McGregor contract talks at Rangers

The Rangers Review and Sky Sports journalist Joshua Barrie has now revealed some key Glasgow Rangers news involving Ibrox legend Allan McGregor.

The Lowdown: Out of contract

McGregor is out of contract  this summer, and is not interested in moving into a coaching role at Ibrox.

The Sun reported that he has been offered a big-money move to the Middle East, and so these are decisive days ahead for his future.

The Latest: Contract ‘talks’

Taking to Twitter, Barrie has now revealed that McGregor is ‘not considering’ a move to the Middle East at this moment in time, and instead has held ‘talks’ with the club ‘this week’ over his future:

“I’m told that Allan McGregor is not considering a move to the Middle East. It’s suggested that he’s held talks with Rangers this week regarding his future, after returning from holiday.”

The Verdict: Relief

It will certainly come as a relief to supporters that McGregor does not want to move to the Middle East, and instead is open to signing a new deal with the Teddy Bears.

The veteran has been a key player for so many years, none more so than last season, where he played over 4,000 minutes of football in total over all competitions and kept 17 clean sheets.

In their memorable UEFA Europa League campaign, the Scotsman saved a penalty, made no errors leading to goals and averaged 2.9 saves per match (SofaScore), helping them reach the final against Frankfurt, and his efforts should really be rewarded by the Gers with a new contract.

In other news, find out what ’embarrassing’ RFC update has now emerged here!

Kalvin Phillips attracting PSG interest

Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips has been linked with a move to Paris Saint-Germain this summer.

What’s the news?

According to the Daily Mirror’s recent live transfer updater (17 June, 20:24), the French club “have made a formal approach” to Leeds to sign the midfielder.

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The report continued: “The French giants have contacted Leeds to see how much it will cost them to prise the England ace out of Elland Road. Leeds are desperate to keep hold of the midfield ace but know a bid in the region of £55m would be difficult to turn down.”

Marsch will be gutted

The 26-year-old has also been recently linked with a move to Premier League champions Manchester City, with a report from The Athletic claiming that both Leeds and Man City believe that an offer for the Englishman will arrive soon.

Now that PSG have also registered an apparent interest in signing the midfield star, this could further increase the chances of seeing him depart Elland Road this summer, which would surely leave Jesse Marsch gutted.

A product of Leeds’ youth system, the 26-year-old has gone on to make 234 appearances for the club across all competitions.

In addition to being a boyhood Leeds fan and helping the club get back to the Premier League after a 16-year absence, Phillips’ presence in the team over the past two seasons has also shown why there would be so many supporters gutted to potentially see him leave.

The 2020/21 season saw the Yorkshire club lose seven of the nine league games that he missed, while in the following campaign they lost 12 of the 18 league games that they played without the midfielder in their team.

This highlights just how much of a problem it could be for Marsch to take the team forward without Phillips, if the player is sold.

However, having recently secured the signing of Marc Roca, this could at least offset the blow for Leeds and their manager should the Whites end up striking a deal with City or PSG for the England international in the coming weeks.

If Leeds do end up selling the local hero before the 2022/23 campaign kicks off, the recruitment and coaching staff will need to ensure that the team is capable of carrying on without the midfielder.

In other news: Leeds now eyeing “complete” £25m “Rolls-Royce”, he’s the perfect Phillips replacement

Spurs: Romano drops Dybala transfer claim

Fabrizio Romano has dropped an update on the future of reported Tottenham Hotspur transfer target Paulo Dybala.

What’s the talk?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Italian journalist revealed that, despite a number of reports to the contrary, Tottenham are not currently in talks with the 28-year-old regarding a move to north London ahead of the 2022/23 campaign, nor have they been at any point this summer.

In his tweet, the transfer insider said: “Nothing has changed on Tottenham side: they’re not in talks to sign Paulo Dybala as of today – and he’s never been considered a serious target. Spurs want different players.”

Supporters will be gutted

Recent reports have claimed that Dybala is demanding an eye-watering £280k-per-week from a new suitor this summer. However, considering just how talented the Argentina international undoubtedly is, the news that Fabio Paratici and Antonio Conte are not planning on making a move for the former Juventus forward is sure to have left Spurs supporters gutted.

Indeed, over his 29 Serie A appearances this season, the £36m-rated attacker was in breathtaking form for the Bianconeri. He bagged 10 goals, provided five assists and created 11 big chances for his team-mates, in addition to taking 3.4 shots, making 1.3 key passes and completing 1.6 dribbles per game.

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These metrics saw the £222k-per-week talent average a quite extraordinary SofaScore match rating of 7.43, ranking him not only as Massimiliano Allegri’s best performer in the league but also as the joint fourth-best player in the entire division.

As such, while the 28-year-old would certainly cost a pretty penny in wages, the prospect of adding Dybala’s sensational ability in the final third to the likes of Harry Kane, Dejan Kulusevski and Son Heung-min in the Tottenham attack is undoubtedly a mouthwatering one, with there being a very real argument that Argentine could be worth his hefty salary demands.

However, following Romano’s latest update, it seems as if a Spurs move for the versatile forward is not currently on the cards, which is sure to be a disappointing outcome for the Tottenham faithful.

AND in other news: Paratici now given green light for “world-class” Spurs signing, Conte will be buzzing

Former Celtic hero aims dig at Rangers

Former Celtic striker Chris Sutton has aimed a brilliant dig at the Hoops’ arch-rivals after the end of the Scottish season, one in which the Bhoys reigned supreme domestically.

The Lowdown: Celtic reign supreme in Scotland

Ange Postecoglou’s side endured a tense Premiership title battle with their crosstown adversaries throughout the season, with the pair neck-and-neck going into May.

It was Celtic who prevailed in the end, picking up a vital 2-1 win at Ibrox last month and ultimately regaining their crown after seeing the Gers deny them in the quest for a 10th successive league title last year.

The Hoops also won the Scottish League Cup in what was a superb season under Postecoglou, his first in charge of the Parkhead club.

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The Latest: Sutton aims cheeky dig

Sutton is never one to shy away from confrontation, and taking to Twitter on Saturday, he dropped a nine-word dig in Rangers’ direction in the immediate aftermath of the Light Blues’ Scottish Cup triumph, their only trophy of the season.

The former Celtic striker cheekily stated: “They’ve finished the season in Celtic’s shadow once again…”

The Verdict: Celtic back where they belong

Losing out on the title last season was tough to take, robbing Celtic of 10 league titles in a row, but the Hoops’ response to that disappointment has been incredible.

They are back at the summit of Scottish football again, and it’s all the sweeter that it is at the expense of their bitter Glasgow rivals, to which Sutton alluded in his provocative tweet.

The main thing now is for Postecoglou and his players to kick on from here rather than standing still, hopefully winning many many trophies in the coming years as Rangers resume the role of hunters rather than being hunted.

In other news, Kieran Devlin has talked up one possible Celtic signing. Find out who it is here.

'Pick the best keeper in the country'

Twitter reactions to Tim Paine’s unexpected Ashes call-up

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Nov-2017Tim Paine is not even the first-choice keeper for his state team, so his elevation to the national side as a gloveman caused plenty of debate.Former Australian legspinner Stuart MacGill was blunt, as ever.

The sheer lack of games behind the stumps for Paine made it an incredible selection.

Then there was the lack of runs.

Paine averages 29 in his first-class career, and just 20.40 in the past two years.

Paine had his share of backers too though, including experienced wicketkeeper-batsman Tim Ludeman.

And former Tasmania medium-pacer Tim Macdonald.

Wobbly England rely on Cook and Bairstow

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Jun-2016Kumar Sangakkara rang the bell for the start of play•Getty ImagesCook and Alex Hales got the innings off to a serene start…•Getty Images…adding 51 together in the first hour•Getty ImagesBut Rangana Herath struck in his first over, Hales taken at slip for 18•Getty ImagesNick Compton, with his place on the line, did not last long…•Getty Images…he trudged off after making just 1 on his home ground•Getty ImagesSuranga Lakmal picked up his second wicket a couple of overs later, having Joe Root lbw after a review•Getty ImagesEngland were 74 for 3 at lunch and that became 84 for 4 when James Vince had his bail trimmed•Getty ImagesJonny Bairstow might have fallen for 11 but was dropped at midwicket•Getty ImagesCook reached his first half-century of the series …•Getty Images… but on 85, he was pinned lbw by Nuwan Pradeep•AFPHe wisely opted not to review despite being struck from round the wicket•Getty ImagesBairstow, however, built on his start to pass 500 Test runs for 2016•Getty Images… although his luck was still in when he inside-edged a four through fine leg•Getty ImagesMoeen Ali was caught at slip for 25•Getty Images… but Bairstow’s current vein of form sealed England’s recovery•Getty ImagesHe screamed with delight after bringing up his third Test century•Getty ImagesAfter making 95 at Lord’s in 2012, it was a particularly special moment•Getty Images

Meaker primed to be England's fastest gun again

Injuries derailed him but a fit Stuart Meaker could provide the speed England need

Alex Winter09-Apr-2015It’s a statistical quirk to rival any other. In 2011, Stuart Meaker took 44 Championship wickets at 22.56. In 2012, he also took 44 Championship wickets at 22.56. “And the coaches want me to be more consistent!” Meaker quips.Those years saw the emergence of a bowler tipped to become a leading international force. The quickest in England, clocked at 93mph, with a front-on action likened to Malcolm Marshall, Meaker seemed a star in the making. But injury has hindered his progress and after two operations and two “gritty” years, Meaker begins 2015 with a host of bowlers ahead of him in the England reckoning and his form to prove once again.”People ask, where are England’s crop of fast bowlers compared to Australia? We’ve got them. And hopefully I can be one of them,” Meaker told ESPNcricinfo.Meaker was first selected for England on the ODI tour of India in 2011. “I was flying that summer: swinging the ball both ways, knocking people’s poles over for fun and thinking this is fantastic, I’m the new Allan Donald.” He did not disgrace himself in the final two matches of the series but returned for two T20s, also in India, the following year and took greater punishment, sending down four overs for 42 in the second fixture.”A big part of me wishes I had been picked a little bit earlier and at a time when I wasn’t carrying the niggles,” Meaker says. “The first tour I was at my peak and really starting to break through but after that I’d injured my shoulder and my knee was playing up. I’d gone through a good season but things had really started to hit me in terms of the body being affected by my performance.”Stuart Meaker is gunning for an England recall after two injury-affected seasons•Getty ImagesEqually impressive returns (to the decimal place) followed in 2012, this time in Division One of the Championship, but Meaker’s much-needed rest at the end of the season was cut short by a call up to the Test tour of India following an injury to Steven Finn.”I had a jab in my knee but when you get the call up you’re just going to do whatever you can to be able to try and perform and I carried those injuries through the tour. There were net sessions where I was in all sorts of bother but not being able to say much because I was worried they wouldn’t pick me or even send me home.”He struggled on through a tour of New Zealand, where he didn’t play, and then in eight Championship matches during 2013. But ultimately surgery was needed and, having never previously gone under the knife, Meaker was in for a double bout within a month, dealing with patella tendonitis – treated by the same surgeon that saw Stuart Broad at the end of last summer – and a shoulder decompression, ironically suffered in Meaker’s last England appearance with a superman dive in the outfield.”I got over it and came out of the blocks flying at the start of last season,” Meaker says. “But then, as happens, you prepare, you do your rehab and then you pick up another injury out of the blue. I had a rib that got inflamed from constantly bashing it bowling. By the time I got back in August, the way the structure of the season works, we had 60-70% of the season done and it was it was difficult to get back in the side.”Previously, when Chris Adams and Ian Salisbury were here, there were times when I had been bowling well enough to just go straight back in the side but I don’t think that’s a good thing for the squad. It’s not fair. So I was back in second XI cricket, it swung around corners for me down at Kent and then I was called back into the first team at Guildford.”That match against Kent saw Meaker back close to his 2011 self; bowling with pace and moving the ball. He took 11 wickets and enjoyed a brief purple patch until his body caught up with him – painkillers were needed for his knee, with no time to continue the strength work that he stuck too so painstakingly during his rehab of almost four months.”I’m quite fastidious in nailing my rehab and doing the right things and being disciplined. That’s just who I am. People might look at it now and go ‘oh why are you doing so much?’ but down the line it’s got to help and I try to look as long term as I can.”Meaker’s “long term” is aiming to get back into the England set-up. He name-checks Liam Plunkett as an example of a bowler who can come back strongly having drifted from the international scene. But, unlike Plunkett, Meaker is yet to really get a thorough crack for England.A brief chat with Kevin Shine, the ECB lead bowling coach, at The Oval has been the only recent contact with the England management. This time, Meaker, who boasts far superior red-ball figures – 210 first-class wickets at 28.27 – to white-ball – a combined 68 List A and T20 wickets at 35.97 – is perhaps looking straight at the Test squad, with the skills required to bowl in one-day cricket becoming far removed.”That path is perhaps becoming eroded now,” Meaker says. “You look at someone like James Faulkner, I don’t see how you can bowl like he does with his tricks and guile and nailing those yorkers, and the way you have to contort your body into all sort of different positions – to then do that with the red ball, in Tests you just have to be consistent in the same areas day after day, it’s completely different. The physical angles are so different so I don’t believe the path to Tests is through one-day cricket now.”That may help Meaker as he tries to deliver on the promise of speed-gun readings and statistician-pleasing consistency.

The responsible Mr Wog

Steve Waugh always fulfilled his duties, and managed to never be crushed by them: he was the kind of man any bookish 11-year-old would aspire to be

SB Tang13-Jun-2013On the afternoon of October 15, 1991, I fell in love for the first time.I was six years old and sitting cross-legged on the coarse, carpeted floor of my aunt’s living room in suburban Melbourne, watching – live and free to air – a 50-over FAI Cup match between New South Wales and Victoria at North Sydney Oval.Two brothers, twins alike in ball-striking ability, were laying waste to a Victorian attack featuring five former, current or future international bowlers and, erm, Paul Jackson, a left-arm orthodox spinner who was keeping a young fella named Shane Warne out of the Victorian side.One brother wielded his bat like a paintbrush. The other wielded his bat like a butcher’s cleaver. Yet, for reasons that remain a mystery (even to me), it was the latter I fell for. Perhaps it was because, even through the minuscule convex TV screen, I could see the steely glint in his eye, for which he would later become famous. Or maybe I just liked the fact that he appeared to be as fond of playing the cut as I went on to be.His name was Stephen Rodger Waugh.He bludgeoned 126 runs off 133 balls that day. (Twin brother Mark made 112 off 123.) From that day forth, “Steve” Waugh, as everyone seemed to call him, became my favourite cricketer.In October 1991, he wasn’t yet one of Australia’s National Living Treasures. He wasn’t even in the Australian Test XI. He had been dropped the previous summer after a five-year, 42-Test match run in the team as an allrounder batting mainly at six yielded just three hundreds and a batting average of 38.24.He was widely seen, to paraphrase Fitzgerald, as a cricketer who had had advantages at the selection table that others hadn’t, and failed to make the most of them.When, through sheer weight of first-class run-scoring, he won a recall to the Australian Test XI the following summer, it was as a No. 3 and the opponents were the cricketing demi-gods of the Calypso Empire that was still in its pomp.His scores in the first two Tests read: 10, 20, 38 and 1.His Test career hung by a thread. Then, over the course of four and a half painstaking hours at the SCG, he ground out an even hundred against a West Indian attack featuring Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh and Ian Bishop. As a Test batsman, he never looked back, averaging 56.60 in his next 121 Tests, after just 37.14 in his first 47.Earlier that summer another great Australian cricketer had emerged onto the world stage, and it was to him – Melbourne-born and bred – that so many of my fellow Melbournians gravitated. The cherubic legspinner seamlessly assumed the mantle of Great Victorian Hero relinquished by Dean Jones to the era-defining chants of “Waarr-nee, Waaaaaar-nee” that rang around the ‘G. I respected and admired Shane Warne the bowler, but he wasn’t the cricketing hero for me.Warne loved being the centre of attention. He was comfortable there in the spotlight, courting public affection as naturally as a bee gathers pollen; a born showman with a million-dollar smile. He looked as open and at ease with a person he’d just met, as he did with his best mate – a trait to admire, but one I knew I could never share.Waugh, on the other hand, seemed quiet, private, studious, thoughtful and impeccably rational. Soon I would receive detailed, written confirmation of my youthful impressions gleaned from afar in a form that is, sadly, now almost alien in this Twitter age: a book, by which I mean a real, self-written work, not the ghost-written copy hurriedly dashed off to the publishers just in time for the holiday season that nowadays passes for a cricketer’s work. In 1993, Waugh wrote his first book, Steve Waugh’s Ashes Diary. It sold so well that he authored another ten tour diaries, one book of photographs, and a 720-page, 1.9 kilogram autobiography.The early tour diaries were the best. With no formal leadership responsibilities, Waugh was free to observe, think, wander, explore, photograph and write. As a writer, he was no Ray Robinson, but he wrote lucidly, perceptively, and honestly about the big issues both on and off the field, his approach to the game, tactics, his relationships with team-mates and administrators, and his philosophy towards life in general. Perhaps most importantly of all, unlike so many of the anodyne offerings churned out by professional sportsmen nowadays, he never hesitated to offer an opinion about an important issue, no matter how controversial.It was often the little things that stood out, like his reflection on his first encounter with a local – who said, “Hello, Mr Wog. Very well played in 1987, all the best for ’96” – upon arriving in India for the 1996 World Cup:

“It’s amazing how one comment can put everything into perspective, and this one did just that for me. Sometimes you forget how much this game can affect people. You take things for granted. But when you realise a guy like this remembers how you performed nine years ago and wants you to do well, even though you’re part of a visiting team – that’s a very effective reminder that you have an obligation to always give it your best shot. You’re not only playing for yourself and your team, but also for the numerous people out there who care whether you succeed or fail.”

Passages like that quickly won him an 11-year-old’s trust, revealing a person who never forgot, and always fulfilled, his responsibilities, but never allowed himself to be crushed by them. The kind of man any earnest, bookish young boy aspires to be.

He placed great value in friendship, which, much like Test runs and wickets, was something he thought had to be earned, but once earned, brought with it attendant obligations of loyalty, trust and confidence, which must never be betrayed

He never strayed into pretension either, keeping his underrated sense of humour – which ranged from toilet to slapstick to mildly absurdist – firmly intact. The same 1996 World Cup diary containing the passage on responsibility quoted above features: Waugh accidentally crapping his own pants trying to open a jammed bus window; Australian players attacking one another with salt, pepper and weaponised dairy products in the business-class section of a plane; and an Indian newspaper article about a man who lovingly kept a pet cow (“She is really good looking and has an exceptional figure”) in his eighth floor Calcutta apartment, which Waugh chose to reproduce “without comment”.Waugh’s writing, especially in his pre-captaincy days, was so extensive that avid readers like myself felt as if we knew him, even though we’d never met him.He was a self-described “nerd”. He was not gregarious or charismatic like Warne, or a naturally great group communicator like Mark Taylor, although he was good friends with both. He placed great value in friendship, which, much like Test runs and wickets, was something he thought had to be earned, but once earned, brought with it attendant obligations of loyalty, trust and confidence, which must never be betrayed.He was more comfortable in the company of a few close friends than in large groups. Unlike more than a few Australian cricketers at the time, he was curious about the cultures of the foreign lands that the Australian team visited, and instead of bunkering down in his hotel room with a tin of baked beans and a stack of videos, he spent most of his free time on tours exploring the local surrounds in the company of one or two team-mates or journalists who shared his curiosity.He was an excellent, empathetic one-on-one communicator and an astute observer of not just society but individuals too, always being the first to support a team-mate or friend who was down. He practised the precept that Josh Lyman set out – he comforted his friends in times of difficulty and he celebrated with them in times of triumph. When, in the midst of a form slump, Warne announced his premature retirement to his team-mates during the 1999 World Cup, Waugh went on a long, heartfelt walk with him.Waugh had a clear idea of how to prepare himself in order to extract the maximum number of runs from himself for the benefit of his team. He knew how to get the best out of his team-mates too. His unconventional policy of trusting tailenders and not shepherding the strike produced a fount of lower-order partnership runs for Australia, and he had a knack of compiling of series-turning partnerships with greenhorns, such as the 385 runs with Greg Blewett at the Wanderers in 1997.He had an instinctive feel for the ebb and flow of a game of cricket and the mental acuity to know how and when to intervene tactically in order to maximise Australia’s chances of winning. The unexpected and successful deployment of Warne as a pinch-hitter early in Australia’s chase of an imposing 287 for victory in their 1996 World Cup quarter-final was Waugh’s idea – Warne slogged 24 off 14 balls and Australia won with 13 balls to spare. Waugh was always trying to think of ways to improve Australia’s chances of winning a game, even where that meant increasing the risk of losing.He was a good judge of character – both on and off the cricket field – which, combined with his cricketing knowledge and experience, gave him a close to flawless ability to judge whether a cricketer could succeed at Test level.All these things we knew from reading his early tour diaries.Thus, when his critics – who remained present, if not plentiful, throughout the second half of the ’90s, even as he established himself as one of the world’s pre-eminent batsmen and captains – unfairly criticised him, I bristled and not only wanted to defend him, but felt as if I knew what to say.Initially, though, it was his weaknesses, not his strengths, that manifested themselves in his captaincy tenure. No longer one of the boys, Waugh found that the lines of communication to his troops were now garbled and, lacking Taylor’s gifts of group speak, he was unable to repair them on his own. Australia nearly lost the Frank Worrell Trophy and successive group-stage defeats to New Zealand and Pakistan at the 1999 World Cup left them on the brink of early elimination and Waugh on the verge of being sacked as one-day captain.Then, at that turning point in modern Australian cricket history, his strengths, which I had read about for so many years in his books, started coming to the fore – the veteran allrounder Tom Moody, who Waugh had personally asked the selectors to include in Australia’s World Cup squad, re-established good lines of communication with the rank and file and contributed valuable quick runs and wickets; Warne, who Waugh had backed throughout a tournament-long form slump, came good at the business end; and Waugh himself took personal responsibility for his team’s fate, scoring a team-best 398 runs at 79.60 for the tournament as Australia went unbeaten for seven consecutive matches to win their first World Cup since 1987.That victory proved to be the watershed moment in Waugh’s captaincy. Soon, all the virtues that we’d seen in his diaries manifested themselves in his captaincy and, by the time he retired in January 2004, Steve Waugh was, and forever will be, one of Australia’s favourite cricketers. But, he was mine first.

'The biggest thing in T20 is knowing your role'

Thinking on your feet, knowing what the other person has to do, trusting your gut – Australia’s new T20 captain talks about the challenges of the format

Interview by Brydon Coverdale31-Jan-2012As a new captain, did you have any input into the squad chosen for these two games?
John [Inverarity] got in touch, asking me to submit a squad. I did so and it was pretty similar to his and it went from there. Perhaps not official input but it was in keeping with the recommendations of the Argus report – that’s part and parcel of all the teams that are being picked now. It would have been interesting if I’d plucked 11 names from out of nowhere. But I think it’s quite obvious that all those guys deserve to be where they are.Do you see this squad forming the core of the group that will go to the World T20 in September?
I would think so. There’s a hell of a lot of water to pass under the bridge until that time and this was just a first step. The hard thing for the T20 team is, we don’t get the chance to spend the time together that the one-day and Test teams do. I guess part of starting to talk about the World Cup and get people thinking about it is that at least gives us an endpoint to work towards as a group.You may have as few as four matches together before the World T20 – is that enough?
It will have to be. But that’s not the only cricket that guys will be playing. I don’t think you’re playing one-day cricket and Test cricket and not necessarily working on your T20 skills. Or IPL cricket for that matter. I certainly don’t think we’ll get to the World Cup and complain of not having played enough.Given you haven’t been one of the leading scorers in the BBL, how much pressure is there for you to perform with the bat to justify your position?
I don’t think it’s any different to anytime I step out as captain for any other team. You are captain, but first and foremost you’re in there to perform. That dictates a hell of a lot of the respect that you have. Part of my performance will be my captaincy but the majority of it will be with the bat. I have to perform. I certainly would have liked a few more runs in the Big Bash, but since Twenty20 started being played I think my record stands up against anyone, particularly for someone who has batted for the majority in the middle order.Is it hard to read much into statistics for middle-order batsmen in Twenty20?
It’s not only for middle-order batsmen. I think there are a lot of facets of Twenty20 cricket, and we’re still working out how we measure whether someone has been successful. Part of naming a squad and starting to work out who’s going to fit into the jigsaw puzzle of September is exactly that – [getting] a group that harmonises well together. You could pick the top six or seven run scorers from the Big Bash and the top five leading wicket-takers, but in terms of getting a team together it’s about melding those skills and putting all of those things together into a team. We’re getting closer and closer and we have more data on T20 cricket but certainly batting in the middle order, it’s always going to be a challenge, compared to a Test cricketer, where you get to the end of your career and you say, well, you averaged this. I think in T20 you look at whether people are contributing in partnerships, or what stage they come in, or when they hit their boundaries and their sixes, to be an effective cricketer.Are you expecting to bat around No. 5 in the Australia side?
I think that’s where I’m best suited in this form of the game, particularly with the squad we’ve picked. We’ve got a great balance of guys who have had great success at the top of the order. The role of the Dave Husseys, the Mitch Marshes, the Dan Christians, the Matthew Wades and myself, the guys through the middle of the order, is to then capitalise on the starts and then finish the innings.Michael Clarke was viewed as a good T20 captain but someone whose batting wouldn’t have earned him a place in the side. If there are concerns about your batting as well, how do you put those out of your mind?
It’s not something I’ll be feeling in the group. I’ll just be playing a game of cricket my way and the pressure is on your results because you want to be performing, because you don’t want to be letting down the ten guys that are playing and the two or three guys that are unlucky enough to not be playing, and all those guys who haven’t been selected – you don’t want to be letting them down. Cricketers are aware that we play in a performance-based game and the pressure sometimes of what other people are thinking, that’s often built up in the media. Once you’re out there performing, you’re just out there doing your job to the best of your ability.Cameron White was your Melbourne Stars captain and he’s the man you’ve taken over from as Australia’s captain. How supportive has he been?
He certainly has been good to me. I know he’s bitterly disappointed, as you would be if you’ve been told you’re not required at the present time in your dream job. I certainly understand his disappointment. But in terms of his chats with me he’s been more than helpful. I haven’t masterminded anything to undermine him, so I don’t think there was ever going to be too many issues between Cam and I. I’ve really enjoyed working with him over the last six weeks and I’ve learnt a hell of a lot watching him captain, and trying to help him as much as I can, and seeing how he goes about things. No doubt there will be things I would have learnt off him in the last few weeks that will come through in those two games.

“I like to think that I’m pretty approachable and pretty inclusive in that if someone in the team has a good idea, let’s run with it. It’s certainly not my job to be making all the decisions”

What are the challenges of captaining in T20, compared to the longer formats?
I think the time constraint is the biggest pressure. You have to keep the game moving, and things do happen so quickly. Quite often you sit down and you have plans A and B, and then you’re out in the middle and you find yourself suddenly having to look at plans C and D. There’s very rarely time when you can get your vice-captain or your best bowler and stand there and have that conversation. Quite often it’s in the middle of an over and a bowler has been hit for a couple of sixes and you’re trying to think of how you get out of the over for 16 as opposed to 26. A lot of it is about thinking on your feet, a lot of it is working with your bowlers and your fielding group and trusting that gut instinct. But the biggest thing in T20 is knowing your role and knowing everyone in your team’s role around you, so if I know what I’m going to do and you know what I’m going to do, it’s much easier to predict how you’ll behave as well. It just gets back to the harmony within the team. That’s why the balance of the XI is so important.Is it harder to captain than four-day cricket?
No, they’re just so different. When you’re captaining and you’re in the field and it’s 3 for 350, that’s a pretty tough time to captain too. I just think they’re very different. Both challenging and very much rewarding.Which captains have had the most influence on how you go about the role?
Dan Marsh is someone that has had a profound influence on my cricket. I will forever be trying to emulate how he thought about the game and how he analysed it, and I think I’ll fail dismally. But he was someone who I always enjoyed talking with about cricket. He made people feel very comfortable about the cricketer they were, understood the game to the nth degree. He was very level-headed and never got ahead of himself, never got too up when we were winning or too down when we lost – all pretty great characteristics.What are your strengths as captain?
I like to think that I’m pretty approachable and pretty inclusive in that if someone in the team has a good idea, let’s run with it. It’s certainly not my job to be making all the decisions. You can always be getting better at your communication. That was one of the things Dan told me. He said it doesn’t matter how good you are on your first day, I guarantee you’ll get better and better at it the more you do, because you’ll just understand people’s reactions better and you’ll understand the game of cricket more and more.Australia made the final of the 2010 World T20 but have struggled since then. As an outsider looking on, can you pinpoint why that has been the case?
I can’t, really. I appreciate that we’re ranked sixth, and I don’t know how the rankings necessarily work. But I also know that at the end of this Big Bash we have a winner who could go out the next day and play the Melbourne Renegades, who finished on the bottom, and it would be a 50-50 game. That’s the nature of T20. I find it hard to say that we’re necessarily the sixth-best team or the tenth-best team or the best team in the world. The rankings to me don’t matter. What matters is that the pinnacle of it is the World Cup, and come that time, it’s a bit like the Olympics in that anything can happen in the lead-up, but come that little period of time you’ve just got to be at your best. That will be our litmus test. Our challenge as a group is to become as consistent as possible. That’s probably the greatest trait a T20 team can have. We’ve got an outstanding array of match-winners from top to bottom in that team. The key is now to get us all going in the one direction so those match-winners are performing as regularly as possible.The selection of Brad Hogg at 40 was in many ways surprising. How would you describe it?
Exciting. All those older players that played in the BBL showed why they were still wanted by teams. Their skills were outstanding. I guess where Hoggy differentiated was with his energy and his enthusiasm and his fitness in the field and the way he can still move. He showed he was able to go to that level. Your preparation needs to be meticulous in T20 but once you’re out there you want to be having a lot of fun and [being] energetic and feeling great about what you’re doing. Hoggy is someone who will provide that on top of his outstanding skills with the ball.Bailey: Hogg differentiated with his enthusiasm, energy and fitness in the field•Getty ImagesHogg is being viewed as someone who can be important for Australia in the World T20 in Sri Lanka. How big a role will spin play in those conditions?
Spin is really important here because we tend to play on bigger grounds and the challenge is to be trying to clear the pickets, and you’ve got to make sure you hit the ball as cleanly as you can to do that. The challenge in Sri Lanka will be that the ball will turn more, there will be more spin. So guys will be aware of that. But it’s a long way away and being aware of that and working on that will be part of the process, but more importantly we worry about the spinners India will play on Wednesday and Friday.You’ve been on the Australian Cricketers’ Association executive for nearly five years. What have you learnt from that role?
That’s a really rewarding one. I think I’ve learnt more about the issues that we face as cricketers and I’m really fascinated by that sort of stuff. The biggest things I’ve learnt there are how important cricket is to Australians – those who are playing and those who are coming along to watch and those who are growing up wanting to play it. People love the game in Australia and people want to see it continue to prosper long after we’re gone and to have it be a better game long after we leave it. I think the strength of the playing group when they get behind an issue is great to see.As part of an ACA programme you had a work placement at the Carlton Football Club last year.
It was a great eye-opener for me. It was a completely different feeling in a footy change room to a cricket change room. I envied the fact that they are so structured in the way they can prepare. They play on a Saturday, they recover, they debrief, they turn their attention to the next game and then they play the next Saturday.I think the challenges at state level of being able to do that when you’re swapping from one-day cricket to Shield cricket, back to one-day cricket, and then suddenly you’ve got six weeks of T20, are really challenging. I was also fascinated by the way they communicate and the differences between communicating to a Chris Judd type, who is a legend of the game and so highly respected and you know is going to do the right thing every time, to a kid who has just come in and is still learning.What sort of things could you take from that experience and apply to cricket?
I found it fascinating the way the coach, Brett Ratten, has changed his focus from having his best 22 to having a real squad mentality and knowing that if you are going to have success then you’ve got to know that your 35th, 36th best player, if he gets an opportunity, is going to be able to perform, and what buttons you have to press to get him to perform. I think cricket is heading down that path. You’re starting to see rotation policies and turnover in squads, and the experience that I’ve had in domestic cricket with the cramped schedule, guys who have been injured for little periods or sitting out because they’re starting to fatigue – it’s the same thing. You just don’t get teams winning Sheffield Shields and one-day titles now if they’ve only got 11 good players. You’ve got to have such good depth and know that when your best two or three are playing for Australia or your best player is injured, someone can come in and you can still perform as a team.

New Zealand up against bogey opponent

Stats preview to the Champions Trophy semi-final between New Zealand and Pakistan in Johannesburg

S Rajesh02-Oct-2009New Zealand topped their group while Pakistan finished second in theirs, but Pakistan will go in as favourites in their semi-final clash in Johannesburg on Saturday. A couple of factors make New Zealand the underdogs – the loss of key players (Jesse Ryder, Jacob Oram and Daryl Tuffey are all out), and their poor record against Pakistan, especially in semi-finals.Overall, Pakistan have a comfortable 47-29 advantage in ODIs, which increases to 18-6 when they’ve clashed in neutral venues (in South Africa, Pakistan have a 2-0 lead, though they’ve not met in this country since December 1994). Of the nine occasions when Pakistan have played New Zealand in world events (World Cup and Champions Trophy), they’ve won six. Moreover, no team has stopped New Zealand in the semi-finals as often as Pakistan have: of the 12 semis that New Zealand have contested in ODI tournaments, they’ve played Pakistan in half of those matches, and lost on all occasions except one.That one victory, though, came in the 2000 edition of the Champions Trophy, when New Zealand beat Pakistan in the semi-finals and then went on to win the final as well. In fact, their Champions Trophy record against Pakistan should cheer Daniel Vettori and Co: the two teams have met twice, and New Zealand have won both games.

ODIs between Pakistan and New Zealand
Venue/ Tournament ODIs Pak won NZ won Tied/ NR
in Pakistan 20 17 3 0/ 0
in New Zealand 34 12 20 1/ 1
Neutral venues 24 18 6 0/ 0
World Cup/ Champs Trophy 9 6 3 0/ 0
Tournament semi-finals 6 5 1 0/ 0

Pakistan’s varied bowling attack has troubled all the teams in the tournament so far. They’ve taken 28 wickets, the most by any team till the end of the group stage of the tournament. Their bowling average (20.96) and economy rate (4.53) are the best in the tournament too, which suggests that Ross Taylor and Co will have quite a job on their hands.New Zealand have pretty impressive stats too, though – they’ve taken 25 wickets at less than five per over, and their pace attack has enjoyed the conditions in Johannesburg.

New Zealand and Pakistan in the 2009 Champions Trophy
Team Runs Bat ave Run rate Wkts Bowl ave Econ rate
New Zealand 676 29.39 5.40 25 25.60 4.88
Pakistan 641 32.05 4.91 28 20.96 4.53

Where New Zealand have done much better than Pakistan so far is in utilising the Powerplay overs when they’ve batted. In the first ten overs they’ve averaged nearly a run a ball, and have lost only one wicket in three matches (they scored 76 and 66 without losing a wicket in the first ten overs against Sri Lanka and England). Brendon McCullum, with scores of 44, 46 and 48,has led the charge each time, while Martin Guptill has been in fine form as well.Pakistan have started far more slowly, and they’ve also lost plenty of wickets in the batting Powerplay (eight in ten overs in two games – they didn’t take it against West Indies).

How the teams fared with the bat in the Powerplays
Team Type of Powerplay Runs per wkt Runs per over
New Zealand Mandatory 178.00 5.93
Fielding 60.00 6.00
Batting 21.17 8.47
Pakistan Mandatory 26.60 4.43
Fielding 31.00 4.13
Batting 9.00 7.20

During the bowling Powerplays, though, Pakistan have come into their own, stopping the batting team with a slew of wickets – five in the mandatory and batting Powerplays, and six in the bowling one. New Zealand have had most of their success during the mandatory Powerplay, taking six wickets; during the batting one they haven’t taken any.

How the teams fared with the ball in the Powerplays
Team Type of Powerplay Runs per wkt Runs per over
New Zealand Mandatory 22.83 4.57
Fielding 59.00 3.93
Batting 7.40
Pakistan Mandatory 29.20 4.87
Fielding 12.50 5.00
Batting 14.40 5.21

New Zealand have also had more experience of playing in Johannesburg. They’ve won both their games there – against Sri Lanka and England – while Pakistan won the only time they played at the venue, against West Indies. All four day-night games there have been won by the team fielding first, and each match has been punctuated by early wickets – the 10-over scores of the team batting first in these matches were 31 for 3 (West Indies v Pakistan), 43 for 4 (Sri Lanka v England), 23 for 3 (England v New Zealand) and 30 for 3 (West Indies v India). Going by these numbers, the toss could have a huge role in deciding which team makes the final.

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