Tottenham: Mail makes Richarlison claim

Tottenham Hotspur are among the clubs interested in signing Everton forward Richarlison, according to a report from the Daily Mail. 

The lowdown: Survival hero

The Brazil international ended the 2021/22 season on a high as his goals against Crystal Palace and Chelsea helped the Merseyside club secure their Premier League status.

An Olympic Goal medalist with Brazil, Richarlison has enjoyed a steady upwards career trajectory since arriving at Watford before making a £50million switch to Everton (BBC).

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Having taken his tally to 53 goals in 153 outings for his current employers, another move could now be in the offing as the Lilywhites watch on…

The latest: Spurs interested

As per the Daily Mail, Tottenham, Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid are all keen on the 34-cap Brazil ace.

It’s claimed that Richarlison has an ‘uncertain future’ at Everton and the club are ‘bracing themselves’ for bids in the upcoming summer transfer window.

The report also states that Spurs are among the suitors ‘monitoring developments closely’ as Antonio Conte looks to the man recently hailed as possessing ‘huge talent’ by Frank Lampard to bolster the striking department at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

The verdict: Make it happen

After the news this week that Conte and transfer chief Fabio Paratici would be handed a £150milion boost to the transfer war chest from ENIC this summer after qualifying for the UEFA Champions League, the calibre of targets can naturally go up a level.

Therefore, spending big on Richarlison – who holds a market value of £45million and a contract until 2024 (Transfermarkt) – should be no issue for Spurs.

During 2021/22, the hardworking Brazilian scored 11 times and provided five assists in 33 appearances across all competitions, winning an impressive 7.1 duels and taking 2.4 shots per game and earning a 7.02 average Sofascore rating in the process.

Richarlison has previously admitted a desire to compete amongst the elite of Europe and a switch to north London to support Harry Kane and Son Heung-min makes an abundance of sense for all parties.

In other news… Harry Kane appears to have made a huge decision regarding his future at Spurs

Tottenham: Romano makes claim on Paratici ‘masterpiece’

Famed transfer journalist Fabrizio Romano has claimed sporting director and club chief Fabio Paratici has pulled off a ‘masterpiece’ at Tottenham Hotspur.

The Lowdown: Good times return?

The brief Nuno Espirito Santo era is one Spurs supporters will be hoping to quickly forget.

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Paratici’s decision to appoint the ex-Wolves boss was met with criticism, particularly after Nuno was given his marching orders for terrible results and an arguable lack of exciting football (The Daily Mail).

Seven months on, new manager Antonio Conte has re-instilled faith in Lilywhites and guided them to a possible Champions League qualification finish – depending on how north London rivals Arsenal finish the campaign.

To even be competing for a Premier League top four place seemed like a pipe dream back in November, testament to Conte’s phenomenal job at Hotspur Way.

The Latest: Romano makes ‘masterpiece’ claim…

Taking to Twitter, Romano claims Spurs official Paratici was actually responsible for bringing in the former Chelsea manager – claiming he’s pulled off a ‘masterpiece’.

The journalist explained:

“Tottenham can’t lose Antonio Conte at the end of the season, no matter what happens with UCL race. He completely changed everything in the club since Paratici did a masterpiece to appoint him. #THFC Conte will meet with Levy at the end of the season to decide his future.”

The Verdict: Interesting claim…

Question marks surrounded Paratici following a 50/50 January transfer window but the game-changing Conte appointment appears to have vindicated chairman Daniel Levy’s decision to hire him.

Now, all focus for the 49-year-old will be on spearheading the club’s transfer assaults for this summer as he aims to back Conte and ensure that he can get most, if not all, of the six summer signings allegedly on the ex-Inter Milan boss’ radar.

In other news: Reliable source: Tottenham agreement ‘very likely’ as Conte closes in on ‘top signing’! Find out more here.

Taken: a love letter to the art of wicketkeeping

There are only some among us who can truly embody this quiet, self-effacing role

William Fiennes19-Dec-2019My father had been a wicket-keeper, widely admired, playing at Lord’s aged 18 in the summer of 1939, maybe good enough for a county trial if war hadn’t barged in, and it was still in his bone and muscle memory in his eighties and nineties, throwing an apple up and catching it and nudging the bails off, or just miming a take to one side of the body, his fingers and palms opening into a bowl or cradle, a little give with the elbows as the ball invisibly landed, not “caught” so much as greeted and received, the evidence there when he held his hands up and you could see the fingers all crooked where balls had crocked the joints, corroborated too when old friends of his encountered with Rover tickets in the Warner or Allen stands would look down at me and remember not just my father’s batting but his keeping too: “A wicket-keeper, your father…”So when at school they asked for a volunteer, I raised my hand. The gloves in the communal kitbags were huge, cumbersome gauntlets, sweat-soaked leather hardened in the off-season, the plastic finger guards like burly thimbles, the pimpled catching surface worn smooth and shiny. The chamois inner gloves were hard and creased when you first put them on but would melt and soften with sweat from your hands so that after a short sequence of catches the paraphernalia of inner and outer gloves seemed to meld with your own body and be forgotten. I don’t remember any coaching, it was more a matter of imitation, mimicking the squats and nimble sidestep dances of Bob Taylor and Jeff Dujon, relishing not just their diving one-handed catches but the lovely soundless grace of the task done right, understanding from Dad that the point was to go beneath notice, taking each catch so cleanly the ball made no sound in the gloves, the good wicket-keeper dissolving into each passage of play with Zen-like self-effacement. That was my father’s ideal, increasingly remote in an era when keepers were expected to lead the psychological attack, being right under the batsman’s nose and eyes, mouth in his ears, lips almost brushing the stump mic, expected to chirp and heckle like Healy, Boucher, Prior, Nixon, Wade, even the ineffably dignified Kumar Sangakkara haranguing Shaun Pollock with some entry-level psy-ops in the 2003 World Cup: “Lots of pressure for the skipper now, yeah? Gonna let his whole country down if he fails! Oh man, the weight of all these expectations, fellas! The weight of the country, chaps! Forty-two million supporters right here!”

The game continually circulated the ball through the keeper like blood through the heart

And not just the relentless dreary chiselling at the batsman’s sporting and sexual self-esteem – now the keeper had to be chief of geeing-up and morale-boosting too, as if he were the afternoon’s host and compère, calling everyone “buddy” and filling the pauses – “Good areas, Frankie!” – like a radio DJ scared of dead air. Of course no one’s better placed to jab the needle, but even Paul Nixon must have felt something more complicated than enmity for the batsman standing just across the line. You’re so close to the batsman’s talents and shortcomings it’s hard not to feel solidarity as well as opposition, so that the celebrations of a stumping might simply be a way of disguising the feeling you’d betrayed a friend. You can hear them breathing, hear the mantras of concentration and self-reproach they murmur to themselves, read forearm tattoos and bat labels, see where they take guard and how they mark it, how their feet settle and shuffle. When the ball approaches, keeper and batsman are alone together inside a world of movement and sound – the flurry of backlift and batswing, the faint creaking of leather boots and pads, the fabric swish and rustle, the expulsions of breath, the bat-and-ball percussion all bursting out of the still, silent moment when you and the batsman waited together in squat and stance.Baseball has a catcher, cricket has a keeper: you keep wicket, like a diary or a secret, the verb rich with suggestions of ownership and intimacy. The keeper standing up to slow or medium-paced bowling is eye-level with the bails’ rolled beads and spigots, breathes woody stump varnish, knows each agricultural miniscape of grooving and abrasion made by bat toes and dragged studs across the batting crease – the guards, guidelines and small August dust bowls. The idea was to stay low and rise with the ball, weight in the balls of your feet, thigh muscles driving out of the squat to spring to left or right. I liked the athletic possibilities of standing back to quick bowlers – at university I took one off the inside edge, a fast Neil Coulson out-swinger that first had me moving slipwards before a drive scrambled the trajectories and I dived full-length down the leg side, the ball landing snug in my left glove, just off the ground. And how about that flier off the outside edge at Burleigh Park, right-handed, slips dispersed to boundaries for a batsman on 99, or that guy trying to cut a wide one at Stonor so I was already moving in front of first slip and could plunge in front of second to land it one-handed inches off the grass… Now approaching 50, I’m aware of those reflexes waning, balls diverted off the edge already yards past me before my nerves convey the message of a chance, and sometimes I watch the YouTube clips – Tim Ludeman’s full-stretch zero-gravity left-hander, a Brad Haddin screamer in front of first slip, where in slo-mo you can see Shane Watson raising his hands in awe or prayer at the flying man under his eyes – and dream of just one more before it’s over.Jack Russell was “tidy” behind the stumps – perhaps the highest praise for a keeper•Getty ImagesAged 12 I got Gordon’s Gin’s Wicketkeepers of the World by Godfrey Evans for Christmas, and the author’s Dickensian white muttonchops and ritual siesta in the lunch interval seemed part of a strain of eccentricity running through English keepers, via Alan Knott who warmed his hands in hot water before taking the field and reinforced his chamois inners with strips of plasticine, and Jack Russell who drove between games wearing a specially adapted sleeping bag to keep his back and legs warm, and reportedly used the same tea bag through all five days of an Oval Test against Australia, which Derek Randall estimated amounted to a hundred cups. Dad liked Russell especially for his “tidiness”, and I’d absorbed the idea that this was the highest accolade available for keepers, whose mistakes – a drop, a bye, a fumbled stumping chance – could loom so unfairly over hours of quiet, unnoticed competence. This was the goalkeeper’s burden too, and both keepers shared that Wim Wenders existential loneliness, the only one of their kind: a handful of batters, a handful of bowlers, only one keeper. And added to this was the way the game continually circulated the ball (and so also the focus of players and spectators) through the keeper like blood through the heart, not just when batters played and missed or let it go, but almost every time fielders gathered and sent it back in, as if the keeper were really the ball’s home, the place to which it always returned.My Godfrey Evans book featured Jeff Dujon – who could go a whole innings without standing up to the stumps, at home midway between wicket and boundary while Marshall, Holding, Garner and Croft took turns stretching him like a goalie to posts, top corners and crossbar – and Farokh Engineer, who could go a whole day anchored to the stumps by the spin quartet of Bedi, Prasanna, Chandrasekhar and Venkataraghavan. Hard to imagine a book like that now, in the post-Gilchrist era, when keepers earn their place as much for their batting as their glovework, and when keeping is more an interchangeable athletic discipline than an art for which you might have a natural gift and style. Admirable sportsmen, of course, but who’s talking about “art” or “style” in the keeping of Ramdin, Karthik, Pant, Watling, Bairstow, Wade, Paine? The speed of Dhoni’s hands in a stumping off Harbhajan is objectively astonishing, but there’s a stiff, machine efficiency to the transaction that leaves me cold. Give me Sarah Taylor standing up to Nat Sciver or Anya Shrubsole, moving to leg as Ellyse Perry or Trisha Chetty or Suné Luus shape for a glance or flick but get nothing on it. Taylor has spoken of “flowing with the line” and it’s true there’s something silky or liquid in the way her hands and body track the angle to make the catch then spirit the ball back as if through her own slipstream to the bails, batter teetering off-balance, Taylor already rushing towards teammates with arms fully outstretched, beaming.

Baseball has a catcher, cricket has a keeper: you keep wicket, like a diary or a secret, the verb rich with suggestions of ownership and intimacy

Standing back, each ball had the glory-potential of a one-handed grab; up close, I could only dream of leg-side stumpings like Taylor’s. Maybe you have to have kept wicket yourself to grasp the challenge: you’re in a squat outside off, and when the bowler sends it down leg it’s not just that you have a fraction of a second to adjust position, body following the advance party of your hands, but for a large fraction of that fraction the ball will be completely invisible behind the batsman, on the dark side of the moon, your hands moving blind, by dead reckoning. So it’s not just an exhibition of physical speed and balance, but a computational miracle that Taylor can “know” where and when the ball will arrive and be there to meet it. Sciver couldn’t have been bowling more than 70mph, so think about Jack Russell in early January 1991, the third Test against Australia at Sydney, when Dean Jones on 60 has been batting out of his crease, so Russell is standing up (no helmet!) to Gladstone Small to keep the batsman honest. Small fires it at 80-odd clicks down leg, Jones tries to glance but misses, and in blink-speed Russell has followed his hands blind a couple of yards to his left and the bails are gone, Jones already walking. No way Jack Russell ran out that morning wondering how he was going to “get in the batsman’s head”. And Russell was dropped for the next Test, replaced by Alec Stewart, the superior batsman…”Well taken”: I must have learned the phrase from my father, and that verb had resonance too – not “caught” but “taken”, as if each ball were a criticism or compliment the keeper had to absorb and process. It was more than catching. You made your broad, webbed hands into a berth or nest, and gave with the elbows to cushion the landing. The technique evolved to protect the palms from repeated heavy impacts – the ball a meat hammer tenderising the fillets – but origin stories didn’t matter when you saw or made those cradle shapes in the arms and the ball sank home so naturally you barely felt it. I don’t remember when I last really talked about wicket-keeping with my father. Maybe it was around the time Russell faded from view, and Adam Gilchrist’s phenomenal impact as a batsman forced everyone to think differently about the keeper’s role – who cares about “flowing with the line” when you can score an Ashes century off 57 balls? But the conversation was still there when he lobbed an apple in the kitchen and made the stumping (Mum said he did the same when she threw him a pair of balled-up socks to put in his sock drawer) or held up his hands in silhouette with the window behind them, his fingers crooked like an old oak’s staghead branches, and in those dreamy bye-less afternoons when each catch landed true, all the half-volley throws, wides and leg-side surprises, Dad’s voice among my teammates’ saying: “Well taken, Will. Well taken.”Nightwatchman

Babar Azam needs to break the habit

In his short Test career, he has been dismissed close to lunch, tea or stumps too many times and it is hurting Pakistan

Osman Samiuddin in Dubai09-Oct-2017There were about five minutes left before tea. Babar Azam was looking like Babar Azam, hanging around with all the languor of a rakish prince. When he defended the first ball he faced, as often happens with him, he immediately looked so in, so in control that it could’ve been the 100th ball he was facing, or even dawdling in a low-key net session.For half an hour, he appeared every bit as accomplished as the hype has it, mostly untroubled – although not against spin – and definitely unhurried. Sri Lanka’s pacers were squeezing him and making him play, but all in all he was shaping up okay, a young man who knows he’s got this.Then, with a break in play looming, Rangana Herath bowled a shortish delivery on off stump that broke further away. Babar tried to whip it through midwicket, except there was a midwicket in place and he took a straightforward catch. The ball had not stopped on him, it did not bounce more than it should have, it wasn’t great. But it an awful shot. With ten balls left for tea.But hey, it happens. It happens to young batsmen finding their way into the game. Make a note, talk it out with him and expect better next time. Except this wasn’t the first time Babar had gotten out at the worst possible time. Or even the second. Or third.He’s not had a long Test career – this is just his 12th Test. Yet of his 19 dismissals to date, on as many as 15 occasions he has been dismissed just before or after a break, whether that is at the start of play, lunch, tea and close (or tea and dinner), as well as drinks intervals in between sessions.A graphic showing Babar Azam’s dismissals before session intervals•ESPNcricinfo LtdNear enough a break, for the purposes of this, is anything inside four overs either side. If that seems too much, it isn’t really – common wisdom has it that five overs either side of a session break are important moments in a game, where it is vital to not lose a wicket and, potentially, cede momentum. Maybe including the drinks in between sessions is harsh, but they are breaks and do require, to an extent, the batsman starting afresh after it. In any case, Babar’s dismissals near drinks breaks have all been within 10 deliveries either side.Even if you take those out, look at the timing of the really bad ones on the list. Four balls after tea in Hamilton; last ball before lunch and first ball after it at the MCG; three overs before tea and four overs into the morning in Sydney; last ball before lunch in Dominica; and what turned out to be the last ball of the day in Abu Dhabi.All of them are critical moments for batsmen, where the very best of them prove in a small way why they are what they are. It is where the already-heightened levels of focus of elite athletes reach out to another higher level. Eyes narrow, the mind cleanses itself of distraction. Shots are checked and balls that can be, are left. Batsmen, forever stepping in and out of bubbles, must step into one here, where their intrinsically selfish instincts are, for once, line up with the needs of the team. One must survive so that the team can prosper. It is when you really need to understand not only your game but also where the game itself is. What will bowlers and their captains try and do to you here?Even if you find justifications to whittle this list down, in such a short career it will still be too many for it to not be a pattern, not to reveal an overbearing looseness in Babar’s Test game. It makes it worse that it always looks so easy for him. Half the problem is that he is unable to make it look any other way. He plays as he plays whether Pakistan are following on, clawing their way out of another wreck, chasing a target down, batting out time – batting in monotone, unaware much of what is happening around him.That much should be clear from the nature of some of these dismissals. The shot to Herath was awful, but only perhaps as bad as the tickle down the leg side in Abu Dhabi at day’s end. At least twice he has chased full, wide tempters that may as well have come with a skull-and-crossbones sign. And twice his wicket has come not only right after a break, but been the second in quick succession. He’s a cautionary coaching manual tale of how not to bat near breaks.It’s no secret how highly Pakistan rate him. And the fuss is understandable, because it’s easy to look at the way he bats, and the runs he scores in limited-overs and the manner in which he scores them, and walks away thinking there is no way he’s not going to make it as a Test batsman. Well, it turns out there is one way, which is to average 19 in 16 innings since his best Test knock (an unbeaten 90 in Hamilton) and lug around this list of dismissals. It should be enough for Pakistan to start asking themselves whether he really can be turned into a Test batsman.It is not known whether he or the coaching staff have picked up on this issue, though it wouldn’t be a surprise if they haven’t. All through last season, they put him at one down in the belief that ‘yes, it will be tough and he is the youngest and most inexperienced in that order, but he is gifted enough to work out a way’. And suddenly this season, it’s fine to have him lower down when, one would think, he is a year older and wiser. With young batsmen, it usually works the other way.Azhar Ali, who could teach him a thing or two about batting, thinks it is just a matter of one big innings. Babar will make it, that’ll be the end of it and we’ll have ourselves a Test batsman. If only it were that easy.

Flavours from a banquet 139 years long

Close analysis, sharp writing, love of the game, talk about splendid moustaches – a new “biography” of Test cricket has it all

Paul Edwards14-Feb-2016″You have to drive the engine that has your fuel in it,” said the playwright Dennis Potter. It is fine advice for any writer and the principle enshrined in the metaphor has not been lost on Jarrod Kimber*. In the seven years since his blog cricketwithballs.com cast its first irreverent eye on the cricket world, Kimber has established himself as one of the game’s most sympathetic, acerbic and disrespectful observers. He is also a very fine writer with a turn of phrase some journos would maim to possess. And he has never been less than himself. Kimber does not trim his opinions or shape them so that they might fit a dominant mood. Instead, he mocks the mighty and holds cricket’s absurdities up to the light, often in the one-sentence paragraphs and one-word sentences that have become two of his stylistic trademarks.Jarrod Kimber’s deep love of cricket shines brightly, particularly when he views the game with amused despair and wry anger.Jarrod Kimber casts a cold, unsparing eye on power. Cold. Unsparing. Power.Jarrod Kimber’s close observations of a day’s cricket are frequently devoted to the activities of a single player and they are often brilliant pieces of work.In four years there were three books. One was a collection of blogs and the other two were devoted to Ashes series. Last year , the film made by Kimber and Sam Collins, examined, among other things, the appalling governance of the ICC. It was necessary viewing for anyone interested in the game’s future and in whether Test cricket even had one. One or two of cricket’s megalomaniac bosses may have pondered whether Kimber took polonium in his tea.This, after all, is the author a “powerful cricket administrator” once described as “the most hated man in cricket”. Another badge of honour, eh, Jarrod?Now Kimber has written , a title containing one of the most superfluous words in the history of publishing: unauthorised. Of course it’s bloody unauthorised. The chances of Kimber currently being authorised to write anything by anyone in the ICC are around the same as the Pope asking Shane MacGowan to deliver his Urbi et Orbi address on Easter Sunday.Hardie Grant Books is typically unconventional. The current match between Australia and New Zealand is the 2201st Test to be played, although how some of the early matches came to be classified as such affords Kimber plenty of innocent amusement. It is plainly impossible to provide a full biography of Test cricket’s multifaceted character in 296 pages and Kimber probably would not wish to write such a tome. Instead he has provided us with 63 chapters, some of them no longer than a couple of pages. It is a book of essays and impressions that aim to give the reader as many flavours as possible from what has been a 139-year banquet.Now let’s get the gripe out of the way, shall we? So much of this book is good and so much of it is stimulating that the little inaccuracies are particularly irritating. Why, for instance is Hedley Verity’s first name spelt “Headley” three paragraphs above a sentence in which it is spelt correctly? Why did no one spot that it is Tom Cartwright, not “Tim”? And I’m not sure that anyone in Yorkshire will take too kindly to Herbert Sutcliffe’s first name being reduced to “Herb”. Such things may seem quibbles but a book containing so much perception and insight deserves a sharp-eyed proofreading.Far more often, though, Kimber sends you back to the players you thought you knew. This is valuable, even when you are still not quite convinced by his assessment. For example, in his description of what I take to be the famous Beldam photograph of Victor Trumper, he writes: “His back foot is off the ground.” Now I have always held the view that only Trumper’s front foot is raised in that glorious image, but it is not the least of my debts to that Kimber caused me to spend another ten minutes examining a photograph at which I have already gazed for many hours.There is, as we might expect from Kimber, plenty of very close analysis in the book. Moustaches get special attention. Fred Spofforth looked like he was about to twirl the end of his in the manner of a Victorian scoundrel, whereas Ted Peate’s was “the sort a genial school bus driver would have. Spofforth’s moustache wouldn’t spit on a moustache like that.” As for Richard Hadlee, the facial hair gets top billing: “That moustache. There was no way around it. It was the moustache of a villain.”

Women’s cricket gets far more attention than the authorities once gave to it. The opening and closing chapters about Phillip Hughes are as good as anything Kimber has written

Then there are the careers of cricketers of which one was aware but had not really considered in sufficient depth. This is Kimber’s first paragraph on Aubrey Faulkner, the South African cricketer who eventually killed himself.”Aubrey Faulkner was the sort of man that makes racists believe their own rhetoric. He was tall, broad-shouldered and looked like he was from some sort of superior sect that could, if it wanted, enslave us all.”And this is Faulkner’s last Test:”For Faulkner, the embarrassment was much worse. He had been a legend. A drop-dead gorgeous world-leading all-rounder. Now he was a man with no real balance, who had not even a hint of natural athleticism and seemed to hit the ball by accident. One of the greatest players ever would leave his last Test embarrassed.”Yet neither of those paragraphs is the best in – wouldn’t you know it? – Chapter 13. This is:”There is a dark history in cricket. There is something about the game that chews people up like no other sport. It’s the Woody Allen of sports, permanently on the couch, analysing itself. Its players do the same.” is pleasingly rich in such stuff. It does not ignore the countries that have played only a few Tests, and even makes room for those that have played none at all. Women’s cricket gets far more attention than the authorities once gave to it. The opening and closing chapters about Phillip Hughes are as good as anything Kimber has written. The book’s style and organisation remind one rather of RC Robertson-Glasgow’s two books, and . Rather like Robertson-Glasgow, Kimber is more concerned with painting a picture than churning out statistical proofs. And like almost all good writers, he invites you to think again.Test Cricket: The Unauthorised Biography
By Jarrod Kimber
304 pages, $35
Hardie Grant Books*Jarrod Kimber writes for ESPNcricinfo

India lacking in Test skills

The amount of T20 cricket India play has left most of their batsmen unable to compile big Test innings and their bowlers unable to produce multiple spells of accurate bowling away from home

Jarrod Kimber at the SCG06-Jan-2015The fear has been with us for a very long time. Cricket does fear and worry better than parents watching a drunken aunty hold their newborn. T20 is cricket’s creeping evil. If you look hard enough, and have the right kind of tunnel vision, you can see its destructive powers in every part of cricket.The spectre of T20 and its giant mutated child, IPL, is never far away when people talk about India. If India win a match, they do it because of the IPL. If they lose, they do it because of the IPL. Their batsmen are flashy millionaires with shots a dozen who can’t crack real cricket. Their bowlers are lazy, popgun, four-over specialists with tricks to get a bloke caught at long-on and not much more.We are in the first T20 generation of cricketers. Players who are arriving at Test cricket with contracts across continents, who can reverse, switch-hit, ramp or scoop a maximum for a moment of success, but who enter the corridor of uncertainty like a chainsaw wielding psycho is at the other end. Coaches tried to ground their pupils at first, but now we have T20 specialist coaches who cheer rather than chide improvisation. When Glenn Maxwell played a reverse hook shot, we’d reached uber cricket-max mode.Cricket has feared the limited-overs revolution for almost as long as it has existed. In the 1990s every time a bad shot was played, ODI cricket was blamed. It was the IPL before we had the IPL. Yet, if you spend anytime watching old cricket footage, stupid shots and pointless bowling has always existed. When Sobers made his double-hundred at the G for the Rest of the World, the modern analyst’s computer would have exploded at the amount of short and wide balls he got.T20 makes you rich. T20 puts you on television. T20 makes you a target.In this match we have David Warner, Steven Smith, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, R Ashwin, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, and Rohit Sharma. All T20 players first, Test cricketers second. Perhaps not in hopes or dreams, but in reality and contract.Warner was a franchise player before a first-class player. Smith has travelled the world playing limited-overs cricket in shirts every colour of the rainbow. Ashwin was a Chennai Super King well before he was an Indian spin king at home. Kohli was the emerging player in the first IPL and one-day superstar. They have all adapted, changed and are working out what Test cricket is.India as a team is yet to evolve. This is a young team; Kohli with 33 Tests is the most experienced player. They have talent, they have proved that at home, but on the road is where young players are tested the most. And on this road at the SCG, they were run over.Most of India’s current squad have played more domestic T20s than any other form of cricket. Dhoni had not played a Ranji Trophy match since 2005, or Irani Cup match since 2008. Rahane has played one first-class game outside of India colours since 2012. Dhawan has played none since his debut. Rohit has one in the last two years. Mohammed Shami last played in 2012. Raina did not play a first-class game in 2014. He has played 203 ODIs, and 86 first-class matches. And Ashwin not one since 2010. This is a generation of cricketers learning Test cricket while playing it.Because of their schedule, and how they like to warm up – when India play warm up matches before Tests – they use most of their squad. Blokes retire once they start hitting the ball well. They bowl 12 overs in the match and then rest with the physio. They don’t treat them like matches, and they don’t reap the rewards of a bowler bowling his 20th over and working through a set batsman. Or a batsman pushing beyond 130 knowing how tired that makes you. Their innings and spells are short, their games are make believe. And because of this they struggle to play more than three good sessions in a row. They can’t catch in the slips. Their bowlers need a rigid plan. And their batsmen give away good starts.Mohammed Shami, who has been ordinary on this tour of Australia, had Chris Rogers dropped by KL Rahul at slip on the first day at the SCG•Getty ImagesMany times in this series India have played good cricket. The first two sessions on day five in Adelaide gave them a chance of winning. The next session might as well not have existed. At the Gabba they fought to get the Australia tail in while they were well behind. Then they spent hours bowling at them. For three seasons India batted well at the MCG, but they had one session where they gave away five wickets and the Test was over. They have not had one great innings from beginning to end. Not with the bat, not with the ball, not with their fielding, and not with their captaincy.India have dropped a fair chunk of slip catches this series, but what was more noticeable is the amount of people who have fielded in the cordon – Dhawan, Cheteshwar Pujara, Kohli, Ashwin, Raina, KL Rahul, Rahane and M Vijay. There could be even more. Slip is a position you only learn by standing there. You can have the hands, you can have the reflexes, but your mind needs to be trained on how to be ready for the one ball a day that may come your way. The Indian slips don’t even get whole days. Or whole sessions. Ashwin aside, if you’re a batsman, you’re probably going to be travelling through there.The first morning in Adelaide, India started around the wicket to Warner. It was a clear plan. When Mitchell Johnson came in at the Gabba, sledging and bouncing happened. It was a clear plan. All series India have been aiming at Chris Rogers’ hip. It is a clear plan. When Brad Haddin came in at Melbourne, he was bounced. Plan. India set the field in such a way that Haddin, and seagulls flying overhead, knew where the ball was going. It’s almost as if India don’t believe their bowlers can come in and bowl ball after ball, over after over, session after session. So they pile on these plans that, mostly, have just not worked.Kohli has three hundreds and one fifty. His team have two hundreds and seven fifties. Rahane, Pujara and Vijay should have made hundreds. Dhoni, Rohit and Ashwin gave up starts before they got to 50. The Australian order has only made three more hundreds, but they have a tail. India are naked once they are seven wickets down. Too often their batsmen have done some good work, but not enough, and then the innings just disappears.That is India. On first glance they look okay, then the harder you look, the longer you look and the more often you look, the worse they seem.The 12th ball on Boxing Day was quick, bounced, and took the edge. Umesh Yadav is big and strong. He’s the most moose like of Indian quicks. His strike rate is amazing. His pace is impressive. Dhawan at slip goes low, the ball hits the middle of his hands, he roles forward athletically.But it’s kind of a mirage. It’s the best of India, and what they can do. But notoften what they do.They’re learning as they go in front of a billion angry fans, on unhelpful surfaces, without bowlers who can keep pressure, batsmen who score regularly overseas, with a captain leaving, a hot head taking over and Ravi Shastri. And T20 cricket ruining their games.Their biggest problem might just be that they don’t play enough cricket of this kind. You can make 264 in an ODI, without really knowing how to do it in a first-class match. You can take a five-wicket haul without knowing what a fifth spell feels like. And you can catch a one-hander on the boundary and never learn how to take a nick at second slip.Today India watched Sunrisers Hyderabad’s Warner make a hundred, before ending the day with a big partnership from Rajasthan Royals’ Smith and Watson. Earlier in the series they lost wickets to the find of the 2010-11 BBL, Nathan Lyon and the IPL-winning Ryan Harris. And they ran out the top scorer of the first IPL tournament for 99 in Melbourne.If T20 is truly evil, it’s clear it also discriminates.

Progress elusive for Glamorgan

Glamorgan have some experienced heads and the nucleus of a capable side but the lack of local talent is worrying

George Dobell28-Mar-2013Last year 6th, CC Div 2; Group stage, FLt20; 6th in Group B, CB40.2012 in a nutshell Glamorgan continued to drift in 2012. They started poorly in the Championship, failing to win a game until mid-July, and had it not been for a final-match success against Kent, they would have finished bottom. Their T20 season was blighted by the weather, losing more games – five – to the rain than any other club, while their CB40 campaign never really got going. They won only one of their first six games, with the rain again doing them few favours. To make matters worse, they were unable to retain James Harris, one of the gems of their youth system; Robert Croft, who topped the bowling averages at the age of 42, retired at the end of the season; and they had to deal with the grief of losing a former team-mate, Tom Maynard, in such tragic circumstances. There was little reason for cheer.2013 prospects At full strength, Glamorgan have a team that could prove tough opposition in the Championship. The arrival of Michael Hogan should significantly strengthen the bowling and if Jim Allenby and Marcus North replicate their 2012 form, Graham Wagg can remain fit and Murray Goodwin can rediscover his form and combine with the reliable Mark Wallace and Stewart Walters, perhaps they could finish in mid-table. But the failure of locally developed player to contribute significantly continues to undermine the team.Key player Allenby was the leading wicket-taker in the 2012 Championship season as well as being the second-highest run-scorer and won the Cricket Society’s award for the leading allrounder in domestic first-class cricket. He also led the side in T20 cricket and remains a key player in all formats.Bright young thing Mike Reed, a very tall fast bowler, broke into the side at the end of last year and fared well. There is not huge competition for the category at Glamorgan, though, which is a concern.Captain/coach Wallace, who has a benefit season, will continue to captain the Championship side, with North taking control of the limited-overs teams. Matthew Mott continues as head of elite performance. After two years at the helm, it is hard to ascertain much progress.ESPNcricinfo verdict The failure to develop local players means the side appears to be longer on experience than it is on England potential. A long-term plan is hard to make out.

India wilt as Dravid drops dollies

ESPNcricinfo presents Plays of the Day from the second day of the third Test between England and India at Edgbaston

Andrew Miller at Edgbaston11-Aug-2011Omen of the day

With 207 catches to his credit, the highest in Test cricket by a non-wicketkeeper, Rahul Dravid could be said to possess the world’s safest pair of hands. But that crown would seem a misfit if you have seen Dravid put down some easy catches in this series. So far his drop count stands at five: at Lord’s, on the first day, he gave Jonathan Trott two chances, even if MS Dhoni shared some blame for the second. In the first innings at Trent Bridge, he made good ground to get to a chance from Ian Bell but the ball slipped out as he fell on his elbow. Today Bell was given another helping hand by Dravid. Sreesanth had bowled a nice awayswinger to get an edge, but the ball hit Dravid at the base of his wrists and popped out. An even simpler chance came Dravid’s way off Eoin Morgan’s edge in the last over of the day. Dravid grabbed at the ball though and floored it, and immediately threw his cap down in disgust.Failed appeal of the day

Sreesanth came up with a wonderful delivery that pitched and moved just that bit away from Kevin Pietersen’s bat. He then charged, determined and assured, like a 4×100 metre relay runner who had won the gold medal, with his right hand index finger raised high and upright, towards MS Dhoni and the slips. Pietersen, bemused, walked away staring at Sreesanth. Simon Taufel, the Australian umpire, did not move. Dhoni asked for a review. Hot Spot could not locate any edge as the ball had brushed the pad on its way to Dhoni.Non-performer of the day

Clearly that honour should go to Amit Mishra. Granted the legspinner was playing his first match of the series and hence could be given some leeway. But eight no-balls was going too far as Mishra kept sliding his landing foot in front of the popping crease. In fact, the only wicket he got on the day, bowling Strauss round his legs, should also have been called for an overstep, but Taufel, who had called him four times previously, missed the one that mattered. In his previous 11 Tests, Mishra had transgressed the line an incredible 61 times. By contrast, in their past 11 Tests, England as a team have bowled just 39 no-balls.Slow reaction of the day

Sachin Tendulkar’s longevity is one of sport’s modern miracles, but on a day as one-sided as this, he couldn’t help but look every one of his 38 years. A sprightlier presence at midwicket would surely have curtailed Alastair Cook’s innings to 165, when Ishant Sharma – returning for a new spell – found some rare aggression on a good length, and lured Cook into a looping leading edge. Tendulkar, however, barely even flinched as the ball plopped harmlessly to the turf two metres in front of him. He claimed he had been unsighted, but perhaps that was selectively so. After all, there’s a time and a place for straining the hamstrings and flinging oneself headlong to the turf. At 405 for 3 in the 101st over, it’s probably neither.Clanger of the day

Four overs later, it was Eoin Morgan’s turn for a reprieve, but this one was rather more straightforward. Quite what Sreesanth was doing at point is anyone’s guess, but when Morgan climbed into a loose cut off Ishant, the ball slapped straight into his palms and out again. To add to the indignity, the batsman scampered a single as a boisterous crowd roared its approval, and Sreesanth was instantly banished to the boundary’s edge to contemplate his sin. He didn’t have long to think before the ball came his way again, however. Another cut, this time, from Cook, rolled gently into the deep, leading to a massive ironic cheer as Sreesanth this time gathered properly.

Australia choked by 8-1 field

India’s plan was extremely defensive, but not negative. By persisting withthe wide line, they were relying on a lapse in concentration from thebatsmen for a wicket

Cricinfo staff08-Nov-2008
Simon Katich was forced to play to India’s off-side field © AFP
The third day of the final Test produced only 166 runs in 86.4 overs andyet the contest was absorbing. India showed their hand early by deployingoutrageously lop-sided fields which made it clear that if Australia wantedto score, their batsmen would have to reach out for deliveries wideoutside the off stump. Were India overtly defensive? Or was their tactic anecessary measure? The arguments for both cases are strong. The bottomline, however, is that the strategy worked.Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma bowled to the left-handers – Michael Husseyand Simon Katich – with eight fielders on the off side. The only man on theleg side was at mid-on. They complemented their field by bowling a linewide outside off stump. Katich chased and edged one in the second over but thecatch was dropped. Thereafter he chose to be extremely cautious. Bothbatsmen were wary of the two slips in place and left numerous deliveries.Their cut shots were blocked by a fielder at point who had a third manand a sweeper as back-up. The drives were stopped by short cover and those that got past failed to beat extra cover and mid-off.The suffocating effect was enhanced by the discipline with which Zaheer and Ishant operated. Had they dropped short, the batsmen would have had enough time to cut with power; had they over-pitched, they would have been able to drive straight. But they so rarely wavered in length that you could easily count the number of deliveries that weren’t outside off stump. It was like a stuck record: the bowler delivered outside off, the batsman shouldered arms, and Mahendra Singh Dhoni collected.India’s plan was extremely defensive, but not negative. By persisting withthe wide line, they were relying on a lapse in concentration from thebatsmen for a wicket. Zaheer bowled closer to off stump than Ishant did but the left-armer usually dismisses left-handers with the ball that swings in towards the stumps. The field, however, demanded Zaheer’s aim not to be at middle stump. Unless the batsmen played on, they would not be bowled. Lbws were out of the question.The plan was understandable. India should have shut Australia out of the game by the end of day two but they had not. They should have scored 600 after winning the toss instead of 441. They took Jason Krejza lightly and lost wickets to unnecessarily aggressive strokesagainst him. Sachin Tendulkar had said losing five for 311 on the first day was too many. They lost their next five for 19 on the second. Australia were still in the game and even more so after India’s bowlers bowled without direction last evening. Runs flowed at four an over and Australia reached 189 for 2 at stumps.”We tried to attack yesterday but ended up conceding some runs,” Ishant said after the third day. “So our plan for today was to be defensive because this was the only way we could have come back in the game. We just stuck to our plans as our captain told us to do. We were assigneddifferent roles, and we all bowled according to our roles.”This morning’s ploy was India’s attempt to regain control over the matchby delaying Australia’s rate of progress. It might have even been seen asan attempt to draw the game and protect a 1-0 lead. The onus was onAustralia to force the pace for they need the victory to draw theseries. But they didn’t.Katich and Hussey didn’t even try to force a field change by improvising to hit on the leg side or by lofting over the infield. They didn’t attempt to alter lengths by stepping out of the crease like Matthew Hayden or Gautam Gambhir might have done. Insteadthey left deliveries, blocked, and left some more. Their approach was not one of a team that needed to set the pace.Australia were so shackled by the off-side plan that the first attempt to hit the ball on the leg side was in the 12th over of the day: Hussey tried to pull Ishant but missed. The first time the ball was hit to the leg side was in the 18th over: Hussey pushed towards Ishant at mid-on. The first run on the leg side finally came in the 21st over when Hussey swept Harbhajan Singh to long leg. By the end of the first session India had conceded only 42 runs off 24 overs. They had also dismissed Katich who kept moving across his stumps to play the wide line and was eventually struck in front by an inswinger from Zaheer. Katich scored only 10 runs off 69 balls today compared to 92 of 120 last evening.There were large-scale field changes whenever the right-hander – Michael Clarke – was on strike. Two fielders would cross over and form a 6-3 off-side field. The two extra men on the leg side – midwicket and long leg in addition to the mid-on – allowed Zaheer and Ishant to target the stumps. Clarke scored only 8 off 44 balls (a four came from a mis-field) and he fell by edging a delivery from Ishant that seamed away from him.Katich and Hussey didn’t even try to force a field change by improvising to hit on the leg side or by lofting over the infield. They didn’t attempt to alter lengths by stepping out of the crease like Matthew Hayden or Gautam Gambhir might have done. Instead they left deliveries, blocked, and left some more. Their approach was not one of a team that needed to set the pace The modus operandi changed when Harbhajan began bowling but the intent was the same. He went over the wicket to the left-hander and bowled a leg-stump line with a 6-3 leg-side field. The absence of a fielder at point ensured that Harbhajan would not be pitching anywhere close to off stump. Hussey tried to counter by sweeping and once by reverse-sweeping but he failed to raise the run-rate.It was staggering that Australia did not make a concerted effort to thwart India after lunch. Their run-rate during the second session was lower than the first – 49 runs in 29 overs – and they had lost three wickets. Australia had begun the day trailing by 252 runs with eight wickets inhand and a run-rate of 3.85. They added only another 166 in 85.4 overs before being bowled out with an over remaining in the day. India’s tactics were neither attractive nor in the best interests of Test cricket when spectator-numbers are thinning. The bottom line, however, isthe end justified India’s means.

Tania Mallick: Zaka-led IMC was 'not willing to commit' to Pakistan's women's league

The PCB Women’s Wing head said the decision “was quite disappointing” but hopes the league takes off soon with stability returning to the board

Danyal Rasool09-Feb-2024The PCB has pushed back a commitment they made over three years ago to launch a women’s T20 league and shelved women’s exhibition matches on the eve of the start of the ninth season of the PSL.In 2023, three women’s exhibition matches featuring players from countries including South Africa, England and New Zealand were held, but this time around, it’s not on the agenda. Tania Mallick, head of the PCB women’s wing since 2021, attributed this to the uncertainty around the PCB chairman, saying the interim management committee led by Zaka Ashraf until last month did not wish to financially commit to a women’s league.”The impression I got was they did not feel they were in a position to make such big financial decisions,” Mallick told ESPNcricinfo. “What was conveyed to us was the next committee and administration would do this, ‘we don’t want to’. The obstacle is not within our management or the financial officers within the PCB. It was the interim management committee that was not willing to commit. I don’t feel frustrated with my management because they all agree [we need a league]. Even the PSL department, we had planned everything but it was taken off the board at the last minute. This was towards the tail-end of the Zaka regime. It was quite disappointing for all of us and I told the girls that repeatedly.”Related

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There was little to no public communication from the PCB regarding its plans or intentions for women’s cricket for the best part of 2023. Much of the year was a difficult period for Pakistan women’s cricket, though it ended on a note of optimism as the side whitewashed South Africa 3-0 in a home T20I series, before becoming the first Asian side to beat New Zealand in New Zealand, stunning them 2-1 in the T20Is.After that series, Fatima Sana spoke to ESPNcricinfo, and said that the three exhibition matches had “opened up the minds of our girls” and that “all the players want” to have their own league. The PCB has toyed with the idea of various leagues besides the PSL across three different chairs, with the Pakistan Junior League taking place in 2022. Last year, a local T10 league was also mooted, which Mallick said would have potentially included women’s games.But for a board that once spoke about getting Asia’s first women’s T20 league off the ground, things have changed significantly.”Every new administration who comes in also doesn’t necessarily have the same kind of interest in women’s cricket,” Mallick said. “I still feel Pakistan is at the emerging stage of women’s cricket and needs to go a long way. So [the administrative turnover] has a huge impact. We always wonder if we’ll have a women’s league or exhibition matches now, but if we had one chairman these question marks would not have been there. A couple of chairmen announced it’ll definitely happen but because every chairman had such a short span of time, they spent most of their time firefighting and couldn’t have a strategic policy.””There was talk about a T10, and women were a part of that but unfortunately that couldn’t take place and women’s exhibition matches have also been pushed back. But all the chairmen that have come in, it’s not as if they’re unwilling to support us. They’ve imposed no financial cap on us to prevent us from holding camps or sending our Under-19 team to Bangladesh. But the problem is that normally with a chairman we can plan for a three-year period. There was a restriction there because we were only able to plan for a few months here and there.For Mallick, there is a possible reason for optimism, as there are signs of stability returning to the PCB. Mohsin Naqvi was elected as PCB chairman on a three-year term earlier this week, and barring significant unforeseen events, should be in the role for the foreseeable future.The Pakistan women’s team celebrate a historic series victory in New Zealand•Getty Images

“With the new chairman coming in hopefully we can plan for a longer period,” Mallick said. “Higher management have told us repeatedly that it’s not that we are not supporting it, we definitely support it but as soon as we have firmer footing, it will be in place. We are hopeful we don’t have to go back on that one because I felt the exhibition matches had a very good impact in terms of exposure.”Mallick was unwilling to commit to a firm date for a women’s league. While she hopes it will happen “earlier than 2025”, that would mean a league happening independent of the PSL, as well as the PCB carving out a window that does not clash with other stakeholders, a scenario that is optimistic to the point of being unrealistic.But having been in the job for more than two years, Mallick admitted that having had just three exhibition matches to show by way of a league has been “frustrating”. She feels attracting top talent from around the world will not be an issue, pointing to the players that made the trip over for those exhibition matches, and adding Pakistan have received expressions of interest from players around the world.She also warned against the dangers of a league rushed through, though. “We don’t want to compromise on the quality of the league we put up. If you saw the exhibition matches, the broadcast, everything was at par with the men’s league,” she said. “It has to be of that quality, anything below that is not acceptable. The new chairman has only just come in, so you really can’t say how it’ll be taken up in the future with the Champions Trophy taking place in 2025 as well, but we’re very hopeful.”Pakistani women cricketers don’t get called up to many leagues. Fatima Sana was a one-off because she gave such an exceptional performance in New Zealand and she was asked to stay back. They don’t get that exposure, and I think that’s really holding us back. As the landscape in women’s cricket is changing, the style of women’s cricket is changing. Our girls only play against each other, and when they play, they play against international teams.”Playing a league is very liberating because you don’t have the pressure of international matches. When you play in a league, you can bring out your personality and play the way you want to. You play against senior players, you learn their style and learn from those coaches. But our girls don’t get that.”

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