De Villiers, Steyn, Philander back in SA Test squad

AB de Villiers and Dale Steyn last played Test cricket in 2016, while Vernon Philander made a return after an injury lay-off that had ruled him out of the Bangladesh series

Firdose Moonda19-Dec-20175:39

Cullinan: I wouldn’t select Dale Steyn to play against Zimbabwe

AB de Villiers and Dale Steyn have returned to South Africa’s Test squad for the inaugural four-day, day-night Test against Zimbabwe, which starts on Boxing Day in Port Elizabeth. De Villiers last played a Test in January 2016, while Steyn has not played international cricket after suffering a shoulder injury in Perth last year.

South Africa Test squad

Faf du Plessis (capt), Hashim Amla, Temba Bavuma, Quinton de Kock, Theunis de Bruyn, AB de Villiers, Dean Elgar, Keshav Maharaj, Aiden Markram, Morne Morkel, Andile Phehlukwayo, Vernon Philander, Kagiso Rabada, Dale Steyn

The duo were joined in the squad by Morne Morkel, who has recovered from a side strain that has sidelined him since late October, and Vernon Philander, who is fully fit after a back problem sustained in England. Captain Faf du Plessis, who is in the final stages of recovery from a shoulder operation, has also been named.Chris Morris, who bowled Titans to victory in the Ram Slam T20 Challenge final, has not been included. Morris suffered a slight groin strain in that match and has also been withdrawn from the South African Invitation XI to play Zimbabwe in a three-day warm-up match in Paarl from Wednesday. De Villiers was initially due to participate in that match but will no longer play because of a lower back strain. De Villiers remains available for selection for the Test but there is no confirmation that du Plessis is guaranteed a start. ESPNcricinfo understands the Test captain may be granted an extra week’s rest to ensure he is ready for matches against India, which begin in early 2018.”It is a very exciting moment not just for South Africa but for world cricket to have Dale and AB, two icons of the game, back in the multi-day format,” Linda Zondi, CSA’s convener of selectors said. “AB and Dale bring loads of experience to the side apart from being two of the South African all-time greats. It is also good to have Vernon back and it is very encouraging that our four premium fast bowlers – Steyn, Philander, Kagiso Rabada and Morne Morkel – are all back in the selection mix.”South Africa’s pace pack will use the Zimbabwe match to find rhythm ahead of a summer which includes seven more Tests – three against India and four against Australia.With all the premier quicks available, there was only room for one more seam bowler – allrounder Andile Phehlukwayo – as neither Duanne Olivier nor Wayne Parnell were included.The squad is also heavily stocked with batting options. Dean Elgar and Aiden Markram will open the batting, with Hashim Amla to follow. But, if South Africa stick with the same team balance they employed against Bangladesh, there may only be space for two out of Faf du Plessis, AB de Villiers, Temba Bavuma and Theunis de Bruyn, with Quinton de Kock at No.6, followed by the bowlers. Against Bangladesh, South Africa used six batsmen, two allrounders, two seamers and a spinner.They may, however, revert to a seven-batsmen strategy, which would likely see Phehlukwayo miss out completely and leave the selectors with a choice between three of the four seamers and Maharaj. The possibility of an all-pace attack, especially on green Highveld pitches, against India, cannot be ruled out.

Keeping the Ashes burning

The Ashes memories just keep on coming as two more DVDs arrive for your viewing pleasure

Edward Craig28-Jan-2007



Another Christmas, another Ashes series and
yet another Phil Tufnell DVD. Here, Phil, with an
old twist to an old theme, trades on his loveable
rogue image to string together another series of
cricket clips, linked with toe-curling one-liners
and limp explanation from the ex-king of the
jungle.This seems little different to Tufnell’s efforts
last year, except he wanders round quirky
locations at Lord’s and The Oval as opposed to
quirky locations at Arundel and the Rose Bowl
(increase in budgets, no doubt) introducing
clips of Ashes Geezers (Botham), Gaffes (England
in 1989) and Greats (Keith Miller).In theory, this could make for an interesting
retrospective, and some of the clips are
magnificent – Harold Larwood’s bowling action,
Gooch batting at The Oval in 1985 – but you
could watch this footage through goggles filled
with ink and still enjoy them. Cutting them
together with an irritating soundtrack and an
irritating script only diminishes their value.That said, Tufnell is one of the better things
about the DVD. You know what he’s going to
do, how he’s going to do it, you can see the
jokes coming and, although it can be painful, he
does it pretty well – he’s natural and energetic
but needs a better writer. Throw in some
horrendous editing and an awful “chat” with
TMS commentator Henry Blofeld (he’s on radio
for a reason), you’ll do well to reach the end.



This is not an easy time for English people to
view an Ashes DVD. The past seems very similar
to the present. Australian victories, like a Steve
Harmison over, just go on and on.Our famous guides, Ian Botham and Allan
Border, do their best, but Shakespearean
narrators they ain’t. In between Tests they face
each other across the table and dissect. “And
Australia went on their merry way,” says AB
several times. Beefy nods and scratches the
side of his nose in preparation for remembering
another ad-lib.But what they describe is magnificent
– lots and lots of great cricket. They begin on
Illingworth’s 70-71 tour and the clips just keep
rolling. John Snow getting menaced by the
world’s oldest hooligan. Lillee and Thomson;
Tony Greig hitting, then signalling, a four. Colin
Cowdrey, aged 42, with no need for a chest
protector, getting one on the elbow.There are little moments of beauty too.
Those Gower cover drives. How could a
man stand so still when the ball was about
to be delivered? And on disc two, enjoy
the wicketkeeping of Ian Healy below, the
best Australia has had. Speaking of brilliant
Australians, there’s nothing like a Benaud bon
mot. Bill Lawry, on the other hand, with 30 years
in the comm box on his CV, may never know
whether a swipe to the boundary will become
a four or a six.If you’re English, the fast forward button may be useful on disc two. A decade-and-a-half of Australian skill and English ineptitude. If only we’d known in 1989, when disc one shows Kim Barnett getting slogged to all parts by Merv Hughes, that – 2005 excepted – Australia would
just keep going on their merry way.

This is Australian sporting nirvana. Amazing Adelaide records the critical second Test of the 2006-07 Ashes at the Adelaide Oval, in which the hosts were 15-1 to win on the final morning… and went on to win. Each of the five days’ play, plus the post-match celebrations, have been put into one 115-minute highlight reel. The DVD, hosted by Michael Slater and Richie Benaud, is a compilation taken from Channel 9’s excellent coverage over the Australian summer.Features are few; there is no 5.1 stereo available for proper effect. There is only the one menu to navigate, though, and the image is represented well on any HD television or projector. A great gift and not to mention lesson. England should be sat down and made to watch the highlights again and again to learn just why it’s important to play the full five days out – and play them with total concentration.

Karthik to join Test squad in South Africa; Saha injured

First-choice wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha is out of the tour because of a hamstring injury

Nagraj Gollapudi16-Jan-20182:34

Chopra: India should have picked Rishabh Pant or Ishan Kishan

India wicketkeeper-batsman Dinesh Karthik has been named as a replacement for the injured Wriddhiman Saha in the squad for the third Test against South Africa in Johannesburg. Saha suffered an upper left hamstring tendon injury during training on January 11, and was replaced by Parthiv Patel in the starting XI for the ongoing second Test in Centurion.As a result, Karthik will be in South Africa a couple of weeks earlier than planned because he had already been picked for the six ODIs that will follow the Test series.Karthik, who made his Test debut in 2004, played his last Test nearly eight years ago, against Bangladesh. Since then, he has been in and out of India’s limited-overs squads. Karthik, however, has managed to be on the selection panels’ shortlist with impressive displays in domestic arena. In the ongoing domestic season, Karthik scored 296 runs in four first-class matches at 59.20, which included three Duleep Trophy fixtures and one Ranji game. He has carried on his robust form into the T20s, making 211 runs including three half-centuries, in five innings in the ongoing Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.In Centurion, Saha’s replacement Parthiv has not had the best of Tests. While he scored 19 in the first innings, he dropped two catches and failed to attempt a third regulation chance. Hashim Amla was dropped on 30 off Ishant Sharma down the leg side in the first innings and went on to score 82. Later in the innings, Faf du Plessis was on 54 when Parthiv failed to hold on to an outside edge off R Ashwin.In a tense second innings, Dean Elgar was on 29 and South Africa 70 for 2 when Parthiv did not go for a catch to his left. Elgar ended the day unbeaten on 36, and South Africa 90 for 2, which took their lead to 118 with eight wickets in hand.

Pace is back

In the early 2000s a pair of spinners took centre stage. But Warne is gone, Brett Lee is better than ever, Dale Steyn is making the headlines, and quicks are even thriving in India, traditionally fast-bowling’s final frontier

Lawrence Booth26-Mar-2008

Bad and back: Dale Steyn has averaged 19 since returning to Tests in 2006
© Getty Images

“Poetry and murder lived in him together,” wrote RC Robertson-Glasgow of Don Bradman, but anyone who watched Michael Holding glide to the crease or heard the chants of “kill” as Dennis Lillee prepared to do his worst might think the conceit applies equally well to the fast bowler. Ever since George Brown of Brighton ended the life of an inattentive dog in the early 19th century with a delivery that beat the wicketkeeper and – so legend has it – went through a coat held by the trembling long-stop, the speedy have exerted their hold, both ghoulish and visceral, on spectators. Think of Harold Larwood and Bodyline, Frank Tyson, Lillee and Thomson, Holding’s over to Geoff Boycott, Wasim and Waqar, Donald to Atherton at Trent Bridge, Shoaib Akhtar. “The fast bowler,” wrote John Arlott in 1975 in his preface to David Frith’s , “is the most colourful character
in cricket.” More than three decades later, is it wishful thinking to suggest that the colour is returning to a few characters’ cheeks?If we take as our yardstick a speed of 85mph – the likes of Thomson and Shoaib, bowler of the first recorded 100mph delivery
in match conditions, are a subset of their own – then the global paddock looks nicely stocked. Australia have a more mature Brett Lee
and an exciting Mitchell Johnson, even if Shaun Tait is temporarily out of action; England boast Stuart Broad, Ryan Sidebottom (quicker now than when Duncan Fletcher ignored him), Steve Harmison, and are itching for Andrew Flintoff’s return, to say nothing of Simon Jones; New Zealand have – or had – Shane Bond; Pakistan have Shoaib, when fit, and the whippy, casual Mohammad Asif; South Africa can unleash Dale Steyn and, more recently, Morne Morkel; Sri Lanka can let loose Lasith “The Slinger” Malinga; and
even West Indies can take their pick from Fidel Edwards, Jerome Taylor and Daren Powell. As for India, the days of the many-pronged spin attack of the 1970s are a distant memory: as with most other areas of the game, the world of pace is very much
their oyster. “Fast bowling around the world is pretty healthy at the moment,” says Troy Cooley. “These are exciting times.”Not least for Cooley himself. One of the game’s most respected fast-bowling coaches, he was the puppet-master behind England’s Ashes-winning four-man pace attack in 2005 before being poached by his native Australia in plenty of time for the return leg in 2006-07. It would be a gross exaggeration to say that Australia’s 5-0 win was down to Cooley. But it would be equally wrong to ignore his contribution. After all, would Harmison really have begun with that scene-setting wide at the Gabba if Cooley’s calming influence had been in England’s dressing room rather than Australia’s? Who knows? But what is clear is that back-room support in this non-stop era of international cricket is now a necessity rather than a luxury. And it seems to be paying dividends.”The schedule can be a bit tough,” says Dale Steyn, who – following South Africa’s drubbing of Bangladesh – had taken 97
wickets at 19 each since returning to Test cricket in April 2006. “If you manage it well, you can get away with it. We have great support staff in South Africa, so if I have a day off, I don’t get on my feet at all. They know all the requirements.” The 24-year-old Steyn says he is yet to bowl within himself, which might explain why his Test strike-rate in the last two years has been a phenomenal 33. “I love the buzz of bowling fast,” he says. “Yes, I do get a thrill from it. Morne Morkel is incredibly quick too, and that spurs me on. You think you’ve got to bowl quicker than the other guys because you don’t want to lose your place in the team. Even the franchises are producing quick bowlers. The selectors have got a good thing going. Now I want to be the quickest in the world.”Steyn’s instinctive enthusiasm – “When I fly from Johannesburg to Cape Town and look down at my country, it’s amazing to think,
‘Out of all the people to bowl fast for South Africa, they picked me'” – is a recurring theme among pacemen. Tyson spoke of the “glad
animal action” of bowling fast. Lillee noted: “It’s the sheer ‘I can fly’ exhilaration … It’s seeing that look of apprehension on your quarry’s face.” Thomson, his partner in crime, famously reckoned he just went “whang”. Neither was he averse to the sight of blood. Each generation of quicks derives its own special pleasures.

It’s the sheer ‘I can fly’ exhilartion…It’s seeing that look of apprehension on your quarry’s faceDennis Lillee

The question is, do the generations wax and wane as a matter of course? Is the current crop of emerging quicks merely part of cricket’s natural ebb and flow? Mike Atherton, who faced some of the modern game’s great new-ball pairings during the 1990s, agrees there was a “drop-off in terms of the quality of fast bowlers” in the years following his retirement in 2001. But he adds: “I wonder to what extent these things are cyclical.” The power struggle between quick and slow over the last four decades suggests he has a point.In the 1970s three of the five leading Test-wicket-takers were spinners: Derek Underwood (202 wickets), plus the Indian pair of
Bishan Bedi (196) and Bhagwat Chandrasekhar (180). But by the 1980s only one slow bowler – Pakistan’s Abdul Qadir (216) – made a top ten dominated by the West Indians and the four great allrounders: that decade Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev, Ian Botham and Imran Khan claimed 1075 wickets between them. Shane Warne led the pack in the 1990s but behind him came five quicks and one almost-quick: Curtly Ambrose (309), Courtney Walsh (304), Wasim Akram (289), Allan Donald (284), Waqar Younis (273) and Glenn McGrath (266). And in the 2000s Muttiah Muralitharan, Warne and Anil Kumble lead the way. But Warne has retired, Kumble will soon join him, and – after the fallow period alluded to by Atherton – the picture is changing once more.Not everything, however, can be put down to the self-regulatory nature of cycles. Improvements in physiotherapy have helped, even
if Cooley stresses that fast bowling remains a “risky business”. But Stuart Osborne, who has been the Sussex physio for ten years and
has worked regularly with the England Academy, says technological advances have changed the nature of the beast. “Fast bowlers now are year-round athletes,” he says. “They are fitter and stronger than when I first started in the job. The buzzword in the last five years has been ‘core stability’ – they work on different muscles now. You always get naturals, but there’s a lot more help now for fast
bowlers who are not as naturally gifted. Ice baths prevent stiffness in muscles and at Sussex we have a jacuzzi, as well as hot-and-cold contrast baths. Bowlers are screened regularly and there’s an eye on workloads. There’s been a sharp reduction in stress fractures.”

Ishant Sharma took 4 for 38 against Australia in February, including Ricky Ponting with a brute of a lifter
© Getty Images

Nowhere has this new tendency to prolong the life of the average fast bowler had more impact than in India. And this is where the argument really does depart from the cyclical. It used to be thought that the group most likely to smuggle secrets across borders were legspinners, misunderstood by everyone but each other. But the MRF (Madras Rubber Factory) pace foundation in Chennai, the brainchild of Lillee himself, has given fast bowlers everywhere the sense of a global community and Indians in particular the confidence to reach beyond their traditional stereotypes of beguiling spin and wristy batting. Zaheer Khan, RP Singh, Irfan Pathan, Sreesanth and Munaf Patel are all products of the foundation, as is India’s bowling coach, Venkatesh Prasad. When Lillee told Prasad how his bowlers could best exploit the Fremantle Doctor during the recent Perth Test, it was confirmation that the fast-bowlers’
union has moved way beyond the old agreement not to bowl bouncers at each other. India won by 72 runs.TA Sekhar, who briefly bowled fast-medium for India in the mid-1980s, has been working with Lillee at the foundation almost
from its very beginnings in 1987. “When it started, no one in India understood what it meant to be a fast bowler,” says Sekhar. “They
had no clue about training. Now young bowlers know about the three types of action: open, semi-open and side-on. They know
exactly what they want to do and where they want to land the ball. Previously bowlers were always side-on. Awareness has improved massively. And they are learning how to swing the ball at pace, which is what they did in Australia. Only Brett
Lee swung it for Australia, but all our boys were doing it.”Until the emergence of Prasad and Javagal Srinath, another graduate of the foundation, as an international-class new-ball pairing in the 1990s, India’s lack of fast-bowling heritage had irked those who looked west and saw the Pakistanis churn out one loose-limbed tearaway after another. Sekhar attributes the discrepancy to nothing more than genetics – “Constitutionally, Pakistanis are bigger men” – but says this very awareness helped him and Lillee customise a training regime for potential Indian fast bowlers. Sekhar stresses the need for fitness and strength but also points out that the natural flexibility of most Indians (“We sit on the ground and cross our legs when we eat”) has helped prevent back problems. “With Shaun Tait, we all knew he was going to have injury problems because of his action,” he says. “There is an inherent risk of injury in bowling fast. The body is not designed to do it. You have to get used to awkward moments and do your training and weights, your yoga and Pilates. It’s about core-muscle strengthening.”After some trial and error at the start the system has evolved at the school over 10 to 12 years and now we’re seeing the benefits.”

Fast bowlers are the strongest kind of cricketer and yet the most delicateStuart Osborne

Sekhar speaks in reverential terms about the skills which Lillee, who has first-hand experience of serious injury after missing nearly two years of Test cricket in 1973 and ’74 while he recuperated from stress fractures of the back, imparts to a new generation of fast bowlers during the seven or eight weeks he spends annually at the foundation. “He is the best fast-bowling coach I have ever seen. He makes it very simple. There isn’t too much theory. He watches a bowler once in the flesh, then again on video, and then he can say what’s going wrong. He can see in real-time what other coaches only see in slow motion.”Fast bowlers everywhere clearly agree. The counties now send between 15 and 20 bowlers to Chennai every year, with Mick Newell, the coach of Nottinghamshire, admitting “the boys hang on Dennis’s every word”. He adds: “Dennis is very big on injury-prevention coaching. He’s always looking for straight lines. He builds actions and spots bowlers who are likely to run into trouble.” Newell credits Lillee with helping Sidebottom, in early 2004, to find the swing into the right-hander which has changed his career. Lillee lined him up straighter, kept his wrist behind the ball and got the seam straight. Makhaya Ntini and Mitchell Johnson have both paid visits to the foundation – Johnson took five wickets in a one-day international at Vadodara not long after – and Sekhar is particularly proud of the improvement made by Mohammad Asif, who reportedly amazed onlookers when he returned from a stint
in Chennai with a regular outswinger and an extra yard of pace. No matter that Asif represents the arch enemy.It might irk Sekhar that he is yet to work with Ishant Sharma, the 6ft 4in, 19-year-old prodigy from Delhi who persuaded the
owners of the Kolkata franchise in the Indian Premier League, to fork out £475,000 for him at the recent IPL auction: only three players cost more. Instead, there is genuine excitement in his voice. “Ishant Sharma is the most exciting talent going around,” says Sekhar. “He needs to fill out a bit, and I hope he doesn’t fall into the trap of listening to absolutely everyone. But he uses his body very well, has a good wrist position and good bounce. And he excites people.” It is symptomatic of fast bowling’s ability to stir the emotions that Sharma’s spell to Ricky Ponting in the fourth innings at Perth – 38 deliveries, 15 scratchy runs, plenty of fresh-air gropes, and finally, a misery-ending edge to first slip – is already the stuff of folklore.

Makhaya Ntini lags behind three spinners in a list of Test wicket-takers in the 2000s
© Getty Images

Cooley, another Lillee disciple, provides the non-Indian perspective. “It’s great to have the facilities there in India, because
it’s one of the hardest countries to bowl fast in. You’re putting bowlers in very uncomfortable positions. It can be 40 degrees, there’s
the humidity and the fact they’re no longer at home. You work out pretty quickly who’s got the right attitude that champions need. You learn fast bowling is a tough job.”But is it too tough in an era where there is already talk of squeezing the packed schedule into even fewer weeks to accommodate the IPL? After all, as Osborne points out: “Fast bowlers are the strongest kind of cricketer and yet the most delicate. They are the thoroughbreds, the ones who need the most work done to them.” Most experts agree that the sheer volume of cricket should militate against day-in, day-out, express-pace bowling, and point towards Flintoff, Shoaib, Bond and Simon Jones as examples of players unable to shake off long-term injuries. But this overlooks the number of problems avoided with the help of the back-roomers – Cooley says managing the players’ fitness is a “huge part” of his job – and the recent trend of moving away from so-called mixed actions, where shoulders and hips are not in alignment. Atherton wonders whether there might be another problem in the long run. “Administrators like pitches to last for five days,” he says. “You don’t seem to get many pitches around the world any more where the captain will stick the opposition in, so it becomes harder for fast bowlers to find wicket-taking opportunities on the first morning.”It might be true that the days of a Test team collapsing to 2 for 4, as England – Atherton included – did on the first morning at
Johannesburg in 1999-2000, will become increasingly rare. But with Chennai now established as the international fast bowler’s home away from home, captains forever on the lookout for a cutting edge on pitches that demand a bit extra, and the physiotherapists among the most important people in the dressing room, the best fast bowlers ought to be superbly looked after. For all the concerns, it might just be that there has never been a better time to bowl quick.

Matt Turner insists Gio Reyna has 'grown up a ton' since 2022 World Cup fallout with USMNT boss Gregg Berhalter as he explains why Borussia Dortmund loanee can be a 'strong asset' for Nottingham Forest

USMNT goalkeeper Matt Turner says Gio Reyna has "grown up a ton" since his fallout with Gregg Berhalter at the 2022 World Cup.

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  • Turner hailed Reyna's signing
  • Joined Nottingham Forest on loan from Dortmund
  • Says he has matured a lot
  • Getty Images

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Nottingham Forest goalkeeper hailed his club's decision to sign compatriot Reyna on loan from Borussia Dortmund in the January transfer window as he feels that the youngster could prove to be a real "asset". He also claimed that the 21-year-old winger has grown as an individual since his fallout with national team coach Gregg Berhalter during the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

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  • WHAT MATT TURNER SAID

    Speaking to , Turner said: "He's grown up a ton right before my eyes. The best compliment I can give him is that right now I see a consistent approach for him every single day. He wants to be on the ball and he wants to make an impact on the game with the ball at his feet. I can see him being a really strong asset."

    The USMNT shot-stopper added: "Our coach's message has been to play a bit more, and Gio's that type of player. Once he establishes a better connection with some of the players and gets more familiar with their movements and how they want the ball, I can see him being a really strong asset."

  • Getty Images

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The youngster missed several matches for Dortmund in the first half of the season due to injuries and had managed to clock just 360 minutes on the pitch for the German club. If he can adapt to the conditions in England, he could be a big help to Forest, who are currently just two points above the relegation zone.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR NOTTINGHAM FOREST?

    Nuno Espirito Santo's side will be next seen in action on Wednesday as they take on Bristol City in a FA Cup fourth-round replay, but Reyna is ineligible to play because he wasn't registered in time to feature in the competition.

Another injury setback for Fran Kirby! England and Chelsea dealt blow as attacker is forced to withdraw from Lionesses squad

Chelsea's Fran Kirby has withdrawn from the England camp in Spain after picking up yet another knee injury.

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  • Kirby withdraws from England squad
  • No plans to recall Kirby in this break
  • England to face Italy
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The attacking midfielder did not feature in the Lionesses' rampant 7-2 victory over Austria after being injured in the warm-up and would have been aiming to get some minutes in an England shirt against Italy on Tuesday. However, Kirby has been forced to return to London from the camp in Spain for assessment on the minor injury.

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    WHAT ENGLAND SAID

    On Kirby's injury, England released a statement saying: "Fran Kirby has withdrawn from the England camp in Spain and will return to Chelsea for further assessment on a minor knee injury reported before the Austria match. At this stage, there are no plans to call a replacement into the senior squad."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Kirby will be disappointed not to have had the opportunity to showcase her talents for England this break after returning to regular football, and form, this season for Chelsea. Kirby missed the Lionesses' World Cup campaign through another injury to her knee and will be desperate to remind Sarina Wiegman that she can be a starter as they look to defend their crown at next year's European Championship.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR KIRBY?

    Kirby will return to Chelsea in order to have her knee assessed. She will have the Blues' next game against Leicester in mind as she looks to recover from this minor setback. Chelsea remain top of the WSL but equal on points with Manchester City.

Malang Sarr: Friends 'worried' about Chelsea's forgotten man as reasons for January exit falling through revealed

Malang Sarr's friends have admitted they are worried about the defender as he is enduring a very difficult time at Chelsea.

  • Sarr not in first-team picture at Chelsea
  • Saw January move fall through
  • Friends are worried about him
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Sarr signed for Chelsea in 2020 but has not played a competitive game for the Blues in almost a year, becoming a forgotten man at Stamford Bridge. The 25-year-old saw a January transfer to Le Havre collapse on deadline day and he currently trains with the Under-21s after being excluded from the first-team squad. Sarr's friends have spoken about their concerns for the defender due to his difficult situation in west London.

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  • WHAT HAS BEEN SAID ABOUT SARR

    A source close to Sarr told The Athletic: “I have never seen him as low as this. This is the first time I have seen him like this. He tries to change his mental state, but it is hard when you are not playing. He is not in the first-team dressing room anymore, he is with the kids in the other building. He feels outside the group. He tries to hide his feelings, but I know him, what he is really feeling.

    “He wants to play football and works hard for that. He is completely fit. But at the moment, he does not know where he is going to play. Friends and family go stay with him occasionally. It is important for him to have people around him.

    “He loved playing under Tuchel. But some of the closest friends he made, like N’Golo Kante andMason Mount, have left. He goes to train because it is his job but I know he finds it very hard because any footballer who knows they are not going to play matches will find it difficult.”

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Sarr had looked set to seal a move to Le Havre in January only for the deal to collapse. There are differing accounts as to why the move did not go through, but Le Havre director Mathieu Bodmer has blamed Chelsea and claimed the Blues ended up blocking the deal.

    He told French newspaper Paris Normandie: “What Chelsea did to Malang Sarr was disgraceful. With just a few details still to be worked out, they did a U-turn. They gave the youngster the go-ahead to travel, and a financial agreement had been reached for the 18 months of his remaining contract at Chelsea.

    “However, on several occasions, they went back on their agreement, and then gave it again. And once the player had agreed to make a big effort, to come to us on a tiny salary, just to play football, they blocked him.

    “Everything was OK, the contract had even been submitted to the league (LFP), but we never received Chelsea’s cancellation. In the end, they just told him he wouldn’t be leaving and they didn’t even answer the phone anymore.”

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MALANG SARR?

    Sarr will see out the season training with Chelsea's youngsters and could move in the summer transfer window if he can find a club and reach an agreement with the Blues. He still has a year remaining on his existing deal but sadly looks to have no chance of playing first-team football at Stamford Bridge as things stand.

Turn off

For Panesar, everything beyond the day-to-day business of preparing for cricket, playing cricket and recovering from playing cricket is pretty much irrelevant – including, presumably, his book

Andrew Miller21-Oct-2007Monty’s Turn: Taking My Chances by Monty Panesar
(Hodder and Stoughton; £18.99; 320pp)



Apparently Monty Panesar racked in a cool £300,000 from his publishers, Hodder & Stoughton, to regale an eager nation with the whats, whys and wherefores of a remarkable first two years of international recognition. Quite what they hoped to get in return for their investment is anyone’s guess, for as anyone who’s ever listened in on a Panesar press conference will know, verbal dexterity is not poor Monty’s forte.Monty’s forte is simple. He’s a monstrously enthusiastic cricketer with an uncanny skill for spinning a cricket ball. And that, as far as he’s concerned, is that. Everything beyond the day-to-day business of preparing for cricket, playing cricket and recovering from playing cricket is pretty much irrelevant – including, presumably, this book.There’s no doubt he’s a fascinating character. The first practising Sikh to play for England, the best English spinner since, arguably, Derek Underwood, and among other accolades, he’s the reigning Beard of the Year. But if you’re after a fascinating read, look away now. There are all sorts of insights that could have been offered in this book, but at every opportunity the bat is raised and the delivery fizzes harmlessly by.On Marcus Trescothick’s sudden departure from India, on the eve of Monty’s debut in Nagpur: “He went very suddenly and I don’t think that any of us really knew the full extent of the situation.” On the Fredalo scandal in St Lucia: “There is no doubt that the business affected the general mood.” On Duncan Fletcher’s resignation: “Results were disappointing over the winter, and he may have felt he’d just had enough.” Really Monty? You astound me.Clearly this was never going to be a warts-and-all expose of England’s post-2005 decline, but at £18.99 the fans who lifted Panesar into the running for BBC Sports Personality of the Year deserved a little bit of insight into the character who has captured their imaginations.Even Monty’s intriguing heritage is given the brush-off. “To be honest, cricket did not occupy much of my early life,” he declares in the first chapter, teeing up the prospect of a digression into the family life of a first-generation immigrant family – genuinely, Monty, we would be interested. Instead, ten pages and a few rushed anecdotes later, he is taking 7 for 35 for Bedfordshire Under-15s against Worcestershire, and the die of his career is cast.

From personal experience, I know that Monty loves to talk when the mood takes him, but the facts need to be wrung from him, much as his long-suffering ghostwriter, Richard Hobson, must have wished to wring his neck

A few facts about his personality do seep through. He is more than a touch obsessed by Sachin Tendulkar, he’s in gentle awe of Andrew Flintoff (and most of his England team-mates for that matter), he’s forever indebted to his original coach at Luton Indians, Hitu Naik; and his adoration for the game of cricket is such that, in perhaps the most candid confession of the entire book, he reveals his despair after being omitted for the Ashes Test at Brisbane. Fletcher took him to one side after the team meeting to give him a pep-talk, but Monty’s mind was a maelstrom. “Sorry,” he eventually said, “can you repeat that please?”In between whiles, the book is a plod from one scorecard rewrite to the next, interspersed with some truly extraordinary snippets of irrelevant detail. From personal experience, I know that Monty loves to talk when the mood takes him, but the facts need to be wrung from him, much as his long-suffering ghostwriter, Richard Hobson, must have wished to wring his neck.And so, when the enthusiasm comes, there’s no alternative but to note it down in all its glorious triviality. Take a childhood trip to India for instance – the most interesting thing that happened to Monty was, bizarrely, the sight of a Chinese boy crying in the street. The most “embarrassing” tale that he is able to bring back from the recent World Cup – surely a haven of embarrassment – was the night he turned off his air conditioning and awoke to find the floor and his kit were damp.It turns out that meeting Daniel “Harry Potter” Radcliffe during the Lord’s Test in May was a big moment, as was Monty’s first appearance on Question of Sport. “The strange thing was that I didn’t feel nervous at all,” he says without a trace of irony. And so, after 243 pages of very occasional insight, the question arises as to what Monty might do when his playing days are over.”You know, that is something I really haven’t thought about,” he deadpans. “Some players go into the media when they retire. I am not sure that is for me.”

Man Utd's day-one girl is going nowhere! Leah Galton agrees contract extension through to 2026 – but no breakthrough yet in Mary Earps negotiations

Man Utd winger Leah Galton has signed a new deal as the club looks to tie down many of its out-of-contract stars, England star Mary Earps among them.

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  • Galton pens new Man Utd deal
  • Was set to become a free agent this summer
  • But club yet to agree terms with many, including Earps
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Man Utd have been working for some time to agree a new contract with Galton, with the long-serving forward set to become a free agent in the summer. However, on Wednesday, the club confirmed that the two parties have struck a deal.

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  • WHAT HAS BEEN SAID

    After signing the dotted lines, the English forward said, "I’m delighted to continue my journey with Manchester United and want to thank my friends, family and team-mates for their continued support – along with our wonderful fans, who have been great to me throughout my time here."

    Manager Mark Skinner was delighted to see his player extending his stay at the club as he said, "Leah continues to lead by example, on and off the pitch, and epitomises everything a professional footballer should be. We are delighted to see her commit her future to the club and look forward to many more winning experiences together."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Galton has been at the club since it relaunched its women's team back in 2018. She's racked up over 100 appearances in that time and played a vital role in Man Utd establishing themselves at the top table, helping the Red Devils to hit milestones such as promotion to the Women's Super League, an FA Cup final and their first ever appearance in the Women's Champions League.

    To keep the 29-year-old around is a huge boost, then, but there is still a lot of work for Man Utd to do when it comes to contract renewals. Captain Katie Zelem and forwards Lucia Garcia, Rachel Williams and Nikita Parris all have contracts that will expire in a few months' time, as does England star Mary Earps, who was linked heavily with a move to Arsenal last summer. There have been rumblings of interest from clubs in Europe for Earps during the January transfer window, too, but she appears set to stay in Manchester for the time being.

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Galton is one of just five players to make over 100 appearances for Man Utd's women's team, along with Ella Toone, Zelem, Millie Turner and Earps. She is also the team's second highest goal-scorer in its short history, only behind Toone.

'Get down the tunnel' – Jamie Carragher sparks furore after taking aim at Arsenal celebrations & Martin Odegaard's unusual camera antics following huge victory over Liverpool

Jamie Carragher sparked a furore with his dig at Arsenal’s celebrations after their win over Liverpool, with Ian Wright and Piers Morgan responding.

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  • Gunners claimed vital victory
  • Premier League title race wide open
  • Reds legend questioned celebrations
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Reds legend saw his former club suffer a 3-1 defeat at Emirates Stadium that has left the Premier League title race wide open. The Gunners were in high spirits after picking up three priceless points, with captain Martin Odegaard borrowing a camera from a club photographer in order to capture some of the jubilant scenes.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Said antics did not go down well with former Liverpool star Carragher, who suggested while on punditry duty for Sky Sports that Arsenal’s players should “get down the tunnel”. That jibe was slightly tongue-in-cheek, as he also went on quote Neil Warnock by claiming that celebrations should be “disciplined” – and the English coach responded with a light-hearted warning about using his catchphrase. Carragher also took aim at journalist Jan Aage Fjortoft on X, after he defended Odegaard's actions.

  • WHAT WRIGHT & MORGAN SAID

    Carragher’s words have not gone unnoticed, though, among the Arsenal fanbase. Plenty have had their say on social media, including former frontman Wright and passionate Gunners supporter Morgan. Wright said: “What is wrong with the captain doing that? Why is everybody trying to kill the joy? Don’t kill the joy. There is still so much of the season to go. As soon as Arsenal do anything, they just come under the pile on. It’s like we can’t have any joy. Don’t let them spoil the joy – keep doing what you’re doing.”

    TV host Morgan said in a post of his own: “Calm down, calm down, @Carra23 – we battered you, and we’re going to enjoy every second.”

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

    Victory for Arsenal has lifted them up to second place in the Premier League table, two points behind leaders Liverpool with both clubs having 15 games left to play. Reigning champions Manchester City can rise above the Gunners again if they beat Brentford on Monday, however.

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