Murshida's 91* and Bangladesh spinners rout South Africa

It was Bangladesh’s first victory in the format over the hosts since 2017, as they registered their biggest win by runs

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Dec-2023

The Bangladesh players celebrate their win•Gallo Images

Murshida Khatun and the Bangladesh Women spinners combined to help their team clinch their first ODI victory against South Africa Women since 2017. Bangladesh took a 1-0 lead in the three-match series with a comprehensive 119-run win in East London by defending 250, their highest total batting first in an ODI, with their margin of victory also being the biggest while batting first.Murshida scored a career-best 91 not out off 100 balls while no other batter could cross 38 despite all of them getting starts. After Fargana Hoque and Shamima Sultana put on 66 for the opening stand, Murshida slammed 12 fours, keeping one end intact while sharing stands of 44 with Fargana, 80 with captain Nigar Sultana and an undefeated 60 with Shorna Akter.During the chase, South Africa were reduced to 9 for 2 in the third over, with Sultana Khatun having Laura Wolvaardt caught behind and Marufa Akter trapping Tazmin Brits lbw. Anneke Bosch and Sune Luus briefly steadied the hosts with a 41-run stand, before left-arm spinner Nahida Akter claimed her first wicket by having Bosch caught behind for 16. That started a massive collapse for South Africa, as 50 for 2 in the 13th over became 95 for 8 in the 27th.Debutant Eliz-mari Marx, who top-scored for South Africa with 35, and tailender Masabata Klaas then frustrated Bangladesh by adding 36, before Sultana Khatun and Nahida wrapped things up within the space of five balls. Nahida finished with 3 for 33, while the trio of Sultana Khataun, Rabeya Khan and Fahima Khatun claimed two wickets apiece.The second ODI will take place in Potchefstroom on Wednesday.

Head named co-vice-captain as Australia look to 'future-proof' leadership stocks

Australia’s World Test Championship final and ODI World Cup hero Travis Head has formally been elevated to co-vice-captain in Australia’s Test team alongside Steven Smith, with current captain Pat Cummins saying that he has all the makings of a future Test leader as they try to future-proof the leadership stocks within Australian cricket.Head, 29, was added to Australia’s leadership group on Wednesday, just a day out from the first Test against Pakistan in Perth, as Cummins also revealed Australia’s XI with only one change being made from the last Test they played back in July at The Oval against England: Nathan Lyon returns from injury in place of Todd Murphy as the lone spinner.Smith remains the senior vice-captain and will continue to be the first choice to stand in for Cummins when required. Smith has stood in for Cummins in four separate Test matches over the last two years when Cummins has missed matches for a variety of reasons, having also captained Australia in 34 Tests between 2014 and 2018.Related

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Head had previously been a co-vice-captain of the Test team alongside Cummins when Tim Paine was captain. The pair was named as Paine’s new deputies in February 2019, replacing the previous co-vice-captains in Mitchell Marsh and Josh Hazlewood, who had been installed in the roles in October 2018 following a team vote in the aftermath of the sandpaper scandal. But Head, like Marsh and Hazlewood, lost the title when he lost his Test place after being dropped from the side during the 2019-20 home series against India.But his stunning run of form over the last two years across all formats has Head well-entrenched in the side, despite briefly being controversially left out for the first Test in India earlier this year. Cummins confirmed the move had been made with an eye to the future.”Really excited to have Trav on board as the co-vice-captain,” Cummins said on Wednesday. “He’s been playing for a long time. He’s always been a leader in our group. So we thought it was a good time to formally recognise that. Whilst nothing’s imminent, Steve’s not going to play forever. I daresay I’m not going to captain forever. So we feel like we’ve got some responsibility to future-proof the team and start trying to give opportunities to other leaders.Cummins is entering his third year as Test captain having been appointed in November 2021. He has consistently noted that he will not have a long tenure as captain despite an incredible run of success that has included winning the World Test Championship and the ODI World Cup this year. Meanwhile, Smith is 34 and highly unlikely to be the permanent captain again.

Head looms as one of the leading candidates to be Australia’s next long-term skipper post-Cummins. He had long been groomed as a future leader within Australian cricket having been elevated to captain South Australia in Sheffield Shield cricket at the tender age of 21. He has led South Australia in 62 Shield matches, including two Shield finals in his first three seasons. He has also captained his state in 27 List A matches including two Marsh Cup finals and led Adelaide Strikers to a BBL title in 2017-18. He has captained Australia A in eight List A games and one first-class match between 2018 and 2020 and even led Worcestershire in a List A game in 2018.While Cummins stopped short of confirming that Head was the heir apparent, the captain noted that his own experience as a vice-captain had helped his transition to the role exponentially.”It doesn’t guarantee anything,” Cummins said. “But we’re giving him a good opportunity. So when you look through the candidates for future captains, of course, he’s going to be right up there. And I know in my last couple years before I became captain, being in some of those conversations as a vice-captain really helped fast-track my readiness. So down the track, it might be Trav, it might be someone else, but we want to make sure they’re as prepared as they can be.”Travis Head, here with Scott Boland and Alex Carey, was one of Australia’s stars of the WTC final•ICC/Getty Images

Cummins noted that Head was a popular member of the team but had greater tactical nous than he was given credit for, which is part of the reason for his elevation.”I think the personality that he brings to the team is something that we all love,” Cummins said. “And I think you see it in the way he plays his cricket. There’s a certain amount of freedom to it. He takes the game on. He enjoys it. He’s always got a smile on his face. He never takes anything too seriously. He’s great at bringing the team together for team morale, for putting his arm around players that need it.”Sometimes you can mistake that for someone who’s not a deep thinker about the game, but I think tactically, he’s excellent. So he’s got all the makings of a really strong leader like we’ve seen him do for South Australia for quite a few years and we’re making that a little bit more formal around the Aussie team.”

Evan Ferguson or Rasmus Hojlund? Roma approach Brighton for young striker but keeping eye on struggling Man Utd forward

Roma have opened talks to sign Brighton youngster Evan Ferguson on a loan deal, while not ruling out a move for the struggling Rasmus Hojlund.

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Roma want to bolster their attackAre planning a move for FergusonHave not ruled out signing HojlundFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to a report from , Roma are set to open talks with Brighton to sign Ferguson on loan ahead of the 2025-26 season, with an option to buy him next summer. The Serie A outfit are keen on bolstering their attack and have not ruled out a potential move for struggling Manchester United forward Hojlund either.

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On Wednesday, Fabrizio Romano reported that Roma have decided to focus on Ferguson as a reinforcement in attack; he is at the top of the Giallorossi's wish list. Head coach Gian Piero Gasperini wants to revitalise the attack in light of departures of Eldor Shomurodov and Tammy Abraham, who has joined Besiktas. Despite interest from Chelsea, Arsenal, and Tottenham, Roma appear to be in pole position to clinch the young Irishman.

The report from claims that Roma and Brighton are working on a loan deal, with an option to buy for around €25-30 million (£21-26m/$29-35m). This would give Roma time to assess him before making such an investment, allowing them to use their resources to strengthen other areas of the team, such as the right wing.

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On the other hand, the option to sign Hojlund remains on the table, too. United would be open to letting the Danish international leave on loan this summer. Hojlund would be reunited with Gasperini at Roma, who launched his career at Atalanta, where he undoubtedly enjoyed his best season to date. Inter were also interested in the striker, but they then opted for Ange-Yoan Bonny, focusing their resources on other players. Hojlund, however, wishes to remain at Old Trafford and fight for a place under Ruben Amorim.

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Having sold Joao Pedro to Chelsea for a sizeable fee, and Ferguson likely to head for an exit, Brighton will be intent on signing offensive reinforcements this summer. They have already signed teenage Greek sensation Charalampos Kostoulas from Olympiakos and have been linked with a move for Liverpool's Harvey Elliott.

Neser's stunning all-round show secures Brisbane Heat home Qualifier final

The allrounder clubbed a brilliant half-century, claimed two wickets and took a stunning catch

Tristan Lavalette10-Jan-2024Michael Neser starred with a spectacular all-round performance as Brisbane Heat secured the BBL’s top spot after a drought-breaking victory over nemesis Perth Scorchers at the Gabba.There was much at stake in the top-of-the table clash with Heat locking in a home qualifying final on the Gold Coast on January 19, while two-time defending champions Scorchers were unable to wrap up a finals berth.Related

Boyce, Carey give Adelaide Strikers vital win; McDermott's 95* in vain

Smith to captain ODIs against West Indies, Morris called up

Khawaja displays dove and olive branch symbol in BBL

Usman Khawaja and Marnus Labuschagne made rare BBL appearances between Test commitments, but stalwart Neser stole the show.In a replay of last season’s epic final, Heat were in trouble at 91 for 5 before Neser and Sam Billings struck a belligerent 80-run partnership from 41 balls.Neser was unstoppable with 64 off 30 balls at No. 7 as Heat smashed 100 runs off the last 47 balls.Scorchers rued an unusually ragged effort in the field and were always up against chasing 192 with Neser taking two wickets and his heroic effort also included a brilliant catch to dismiss Josh Inglis.The teams will renew their rivalry on Saturday at Optus Stadium.Unbeaten Heat had been the form team of the competition, but faced a litmus test against Scorchers who had won the past six matches between the teams.After Khawaja elected to bat, the contest lived up to the hype during a frenetic powerplay laced with a flurry of boundaries and two wickets from knuckle balls by left-arm quick Jason Behrendorff.Having battled on tough Test surfaces against Pakistan, Khawaja relished the batting-friendly conditions to bludgeon three boundaries in the first over off quick Jhye Richardson.But Khawaja, who showcased the dove and olive branch symbol of peace on his bat and shoes, fell in the next over after mistiming a slower Behrendorff delivery that was well caught by Sam Whiteman low down at cover.Michael Neser celebrates his stunning catch•Getty ImagesOn a flat surface, Behrendorff cleverly mixed his speeds but Richardson erred by bowling too short and he was dispatched by Labuschagne for a trio of boundaries.Richardson, who was named in Australia’s ODI squad against West Indies, leaked 25 runs off his first two overs. He was shown up by typically superb new-ball bowling from Behrendorff, who knocked over Colin Munro with another clever slower ball that gripped the surface.Left-arm wrist spinner Hamish McKenzie was selected over veteran seamer Andrew Tye due to Heat’s slew of left-handed batters. He came on in the sixth over as Labuschagne and Matthew Renshaw aimed to build a partnership.But Renshaw, who was selected in Australia’s Test squad against West Indies, could not get going and he fell to left-arm spinner Ashton Agar on 18.Heat were further derailed two balls after drinks when Labuschagne nicked off for 45 to quick Lance Morris. Rather farcically Labuschagne was at the wrong end on resumption and should have been on strike instead of Billings, who then took a single off the first ball.The batters struggled to pick McKenzie, who continued an impressive debut BBL season having pushed through a back injury. He combined well with Agar, who was coming off the remarkable figures of 2 for 6 from four overs against Sydney Thunder.But Neser ignited Heat with three consecutive boundaries off Morris before Billings took over with lusty hitting after the power surge was taken late in the innings.Showcasing his ever improving batting, Neser smashed his first BBL half-century as he pummelled the previously miserly Behrendorff for three sixes in the last over to lift Heat to a total that had seemed well beyond them.Neser then dented Scorchers’ fast start in reply with the wicket of opener Zak Crawley in the third over. It was Crawley’s final BBL appearance before he heads off to England’s tour of India.Bowling at speeds around the mid-140kph, left-arm quick Spencer Johnson was a handful and his sharp short-pitched delivery accounted for Whiteman.The pressure fell on Aaron Hardie and Inglis, who bat well together. But Inglis had to take the lead when Hardie holed out on for 14 and he attacked through the off-side.He gave Scorchers hope with a 48-run partnership with Laurie Evans, who clubbed a golf-like tee shot into the stands off Neser.But Neser’s stunning catch running back to the boundary to dismiss Inglis in the power surge gave Heat a stranglehold.Evans tried to provide a late twist as he unfurled strokes similar to his recent 28-ball 85 against Adelaide Strikers. Batting deep in the crease, Evans powered to a half-century off 27 balls but ran out of support as Heat clinched a pivotal victory.

‘Will it be perfect? Probably not’ – If the Club Club World Cup was the dress rehearsal for soccer in America, the 2026 World Cup is the main event – and the clock’s ticking

The World Cup can be spectacular – and CWC was a blueprint for what FIFA, North America must do to ensure that outcome

The lower level platform at Secaucus Station was crowded and sweaty. Baffled supporters milled around. It was a multicultural kind of confusion, English, Spanish, Portuguese and French mutterings filling the air as the post-match haze settled. No one knew what train to get on, where it would come from, or how long it might take.

Hundreds were stuck in the summer heat.

The Club World Cup final had finished nearly 3 hours earlier, with Chelsea having dispatched PSG in the final of the expanded 32-team tournament in the U.S. What was left was a smattering those who had stayed behind, hoping to get a glimpse of a team bus.

The central problem: there wasn’t easy transportation back to New York City. From New Jersey. After a football match.

It was a red flag for what might happen next year. The United States is hosting the World Cup in less than 12 months, along with Canada and Mexico. And the Club World Cup, as a sort of beta test younger brother, was supposed to be a proof of concept that the country can cope with a global football tournament with global fans on a global scale.

The reality, less than a week after the end of the Club World Cup, has been mixed. The CWC proved that, in general, yes, there are ways in which the U.S. can handle large influxes of fans. But at a practical level, the specifics of hosting a global soccer tournament are still concerningly unattended. After a month of football in 11 cities and 12 venues across the U.S., there are some answers, but many, many more questions.

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    An unintentional parody of American sports

    Gianni Infantino really tried here. The FIFA president spent years planning the CWC, trying to manifest it into existence. He got Tiffany to build a very shiny, very gold trophy. He picked up on some major American sporting event touchpoints – individual introductions for players, multi-cultural half-time shows, boxing ring announcers, celebrity appearances and the presence of the United States President at the final.

    As an unintentional parody of American sports, the competition worked.

    But the byproduct was the revelation of the many things the country still needs to address as it looks to host the biggest World Cup ever in less than a year’s time. This, of course, is not unique to the U.S. Very few countries are purpose-built to host an event of this magnitude.

    Qatar had to build a new city, seven stadiums, and dodge human rights accusations in doing so. Brazil spent two years cleansing and covering up its favelas, tearing down schools for new venues and built a stadium deep in the Amazon rainforest that still isn’t routinely used.

    Problems come with the territory. The first task is identifying them. The more important task is addressing them.

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    Facilitating the flow of fans

    The primary and most complicated issue, at least for the fans trying to attend matches, was always going to be simply getting to the stadium. Public transportation is ubiquitous across Europe and Asia, and World Cups in South America have, historically, facilitated the flow of fans efficiently.

    America isn’t devoid of public transportation. The NYC subway system, for example, is effective. But the problem the CWC faced was that its venues were, for the most part, either outside of major metropolitan areas, or housed in areas that don’t have established public transportation.

    Hard Rock Stadium, which hosted the opener and seven other games, was a prime example. There were widespread complaints about the physical ability to just get to the stadium, which is 15 miles from downtown Miami. There is no public transportation, and considerable congestion.

    Fans generally had to use car services, private transportation or chartered buses simply to get to the ground. One fan was quoted a price of $150 to get from the stadium to their hotel via taxi – an 11-mile ride. Numerous fans told , rather dramatically, that going to Hard Rock had put them off football matches altogether.

    That, of course, is one extreme.

    But even those venues which are better equipped, such as MetLife Stadium, are faced with similar issues. MetLife is not in New York – its in East Rutherford, New Jersey – and it can take more than an hour to get to the grounds from Penn Station in the heart of Manhattan. Such is the regularity of delays. NYNJ host committee co-manager Bruce Revman backed the area to cope with a major tournament.

    “Will it be perfect? Probably not, but it's going to be damn good because we've been planning on this for four, five, six years,” he said last week at a global soccer summit in Newark. “And by the way, this region, especially MetLife, as we know, hosts really big events. This is not their first rodeo. So gaming it out, having the right imagination and communicating appropriately is really critical.”

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    'It is almost impossible to train'

    The CWC reinforced that there are controllable challenges – and some uncontrollable. No. 1 on that list is the climate. Summer World Cups are going to be increasingly difficult to play, given extreme temperatures and disruptive weather events. It’s why the 2022 World Cup in Qatar was pushed back to November in a significant departure from the normal June-July timeframe.

    This probably should have been recognized by FIFA. There are professors, climatologists, NGOs who have written extensively about the impact climate change can have on soccer.

    But even stripping that away, there remains one fundamental fact: America gets hot during the summer. Very hot. This is not a new phenomenon. Severe weather, including thunderstorms and lightning, also delayed or suspended matches for long periods. But European teams, in particular, seemed surprised by the blistering heat.

    PSG coach Luis Enrique admitted that the temperatures had an impact on his team’s 4-0 battering of Atletico Madrid in their group stage opener. Chelsea’s Enzo Maresca was left furious after his team could barely train due to temperatures that exceeded 100 degrees in Philadelphia.

    “It is almost impossible to train or to make a session because of the weather. Now we are trying just to save energy for the game,” Maresca said.

    Chelsea’s Enzo Fernandez, who spent a good chunk of his career playing in the humidity of South America – and routinely takes part in sweltering friendlies for Argentina – remarked that he felt dizzy due to the weather.

    Borussia Dortmund were ridiculed for the fact that their substitutes watched some of their game against Mamelodi Sundowns from the dressing rooms. That image becomes far more understandable when you consider it was north of 90 degrees.

    There have been dissenting voices. Brazilian, Saudi and African teams all said that the weather was pretty standard for them. Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane, raised in the stifling heat of North London, admitted that it was just “part of football.”

    Either way, it has started a dialogue on weather implications for the World Cup. FIFPro, the worldwide footballer’s union, said that a handful of CWC games should have been canceled due to unsafe weather conditions. Nine of next year’s 16 host cities often reach average summer temperatures that can cause “high risk” of heat-related injuries.

    FIFPro director of Global Policy Alexander Bielefeld summed it up:

    "What we have seen in the Club World Cup has to be a wake-up call for FIFA,” he said. “It’s clear that certain areas in the USA, especially in Florida, where there is a higher risk and a need to avoid midday kickoffs – so games scheduled in these cities should be moved to a later time. The health and safety of players must take priority over commercial interests, including the broadcasters."

    Infantino admitted that “the health of players is important.” He insisted that mandatory cooling breaks made a difference. But FIFA will face a real decision here. Some have suggested that early morning kickoffs could be a solution. Afternoon start times, in many cities, seem unreasonable.

    "Every criticism we receive is a source for us to study and analyze what we can do better," Infantino said at a news conference in New York. "Of course, the heat is an issue. Last year, at the Olympic Games in Paris, games during the day, in all sports, took place in very hot conditions. Cooling breaks are very important, and we will see what we can do, but we have stadiums with roofs, and we will definitely use these stadiums during the day next year."

    There are, indeed, some stadiums with roofs. But only four of the 16 earmarked for 2026 have coverage – Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, AT&T Stadium in Dallas, NRG Stadium in Texas, and BC Place in Vancouver.

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    'An NBA game played on a court full of holes'

    Pitches were always going to be a point of controversy. They have been a point of contention in MLS for years. In some cases, the problem was that real grass pitches would simply bake in the summer sun. In others, grass laid on top of turf created a litany of issues. Turf fields can be dangerous for top level football. Something had to be done.

    The result was a troubling inconsistency in playing surfaces, and footballers forced to adjust to imperfect conditions. Real Madrid’sJude Bellingham said that the ball bounced unpredictably, and that it took some adjusting to figure out how to play on a new surface.

    Palmeiras starlet Estevao said that the MetLife turf was far too dry in the first half of his team’s match with Porto, then overwatered in the second – remember, he played his football in the streets of Brazil growing up. Dortmund’s Niklas Sule was more blunt, describing the field as “pretty terrible.”

    Luis Enrique made perhaps the perfect analogy for American viewers: “I can't imagine an NBA game played on a court full of holes."

    Of course, venues and World Cup host committees have long sought to ensure the quality of the fields. Atlanta’s host committee has been growing grass off site for more than a year, which will then be properly laid into Mercedes-Benz Arena. MetLife Stadium did something similar. It is a top-of-mind issue for committee hosts – who have urged patience in getting everything sorted.

    “Anyone who's ever done even a small renovation in their home knows how projects can go – and certainly in this economic climate, and that's been a challenge and needed the longest runway,” Sharon Bollencach, executive director of Toronto’s host committee, told GOAL.

    The CWC made one thing clear: the renovation might not be so small.

موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة مصر وأوغندا اليوم في بطولة إفريقيا لكرة السلة "الأفروباسكت"

يستعد منتخب مصر لكرة السلة لمواجهة نظيره أوغندا، اليوم السبت، ضمن منافسات بطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا لكرة السلة “الأفروباسكت”.

ويلتقي منتخب مصر مع أوغندا، اليوم، ضمن منافسات الجولة الثالثة من دور المجموعات من بطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا لكرة السلة “الأفروباسكت”.

وصعد منتخب مصر إلى البطولة بعد احتلال المركز الثاني في المجموعة الرابعة من التصفيات التي ضمت منتخبات كوت ديفوار، مدغشقر، وإفريقيا الوسطى.

طالع| موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة مصر والسنغال اليوم في بطولة إفريقيا لكرة السلة “الأفروباسكت”

ووضعت القرعة منتخب مصر في المجموعة الرابعة بجانب منتخبات مالي، السنغال وأوغندا.

وحقق منتخب مصر الفوز على مالي، بنتيجة 74-59، ليحصد أول نقطتين في البطولة من الجولة الأولى.

ثم فاز منتخب مصر على السنغال بنتيجة 91-77، ضمن منافسات الجولة الثانية، ليتأهل إلى ربع نهائي بطولة الأفروباسكت.

منتخب مصر لديه 4 نقاط، في صدارة ترتيب المجموعة الرابعة، متفوقًا بنقطة واحدة على منتخبي مالي والسنغال، فيما يتذيل أوغندا الترتيب برصيد نقطتين. موعد مباراة مصر وأوغندا اليوم في بطولة الأفروباسكت

تقام مباراة مصر وأوغندا في كأس أمم إفريقيا لكرة السلة “الأفروباسكت”، اليوم السبت، في تمام الساعة السابعة والنصف مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية. القناة الناقلة لمباراة مصر وأوغندا في بطولة إفريقيا لكرة السلة

تنقل مباراة مصر وأوغندا في بطولة إفريقيا لكرة السلة “الأفروباسكت” عل قناة بي إن سبورتس 7.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا.

VIDEO: Mason Greenwood thunderbolt rescues Marseille as ex-Man Utd star scores again in pre-season

Marseille forward Mason Greenwood struck his fourth goal in two pre-season matches to secure a draw for the Ligue 1 side in a friendly on Monday.

Greenwood on target again for Marseille Has scored in both of club's pre-season fixturesGirona up next for Ligue 1 clubFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Marseille continued their pre-season preparations with a friendly against OC Charleroi on Monday night and were forced to come from behind to snatch a draw. Greenwood was the scorer for Robert De Zerbi's side with a vicious strike that made it 1-1 in the second half. The former Manchester United forward did not start the game but came on at half-time and delivered the good for the Ligue 1 club.

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Greenwood has been in the goals in pre-season for Marseille. The 23-year-old bagged an 11-minute hat-trick in a 5-0 win over Dutch side Excelsior as he prepares for his second season in Ligue 1 with Marseille. The former Manchester United star has been linked with a move away from the French club, with Atletico Madrid still believed to be keen, but appears set to start the new campaign with De Zerbi's men.

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Greenwood and Marseille are due to continue their pre-season preparations with another friendly on Saturday against La Liga side Girona.

Red-hot Williamson puts the stamp on NZ's day again

Kane Williamson followed his first-innings 118 of 289 with a more enterprising 109 off 132 balls to flatten a depleted South Africa and power New Zealand’s lead to a gigantic 528 at the end of the third day. South Africa had earlier been bowled out for 162 as New Zealand further pushed for victory despite not opting to enforce the follow-on after taking a lead of 349 in the first innings.Williamson went from 29 to 31 Test centuries in a matter of three days and unlike in the first innings, he scored quicker and held the New Zealand innings together even though they were well ahead in the game when he walked out to bat at 10 for 1. But like in the first innings, he was again given a life, on 61, and he cashed in to punish the South Africa bowlers. He become the joint second-quickest batter to 31 Test centuries in 170 innings with Steven Smith, and only behind Sachin Tendulkar’s 165.As compared to his hundred on Sunday, Williamson played his strokes with a lot more freedom and found the gaps more easily once he reached fifty off 75 balls. Until then, he was held down a fair bit by Tsepho Moreki and Dane Paterson by the new ball, but not by Ruan de Swardt whom he smacked for three fours in the over after the tea break. Barring a classical straight drive early in his innings, also off de Swardt, Williamson scored most of his runs square of the pitch and behind it with his trademark dabs on the off side and pulls off the shorter balls. Like in the first innings, he showed some signs of frustration when he couldn’t pierce the gaps early on and got a life when he uncharacteristically heaved Paterson to deep square leg where Edward Moore shelled a sitter.Related

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There was no stopping Williamson after that. He raced from 64 to 100 in just 25 balls, by backing away for boundaries against Paterson – one of which was half a chance at mid-off – and with just four dot balls in the period as he also took on Neil Brand’s left-arm spin from over the wicket. The hundred came up with 15 minutes left for stumps when he punched Brand on the off side for a single and followed it with a big swing for six over wide long-on in Brand’s next over when he came around the wicket. Five balls later he attempted another big shot on the leg side but was stumped for 109.In between, first-innings hero Rachin Ravindra fell for 12 to de Swardt when he tried to attack after the second-wicket stand of 92 between Devon Conway and Williamson was broken when Conway slog-sept Brand to deep midwicket. Daryl Mitchell and Tom Blundell ended the day for the hosts by batting for just one over together.New Zealand’s charge was started by two wickets in an over from Matt Henry in the first session of the day followed by a three-for from Mitchell Santner, who bowled a very disciplined 21 overs for just 34 runs a day after turning 32.South Africa had to crawl their way from 80 for 4 to their eventual score of 162 as the New Zealand quicks bowled tight and the spinners Santner and Ravindra found turn and drift to contain the tail. Keegan Petersen was the main source of resistance for South Africa along with supporting acts from Clyde Fortuin and Duanne Olivier. South Africa had scored just three runs in the first 33 balls of the day before a solid-looking David Bedingham got a leading edge off a wild pull which Santner settled under near the pitch. Two balls later, left-handed de Swardt shouldered arms to an inswinger from around the wicket to be struck outside off and was given out. De Swardt reviewed almost immediately, and ball-tracking showed the ball would have just shaved off stump and the batter had to walk back reluctantly.Matt Henry struck twice in an over removing David Bedingham and Ruan de Swardt•Getty Images

Petersen and Fortuin got together at a precarious 83 for 6 and started with plenty of blocks. Petersen was stuck on 2 for as many as 31 balls, while Fortuin showed good technique against the fast bowlers. Petersen soon picked up pace with a rare boundary off Tim Southee and survived a close lbw call when he missed a rare reverse sweep against Santner. New Zealand called for a review, but ball-tracking showed the ball to be missing the stumps.Fortuin took 17 balls to get off the mark and also survived a chance when Santner drew an outside edge that deflected off Blundell’s gloves and landed near the right boot of first slip. His stubborn 79-minute vigil and the seventh-wicket stand of 37 ended when he attacked Santner but handed a catch to short cover for 9.Soon after Duanne Olivier collected consecutive boundaries off Kyle Jamieson after lunch, Southee brought on spin from both ends after seeing Santner draw a few edges and keep the lbw in play. Santner produced two loud lbw shouts in the 60th over against Olivier and Peterson, but on both occasions the batters had edged the ball. When it looked like Peterson would bring up a valiant fifty, he threw his wicket away with a slog against Ravindra and handed a leading edge to mid-off for 45.Olivier continued to frustrate the hosts which made the spinners strike in consecutive overs at the other end. Santner removed Moreki’s off stump for his 50th Test wicket while Ravindra snared Paterson in similar fashion to wrap up the innings.

Jamal's 82 saves Pakistan after another Cummins five-for

Mohammad Rizwan and Agha Salman also struck fifties before David Warner survived a tricky over in his farewell Test

Tristan Lavalette02-Jan-2024

Aamer Jamal smashed his way to a career-best 82•Getty Images

Retiring opener David Warner survived a tricky final over on day one of his farewell Test after Aamer Jamal, coming in at No. 9 completed a gutsy half-century to lead Pakistan’s recovery in Sydney leaving Australia frustrated.Jamal’s 82 off 97 balls and his last wicket partnership of 86 with Mir Hamza lifted Pakistan to an unlikely first innings of 313 after Pat Cummins claimed his third straight five-wicket haul.Australia openers Warner and Usman Khawaja were then left with having to face one over before stumps. In his 112th and final Test match, Warner received a standing ovation from the 33,905 crowd at the SCG and a guard of honour from the Pakistan team.Related

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Warner hit offspinner Sajid Khan for a four through covers first ball but had an anxious moment when he almost played the ball onto his stumps as Australia went into stumps at 6 for 0 still trailing Pakistan by 307 runs.Earlier, Pakistan had seemingly failed to make the most of winning an important toss from captain Shan Masood in favourable conditions as they crashed to 47 for 4.But Mohammad Rizwan and Agha Salman struck attractive half-centuries to engineer a fightback. They both fell amid another flurry of Pakistan wickets either side of tea as batting became more difficult under significant cloud cover.Pakistan, however, received an unexpected boost when Jamal and Hamza produced the highest tenth-wicket stand against Australia in Tests since England’s Alec Stewart and Andy Caddick combined for 103 in 2001. Jamal took Australia’s increasingly ragged attack apart, while Hamza stonewalled and didn’t score until his 22nd ball faced as they defied Australia superbly for over 90 minutes.Pakistan’s hopes of a competitive total had seemingly nosedived when Rizwan holed out on 88 just before tea as they succumbed to a short-ball tactic perfectly executed by Cummins and Mitchell Starc. Cummins removed an impatient Sajid, who fell into the trap and hit straight to forward square.Salman had defied the barrage of short deliveries to reach his second straight half-century before tamely falling to Starc, as Cummins claimed Hasan Ali for a duck and finished with 5 for 61 off 18 overs.After their painful 79-run defeat in the Boxing Day Test, having fought bravely and at times appearing close to causing an upset, Pakistan started the new year with both their openers making ducks within the first eight deliveries of the match.Pat Cummins bagged his third straight five-for•AFP/Getty Images

Starc found sharp swing and on the second delivery of the innings he removed opener Abdullah Shafique, who drove loosely and produced a thick outside edge to second slip. It was a severe initiation for debutant Saim Ayub, who had hoped to spark the top order after replacing Imam-ul-Haq. But on his second delivery, Ayub could do little against a superb length delivery from quick Josh Hazlewood and he nicked off.The pressure fell on Babar Azam, who had only made 77 runs in four previous innings and been worked over by Cummins and Hazlewood. He made a watchful start before unfurling his trademark cover drive to the boundary and pounced on an increasingly wayward Starc.Babar was feeling confident on a sedate surface but confronted Cummins who had dismissed him twice in brilliant fashion in Perth and Melbourne. Cummins added a third when a hooping inswinger trapped Babar, who initially survived before the DRS overturned the decision after ball tracking confirmed the ball was hitting the leg stump.Cummins added another after drinks when he had struggling No. 5 Saud Shakeel caught behind in a poor dismissal to leave Pakistan in disarray. But Rizwan belted 76 off 72 balls in the second session making his non-selection in the opening Test of the series even more puzzling. He received good support from Salman in a 94-run partnership off 101 ballsWith Pakistan wobbling at 75 for 4, Rizwan continued where he left off before lunch as he targeted backward point and scored runs quickly. But Masood was unable to bat proactively as his preference given his team’s predicament. He had been watchful against offspinner Nathan Lyon, who he had numerously charged at in Melbourne, but his bid to play the long haul seemingly ended on 32 when he edged Marsh straight to second slip.But Marsh’s celebrations were halted when he was found to have delivered a no-ball. Masood could not make him pay and fell almost in the exact same manner shortly after, with Marsh relieved when it was confirmed that he hadn’t overstepped again.Rizwan had appeared set to become Pakistan’s first centurion of the series, but Australia reverted to short bowling and the tourists crumbled until Jamal and Hamza turned the innings on its head.Pakistan’s bid for a consolation victory and to snap a 16-Test losing streak in Australia was made harder with spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi rested after a heavy workload in the opening two Tests. He was replaced by specialist spinner Sajid, while Australia again named an unchanged line-up in Warner’s farewell to Test cricket.Despite the increasingly gloomy conditions, no rain fell on the opening day in a relief with the traditional New Year’s Test severely impacted by bad weather in recent years. But rain and thunderstorms are expected late on day two as Warner takes centre stage.

São Paulo deixa de receber quantia milionária com Arboleda na Copa do Mundo, mas ainda lucra; saiba valores

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Com a eliminação do Equador, seleção de Arboleda, ainda na fase de grupos da Copa do Mundo, o São Paulo deixou de lucrar uma quantia milionária. Isso porque, caso a equipe do zagueiro chegasse até as etapas finais, o Tricolor levariacerca de US$ 320 mil (R$1,7 milhão na cotação atual).

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Entretanto, mesmo com a eliminação precoce do país, graças ao período de convocação e aos jogos disputados, o São Paulo ganhará a boa quantia de160 mil dólares (cerca de R$ 803 mil na cotação atual). Arboleda está com a seleção equatoriana desde o dia14 de novembro, e o último jogo do time foi nesta terça-feira (29) – ao todo, foram 16 dias que serão pagos.

Além do dinheiro, a presença do zagueiro no mundial foi de suma importância para o clube do Morumbi. Mesmo que não tenha saído do banco de reservas, sua convocação foi o sinal de melhora da complicada lesão que o defensor enfrentou. Esta o tirou de campo em junho, fazendo Arboleda perder grandes decisões do Tricolor neste ano – como a final da Copa Sul-Americana.

Sem Miranda e com a saída próxima de Luizão, deve retornar ao seu posto como titular. Quanto ao dinheiro, mesmo que não tenha batido nem um milhão de reais, é sempre de bom grado para os cofres do clube, que segue bastante endividado.

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