Ashwin's records and lowest top scores

Stats highlights from the Nagpur Test where India handed South Africa their first away-series defeat in nine years

Shiva Jayaraman27-Nov-20152006 The last time South Africa lost a Test series overseas, whitewashed 2-0 by Sri Lanka. Between then and now, they had remained unbeaten in 15 consecutive away series. That streak is only bettered by West Indies’ 18 consecutive series from 1980 to 1995.7/66 R Ashwin’s figures in the second innings. They are his best in both Tests – beating the 7 for 103 he took against Australia in Chennai in 2012-13 – and first-class cricket. JP Duminy, in South Africa’s second innings, became Ashwin’s 300th first-class wicket. He added three more to that tally and averages 26.90.15 five-wicket hauls for Ashwin – equalling the most taken by any spinner in their first 31 Tests. Australia’s Clarrie Grimmett had been the sole record-holder until today, while South Africa’s Hugh Tayfield is third on this list with 14.169 Wickets by Ashwin – the most by a spinner in his first 31 Tests beating Grimmett’s tally of 164. A broader search including all kinds of bowlers indicates only two have been better wicket-takers than Ashwin after their first 31 Tests. England seamer Sydney Barnes with 189 wickets (in 27 Tests) tops the charts while Pakistan fast bowler Waqar Younis took 180 wickets at 18.78.55 Wickets for Ashwin in 2015, the most by any bowler. It is also only the 12th time an Indian has taken 50 or more wickets in a calendar year, Harbhajan Singh was the last to the mark with 63 wickets in 2008. Ashwin’s six five-fors this year also equals the most by an Indian in a year.17.81 Ashwin’s bowling average in 2015 – currently the third-best for any spinner with at least 50 wickets in a calendar year. Only Muttiah Muralitharan, who averaged lower in two separate years, has done better. Muralitharan took 55 wickets at 17.80 in 2002 and 90 at 16.90 in 2006. Ashwin’s strike rate of 34.20 this year is the second-best for any bowler who has taken at least 50 wickets in a year. Only Waqar has done better: he took 55 wickets at 29.50 in 1993.1 Instance since 1900 when a Test ending with a decisive result had an individual top score lower than the 40 scored by M Vijay in this Test. And it had come quite recently: Rahul Dravid had top-scored with 39 in the Hamilton Test in 2002-03 that New Zealand won. Overall, this was only the 14th Test without an individual fifty to end in a result.1 Instance when a bowler has returned better match figures against South Africa since their return to Test cricket than Ashwin’s 12 for 98 in this match. Muttiah Muralitharan took 13 for 171 in Galle in 2000.1912 The last time South Africa’s batsmen averaged worse in a series involving three or more matches. Their average on this tour of India has been 14.32, with only two fifties from 55 innings, but they had averaged 11.30 in three Tests against England 103 years ago. Overall, batsmen from both teams have together have averaged just 16.90, which is also the third-worst in any series involving three or more Tests.8 Batsmen who were dismissed for scores between (and including) 30 and 40 in this Test. The last Test that had eight or more such scores was the Ashes Test in Sydney in 2010-11. Overall, there are only eight such instances.13 South Africa batsmen who were dismissed for single digits in this Test, which makes it the fourth time that at least 13 batsmen fell between 0 and 9 since their readmission to Test cricket. The last time was against Sri Lanka in Colombo in 2004.14.85 Runs conceded per wicket by India’s bowlers against South Africa so far – the best they have averaged in a series with more than one Test. Their previous best was against New Zealand in 1995-96, when they had averaged 18.51. India’s bowling average is also the fifth-best for a team in a series with at least two Tests since 1950. The last time a team did better was in 2012-13, when West Indies’ bowlers had averaged 14.47 against Zimbabwe, taking 40 wickets in two Tests.2012 The last time a South African pair lasted more deliveries in an away Test than the 278 by Hashim Amla and Faf du Plessis in the Nagpur Test. Du Plessis was there again, with AB de Villiers in Adelaide, when they faced 408 deliveries for 89 runs. This was South Africa’s fourth-longest fourth-innings stand in away Tests (since balls faced information is available for partnerships). This was also the longest stand of the series bettering the 184 balls by Cheteshwar Pujara and M Vijay in the second innings of the Mohali Test.

Aussies at the Men's Hundred: Maxwell, Zampa, Stoinis and David lead the cast

Could performances at the tournament have any bearing on T20 World Cup selection?

Andrew McGlashan03-Aug-2022Sean Abbott (Manchester Originals)His Sri Lanka tour was over before it had really started when he fractured a finger in training. Has developed into one of the leading domestic allrounders in Australia, capable of packing a punch with bat and ball. Is among those who will leave before the end of the tournament due to the Zimbabwe ODIs in Townsville.Hilton Cartwright (Oval Invincibles)Capable of giving the ball a tremendous thump with the bat and one of the best fielders in the game. Has been playing for Derbyshire in the lead-up to the Hundred.Related

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Tim David (Southern Brave)One of the most talked-about players in the Australian game at the moment with all eyes on whether he gets a place in the T20 World Cup squad. A strong return for Brave will keep that bubbling ahead of decision day in mid-September. Made two appearances last season.Nathan Ellis (London Spirit)Won Hampshire the Blast title twice, holding his nerve in extraordinary scenes after being called for a no-ball, to cap a tournament where his death bowling stood out. Making a strong push for the T20 World Cup squad, which he has spoken about after his late call to the Hundred to replace Riley Meredith.Josh Inglis (London Spirit)The wicketkeeper-batter made 173 runs at a strike-rate of 136.22 for Spirit last season and this time will take over from Glenn Maxwell when he leaves for international duty having himself not been included for the ODIs.Glenn Maxwell (London Spirit)Will be one of the headline overseas names and is a player capable of winning white-ball matches off his own bat, regardless of how many balls are involved. However, he will be one of the Australians leaving early for international duty.Ben McDermott (London Spirit)McDermott finished the T20 Blast for Hampshire very strongly, producing the top score in the final, after being picked as a Hundred wildcard. Likely to be Spirit’s wicketkeeper.Kane Richardson (Birmingham Phoenix)No longer holds a CA contract but remains part of the white-ball plans, although may start to face pressure from Ellis so a strong Hundred could be useful for him ahead of T20 World Cup selection.Daniel Sams (Trent Rockets)Picked up as a wildcard, Sams’ power with the bat could be as valuable as his left-arm pace bowling. During the T20 Blast for Essex he struck 71 off 24 balls against Sussex. Was a reserve at last year’s T20 World Cup and remains on the fringes of the team.Marcus Stoinis (Southern Brave)Stoinis had his Sri Lanka tour cut short by a side injury so this tournament will be his return to action ahead of the Australian season. Has become a finisher in Australia’s T20I side but opens in the BBL so it will be interesting to see where Brave use him. Won’t be available all tournament.Ashton Turner (Manchester Originals)Had his T20 Blast campaign with Durham interrupted by a dislocated shoulder and largely struggled to make an impact.Matthew Wade (Birmingham Phoenix)Enjoying a final flourish to his international career as Australia’s T20 finisher, and has stated the upcoming World Cup will be his swansong.Adam Zampa (Welsh Fire)One of the leading white-ball spinners in the world, the Hundred will be Zampa’s first outing since the tour of Pakistan having skipped Sri Lanka for the birth of his first child. Should be a key weapon in Fire’s attack before heading back to Australia to play against Zimbabwe.

Liverpool hit gold with Klopp signing who’s now worth more than Trent

Calmest man in the arena. Trent Alexander-Arnold stepped up when England needed him most, expertly dispatching his decisive penalty, his team's fifth, in the quarter-finals shootout against Switzerland to advance to the semi-finals of Euro 2024, where the Netherlands now await.

The Liverpool vice-captain has been on the periphery this summer after being shoehorned into the centre of the park in the Three Lions' opener and failing to hold a motley crew together against Serbia.

It was always going to be an uphill battle, but Liverpool fans will be safe in their knowledge that their homegrown talent is one of the very best in the business.

Trent Alexander-Arnold celebrates for Liverpool

Courted by Real Madrid and entering the final year of his contract, there's an uneasy focus on the 25-year-old's future, with his technical quality and presence in the Anfield side simply irreplaceable.

However, for all his strengths, he's not the most valuable member of Arne Slot's first team, with one of Jurgen Klopp's later signings actually overtaking him in that regard.

Why Liverpool signed Cody Gakpo

The man in question is none other than Cody Gakpo, who is starting to show signs of growing into the player that Liverpool envisaged when they paid PSV Eindhoven the big bucks to bring him to the Premier League in January 2023.

Liverpool forward Cody Gakpo

Liverpool paid £35m for Netherlands international Gakpo's services, with the dynamic forward having lit up the Dutch Eredivisie and turned global heads onto his journey after an impressive campaign in Qatar, at the 2022 World Cup.

As per FBref, he ranks among the top 18% of forwards across Europe's top five leagues over the past year for assists, the top 6% for shot-creating actions, the top 7% for progressive passes, the top 11% for successful take-ons and the top 8% for tackles per 90.

Liverpool might not feel that they have quite got bang for their buck just yet but Gakpo is a unique attacking outlet and he could positively explode under Slot's leadership in just over one month.

Cody Gakpo's market value in 2024

Hailed for his "special skill set" by Klopp's former assistant manager Pep Lijnders, Gakpo has not seen his market price skyrocket since alighting in Liverpool, but he's made steady progress that has been reflected through his impressive overall tally of 23 goals and nine assists across only 46 starting appearances.

The 25-year-old, who is thriving at the Euros and has notched three goals and an assist over five matches for Oranje – set to meet England at the penultimate hurdle on Wednesday – has so much more to give, but this is a wonderful illustration of just how talented a player the Reds have at their disposal.

Make no mistake, some of the listed market prices below are a tad modest, but there's no question that numbers have been crunched to accurately establish the most important and marketable members of the Anfield crop. Alexander-Arnold, despite his glittering quality, doesn't even make the grade, with the site recording his current market value at £33m, likely due to his contract situation.

1.

Dominik Szoboszlai

£46m

2.

Alexis Mac Allister

£45m

3.

Darwin Nunez

£43m

4.

Cody Gakpo

£40m

5.

Luis Diaz

£36m

Gakpo's place in the rankings bears testament to his high-class ability. While he hasn't always been performing at the apex of his game at Liverpool under Klopp, the Dutchman is a sharp goalscorer with a dynamic and far-reaching skill set.

Liverpool's Cody Gakpo.

Supporters might be yearning for new signings on Merseyside, but if Alexander-Arnold is kept on the books and Gakpo is provided the license to thrive under his countryman's tutelage, Liverpool might just find they have the tools to sculpt the illustrious success they so dearly crave.

Liverpool hit gold on Klopp superstar who's worth more than Anthony Gordon

This talented player could explode under Arne Slot’s management.

ByAngus Sinclair Jul 5, 2024

Lancashire apologise after stewarding shortage cuts double-header capacity by half at short notice

Over 2,000 fans have tickets cancelled for Emirates Old Trafford fixtures at last minute

George Dobell01-Jul-2021Lancashire have “apologised unreservedly” after a shortage of stewards forced them to reduce the number of spectators allowed at Thursday’s T20 double-header at Emirates Old Trafford at short notice.The club say the third-party company which supplies their “safety stewards” notified them on Wednesday that they were unable to honour their commitment. As a result, Trafford Council were uncomfortable with the original capacity agreed for the game (which was 4,500) and insisted upon reducing it (to 2,292).With Lancashire deciding to prioritise members, they were obliged to contact all other ticket holders and cancel their tickets. They have been promised a refund “as soon as possible” as well as two free tickets to other matches. Spectators will have a choice of Hundred, Blast or One-Day Cup games. Lancashire have also promised to “review” their “external stewarding provision”.Lancashire’s women’s team took on Ireland in the first fixture of the day, with Lancashire’s men’s team playing Worcestershire under lights in the evening.Related

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“Lancashire was hugely disappointed and frustrated to have had to reduce the capacity of today’s T20 double header, particularly at such short notice,” a Lancashire spokesperson said in a statement.”After extensive collaboration with Trafford Council on Wednesday evening, there was a concern around the capability of our external stewarding provider with regards to the number of qualified stewards that were available for the fixture”Unfortunately, as a result of this, the capacity had to be further reduced for today’s fixtures. As a consequence, we are undertaking an immediate review of our external stewarding provision.”Lancashire Cricket, as a members’ club, made the decision to prioritise members’ tickets.”We apologise unreservedly to those supporters that have had tickets cancelled. This is not a decision that was taken lightly but the safety and security of our supporters remains our number one priority.”Lancashire have also emailed members to apologise for, among other things, the difficulty – and cost – of attempting to contact the club by phone, cancelled tickets for the T20 match against Durham for reasons unrelated to stewarding, and difficulties for disabled spectators at Old Trafford.

Five ways India can regain Test stronghold, especially at home

With India’s next WTC fixture slated for August 2026, here are five ways they can bounce back after the bruising at the hands of SA, and earlier, NZ

Karthik Krishnaswamy28-Nov-20251:38

What are the remedial steps for team India?

Bin the rank turnerWhat is the ideal home pitch for India? What is the best type of surface to heighten their relative strengths over their opposition? This debate has made India go back and forth between square turners and true batting surfaces multiple times over the last decade, and the two pitches against South Africa, in Kolkata and Guwahati, only showed that neither kind can neutralise the threat of a strong opposition.Two things must be noted, though. South Africa’s victory came on the back of all-timer performances by a visiting fast bowler (Marco Jansen) and a visiting spinner (Simon Harmer) in India. Not too many touring teams can call on attacks that good; most times, India are likely to have the better attack for Indian conditions. It remains in their interests, notwithstanding what happened in Guwahati, to broaden rather than narrow that gap in skill and depth between their attack and the visiting attack. This, as this in-depth study from the analyst Himanish Ganjoo shows, is best achieved on pitches with balance between bat and ball.Related

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There will be losses to good teams, and times when losing the toss hurt India. But those things can happen on sharp turners too.More importantly, good batting pitches with true bounce are better for India’s long-term development. They incentivise the team to pick batters who have the all-round game to score hundreds against good bowling, and fast bowlers and spinners who aren’t just putting the ball on a spot and expecting the pitch to do the rest.On these pitches, players can believe that good processes will beget good outcomes in the long run. This is particularly important for batters; it becomes extremely difficult to trust your processes if you are doing everything right and averaging 20 over a season because the pitches are treacherous. Selection also tends to become more reactionary in these situations.6:22

‘Gambhir took the blame because he felt curators should not be blamed’

For a team in transition, selection will need to be anything but reactionary. India need to pick their best players and give them time to prove themselves. This is definitely a more straightforward process when pitches allow you to judge players properly.Ensure allrounders tick the primary-skill boxAxar Patel’s selection in Kolkata made a lot of sense in theory. A fast, accurate left-arm spinner on a turning pitch against a team full of right-hand batters. An excellent lower-order batter with multiple gears, particularly against spin.India starting day three of the match with Axar and Ravindra Jadeja in tandem also made sense in theory.But watching Corbin Bosch play out Axar comfortably, and watching Axar struggle to test the right-handers’ outside edge right through that spell, showed that theory can only go so far. This was clearly a bowler who had played his last Test match in February 2024, and his only first-class match since then in September 2024. This was clearly a bowler who hadn’t taken more than two wickets in a first-class innings since December 2022.

If Axar is too valuable a white-ball asset to give him time to develop his red-ball game, India should perhaps not pick him for Tests

Axar is a fine cricketer, but he hasn’t been a genuine Test bowler for a while. He gets into India’s home squads because he’s never expected to be the lead spinner, because he usually only plays as a third spinner — in Kolkata he was one of four — and is picked as much, or more, for his batting than his bowling.Being able to call on three spin-bowling allrounders in Jadeja, Axar and Washington Sundar at home can be a luxury. The batting depth provided by R Ashwin, Jadeja and Axar proved to be a cheat code for India during their 2023 home series against Australia, rescuing them from a number of hairy situations.Axar barely bowled during that series, though, even though the pitches were extremely spin-friendly. Even on those pitches, the gaps in his bowling were clear when you watched what Ashwin and Jadeja did from their ends.Axar only played four first-class matches between that series and this one against South Africa. It’s not his fault, because he’s a white-ball regular, but India will have to figure out what to do about this situation. If he’s too valuable a white-ball asset to give him time to develop his red-ball game, India should perhaps not pick him for Tests.1:07

What’s the verdict on Washington Sundar at No. 3?

Washington presents a different case. He has had an extremely unusual early-career trajectory — batter at junior level, new-ball spinner when he broke through in the IPL, white-ball specialist who hadn’t played a first-class match in three-and-a-half years when he made his accidental Test debut at the Gabba in January 2021 — which is now mirrored by his shifting role from Test match to Test match. He batted only once in the two Tests against West Indies, and batted at No. 3 in his very next Test match, in Kolkata. He bowled just the one over in that game, followed by 48 in Guwahati.The thing about Washington is that he is capable of doing everything he’s asked to do, and do it competently. He is a cricketer of frightening ability. Whether it’s the match-saving century at Old Trafford, the crucial wickets in England or the long hours of high-control batting in Kolkata, the things he’s done are impressive but never surprising.But sometimes he can look like an offspinner who’s only taken 99 wickets in 46 first-class matches. He goes through a fair share of tidy but unthreatening spells, and spends long hours out of the attack when two right-handers are at the crease — imagine that ever happening to Ashwin. He often looks like the third spinner in a three-spinner attack, and in Kolkata like the fourth spinner in a four-spinner attack.3:45

Did India pick one spinner too many at Eden Gardens?

What do India do about a player like him? Perhaps the obvious answer is what they did in Kolkata. Washington has the game to bat in the top order, so India may be best served picking him as a batter, and using his bowling regularly but not counting him among their bowlers when they pick their XIs. This would ensure they don’t look short of wicket-taking options in conditions that don’t suit him, but always have his offspin around should they need it.The third young — or youngish; Axar is in his early 30s now — allrounder in India’s squad, Nitish Kumar Reddy, presents the most straightforward case. After two series of batting behind the other allrounders and barely bowling at all, it must be clear to India that he does not merit selection in home Tests — not yet anyway. And while he certainly has the potential to be a Test allrounder in the future, are India really developing that potential by playing him in home Tests, and not using him, when he could be getting innings and overs under the belt in domestic cricket?Develop genuine spinnersAnyone bowling in the same match as Harmer in Kolkata and Guwahati was at a disadvantage. Even spinners as good as Jadeja and Keshav Maharaj looked inadequate in comparison.For India, though, Harmer was a reminder of a bowler who had been an ever-present in home Tests until this season, Ashwin, a fingerspinner who could take wickets in a variety of ways across a variety of conditions, with old ball and new, by bowling quick and attacking the stumps on turning pitches, by beating batters with drift and dip on flatter tracks.The predominant trend of square turners in Ashwin’s final years possibly led to India losing sight of the difference between him and Jadeja on the one hand and Washington and Axar on the other. Ashwin and Jadeja, as good as they were with the bat, were automatic picks in India’s home XIs even purely as bowlers.2:55

‘Harmer in India better than Lyon, Swann’

This is not the case with Axar and Washington, and it becomes clearer when they bowl on flatter tracks.Who are India’s best genuine red-ball spinners after Jadeja and Kuldeep Yadav?Running through the list of spinners who have played for India A in recent years presents a slightly concerning picture, with all three non-Test spinners selected this year — Harsh Dubey, Tanush Kotian and Manav Suthar — falling under the allrounder category.These may well be the best domestic spinners India have, but if not, Harmer’s displays should make the selectors ask themselves whether they are prioritising utility or all-conditions wicket-taking skills.Identify the best middle-order candidates, and stick with themIt was no accident that Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane and Rohit Sharma took over India’s middle order from Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman. Even two or three years before the old guard began to exit the Test stage, these were the younger names tipped to take over by most seasoned watchers of Indian cricket.Now, with all of Pujara, Kohli, Rahane and Rohit (who finished as an opener) done with Test cricket, there is no obvious next generation of specialist middle-order batters, barring Shubman Gill at No. 4. Shreyas Iyer, whose back issues have put his red-ball career at an impasse for the moment, was perhaps the last batter other than Gill who was widely tipped to have a long stint in India’s middle order.Since Iyer’s debut in 2021-22, India’s middle-order debutants have been Suryakumar Yadav, Rajat Patidar, Sarfaraz Khan, Devdutt Padikkal and B Sai Sudharsan. Sarfaraz is the only one of the five to average above 50 in first-class cricket.4:14

Are India selecting Test players based on their white-ball performances?

This is a complete breakaway from the history of selection in Indian cricket. While there has always been the odd exception, an eye-catching first-class record over a decent sample size has generally been a prerequisite for Test selection.There are reasons for the departure from this long-established norm. With the increase of teams in the Ranji Trophy and a possible dilution of talent in consequence, and with pitches often tailored to home teams’ needs at a given point in a season, the selectors have come to view runs and wickets in this tournament as a less reliable barometer for selection than performances for India A.And with the IPL and even state-run T20 leagues pulling the best raw talent in the country towards honing their white-ball rather than red-ball skills, the selectors perhaps also feel the batters best equipped to handle pace and spin bowling at Test level — the ones with the best judgment of length, above all, who give the illusion of having more time — may not have particularly good first-class records or even play that much first-class cricket.Because of this, though, and because India have multi-skilled players such as Jadeja, Washington and Dhruv Jurel who are good enough to bat in the top six, the selectors have ended up having to answer some uncomfortable questions.4:37

Karim: ‘You need specialists to do well in Test cricket’

As good as Washington is, would he be batting at No. 3 ahead of a specialist in a previous era? As good as Jurel is, and as irresistible as his form may be, would he be playing ahead of the specialist middle-order reserve in an India squad from a previous era? And how good is that specialist middle-order reserve if he is getting left out for a lower-order batter simply because he bats left-handed?Having gone through these questions, if the selectors still feel Sai Sudharsan and Padikkal are the best middle-order batters in India other than Gill, this is the time to stick with them. That might, in itself, be the hardest call to make.But beyond the next Test selection, there are broader questions to address. If the selectors and team management feel the Ranji Trophy isn’t a good-enough indicator of player quality, it might be time for the BCCI to turn it into the best tournament it could be. This could mean changing the tournament format, or setting stringent standards for pitches, or – here’s a radical thought – increasing match fees to a point where the best talent in the country is clamouring to be part of it.Don’t take the eye off the red ballBetween now and their next WTC Test in August, India have a T20 World Cup to prepare for and defend. They have ODIs to play, involving Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. There is an IPL season too.White-ball cricket will dominate the domestic scene for a while too, with the Ranji Trophy taking a mid-season break until mid-January.India next play a Test in Sri Lanka and that’s a while away•BCCIIndia have the same coaching staff and the same selectors for white-ball and red-ball cricket, and all of them will have a lot of white-ball cricket to keep their minds on in this period. But they will have reviewed the defeats to South Africa, and identified areas of concern they will want to address by the time India play their next Test. The addressing will have to begin as soon as possible.It could mean finding ways for the best red-ball players in the country to keep playing matches even outside the Ranji Trophy windows. It could mean arranging A tours after the Ranji final in late February, and between the IPL and the Sri Lanka tour.Whatever India do, they will not want to be caught off-guard by a better-prepared and better-equipped Sri Lanka – who might well have brighter prospects of making the WTC final at that stage – when they begin that tour.

Vinicius Junior welcomes Hollywood star Bradley Cooper & Colombian singer Maluma to his home for dinner as Real Madrid winger shows off trophy collection one week after Ballon d'Or snub

Vinicius Junior hosted Hollywood actor Bradley Cooper and singer Maluma for dinner at his house as the Real Madrid star showed off his trophies.

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Vinicius Jr hosts Cooper and MalumaGifted them Real Madrid kitsLos Blancos next face AC Milan on TuesdayFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Hollywood actor Cooper and Colombian singer Maluma turned up at the Real Madrid star's home in the Spanish capital and joined him for dinner. Afterwards, Vinicius Jr. gave his guests a tour of his house, showed off his trophy cabinet and gifted them a pair of Real Madrid away jerseys. The gathering took place a week after the Brazilian was snubbed for the Ballon d'Or as Rodri bagged the award.

AdvertisementWHAT HAS BEEN SAID

Sharing some photographs from the get-together, Maluma wrote on Instagram: "This combo is separating me. Shall we take them on tour?"

GettyTHE GOSSIP

Vinicius' defeat to Rodri at the 2024 Ballon d'Or awards sparked a lot of controversy, with the Real winger having been the favourite for the prize until the day of the ceremony. Los Blancos learned about the final verdict ahead of time and decided to boycott the ceremony, cancelling their planned trip to Paris as a mark of protest.

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR REAL MADRID?

Carlo Ancelotti's side will take to the field on Tuesday night for the first time since their humiliating defeat in El Clasico against arch-rivals Barcelona, as they take on AC Milan in a Champions League clash.

Daryl Mitchell joins Middlesex for T20 Blast spell

New Zealand allrounder available for nine group-stage games as replacement for Mitchell Marsh

ESPNcricinfo staff21-May-2021Middlesex have further strengthened their squad for this year’s Vitality Blast by bringing in New Zealand allrounder Daryl Mitchell. Having signed Paul Stirling for the start of the tournament, Mitchell will come in for the last nine group games.The pair were recruited after Middlesex lost out on the services of Mitchell Marsh, with the Australia allrounder called up for the tour of the Caribbean.”It’s great that Daryl has agreed to play for us in the T20 Blast this season,” Middlesex’s head coach, Stuart Law, said. “He comes highly recommended by his New Zealand contemporaries and we have watched him force his way into that strong New Zealand team over the last few years.Related

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“He brings an all-round game, with a focus on power hitting, and good cricket intellect. We look forward to welcoming him into the Middlesex family and can’t wait to start working with him during the Blast.”Mitchell, 30, has been capped in all three formats by New Zealand and is an experienced T20 player, with 2110 runs and 48 wickets from 108 matches, and a batting strike rate of 130.48. He scored his maiden ODI ton – from just 92 balls – against Bangladesh in March. This will be his first experience of county cricket.”I am really honoured to have signed with Middlesex and to be able to call Lord’s my home for the Vitality Blast,” Mitchell said. “I’m looking forward to meeting up with the group after our Test Championship final versus India and getting stuck into winning some t20 cricket.”Middlesex have also signed Mujeeb Ur Rahman for the T20 Blast, but could face difficulties getting the Afghanistan spinner into the country amid various pandemic-related restrictions on travel.

Offer made: Arsenal eye Zinchenko upgrade in "electric" £34m Euro 2024 star

It might have ended without a trophy, but last season saw Arsenal take another step forward in their quest to finally dethrone Manchester City from the top of the Premier League.

As a collective, Mikel Arteta's side generally looked better than they did the previous campaign, but a few stars, notably Oleksandr Zinchenko, seemed to take a step back.

The former City man saw his game time cut due to injuries and concern over his lack of defensive solidity, and based on recent reports, he could soon be replaced by an exciting full-back who's been brilliant at the Euros so far.

Arsenal transfer news

According to a recent report from Turkish publication Ajansspor, Arsenal are still incredibly interested in Fenerbahçe left-back Ferdi Kadıoğlu.

In fact, the report claims that the Gunners have already seen a €20m – £17m – offer rejected by the Turkish side, who value their star player at closer to €40m, which converts to around £34m.

While there seems to be progress on the deal, Edu Gaspar and Co will need to get moving, as the story also reveals that Borussia Dortmund made an unsuccessful bid worth around €25m – £21m.

Ferdi Kadiolgu for Fenerbahce.

It won't be a cheap transfer to complete, but given his performances last season and at the Euros, plus the uncertainty around Zinchenko's future, it seems like one worth pursuing.

How Kadıoğlu compares to Zinchenko

If the Gunners can reach an agreement with the Süper Lig giants in the coming weeks and get their man, he'd be in direct competition with Zinchenko – lest he's sold – so how does he compare?

Well, from a pure attacking output perspective – this is the modern game, after all – Kadıoğlu comes out ahead. In his 51 games for Sarı Kanaryalar last season, he scored three goals and provided five assists, equating to a goal involvement every 6.37 matches.

Now, while that might not sound outlandishly impressive, it is better than the Arsenal man, as in his 35 appearances in 2023/24, he scored once and provided two assists, meaning he averaged a goal involvement every 11.66 games.

Turkey and Fenerbahce defender Ferdi Kadioglu.

Another area where the "electric" 24-year-old, as described by data analyst Ben Mattinson, has an advantage over the Ukrainian is his positional versatility.

The former City man can certainly play in several midfield roles and has in the past, but the vast majority of his starts in football – 183, to be precise – have come at left-back, so it's hard to trust him to do a job elsewhere on the pitch at a high level.

In stark contrast, the "exemplary" Arnhem-born gem, as dubbed by Mattinson, has played all over the pitch in recent years.

While his 66 starts at left-back are the most in any one position, he has also started 56 games in attacking midfield, 44 on the right wing, 37 at right-back, 23 at left wing, and he's hit double digits in three more positions to boot.

66

Left-Back

183

Left-Back

56

Attacking Midfield

26

Central Midfield

44

Right Wing

15

Right Midfield

37

Right-Back

14

Left Midfield

23

Left Wing

11

Attacking Midfield

19

Right Midfield

3

Defensive Midfield

This ability to not just play but thrive in several areas of the pitch is one of the reasons Mattinson describes the 5 foot 9 ace as a "technically intelligent" player who "loves to interchange with his teammates," which sounds like the sort of player Arteta would love to have in his side.

Ultimately, while Zinchenko is a talented player, it does look as if his importance to Arsenal has decreased since the start of last season. Therefore, while Kadıoğlu won't come cheap, his impressive performances in recent years and tactical flexibility make him an incredibly appealing replacement and someone the club should sign, especially if he continues to impress at the Euros.

Arsenal open talks for Havertz partner who's been "terrorising defences"

The £43m superstar could supercharge the German’s goal tally.

ByJack Salveson Holmes Jun 20, 2024

Sean Williams has been around the block and then some (but he's not stopping now)

The Zimbabwe veteran started his international career two decades ago, but his appetite for the game is undimmed

Firdose Moonda24-Sep-2025When Sean Williams made his international debut on February 25, 2005, precisely one T20 international had been played up to that point. Twenty years later Williams will be in action on the day the 6000th T20I, across men’s and women’s cricket, will be played. It will also be his 39th birthday, as he continues his run as the world’s longest-serving active international cricketer.Since his debut, only two players, Hamilton Masakadza and Sikandar Raza, have been capped more times for Zimbabwe and only one, Brendan Taylor, has scored more runs. Williams has played against 28 international teams in 17 countries. Only two other players – Collins Obuya and Paul Stirling – have been up against more opposition. When Williams says he has “seen the full cycle”, you have to believe him.He is currently part of the Zimbabwe T20I squad that will compete in the Africa regional qualifiers in their quest to reach the 2026 World Cup. Cricket is completely different to what it was two decades ago, when he received his maiden international call-up.”I was playing a first-class game at BAC [Bulawayo Athletic Club] and my dad was throwing balls to me on the side of the nets. He was throwing from quite a wide angle and I didn’t understand why. I was actually getting quite frustrated,” Williams says. “About 10 or 15 minutes later I got a phone call from the national team manager to say I’d been selected against South Africa. And my old man told me he was doing that to prepare me for Makhaya [Ntini]. It was quite stunning, I remember that very clearly.”Related

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Williams didn’t face Ntini in any of the three ODIs he played in South Africa in his debut series but he did get a taste of the big time. South Africa’s team included Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs, Mark Boucher, Albie Morkel and Ntini. In contrast, the Zimbabwe squad had one recognisable name – Tatenda Taibu – and a group of youngsters who were trying to rebuild after the 2004 white-player walkout. Williams was too young to be involved in that rebellion, and he did not entirely grasp how significant the issues in the game were at the time, but even as a newcomer he could tell something was off.”It was difficult,” he says. “I’ll never forget walking through the Sandton Towers [hotel in Johannesburg] and we were going to our team meeting room and when we walked past people, they were like, ‘Where’s [Andy] Flower? Where’s [Heath] Streak? Who are you people?’ It was quite something to walk past.”Flower had left Zimbabwe the year before, after his involvement in the black-armband protest during the 2003 World Cup, and his brother Grant was part of the group of 13 who protested then-captain Streak’s sacking. Streak, of course, was also not around. Zimbabwe was a mess, in cricket and more generally. The accelerated land-reform programme that sought to redistribute farms from white to black ownership was in full swing, inflation was high (though it would get worse) and so was unemployment. A ban was placed on dual citizenship and many who had the opportunity to take up another nationality, especially that of the United Kingdom, did so.Williams himself did not qualify to apply for a British passport but he flirted with moving there after he did a stint in England, with a club cricket team in Newcastle. The late Kevin Curran, then involved in the coaching structures in Zimbabwe, urged him to return, and it was what Williams wanted anyway. “I enjoy being at home,” he says. “And I ended up wanting to play for Zimbabwe no matter what.”Williams on his way to an unbeaten 70 against West Indies at the 2007 World Cup, which was a dismal one for Zimbabwe•Paul Gilham/Getty ImagesEven when Zimbabwe’s results became so poor that they opted out of Test cricket for six years between 2006 and 2011. One consequence of that was that Williams, who averaged over 40 in first-class cricket in five of the seven years between 2006 and 2012, ended up waiting until 2013 to get his Test cap. From an international perspective, he concentrated on ODIs (he played one T20I in 2006 and his next one in 2013) and in particular on how Zimbabwe could perform on the global stage.He was part of the squad in the 2007 ODI World Cup, where they didn’t win a game, and then the 2011 tournament, where they won two out of six matches, against lower-ranked opposition. “It was an absolute struggle when we got to those World Cups,” he says. “I felt very nervous when I played, and also that quite often you could predict the outcome of our games.”The only outlier in that time was Zimbabwe’s stunning win over Australia in the 2007 T20 World Cup in Cape Town (and Williams was not part of the playing group then). It took them seven years and two more tournaments before they won another match at the T20 World Cup – against Netherlands in 2014.By then Williams was playing across all formats and Zimbabwe were stabilising. They made a Test comeback in 2011, when they also had a stable coaching structure with Alan Butcher in charge and Grant Flower and Streak in specialist roles as batting and bowling coaches. Those three were not involved as the 2015 World Cup loomed, but experienced coach Dav Whatmore was put in charge. Williams rated him highly and praised the environment he created which led to that tournament being a high-water mark for him.Brendan Taylor (right) and Williams are among Zimbabwe’s top five run-getters in ODIs•AFP”In my book, it was the No. 1 tour I’ve ever been on for Zimbabwe,” Williams says. “The guys were pretty awesome with each other, we got on well, had honest chats, understood each other’s roles, understood our own personal roles and just got on with it. We really felt the World Cup vibe, and we had first-class treatment. It was quite special, actually, and probably the happiest I’ve ever been in the changing room. And then we also had multiple people contributing, Brendan scoring hundreds, I was chipping in and there were other guys around.”Taylor was the fourth-highest run-scorer overall at the tournament, and Williams was 13th. Zimbabwe only won one match but came close against Pakistan and closer against Ireland, in a game Williams could have successfully finished. Zimbabwe were 300 for 6 in the 47th over, chasing 332, and Williams was on 96 when he hit Kevin O’ Brien to John Mooney on the midwicket boundary. Mooney appeared to be on the boundary cushion but Williams was walking off and had stepped out of the field of play as the check was happening.”It was quite sad in the end, even though it goes down as one of my best tournaments,” he says. “That game against Ireland, obviously it was a heartbreaker and there was all that controversy with my catch [with Mooney] standing on a rope. You can actually hear the umpire on the audio saying, ‘Please stop the batter, stop the batter.'”Had Williams waited for the third-umpire check, not only might he have been able to continue batting, he would probably have also got his first ODI hundred. Instead, it was the end of Zimbabwe’s campaign. On Williams’ return, he married his partner, Chantelle, who was in attendance when he finally reached that first century, in the decider of a five-match series against Afghanistan, which Zimbabwe ultimately lost. “It was a really strange feeling because Afghanistan annihilated us in that game. We were 172 all out [chasing 246] and it was a very difficult game. But I was in Bulawayo, which was quite nice. I had my wife there, and her sister.”In a busy Test year for Zimbabwe, Williams has already scored 648 runs, with one hundred and four half-centuries in eight matches•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesThat his milestone came amid strife was representative of what was going on in Zimbabwe Cricket. The time between the 2015 World Cup and the country’s suspension from the ICC in the second half of 2019 was fraught. Zimbabwe shuffled between coaches and battled poor results. Between November 2015 and July 2019, they played six Test series and lost five, 16 ODI series and lost 14, and eight T20I series and lost five, with the other three drawn.The nadir came in March 2018, when they lost to the UAE at the ODI World Cup Qualifiers for the 2019 tournament. In a rain-affected match Zimbabwe had to chase 230 in 40 overs and were looking good on 206 for 5 in the 37th when Williams was dismissed on 80 and the tail was unable to finish the job.”That was awful,” Williams says. “I knew the moment that happened that the coaching staff was done. That was inevitable. And I wasn’t sure about the next coaches because when you have [Lance] Klusener and Streaky and guys like that in your changing room, with that type of experience, I didn’t know if [we were] going to be able to get better than that. Especially Lance. We went through hell again for quite a while. There were a lot of issues internally with our team trying to recover from that.”Streak and his staff were sacked and Streak was later banned for eight years for breaching the ICC’s anti-corruption code. Zimbabwe’s suspension meant they were unable to participate in qualification for the 2020 T20 World Cup (which was moved to 2021 because of Covid) and their cricketing structures were hanging on by a thread. Williams, who by then had a daughter, considered walking away but with the pandemic came an opportunity to pause and reframe his ideas about how he wanted to play in the last phase of his career.Dav Whatmore’s tenure as Zimbabwe coach in 2015 was one of Sean Williams’ most productive periods as an international cricketer•Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images”I thought about how we as Zimbabwe played, throughout my time, and I realised we approached games as though we always needed to save face,” he says. “We’d say things like, ‘We need to make sure we bat 50 overs’ or ‘We need to make sure we play five days.’ When you try to play like that, it’s mentally exhausting, it’s physically exhausting. And you end up having meetings and just saying the right things and not actually doing anything but just playing cautiously and negatively and always on the back foot. I didn’t enjoy playing like that at all.”My dad used to always tell me, ‘You’re better than you think you are. Stop taking so long. Just hit the ball.’ And that’s when I thought, let me change this and try to be a little bit more dynamic, a little bit more free and a little bit more expressive. And that way, you start playing a little bit more exciting cricket. It gave me quite a clear understanding of what I needed to do and wanted to do at the time. Then I started to train that way.”The post-Covid period has been a boon for Williams. In the last five years he has scored four of his six Test hundreds and averages 58.80 in the format. In ODIs he has made five of his eight centuries in this time and averages 53.77. He plays with the fearlessness of someone with nothing to lose, in part because he has already lost so much.In April 2022, his father, Collin Ray, died, and in September 2023, Streak, a long-time mentor of Williams, also passed away. In that same period, Williams welcomed his second daughter. “Those were the most difficult times. I found that playing cricket was a space I could go to and kind of let the mind be on one thing. It’s been a saving grace for me,” he says. “Both of them [Collin and Streak] were the people I would call straight after a game or straight after something when I’m frustrated and when I’m happy. They were there through all of it.” He also discovered cold-water plunges as a way to focus and get the best out of himself. He says the therapy was “an absolute winner. It helped me get my mind back into cricket and just start making decisions because I didn’t have other people to make them for me.”Williams was caught on the boundary for 96 against Ireland at the 2015 World Cup. Replays later showed that the fielder, John Mooney, had touched the boundary line when taking the catch. Ireland won the match by five runs•AFPThe aspect of his game that he has not been able to work on as much is his bowling, as he juggles fatherhood with cricket and nurses a long-standing back problem. Bowling hasn’t come as easy for him over the years, he says. “I’ve had a little bit of an awkward action, long delivery stride, and kind of cut myself off quite quickly. I’m trying to put a little bit more emphasis into my bowling now. I just try to spin the ball a little bit more and have a little bit more control and clever field sets to try and do things a little bit differently again.”Williams has also defined his role better, especially as he starts to bowl a little more in white-ball cricket. “I’m not necessarily a wicket-taking bowler, but I try my best to be a complementary bowler. Hopefully Blessing [Muzarabani] or Richard [Ngarava] on the other side can take wickets or something.”And for those bowlers, Williams also has some advice about how to be bolder, especially in the longest format. “Even in our bowling, we’ve always done the same thing on the field and we’ve lost. So let’s try something different, and if we lose, what difference does it actually make? If we’re fielding, for example, let’s have a short-ball plan for an hour. If we get hit doing it, so what? Let’s try.”It has been an extremely tough period for Zimbabwe’s Test side, who play as many matches as Australia in 2025 (11 Tests) despite not being part of the World Test Championship. They are on a six-match losing streak with one win this year. Still, Zimbabwe Cricket believes in playing Test cricket in order to both validate themselves as Full Members and expose players to the highest level in order to improve. Williams buys into that but thinks it’s up to him and some of the other more experienced players, such as Craig Ervine and Taylor, to usher the younger generation through this period.”Our Test run has been tough. Over the last ten matches – and I have played nine of them – we’ve been against pretty good teams, if not some of the best teams. We won one and we drew one. And in the rest of them, we had four innings defeats. Dealing with that as a unit is tough because it’s a battering,” he says. “It’s up to the core players to try and change that environment a little bit. There’s a very big skills gap between us and the rest and also a lack of general understanding of the problem-solving of the game. We need to be more proactive rather than reactive to things and people understanding their own roles and space in the team are crucial to going forward.”Williams is trying to return to bowling more now and hopes to be a “complementary bowler” to wicket-takers Blessing Muzarabani and Richard Ngarava•Michael Bradley/AFP/Getty ImagesFor now, Zimbabwe have to put that aside because their focus for the next two years is on the white-ball game. They will co-host the 2027 ODI World Cup with South Africa and Namibia, and thanks to automatic qualification, will play in a 50-over World Cup for the first time in 12 years. Williams will be past 40 by then and he doesn’t want to tempt fate.”I can’t really speak about 2027 because I don’t know what will happen between now and then. Playing cricket and having a family is tough. It’s been tough on Chantelle and she has done very well to keep it all together because she deals with what I bring back too. And the girls are getting bigger. It’s always Dad this, Dad that, so when I am at home, it’s hard to manage cricket and family life. But obviously, I’d like to be there. I also think having us senior players around is a great thing. We don’t want too much to go on to the youngsters because they’re trying to find their feet in international cricket,” he says.In the immediate term, Zimbabwe are also aiming to reach the 2026 T20 World Cup, after being the only Full Member to miss out on the 2024 tournament. They have brought back Taylor, who served a three-year ban for failing to report approaches to fix matches, and Williams, having last played in May 2024, came back this month in the home series against Sri Lanka to boost their squad.He has embraced the challenge of giving everything to help put Zimbabwe back on the global cricketing map. “I’m a little bit nervous coming back because I haven’t been around T20 for a while now, but I am going to try to get into that role as quickly as possible,” he says. “After all, I would have liked to have gone to more World Cups.”He would also like to leave his mark on the format that barely existed when his career started, and which dominates the landscape as his career is coming to a close. “The biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen has been T20 cricket coming in,” he says. “It changed a lot here at home. It also changed things for opportunity. Guys got to start going to these leagues and start really having the opportunity to improve their skills. And the biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen in Zimbabwe is how we have performed after the 2019 suspension. We’re coming right and I’ve seen the full cycle.”

USMNT winger Haji Wright completes three-goal comeback for Coventry City with stoppage-time winner vs. Luton Town

Smashing in a scrappy goal in stoppage-time, Haji Wright and Coventry celebrated as the American finalized their thrilling second half comeback.

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Coventry defeats Luton Town 3-2Club completes brilliant three-goal comebackUSMNT's Wright scores last-gasp winnerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

USMNT winger Haji Wright was the hero for Coventry City Saturday afternoon, with the winger scoring a crucial winner in second half stoppage-time to defeat Luton Town 3-2. The strike, a scrappy tap-in, helped complete their stunning three-goal comeback after going down 2-0 to start the match.

His fifth goal of the season, Wright found the back of the net for the second-straight match, after bagging a goal on Oct. 22 in a 1-1 draw with QPR.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Speaking after the match with Sky Sports Football, Wright was thrilled with the goal, despite the sloppy nature of it. "I don't really care as long as they go in. It was an important goal for us, you know, we were working throughout the 90 minutes to get a result like this, and for it to happen this way is amazing."

Asked if he felt a momentum shift in the second half, the U.S. international replied "Yeah, 100 percent," while adding "Even our play in the first half gave us a bit of confidence, we knew we were creating chances and it was just a matter of time before we took one."

With Saturday's victory, Coventry climbed out of the relegation zone in the championship after a poor start to the season, a campaign that Wright deemed "frustrating."

"We still have loads of new players and our team's quite young, so, we're still trying to find that gel, to find that perfect tempo to play at and we're still finding our feet a bit, but today was a great result."

DID YOU KNOW?

In every single match Wright has scored in this season, Coventry have claimed a result. Saturday was also the 26-year-old's second stoppage-time winner of the year, with his first coming on Aug. 16 against Oxford United.

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR WRIGHT, COVENTRY?

and Wright are back in action on Nov. 2 against Middlesbrough in Championship action. They'll be searching for the second-straight victory after Saturday's heroic comeback.

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