the second Test in Dhaka, Mushfiqur said that the newcomers will still be backed regardless of their performance. “It is hard to maintain a pace attack since we play after long gaps,” he said. “Some of our pace bowlers only play Test cricket, so the gaps become hard for them. We are missing a few bowlers due to injuries. We have to look for the right combination in our bowling attack. If the outcome isn’t positive, we still have to back the newcomers.”Still, Bangladesh could go into the second Test with one seamer and four specialist spinners by including Shuvagata Hom to replace the “rested” Shafiul Islam. They also have the option to include Soumya Sarkar as a second seamer, while being asked to bat as low as No. 8 in the line-up. But these are not really great options to consider. Shuvagata doesn’t have a Test record that would make England afraid while Soumya doesn’t bowl regularly even in the nets.Such a dearth is stark contrast to the ODI attack that based its planning on pace since the 2015 World Cup. Mashrafe and coach Chandika Hathurusingha formulated the plan, to be used even in home conditions where wickets are often slow and flat. Rubel Hossain and Taskin were great foils for Mashrafe, before Mustafizur came into the scene and further strengthened the pace attack. Bangladesh did well in 2015 because of their quicks but the same bowlers haven’t been prepared for the longer format.Mashrafe hasn’t played Tests since 2009, though he remains the highest Test wicket-taker among Bangladeshi pace bowlers. Mustafizur is recovering from shoulder surgery and Taskin’s participation in the Dhaka Test was briefly considered before Hathurusingha settled the argument with a dire warning. Taskin’s last first-class match was in 2013, a year before his international debut, while Mashrafe has played only four first-class matches in the last seven years.

Even when a long-term view is taken on Mustafizur, it is hard to imagine him being used heavily in Tests

That Mashrafe has been discussed in this equation says much about Bangladesh’s woeful stocks in pace bowling in Tests. He hasn’t played for the last seven years due to several injuries that were followed by fitness limitations that only allowed him to prepare for ODIs and T20s. Mashrafe is fitter than he has been at any time in the last ten years, and it is true that periodically there is the odd report of the selectors thinking about bringing him back to Test cricket. It could still happen but it shouldn’t have been because Bangladesh couldn’t put together even a two-man pace attack.Even when a long-term view is taken on Mustafizur, it is hard to imagine the talented left-arm bowler being used heavily in Tests. Already, the load of playing ODIs and T20s as well as domestic T20 tournaments has taken a toll on Mustafizur, so Bangladesh may have to look elsewhere.Robiul Islam was perhaps the last pace bowler who looked the part in Test cricket, with his ability to bowl outswingers for long spells. He was the first and only Bangladeshi to win a Man-of-the-Series award, in Zimbabwe in 2013. A major reason why he faded away was that he was pigeon-holed as a Test specialist, which meant that he hardly got matches at the highest level. Plus, his fitness levels have dropped significantly since 2014, which affected his confidence as a bowler too. Mohammad Shahid was an encouraging presence last year though he lacked the pace and movement while Shahadat Hossain’s career has taken a nosedive since he was bizarrely injured during the Dhaka Test against Pakistan last year.There was also hope that the likes of Rubel, Al-Amin Hossain, Shafiul and Abul Hasan would come good in Tests but none of them have shown even a single encouraging performance. Rubel has played the most of the four, but averages 75.90 in 23 Tests. Shafiul has played nine Tests in six years while Al-Amin, to put it mildly, has been a good T20 bowler. Ziaur Rahman took four wickets in his only Test in Harare three years ago but has long been out of favour.While many of these bowlers didn’t perform to expectations and there is always the problem of Bangladesh playing Tests after long gaps, there has hardly been any focus, in the last decade or so, on sending pace bowlers abroad for learning the trade from experts. Bangladesh also doesn’t have A-team tours regularly, which means that upcoming or struggling pace bowlers are stuck in the domestic grind, which only allows them around 15 overs per innings, at best.Neither has there been focus put on the particular skills of pace bowlers like Mohammad Sharif and Sajedul Islam, two pace bowlers who have taken more than 200 first-class wickets since 2005. Sharif and Sajedul are considered nothing more than a punch-line because of the obscure nature of their performance in the National Cricket League or the Bangladesh Cricket League. Had their causes and efforts been championed, they could have brought their resilience to the top level and come of use to the senior side, which now finds itself struggling to put together a two-man pace attack.

Warnie v Buck

What could the coach and star player of international cricket’s most successful ever side find to argue about? Plenty

Jo Harman24-Aug-2015If you’ve heard Shane Warne commentate on the Ashes this summer – or in fact if you’ve heard Shane Warne talk, ever – you’ll know that he a hobby horse. Be it Cook’s boring captaincy, Beefy’s beery BBQs, Clarke’s funky fields, crap nicknames with convoluted backstories or his latest poker comp; in Warnie’s world, a point’s not worth making unless you make it a dozen times.That’s all very well when you’re retired and spouting off from the comms box but when you’re still playing and the hobby horse in question is the pointlessness of the existence of your coach, things start to get a little bit awkward.Shane Warne and John Buchanan were never going to get on, diametrically opposed as they were in almost every sense. A former university lecturer with just seven first-class appearances to his name, Buchanan was appointed as Australia’s coach in 1999 having led Queensland to their first Sheffield Shield title in 1994/95. He set about introducing a whole new coaching philosophy to the Australian dressing room and while captain Steve Waugh and later Ricky Ponting were ardent followers, Warne was not.Warne v BuchananGetty Images

Tests: 145 v 91 (as coach)

Wins: 92 v 70

Draws: 27 v 11

Losses: 26 v 10

Win percentage: 63.4 v 77

Data analysis and fitness were two of the central tenets of the new regime and Warne just couldn’t see the point. For Warne, a lager-guzzling larrikin whose phenomenal natural talent made his rise to super-stardom inevitable, these were unnecessary complications. Cricket had always been about having a laugh, gobbing off at a batsman, getting him out and then sinking a cold one. But for Buchanan, who’d worked his way up to the top coaching job in Australia despite having no playing career to speak of, they were absolutely integral to success.Coaching to Buchanan meant more than batting, bowling and fielding; it meant broadening the horizons of his players and developing them as human beings. He encouraged his players to deliver lectures and recite poetry in the dressing room to build self-confidence, with subjects ranging from Hulk Hogan to the Bee Gees. The English press dubbed Buchanan the ‘Wacky Professor’ after a team-briefing document was leaked during the 2001 Ashes that drew on the teachings of fifth Century Chinese warlord Sun Tzu. Warne may or may not have used his copy as toilet paper.

“After a bit I just turned to the coach and said: ‘I’m weak as piss, I hate your guts and I want to go home. You’re a d*ckhead'”Warne

Other wacky idiosyncrasies included encouraging his players to practise batting and fielding with their eyes shut, announcing his intention to develop a new breed of ambidextrous cricketers in time for the 2007 World Cup, pushing notes addressed to his own players under the hotel room doors of opponents and a multiple-captain theory during his stint with Kolkata Knight Riders which didn’t go down too well with incumbent skipper Sourav Ganguly. “Tomorrow I can also ask for four coaches,” quipped Ganguly.Best of all, there was his decision to hold vocabulary lessons during the 2005 Ashes, the intention being to encourage his players to use a list of polysyllabic words in everyday sentences. If he was trying to wind Warne up, he was doing a damn fine job of it.

****

Buchanan lit the touch paper during Australia’s 2000/01 tour of India, criticising Warne’s fitness after the second Test defeat at Kolkata. “It’s no secret that Warnie’s probably not one of the fittest characters running around in world cricket,” he said. Hardly revelatory but it was enough to get the leggie’s gander up. Buchanan would later express regret at his comment but for Warne there was no going back.The feud escalated when Warne was forced to cut short his season with Hampshire for a pre-Ashes military-style camp and described a programme that appeared to be constructed out of his very worst nightmares. “Running up and down with water cans for five or six hours, pushing cars, sleeping in a sleeping bag with no tent, no mattress, out in the middle of nowhere. Orienteering through the middle of the night without a compass. There were 6ft kangaroos out there. [The coaches] were hoping we’d confront one of them – but we didn’t actually see one.”Unlike Warne, Australia’s captains under Buchanan, Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting, were fans of the coach•AFPThe bad-blood started to coagulate when Warne was allegedly overheard at a charity do saying: “These boot camps are a big waste of time… after a bit I just turned to the coach and said: ‘I’m weak as piss, I hate your guts and I want to go home. You’re a d*ckhead’.”Buchanan’s methods had incensed Warne but they got incomparable results. Under his stewardship between 1999 and 2007 Australia won 26 Tests series, drew two and lost two, winning three consecutive World Cups to boot. In the years that followed Warne wouldn’t waste an opportunity to talk down Buchanan’s role in their success – “the coach is something you travel in to get to the game” etc – but Waugh and Ponting were quick to point out how pivotal he was.Buchanan eventually stepped down after the 2007 World Cup win but absence did not make Warne’s heart grow fonder. Later that year Warne launched his most scathing attack yet. “I don’t think he has made one good point in a long time, actually,” he told Sydney’s . “Everything that I have read that he says, he is living in pixieland. It just shows what us players had to put up with. We had to listen to his verbal diarrhoea all the time. He is just a goose and has no idea and lacks common sense, and you can put all that in there.”

“It would seem at times he does not put the same thought into these comments as he would in extracting batsmen from the crease”Buchanan

When Buchanan was given a role coaching England’s youngsters ahead of the 2009 Ashes, Warne couldn’t resist ruffling the goose’s feathers once again. “I think that’s a great move because that means we’ve got more of a chance. Hopefully Buck [Buchanan] will be doing his stuff and he’ll be working and doing all his things and hopefully over-complicating things. I reckon it gives our chances a big boost and makes our blokes more hungry.”For his part, Buchanan remained quietly puzzled by Warne’s outbursts. He rarely acknowledged the feud in the media but said in his 2009 book : “Since Shane and I left the Australian cricket team his critical views about my role have continued. It’s disappointing coming from someone like Shane who, on the field, has been a player and a person who has changed the face of the game.All Out Cricket”It is puzzling that a person of his stature in cricket, someone with iconic status, would continue to criticise me. It would seem at times he does not put the same thought into these comments as he would in extracting batsmen from the crease.”In 2013, Mike Hussey floated an intriguing theory about the Warne-Buchanan relationship. “I think the way John spoke to and treated and tried to motivate Shane was genius. He almost tried to get into an argument with him or challenge him with things that were a little bit leftfield. So Shane would say, ‘John, you’re dribbling rubbish. I’ll show you how to do it’, and he’d go out there and do it. In my mind that’s absolutely genius coaching.”If Hussey’s theory is correct, then Buchanan is even sharper – and even wackier – than anyone gave him credit for.

Fast scoring, and an unwanted double

Also, Kohli’s race to 6000, left-armers’ series records, losing despite scoring higher, and when all 11 bowled

Steven Lynch28-Jan-2014Pakistan’s remarkable win over Sri Lanka in Sharjah came at the rate of 5.25 an over. Have there been any faster successful Test run chases? asked Philip Johnson from England
The only faster successful chase in a Test, given a target of more than 200, was pulled off at The Oval in 1994, when England scored 205 for 2 in 35.3 overs to beat South Africa – a rate of 5.77 per over. There wasn’t the same time pressure in that game, though – England won with more than a day to spare, whereas Pakistan only had 1.3 overs in hand. If you lower the required target to 100 or more then there are a dozen quicker examples, the fastest being 6.82 an over, which West Indies achieved in knocking off 173 for 6 in 25.2 overs to defeat India in Kingston in February 1983. That one was tight on time: Wisden records that “West Indies won by four wickets, in a frenzied finish with four balls of the final 20 overs remaining.”Rangana Herath collected a king pair and conceded 100 runs in an innings in the third Test against Pakistan in Sharjah. Has anyone else suffered this indignity? asked Malinda Wijesinghe from Sri Lanka
Rangana Herath was the 17th man known to have bagged a king pair (out first ball twice) in a Test, and none of the others also conceded 100 runs in an innings in the same match as Herath did in Sharjah – the most conceded before Herath was 87, by Bert Vogler for South Africa against Australia in Sydney in 1910-11. In the Adelaide Ashes Test of 2010-11 Ryan Harris took 2 for 84 in between bagging a king pair, in which he reviewed both decisions unsuccessfully, so was actually given out four times in the space of two balls. Herath actually occupies first and second spot on this particular list now, as he followed his 5 for 125 in the first innings against Pakistan with 0 for 100 in the second. Three people have conceded more than 100 runs in the match (both innings) in which they collected their king pair: Bhagwat Chandrasekhar took 6 for 52 in each innings for India v Australia in Melbourne in 1977-78, Adam Huckle had match figures of 2 for 136 for Zimbabwe against Pakistan in Harare in 1997-98, and Ajit Agarkar took 3 for 76 and 3 for 51 for India v Australia in Melbourne in 1999-2000.Is Virat Kohli on course to reach 6000 runs in ODIs quicker than anyone else? asked Pratap Agha from India
Sourav Ganguly is currently the fastest to 6000 one-day international runs in terms of matches – 152, compared to 153 by AB de Villiers and 156 by Viv Richards – although Richards got there in fewer innings (141, six quicker than both de Villiers and Ganguly). As I write, Virat Kohli has 5361 runs from 128 matches (121 innings), so if he maintains his current impressive ODI average of 52, he should get there in about 12 more innings, making 133. That means even if he doesn’t quite keep up his current form, he should have a fair bit in hand. Kohli already shares the records as fastest to 5000 in terms of innings (114, with Richards) and matches (120, with Brian Lara). Another batsman clocking up ODI runs at an impressive rate is Hashim Amla, who currently has 4054 from just 85 matches (82 innings), at an average of 53.Mitchell Johnson took 37 wickets in the Ashes series. How many left-armers have taken more? asked Ray Kennaugh from Australia
The answer here is slightly surprising: Mitchell Johnson’s haul of 37 wickets (at the phenomenal average of 13.97) equalled the record by a left-arm bowler in any Test series – by another Australian, Bill Whitty, at home to South Africa in 1910-11. Whitty was, according to Wisden, “a medium-fast left-hander whose sharp swerve made him something of an Australian version of George Hirst”. Two left-arm spinners come next: India’s Vinoo Mankad took 34 wickets at home against England in 1951-52, while Tony Lock demolished the weak 1958 New Zealanders in England with 34 at just 7.47 runs apiece. Another slow left-armer, Alf Valentine, took 33 in just four Tests for West Indies in England in 1950 (his debut series), while paceman Alan Davidson claimed 33 (again in four matches; he missed one through injury) in Australia’s famous 1960-61 series against West Indies.India lost the second one-day international in New Zealand despite scoring more runs than them. How often has this happened in ODIs? asked Amit Arora from India
India (277 for 9) lost the recent one-day international to New Zealand (271 for 7) in Hamilton by 15 runs on the Duckworth/Lewis equation – when rain stopped play India’s D/L target was 293. This turns out to be the 93rd time that a one-day international has been lost by the side scoring more runs. But most of those involved the side batting second overhauling a reduced target: interestingly, this was only the second time that the side batting second had ever scored more runs but lost – the other occasion was in Bangalore in November 2008, when India batted first and scored 166 for 4 in a match eventually reduced, by two rain breaks, to 22 overs a side. England’s target was revised upwards to 198, they fell short with 178 for 8.Has there been any Test in which all 22 players bowled at least one ball? And how often have there been 11 bowlers in one innings? asked Ashutosh Mehra from India
The most different bowlers used by both sides in a Test is 20, by South Africa and England in the course of a rather boring draw in Cape Town in January 1965. The only people who didn’t bowl were the two wicketkeepers, Denis Lindsay and Jim Parks. Actually, Parks might have been a bit affronted that he didn’t get on, as he’d taken a Test wicket the previous winter in India (a proper batsman, too – Dilip Sardesai, for 87). There have been four instances of all 11 players bowling during a Test innings, all during drawn matches. The last two happened on the batsman’s paradise at St John’s in Antigua: all 11 Indians bowled as West Indies made 629 for 9 in May 2002, then three years later all 11 South Africans turned their arms over as West Indies amassed 747. The first instance was at The Oval in August 1884, when the entire English side bowled during Australia’s 551, and it didn’t happen again for nearly 100 years, when all 11 Australians had a trundle as Pakistan made 382 for 2 in a cast-iron draw in Faisalabad in March 1980. Taslim Arif batted throughout that innings to score 210 not out, so it’s possible he achieved the unique feat of facing 11 different bowlers during his innings (I don’t think anyone else could have managed it). For the full list of most bowlers in a Test innings, click here.)And there’s an update to last week’s question about Nathan Lyon’s not-outs:
My answer to last week’s question about Nathan Lyon not being dismissed at all in the 2013-14 Ashes series was wrong, as I managed to input the wrong query into Statsguru. The answer I produced showed the people with the most not-outs in a series. The only person other than Lyon who has played throughout an entire five-Test series and not been dismissed at all is Bill Johnston, the fabled Australian tailender, in South Africa in 1949-50 – and he actually only batted twice, scoring 1 not out in the first Test and 2 not out in the third. Apologies for the confusion.

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