Crystal Palace interested in Dwight McNeil

Crystal Palace are reportedly interested in signing Burnley midfielder Dwight McNeil, according to Sky Sports. 

The lowdown: In demand

A product of the youth system at Manchester United, McNeil cut his teeth in senior football in the Premier League and has racked up 134 appearances in the top-flight over five consecutive seasons, scoring seven goals and supplying 17 assists.

After suffering the indignity of relegation from the division with Burnley last season, the 22-year-old former England youth international is seemingly a wanted man with multiple suitors already in the mix.

Previously linked with a move to Everton, Tottenham, Brentford and newly promoted Fulham, an emerging report has claimed McNeil is now on the radar at Selhurst Park…

The latest: ‘Approach’ made

As per Sky Sports, Crystal Palace and West Ham have both made an ‘approach’ to sign the 10-cap England Under 21 starlet.

It’s claimed that McNeil is ‘keen to return to the Premier League’ and is currently ‘considering a number of options’ regarding his future.

The report also states that Burnley are ‘likely to demand a fee in excess of £15million’ for the youngster who was dubbed a ‘sensational player’ by The Athletic journalist Andy Jones back in June 2020.

The verdict: Strength in numbers

Eagles boss Patrick Vieira already has an embarrassment of riches at his disposal in wide areas with Michael Olise, Eberechi Eze, Jeffrey Schlupp and Malcolm Ebiowei all capable of operating on both wings.

Furthermore, despite the incessant links to a move away from South East London, including this summer with AS Roma touted as potential suitors, talismanic winger Wilfried Zaha remains in situ in the Palace squad.

However, still just 22, McNeil has already proven to be a capable operator at the elite level and would therefore be a superb addition to the ranks ahead of what looks certain to be a long campaign with a World Cup thrown into the mix.

Although the Englishman supplied only £16.2million valued ace still managed to outperform Zaha when it comes to what many would say is the Ivorian’s forte by completing 2.4 successful dribbles per outing compared to the Palace favourite’s 2.3 completed attempts.

All told, at the suggested price, McNeil would be an impressive signing for the South East Londoners.

Leeds register Josh Tymon interest

Leeds United have registered their interest in Stoke City defender Josh Tymon, according to Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Tymon profiled

Hailed as ‘quick’ by his manager Michael O’Neill, Tymon is primarily a left-back who can also play as a left-sided midfielder when required and has been with Stoke since 2017.

Formerly an England under-20 international, the 23-year-old has made 87 senior appearances for the Potters, contributing to eight goals.

Described as the ‘nutmeg king’ following 14 of them in the Championship last season, it looks as if Tymon could be on the move this summer, with a number of clubs interested in his services.

The Latest: Source shares Tymon update

Football Insider shared a story regarding Tymon on Wednesday afternoon after being informed by a recruitment source.

They claimed that Leeds and Norwich City have both registered their interest in the full-back, joining Rangers in the race for his signature. The report adds that Stoke value Tymon at £6m and have been reluctant to sell.

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The Verdict: Needed?

It looks as if Jesse Marsch is going to give Junior Firpo another chance to impress at Elland Road next season, although the Spaniard is the only senior left-back available to the 48-year-old, so bringing in someone like Tymon could be a wise move.

The Whites have spent £95m so far this summer, although none of the six additions is a defender, even with Leeds conceding a whopping 79 goals in 38 league games last season.

Charles De Ketelaere appears to be the club’s final marquee target, although it looks as if an under-the-radar move for Tymon could be on the cards as well.

Wolves linked with exciting Icardi move

Wolves could reportedly make a move for Paris Saint-Germain striker Mauro Icardi this summer.

The Lowdown: Icardi out of favour at PSG

The 29-year-old has struggled to be a success at PSG, having traded Inter Milan for the Ligue 1 giants back in 2020.

Icardi made just ten starts in the league last season, with the star-studded trio of Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe invariably preferred in attack.

The Argentine’s current PSG deal expires in the summer of 2024, but he could be on the move imminently.

The Latest: Wolves linked with surprise move

According to Calciomercato [via Sport Witness], Jorge Mendes could be a key to making a move to Wolves happen, with PSG happy to ‘get rid’ of Icardi this summer.

Wanderers ‘could be a possibility’ for the striker, given the ‘very solid relations’ that Mendes has with the club.

[freshpress-quiz id=“398117″]

The Verdict: Worth the gamble

While Icardi has been a disappointment in France, he is still a striker of undoubted pedigree, having scored 124 goals in just 219 appearances for Inter. Across his whole career, the Argentina international has racked up 204 goals for club and country.

[freshpress-poll id=“399044″]

He is someone who could be a marquee signing for Wolves, bringing quality and unpredictability to the attack, once being hailed as ‘world-class’ and ‘almost impossible to mark’ by Giorgio Chiellini.

There would be a risk element to the signing given his dip last season, but Icardi is someone who could add much-needed goals in the final third and improve everyone around him at Molineux if he finds his best form.

Whether or not he is happy to move to a club not playing in Europe remains to be seen, but this is certainly an exciting rumour to keep an eye on this summer.

Wolves eye move for Vitoria SC duo

Wolverhampton Wanderers have their sights set on a swoop for Vitoria Guimaraes’ young midfield duo, Andre Almeida and Guilherme Guedes.

What’s the word?

That is according to a report from Portuguese outlet Zero Zero who claims that negotiations are underway between Wolves and Vitoria SC.

As per the report, Wolves have long been tracking Almeida with the intention of moving for the 21-year-old in what will be a package deal, that would also see the 19-year-old known as Gui included.

It is said that a sum of between €10m (£8.5m) and €15m (£12.8m) could be enough to secure the duo in a package deal, with the fee expected to be closer to the latter mentioned €15m (£12.8m).

As of yet, no official agreement has been made.

Neves & Moutinho replacements?

With the uncertainty surrounding a certain Wolves duo in Ruben Neves and Joao Moutinho, the Vitoria SC youngsters could help to fill the rather large void that the pair would leave.

Though, with Moutinho at least in talks with Wolves over a possible extension, and only one of the Vitoria SC duo ready to go straight into the first team, it’s more like a mix and match package.

Almeida, having featured 31 times for the Liga Portugal side is a player who could quickly be integrated within the Old Gold first team.

His average of 2.4 successful dribbles per 90 are better than Moutinho and Neves’ averages combined – with the Wolves pair’s 0.5 and 0.9 respective averages totalling 1.4 successful dribbles per game. Almeida’s average is actually around that of a winger, with his average this season also beating the likes of Daniel Podence, who has registered 2.1.

It’s a severely underrated but important metric in the centre of midfield, with Lage’s side lacking a central option that can consistently progress the ball. Almeida would allow them to be more direct in the attacking transition and allow them to build on the measly total of 41 big chances created – a metric that ranks the side as the fourth worst for BCC.

Gui, having made just five appearances in Liga Portugal will need a longer amount of time to establish himself in Lage’s side, but with Lage already negotiating a deal for the Portuguese starlets, you can see where his head is at amidst his rebuild this summer.

In other news: Tim Spiers drops behind-scenes Wolves update that’ll worry supporters at Molineux 

Moutinho heir: Wolves plot bid for Almeida

Wolves are plotting a bid for Vitoria Guimaraes midfielder Andre Almeida ahead of a crucial summer transfer window for Bruno Lage.

What’s the word?

Portuguese news outlet Jornal de Noticias (via Sport Witness) claim that Wolves are discussing a deal for Almeida as Lage plans a major summer rebuild for next season.

The player could cost £6.8m and at only 21 years old, would represent a shrewd investment.

With his contract due to expire at the end of next season, Wolves may take advantage and try to secure a bargain deal.

Dream Moutinho heir

Lage has had a very solid first season in charge of Wolves, leading the club to a top-half finish despite a poor final few weeks of the campaign derailing some momentum.

He faces a big summer ahead, with the futures of Ruben Neves and Joao Moutinho uncertain, fresh faces will be guaranteed.

In Almeida, Wolves could have the perfect heir to the 35-year-old maestro. Almeida plays slightly further forward in an attacking midfield role and despite not scoring any goals this campaign, an 86% passing accuracy stat is solid.

The midfielder can also contribute defensively, making on average 1.4 tackles per game and winning 56% of his total duels.

These are extremely similar to Moutinho’s, who has a slightly better pass accuracy (87%) and wins 2.1 tackles per match, although his dominance in duels isn’t as good as Almeida’s (43%).

With that in mind, it’s easy to see why he’d make such a good replacement for the Portuguese veteran with his easy on the eye and accurate passing a key attribute when assessing the heir to his midfield throne.

For the aforementioned fee, Lage should be going all out to secure the youngster’s services, with Zach Lowy lauding him as “intriguing”, then it could certainly be worth the money.

AND in other news, Wolves can save millions by unearthing 22-year-old “diamond”, Lage will be ecstatic

Middle order mars Liton Das' special day

Right through the Asia Cup, Bangladesh’s middle order had made up for their misfiring top order. In the final, the roles were reversed

Mohammad Isam28-Sep-2018Bangladesh’s middle order had turned 2 for 3, 87 for 5 and 12 for 3 into spectacular wins in the Asia Cup. But the day Liton Das produced his maiden ODI century, that too in the tournament final, the rest of the batting was a no-show.It was Bangladesh’s last three years in a nutshell, one aspect of their cricket going horribly wrong before or after others click perfectly into gear. The recipe of this collapse included two hits that didn’t cross the midwicket boundary, one batsman playing down the wrong line, and two getting run out.Such untimely dismissals have lately been associated with Liton, who has been billed for so long as the best Bangladeshi batsman of his generation. Despite scoring heavily in the domestic scene for more than five years, Liton has found many different ways to get out in international cricket. After making 41 against Afghanistan, for instance, he had thrown his wicket away with a needless slog. He has been a source of frustration for long, much like Soumya Sarkar has been since 2016, and all of this has piled the pressure on Bangladesh’s senior batsmen.Before today, Bangladesh’s opening stands in the Asia Cup were 1, 15, 15, 16 and 5. Thanks to injury and poor form, three different batsmen had partnered Liton at the top of the order. In the final, the team management made another change in the opening slot, and an unexpected one, with the offspinning allrounder Mehidy Hasan – who had never before batted above No. 6 in 16 ODIs – walking out alongside Liton.Liton himself hadn’t scored a whole heap of runs, but Bangladesh trusted him to open despite having Imrul Kayes and Soumya Sarkar in their line-up. One more failure from Liton could have tipped the decision-makers over the edge. This was his make-or-break innings.How well he and Mehidy responded. They took everyone, including perhaps themselves, by surprise. Like the honest trier he is, Mehidy committed himself fully to the cause of seeing off India’s opening burst. His firmness rubbed off on Liton, who waited until the fourth over before unveiling his first really attacking shot, a wristy flick past square leg. That shot sent him on his way, and he treated Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Yuzvendra Chahal with similar intent on his way to reaching his fifty off 33 balls.But one ball later came the sort of moment that has given Liton a reputation for throwing his wicket away. But Chahal couldn’t hold on to his mistimed slog-sweep running back from deep midwicket, giving Liton a much-needed stroke of luck.Liton tightened up considerably over the course of his next 50-odd runs. It made sense because he was witnessing a collapse at the other end. It was the first of two collapses that would derail Bangladesh’s innings.Poor decision-making played a large part in 120 for no loss turning into 151 for 5. Mushfiqur Rahim and Mahmudullah should have held back their slog-sweeps for much later. Mohammad Mithun was run-out with Liton not responding to his partner’s call, instead watching Ravindra Jadeja’s athletic effort to stop his blazing drive into the covers.Liton, who had slowed down considerably after reaching his hundred, added 37 for the sixth wicket with Soumya in a bid to rebuild what was broken but his dismissal, the tightest off stumpings after he was beaten by Kuldeep Yadav’s wrong’un, began Bangladesh’s second collapse. They lost their last five wickets for 34 runs in 7.4 overs.The timing of Liton’s wicket – in the 41st over – was inopportune for Bangladesh. Perhaps they could have added an extra 20-30 runs to their total – which, in the end, wasn’t too far short of match-winning anyway – had he stayed on until the last three or four overs. And they will rue the shot selection and miscommunication that cost them at other key moments. In the end, as has been the case with a lot of Bangladesh’s recent ODI cricket, hugely encouraging developments came hand in hand with that perennial question: what if?

Lyon roars back from selection precipice

Nathan Lyon came close to being discarded for the Adelaide Test. Given the opportunity, he banked on scoreboard pressure and his variations in pace and spin to pin South Africa down

Daniel Brettig in Adelaide26-Nov-2016Nathan Lyon collected his baggy green cap from the umpire in mid-afternoon with figures of 0 for 27 from five overs and a glum look on his face. His most recent six balls had been taken for 10 runs by Hashim Amla, and it was no surprise when the captain Steven Smith chose to remove him from the attack.Watching on from the outfield as the pacemen were rotated, Lyon must have pondered his situation. He had broken a lengthy wicket drought in the first innings, but the thought of a single victim in the course of five first-class innings can only have been the slightest consolation. A career tally of 214 Test wickets offered more robust reason for self-belief, but increasingly Lyon has seemed alone in keeping the faith. He is the team’s most experienced player, and custodian of the team song. But somehow, unfairly, he had seemingly become expendable.How close did he come to being dropped for this match entirely? About as close as it is possible. Steve O’Keefe, Lyon’s New South Wales team-mate, would almost certainly have been chosen in his stead if not for the recurrence of a calf problem during the Sheffield Shield round played between Hobart and Adelaide. On local radio, the coach Darren Lehmann said as much: “Lyon was in because we couldn’t select O’Keefe, he was injured beforehand.”Having made it narrowly to Adelaide, much of the talk leading into the match surrounded how Lyon could find himself making way for a fourth seamer in either Jackson Bird or Chadd Sayers. All despite Lyon’s own fine record in Adelaide, and the absence of an allrounder making it vital to have someone capable of long spells. At a ceremony to name the players’ viewing area after the loveable Barry “Nugget” Rees, Lyon prompted the guest of honour to nominate him as a favourite player. Laughs were had, of course, but Lyon was certainly in need of some love.So close to being discarded despite being Australia’s most prolific-ever offspinner, Lyon had to be pondering whether this still Adelaide night would be among his last in the national team. He has a captain in Steven Smith who does not share his predecessor Michael Clarke’s dynamism when dealing with spin bowlers, and a coaching staff that oddly does not feature a full-time spin minder – South Africa’s spinners have Claude Henderson on tour.It is true that Lyon has been able to spend time this week with John Davison, his longtime mentor and trusted confidante. That has undoubtedly helped his technique, flight, shape and spin. “It hasn’t been an emergency call,” Lyon said. “Davo’s been planning before the summer to come down to Adelaide. It’s been great to have him around, he’s someone I trust very highly and work great with him.”He’s one guy who is very handy to have in my corner. There’s a bit of that [reassurance], but Davo also challenges me to try to get better and better each and every training session that we go into. He’s just someone I can go to and say ‘What do you think about this, this and this?’ and he’ll come back and say agree or disagree and we can have a conversation.”But he still needed to find a way to get himself into the game. After a brief flirtation with David Warner’s medium pace after tea, Smith handed the ball back to Lyon. The dismissal of Amla in the interim helped Lyon, giving him a left-hander to size up in JP Duminy.The following spell brought gradual improvement from Lyon, as he worked with variations in pace and spin. A major factor in the way he was able to get into the spell was a different level of pressure from the scoreboard, after Australia’s batsmen finally produced something of substance after five matches of failures.Nathan Lyon was masterful against the nightwatchman Kyle Abbott, his efforts culminating in an lbw dismissal•Cricket Australia/Getty Images”It’s always handy to have some runs on the board, and it’s up there with the best innings by a nightwatchman that I’ve seen, so hats off to Usman,” Lyon said. “It’s been an exciting feel this week with a couple of debutants, we want to come out buzzing and prove to Australia that cricket’s in good hands.”I didn’t feel under pressure to be honest. I know on the scorecards there’s been no wickets in the columns but I feel like I’ve been bowling really well and being able to create chances. I haven’t been feeling under pressure that much to be honest. I look at this as a young, exciting team and I’ve played 60 Test matches now and I’ve got a massive role in this team.”It’s not about being different it’s about being there in a supporting role, taking a few of the younger guys under your wing and supporting them. I know how hard it is to play Test match cricket, and if someone in the team can lend that support on and off the field it’s crucial. I know Mike Hussey was my mentor when I first came in, so if I can play my role with the young guys coming in I’m more than happy to do that.”The role to Duminy was to open up an end so that Smith could return to attacking with his pacemen under the Adelaide floodlight. A straighter, quicker delivery that skidded off the pitch did just that, beating Duminy’s absent-minded flick across the line and knocking out off stump. Lyon’s auxiliary role at this point was underlined when Smith withdrew him an over later to try tandem pace to Faf du Plessis, a decision rewarded with a sliced drive off Mitchell Starc and a tremendous catch by Pete Handscomb in the gully.As stumps crept nearer, Smith returned the ball to Lyon’s hands for a critical period. Temba Bavuma and Stephen Cook had the chance to forge through to the close and keep the dangerous Quinton de Kock safe from harm. But Bavuma’s innings had grown skittish under pressure, from Starc in particular, and Lyon was able to exploit this by coaxing out a sweep, a top edge and a catch for Smith. Bavuma reviewed, somewhat oddly, but the HotSpot was clear.This whole sequence showed how match circumstances, a hint of good fortune and a supportive Adelaide crowd make as much of a difference to Lyon as anything from the ball or the pitch. Against the nightwatchman Kyle Abbott he was masterful, working a tall man over with spin and bounce, before straightening one ideally for an lbw verdict.De Kock was left to face the final few balls of the night, and for the first time all series it was Lyon who held the whip-hand. As the ball bit and spun past a groping bat, the crowd transfixed by the moment, it seemed difficult to imagine an Australian team without Lyon in it, when hours before the opposite felt true. How quickly things can change.

The Yorkshire Academy: elitism that dares speak its name

One minute Matthew Fisher is bowling in front of a capacity crowd at Headingley, the next he is back learning his trade – at the place where Joe Root and Adil Rashid did theirs

Paul Edwards10-Jun-2015In front of a raucous crowd at Headingley last Friday evening, Matthew Fisher bowled the penultimate over of Yorkshire’s NatWest T20 Blast match against Lancashire. He was hit for two sixes, took two wickets and sent down two wides. He was watched by 16,199 spectators.On Saturday morning, Fisher was at Shaw Lane Sports Centre, the home of Barnsley Cricket Club, where he was due to captain Yorkshire’s Academy against the team just above them in the ECB Yorkshire Premier League.Matthew Fisher is a professional cricketer. He is 17 years old.Certainly since Andrew Gale’s team won the County Championship last September and probably since England’s Under-19 team included five Yorkshire cricketers a year or so back, people have wondered what makes the county’s Academy special.That question became even more insistent on Tuesday night when Joe Root’s century and Adil Rashid’s all-round excellence helped England to overwhelm New Zealand at Edgbaston. Both Root and Rashid are Academy graduates.A couple of months previously, while some at Headingley were doubting the merit of England taking six Yorkshiremen on the recent West Indies tour but playing only two, others were predicting that before long Alex Lees, Jack Leaning et al would also be gaining representative honours. Lees and Leaning are also products of the Academy and there are plenty more where they came from.Yorkshire’s Academy is the elitism that dares to speak its name. Nobody complains about the cultivation of an elite in Yorkshire cricket. On the contrary, they demand it.Shaw Lane is perched on one of a succession of plateaux on the outskirts of Barnsley. While it may be the windiest non-coastal ground in England, it is also a classy venue and it hosts county second-team games. Outsiders make the connection with Geoffrey Boycott, Dickie Bird and Michael Parkinson but the Barnsley club also produced England internationals in Darren Gough, the former fast bowler turned sports broadcaster, and Martyn Moxon, Yorkshire’s director of cricket, among many others.On Saturday Fisher and his colleagues were returning to one of the heartlands of Yorkshire cricket to test themselves against a fine side. If they required a reminder of the standards required to remain on Yorkshire’s staff, they needed only to look at Barnsley’s team-sheet. It contained the name of Azeem Rafiq, once England Under-19 captain, once Yorkshire’s T20 skipper, once the next big thing. Rafiq was released last season, one of many who never quite made it. Fisher won the toss and decided to bat.

“Our job is to get rid of these lads as fast as we can. We want to get them either upwards, on to the professional staff, or outwards, because we feel that they are not going to be the right players for Yorkshire County Cricket Club”Richard Damms, head coach

It is after tea before Richard Damms, the head coach at the Academy, comes over to speak to me. He has just finished chatting on the phone with Moxon, Yorkshire’s director of cricket. These chats are frequent because Moxon keeps the closest of eyes on the Academy while still letting Damms, who is also a Barnsley lad, get on with his job.The game is not going well for Fisher’s team. They mustered only 199 for 9 in their 55 overs and Barnsley’s former first-team skipper and current groundsman, Gary Nuttall, reckons this will take a lot of defending, even on a rather tired pitch. Barnsley’s openers, Jonathon Trower and James Brown – the latter is also on Yorkshire’s books – have begun well.Damms talks about a structure that might be recognisable to other county coaches. He describes three tiers from the Emerging Players’ Programme up to Scholarship level and, finally, the Academy. “Our job is to get rid of these lads as fast as we can,” says Damms, who has been in the post since last winter’s coaching reorganisation, following Richard Dawson’s move to Gloucestershire. “We want to get them either upwards, on to the professional staff, or outwards, because we feel that they are not going to be the right players for Yorkshire County Cricket Club, although I hasten to add that a lot of them have successful careers at other counties.”We are sitting in one of the few sheltered spots at Shaw Lane. Around us are spectators who will have watched Moxon and Gough make their way in the game. In the middle, though, neither Fisher, who made his first-class debut at Worcester in April, nor Karl Carver, a slow left-armer who took his maiden Championship wickets against Warwickshire last season, have made a breakthrough.”This year we have Academy players in the Under-19 age-group down to Under-16 but we have signed players at Under-14,” said Damms. “I think we signed Joe Root at 13 or 14 because he’d just got something. Matthew Fisher signed Academy contract forms at 14 and now he’s a full professional at 17. I’ve never seen that in all my time in cricket.”The biggest advantage is the number of young lads playing cricket in Yorkshire,” he says, when pressed as to what makes the Academy special. “There are that many lads fighting for the same spots. Inevitably it raises standards and the Yorkshire members demand that we are producing us own. One of our mission statements as a club is ideally to win the Championship with eleven of us own.”That latter aim is one which Yorkshire has yet to achieve in modern times but it is interesting to hear Damms voice a goal which some might interpret as belonging to the era when you had to be born in Yorkshire to play for the county, a stipulation that would now disqualify both Leaning and Will Rhodes from wearing the White Rose. These days, though, it is upbringing that matters to many: there is no longer a need to make sure you give birth the right side of the border.”Our job is to facilitate opportunities and see who stands up and takes those opportunities and who, unfortunately, falls by the wayside,” Damms says. “Everything we do is competitive because we know how tough it is.”It’s also important to see that we are one club. Our Academy lads will be on first-name terms with our international players because they will spend time with them.”This ease with senior cricketers is important at Yorkshire although it is not so very long ago that county cricket was steeped in obsequiousness and deference. This is no longer the case. Not at Yorkshire anyway.Paul Farbrace, formerly Yorkshire’s 2nd XI coach, thinks a young player must look as if he belongs•Getty ImagesPaul Farbrace, England’s assistant coach, spent a productive period at Headingley, arriving via Kent and Sri Lanka before quickly departing to general regret.”I once asked Paul Farbrace, when he was coaching at Yorkshire, what he looked for in a young player coming into a first-team environment,” Damms says. “He said that he wanted him to look and act as if he belonged. Because if he didn’t, you’d only get a shadow of the cricket he is capable of producing.”If you can get one or two pushing for a professional contract out of every year’s intake, that’s fantastic. Last year we had five Academy lads playing for England Under-19s. This year we have two and next year we might have only one.”But the great thing is that these lads know that if they are good enough, they will get a chance. Matthew bowled that penultimate over against Lancashire last night and he said to us today that he’d learned more in one over than in the previous 12 months. If Galey picks them, he plays them. There’s no pecking order. We are one Yorkshire.”

My taxi driver knows I’ve been watching cricket. “Tell me this,” he says, “why couldn’t Bresnan nail his yorkers?”

But it is not a good day. Yorkshire’s Academy lose to Barnsley by eight wickets. The players shake hands. As my taxi draws up to take me back to the train station, Fisher and his players are going through their warm-downs. They seem to be applying themselves to the exercises just as assiduously as if they were preparing to play. Theirs is a professionalism which has nothing to do with money.Moxon and Damms have perhaps the deepest pool of players in the country. They are determined to make the most of it. It has always seemed that cricket is a part of Yorkshire life unequalled in any other county.During the New Zealand Test at Headingley, each journalist was given a tea mug. On one side was a village cricket scene. Pastoral kitsch? All Cricketers Great and Small? Maybe. Yet in the county’s very many strong cricket clubs, boys like Joe Root who have “got something” want to wear the White Rose almost as passionately as young New Zealanders want to be an All Black. And if they are good enough, they get the chance. Damms, Moxon and Gale see to it.We are driving back to the station. My taxi driver knows I’ve been watching cricket but not what I do for a living. “Tell me this,” he says, “why couldn’t Bresnan nail his yorkers last night?” I murmur something sympathetic. “Anyway,” he continues, “at least the weather forecast is good for the Middlesex match.”

The team of the tournament

ESPNcricinfo’s picks for the best eleven performers at the ICC World Twenty20 Qualifer in the UAE

Peter Della Penna01-Dec-2013Tony Ura (Papua New Guinea)
336 runs at 37.33Papua New Guinea came desperately close to securing a spot in the top six, and Ura was a big reason why. His two best scores were against the two toughest teams in Group B. He hit a 100 in an emphatic win over the Netherlands and 56 in a frustrating loss to Afghanistan. He was the second-highest scorer in the tournament, and had the most runs of any opening batsman. Although not physically imposing, his timing is crisp and he tied for the most sixes at the event with 14. He’s only 24-years-old so PNG have plenty of years to build around him.Paul Stirling (Ireland)
292 runs at 36.50, 11 wickets at 11.00One of only two players to remain from last year’s Tournament XI, Stirling continues to evolve from being just a devastating hitter at the top of the order to an allrounder who makes a handy contribution with the ball. Kenya’s Steve Tikolo, Nepal’s Paras Khadka and Stirling were the only players to be in the top 20 for both runs and wickets. He was named Man of the Match twice. The first time was against Namibia for making 52 in 36 balls, and the second against Hong Kong for scoring 77 off 46 and taking 4 for 10 in four overs. He arguably should have had a third award for his belligerent 76 off 43 balls against Afghanistan in the final, but Trent Johnston won out in a sentimental vote seeing as it was his last T20 match for Ireland. Stirling has a growing reputation for saving his best when it matters most for Ireland and this tournament was no exception.Matt Machan (Scotland)
364 runs at 45.50After starting 1-3 in Group B, Scotland were very nearly eliminated from contention for the top six before the play-offs began but they bounced back in a big way only to fall just short of a spot in Bangladesh. Machan was a big reason his team stayed in contention until the bitter end against the Netherlands. He scored four half-centuries, tied with teammate Calum MacLeod for most in the tournament, including one in each game against the Netherlands. He was the leading tournament run-scorer and set a new event record, breaking Paul Stirling’s total of 357 runs from a year ago.Wesley Barresi (Netherlands)
264 runs at 33.00The Dutch wicketkeeper started poorly with back-to-back ducks against Afghanistan and Papua New Guinea before making modest contributions with the bat during the rest of the group stage, but his team may not have secured a spot in Bangladesh were it not for his fearless 75 not out against Scotland in the play-offs. The Netherlands looked shell-shocked after failing to chase the UAE’s 117, but Barresi put the team on his back a day later to knock off Scotland’s 147. He had the second-most dismissals behind the stumps in the tournament with 10.Paras Khadka (Nepal)
232 runs at 29.00, 11 wickets at 18.18Along with Stirling, Khadka is a mainstay from the 2012 Tournament XI. With more than half of Nepal’s games being broadcast either online or on television at this tournament, many cricket fans outside of Kathmandu will have gotten their first glimpse of why this man means so much to his country. His raw stats don’t tell the full story as his numbers are not as glamorous compared to others in the list, not to mention those outside of the XI. After a first-day win over Denmark, Khadka stayed to the end with 54 not out as Nepal chased Kenya’s 182. The performance validated Nepal’s ambitions of finishing in the top six, though they might not have progressed to Bangladesh without his Man-of-the-Match performance against Hong Kong, when he anchored the chase of 143 with a cool 46 in 39 balls.Khurram Khan (UAE)
255 runs at 36.42, 9 wickets at 19.00Khurram Khan steered the host country into the main draw in Bangladesh with his all-round exploits. At 42, Khan has showed no signs of slowing down, and was his team’s leading scorer at the event, finishing ninth overall. A Man-of-the-Match performance with 2 for 18 and 67 not out against Hong Kong ensured UAE would finish in the top three of Group A and get two cracks at securing a spot in Bangladesh. They would only need one though after thwarting the Netherlands in defense of 117.Samiullah Shenwari (Afghanistan)
85 runs at 17.00, 16 wickets at 8.25Shenwari can easily get lost in the plethora of bowling options available to captain Mohammad Nabi, and he wasn’t even handed the ball in two of Afghanistan’s nine games, but he outshone the rest of his teammates over the previous 16 days to be named Player of the Tournament. The legspinning allrounder nabbed three Man-of-the-Match awards during the event, the most by any player, for his performances in wins over Papua New Guinea, Kenya and in the semifinal against Nepal. His 5 for 13 against Kenya was one of only four five-wicket hauls in the tournament, but Shenwari was a much more consistent threat than the other three who pulled it off, and he wound up tied for third overall in the tournament wickets’ column with 16.Despite being on the wrong side of 40, Munir Dar impressed with the ball•Graham Crouch/IDI/GettyMunir Dar (Hong Kong)
17 wickets at 13.05In a team full of young guns, Dar is the wily old fox still hanging around to impart not just wisdom, but plenty of skill as well. The left-arm spinner took 17 wickets, which was second overall, and the most of any slow bowler at the tournament. Twice he took 4 for 17, against the USA and Canada, but his most important contribution came in the play-offs against Papua New Guinea. With qualification into the World Twenty20 at stake, he chipped in with a vital 22 in the first innings before taking 3 for 26 and effecting a run out in a 29-run win to book a place for Hong Kong in Bangladesh.Mudassar Bukhari (Netherlands)
16 wickets at 15.31The medium pacer had to shoulder a bigger load at this tournament without Timm van der Gugten, but he more than handled it. Bukhari finished with 16 wickets overall, tied for third in the tournament with Shenwari. He was named Man of the Match twice, first in a win over Nepal with figures of 3 for 15, and later against Kenya with a return of 3 for 14. There has been much turnover in his team’s bowling options over the past few years, but he has remained a constant and useful presence.Max Sorensen (Ireland)
14 wickets at 10.64Sorensen is a fast bowler chiseled out of granite and he possessed the requisite intimidation factor both with physique and pace to keep opposing batsmen in check. He finished with 14 wickets, which only puts him tied for eighth, but part of that is down to the fact that Ireland had a group game washed out and also played two less games by virtue of booking a place straight into the semifinals after an undefeated run in Group A. A more telling stat was his average of 10.64, which put him behind only Shenwari and Ahsan Malik for bowlers in the top 20 wickets’ list. His lethal spell of 4 for 15 against UAE in the semifinal meant Ireland’s 147 was too steep a target.Ahsan Malik (Netherlands)
21 wickets at 10.00Malik and Sorensen were the only two bowlers in the tournament to bowl and take a wicket in every one of their team’s games. Malik took 12 in seven group games, but was just as prolific in the playoffs, taking eight in the final three matches of the tournament. His value was not just a knack for taking wickets but also in his ability to keep batsmen off balance. He was difficult to get away and his 5.67 economy rate was the second best of any pace bowler in the top 20 wickets list at the tournament.

Attention, it's the Olympics

The Plays of the Day from the third day of the second Test between West Indies and New Zealand in Jamaica

Subash Jayaraman in Jamaica04-Aug-2012Break of the day
The last scheduled drinks break of the day was advanced by seven minutes to allow the fans in the ground to watch the Women’s 100m final at the London Olympics, with two Jamaicans, Veronica Campbell Brown and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce expected to medal. The players and the officials took a comfortable position on the side of the pitch facing the big screen, showing the final. As the runners got off the blocks, a huge roar went around the ground, cheering the locals through. As Fraser-Pryce crossed the finishing line first, jubilant Jamaicans in the stands and the dressing room were seen jumping and hollering. Jamaica finished 1 and 3 in the race.Wasted reviews of the day

Through this Test series, Darren Sammy’s relationship with the DRS challenges has been that of a compulsive gambler and his money – easily parted. He has shown the quick trigger and the tendency to be easily convinced by his bowler. Within the space of seven overs of the morning session, West Indies burned both their challenges. The first was an lbw appeal off Tino Best where the ball seemed to be comfortably missing the leg stump. The second was more egregious, when Narsingh Deonarine hit Kane Williamson on the pads, replay showing the ball missing the stumps by a foot. All of Sammy’s six challenges in this series have been struck down. About time he realises DRS isn’t necessarily a wicket-taking tool, but one to rectify bad umpiring mistakes.Celebration of the day – I
Tino Best was already pumped – it doesn’t take much, really – having taken the wicket of Neil Wagner with a short ball from around the wicket. He welcomed Ross Taylor to the wicket with a short delivery, which he fielded on his follow-through and threatened to throw back at the stumps. Add to it a few words and a persistent glare. Next delivery, he had Taylor playing a shot away from the body to a shortish delivery, edging it to Denesh Ramdin. And Best took off. He wouldn’t stop till he got to the sponsor sign near the boundary, banging his chest and screaming, well within Taylor’s earshot. His team-mates eventually caught up to him and more celebrations followed.Celebration of the day – II
As the players walked back to the pavilion for lunch, the PA system started playing the Jamaica National Anthem, and the crowd came to a stand still. In celebration of Jamaica’s 50th Independence Day, all current and former first-class cricketers from Jamaica were felicitated. Some of them made their entry from the George Headley stand and walked along the boundary, waving to the crowd, all the way around Sabina Park.Shot of the day
Marlon Samuels walked in with West Indies dangling at 20 for 2 but the shots he unfurled clearly indicated that he was in a different zone as a batsman than anybody else in this Test. He had just dismissed a wide ball from Trent Boult in the ninth over through cover point. The bowler adjusted the width and decided to bowl closer to the stumps. Samuels made his adjustment too, moving his feet only slightly to get closer to the line and executed a cover drive so sweet, loaded with impeccable timing, the deep point fielder didn’t even bother to move. He held the pose and admired his shot as the ball raced to the boundary.Drop of the day
Doug Bracewell ran in to bowl the last over before tea. After going for 12 runs in his first over, Bracewell had come back well, bowling tight and even swinging the ball away from the right-hander. If New Zealand were to have any chance, they needed to get Samuels. Bracewell induced an outside edge from Samuels, but BJ Watling spilled a straightforward chance at gully. Following their insipid batting performance, the drop didn’t do much to their self belief.Misfield of the day
In the 11th over, Samuels drove Neil Wagner through point and looked to pick up a couple of runs. Bracewell ran in from the third man boundary, but overran the ball and let it go through. What should have been a tight two, went for four. The New Zealanders in the press box went, “yep, that pretty much sums it up.”

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