'This is not a cricket pitch, this is dangerous'

Was the pitch put out for the Johannesburg Test dangerous to the players’ well being? The cricket world has its say

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Jan-2018″Two out of 100 [is my rating for the pitch]. It’s a s**t pitch. You can interpret that. They should have called it off when Vijay got hit. This is not a cricket pitch, this is dangerous. Call it off, forget it. You can’t play cricket on that. I have no idea what has gone wrong but I know it’s not a good cricket pitch. The last time I saw something like this, the match was abandoned – in Jamaica 1998, and it didn’t even last this long.”
What the ICC’s regulations say

6.2 Fitness of pitch for play: The umpires shall be the sole judges of the fitness of the pitch for play.

6.4 Changing the pitch: The pitch shall not be changed during the match unless the umpires decide that it is dangerous or unreasonable for play to continue on it and then only with the consent of both captains.

6.4.1 If the on-field umpires decide that it is dangerous or unreasonable for play to continue on the match pitch, they shall stop play and immediately advise the ICC Match Referee.

6.4.2 The on-field umpires and the ICC Match Referee shall then consult with both captains.

6.4.3 If the captains agree to continue, play shall resume.

6.4.4 If the decision is not to resume play, the on-field umpires together with the ICC Match Referee shall consider whether the existing pitch can be repaired and the match resumed from the point it was stopped. In considering whether to authorise such repairs, the ICC Match Referee must consider whether this would place either side at an unfair advantage, given the play that had already taken place on the dangerous pitch.

6.4.5 If the decision is that the existing pitch cannot be repaired, then the match is to be abandoned as a draw.

“The unfortunate thing is that nobody minds movement off the surface, but it’s the uneven bounce that’s the problem and it is quite dangerous from a batting point of view when you have pace attacks bowling around the 140 mark, tall bowlers hitting the deck hard. It is dangerous and it’s not ideal. I have seen pitches like this around the world but, as we keep saying, you want a good contest between bat and ball and this one is not providing that. I’d give it a 3 out of 10.”
“”When you have the physio coming on the field so often to attend to injuries received by batsmen on their hands and chest, we are certainly in the territory of keeping an eye on this pitch and see if it’s dangerous.”
“It’s certainly not a good pitch for Test cricket. It’s the worst Test pitch I’ve seen at the Wanderers. However, I don’t think it’s a pitch worth abandoning the match for. Scoreboard still reads 100 for 3 in the third innings, so there are still runs being scored. Rating: 4.5/10.”
“It’s not the ideal pitch. As a batsman you want the bounce to be consistent. The bounce on this pitch has made it unplayable for batting. [But] I think we should see how it plays for another session [after lunch on day three] before deciding on whether to call it off.
“To play test cricket on this surface is unfair. Saw it in NZ in 2003. Batsman have minimum chance. ICC should look into it.”
“Naughty pitch. Yeah, misbehaving and how. Not good for cricket. Not done, ICC must look into it.”
“Groundsman in SA need to get together and have a bit of a chat. This is a terrible Test wicket. All we want in SA is a little movement and pace and bounce. This is ridiculous!!”
“This pitch at Wanderers is getting dangerous… I am quite happy sitting in my room [rather] than playing on that pile of c**p facing those bowlers! #beentheredonethat #windies”
“It’s quite a spicy wicket. No one can hide from the fact that you can get out every ball. By the same token, it’s challenging as a batsman. Sometimes we get onto wickets that are pretty flat and you can score lots of runs. [Here] it is just quite difficult to bat. Whether its too excessive or not, if you ask a batsman what do you think they will say?”
“Some balls are up and down, so that could be dangerous sometimes for the batsman. But we are not focusing on those things right now. We feel the match is in the balance right now.”

Categorically Ben

It is easy to pigeonhole Stokes as a brash, combative allrounder, but there’s more to him – as his frank autobiography reveals

Alan Gardner29-Jan-2017Ben Stokes is easy to categorise, isn’t he? The combative allrounder who hits the ball with vengeful fury, bowls close to 90mph, throws himself around the field. The fiery redhead who likes a word with the opposition and won’t back down from confrontation. The tattooed bruiser who punches lockers, likes a drink and trades as often in the idiotic as in the inspirational.Stokes made his England debut more than five years ago but is still young enough to be cast as brash and unthinking. He charges into battle, feuds with other players, and picks up suspension points from the ICC.But there are, of course, other sides to this 25-year-old career sportsman. A dedicated father of two, Stokes has been with his girlfriend, Clare, since he was 19 and freely admits to tears at the birth of his son, Layton. He is honest about needing to speak to a psychologist when dealing with anger and frustration, and says he wept in the shower after the poor tour of Sri Lanka that led to him missing out on the 2015 World Cup.These are some of the insights provided in his autobiography, . Like with others before him, the temptation to release a book while his star was in the ascendant overrode concerns that he might not have much to say. That is not so much of an issue for Stokes, though, whose career to date has not been short of incident. For someone who clearly prefers doing to talking, he is also gratifyingly open about his successes and failures – for which his ghostwriter, Richard Gibson, should take plenty of credit.

Like Botham and Flintoff before him, Stokes is a full-throttle competitor with a self-destructive streak

“Where I am concerned, there will be moments of heartache but also moments of great triumph,” he writes early on, having gone straight in with an account of being hit for four consecutive sixes in the World T20 final. The image of Stokes crouched, head in hands, with Joe Root providing an arm on the shoulder after England’s defeat to West Indies is powerful but it does not feel like it will end up defining him, not least because he is intent on throwing himself back into the thick of it at every opportunity. “It might be penthouse one day, shithouse the next, but it will never be for want of trying.”The fire in Stokes has, it seems, also helped forge a tougher, increasingly mature character. When discussing an unfortunate dismissal against Afghanistan in the World T20 group stage, he invokes Mario Balotelli and his “Why Always Me?” T-shirt. But while Balotelli has struggled to fulfil his potential for club or country, Stokes has developed into one of the most influential players in the England dressing room, serving as vice-captain during the recent ODI series in Bangladesh, and an equally passionate performer for the county he grew up with, Durham.Even his outbursts of volatility have become more controlled: breaking a bat is far preferable to breaking a bone, as Stokes infamously did when tangling with a Kensington Oval locker in 2014. He now attempts to deal with the disappointment of getting out by methodically packing his kitbag, after discussions with England’s psychologist, Mark Bawden.Poignant though it may be, the image of a distraught Stokes being comforted after receiving a caning is not likely to be the defining image of him•AFPIt was to Bawden he turned at a pivotal juncture in 2013, when attempting to overcome a slump in form. Issues such as performance anxiety are much better understood nowadays – not least because of personal accounts like that of Jonathan Trott, the man Stokes replaced for his Test debut – and his candour is impressive:

Sharing my innermost thoughts was not a weakness at all, as it turned out. Leaving them to fester was only going to make the situation worse, Mark explained… He told me that I was suffering from Bottle, Bottle, Bang syndrome. In other words, I kept storing up everything in a certain bottle – inside of me, effectively – and I was bubbling it up until that bottle went bang and I exploded with frustration. Instead of letting this happen, I had to find another way of dealing with it.

At the start of that year, Stokes’ stocks had dipped sharply when he was sent home from an England Lions tour of Australia for indulging in one too many late nights – “the worst bollocking actually came from Clare” – and with Andy Flower questioning whether he was serious about adding to the handful of limited-overs caps he had won in 2011. He ended it by becoming one of the few success stories of England’s troubled 2013-14 Ashes tour.HeadlineBut that was not the start of a smooth upward curve: less than 12 months later, under Flower’s successor Peter Moores, he felt he “was being strangled as a player” after being asked to bat at No. 8.The Stokes journey has been more eventful than most, from growing up as a rebellious and adventurous youngster in New Zealand, to forging a path as one of cricket’s most exciting talents with his adopted country. Like Botham and Flintoff before him, Stokes is a full-throttle competitor with a self-destructive streak, but after a turbulent start with England, his on-field exploits are starting to take centre stage, be it the take-it-on-the-chin trauma of Kolkata or his stand-and-destroy innings of 258 in Cape Town a few weeks earlier – the second-fastest double-hundred in Test history.Afterwards, he records in , he sat down and wrote the wrong score (257) on a souvenir stump, in permanent marker. “That’s me, I guess: brilliant one minute, useless the next.” However you want to categorise Ben Stokes, he offers a pretty compelling story.Firestarter: Me, Cricket and the Heat of the Moment
By Ben Stokes
Headline
293 pages, £20

How teams prepare for the IPL auction

Scouting players, researching numbers, and even practicising their buying skills – franchises leave nothing to chance

Arun Venugopal and Gaurav Sundararaman19-Feb-2017Numbers, videos and homework
Preparation for the auction usually begins well before the event. While the entire squad has to be rebuilt during the big auction next year, franchises attempt to piece together missing jigsaws in smaller auctions, like the one on Monday.M Lakshminarayanan, Gujarat Lions’ performance analyst, believes only half the job is done at the auctions when the players are bought. A backroom staff comprising coaches, analysts and scouts has to crunch huge amounts of data and watch hours of player footage before zeroing in on who they want. “You need to have options A, B and C, as sometimes the players you want may be bought by other franchises,” Lakshminarayanan says.”If you do proper research and analysis, you end up filling 70-75% of the team. If you are looking for someone who will tick nine of the ten boxes but aren’t able to get him, you must be prepared to pick someone who ticks seven. His industrial average [a combination of different parameters, like his average, strike rate, ability to handle pressure and boundary frequency] may only be 70, but you can get more out of him, extract 75 out of him. The 5% is a big achievement for the team.”Research on player statistics goes well beyond averages and strike rates. Lakshminarayanan, who worked with Chennai Super Kings from 2008 to 2015, says he places a lot of emphasis on parameters like boundary frequency, dot-ball percentage and pressure index”At CSK, we picked Samuel Badree when most teams didn’t pick overseas spinners. The reason was, he had an economy rate of around 6.45. From a pressure-index view, he was very good, as the pressure he created cushioned the bowler at the other end. In the IPL, there are generally three-four main bowlers, while the other two are targeted. So how a bowler helps his partner by building pressure at one end is something we look at before buying him.”In the case of batsmen, he says, even strike rates could at times be misleading, as often two good knocks against a weak side could inflate a player’s figures. “When you need to gauge someone’s boundary-hitting ability – an important attribute, especially when you need quick runs – you need to look at his boundary-frequency data from his previous matches. If a player’s boundary frequency is two boundaries every five deliveries, he is very good. Only when you have two boundaries in an over you can reach an average total of 160, which has increasingly become easy to chase.”Also, you need to look at the batsman’s dot-ball percentage and how he does between overs seven and 15, during what we call the ‘cooling period’.”If I am looking at how someone fares in the slog, I will look at the best death bowlers in Ram Slam or BBL in different categories – right-arm and left-arm fast bowlers, offspinners and legspinners – and see how the batsman has done against those bowlers.”

“If buying a player is only going to help win the IPL, it is discussed, debated, the roles of individuals assigned and the planning done much ahead [of the auction]”Sundar Raman, former IPL chief operating officer

Lakshminarayanan points to Super Kings’ acquisition of Ashish Nehra for Rs 2 crore (about US$300,000) in 2014 as an example of a player picked to execute a certain job. While he finished with eight wickets that year, he picked up 22 the following year at an economy rate of 7.24. “We knew he was a great choice as a death bowler. The data gave us a pretty good picture, and then we had videos. There were quite a few things going for him – left-arm bowler, wicket-taking bowler. But the main thing was his skills at the death.”Mohit Sharma is another example of successful research. He had done well in the Ranji Trophy, but back then I am not sure how many people tracked Haryana’s progress. We had also picked Ankit Rajpoot in 2013. Maybe to others, these might not have seemed great picks at that time, but it was a success story for us.”Monty Desai, a former Rajasthan Royals staffer who was Gujarat Lions performance coach last year, says it is important to validate statistics of players with what they see on the ground. “Just numbers aren’t good enough. We need plenty of match-pressure footage to look at how these players respond to those mini events,” he says. “Do they show fearless skills? Are they executing their skills when needed the most: after getting hit for six, did a bowler respond by executing the best possible yorker to create pressure back on the batsman?”Talent hunt
Over the years, scouting in the IPL has become an increasingly specialised exercise, as franchises look to snap up and nurture lesser-known domestic talent, or even rough diamonds. During the domestic season in India, you will invariably see John Wright or TA Sekhar at some ground scouting for Mumbai Indians and Delhi Daredevils respectively. Teams like Mumbai Indians, in fact, are known to send their scouts out to foreign leagues, like the CPL or the BBL.Kiran More, the former India wicketkeeper and chairman of selectors, has scouted talent for a few years now for Mumbai Indians. He feels it is important to keep track of emerging talent throughout the year. “Any cricket you watch, Under-19 and U-16 also, you just keep your eye on a quality player and how he is going.”Desai says there were a lot of development camps done at Rajasthan Royals, to which they invited potential future buys. “This year, the Tamil Nadu Premier League [where Desai mentored inaugural champions Tuti Patriots] gave me a good close look at the skill sets available in the south.”Teams have to have a list of back-up options for their first picks in case those get snapped up by other franchises•Getty ImagesDelhi Daredevils team analyst Panish Shetty, who has worked with Rajasthan Royals in the past, says scouts look at games in every format to spot talent. “It isn’t only the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament that people see, but also the Ranji Trophy,” he says. “We have seen over the past few years that a batsman who has a strong technique can survive in any form. Also, the local tournaments, like the DY Patil T20 tournament, are looked at.”Desai says the Ranji Trophy 2016-17 helped him make a decision on retaining former India U-19 star Ishan Kishan, who recently smashed a 36-ball 67 for East Zone against Central Zone in the Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament. “I am giving you an example of two young guns – Rishabh Pant and Ishan Kishan – hitting plenty of sixes in the Ranji Trophy. It stood out for me this year and helped me to give my view on helping retaining Ishan Kishan, who we are backing as a potential game-changer.”Mock auctions
Dummy auctions are a minor yet important exercise in the lead-up to the auctions. Roughly speaking, they are a gathering of the team’s officials, the key members of the coaching staff, and sometimes even the captain to replicate the rapid-fire nature of the real auctions. “It is certainly necessary to get a hang of the auction dynamics,” a franchise official says. “A few years ago our coach, who was a foreigner and new to the IPL, suddenly panicked because he had no clue as to how to approach an auction.”Lakshminarayanan says these drills ensure you aren’t surprised by anything that comes up at the auction; he looks at it as a question of building muscle memory. “It’s just something you do to ensure you don’t panic and get into the zone.”Such exercises also help teams prepare for last-minute changes, like the late withdrawal of Mitchell Starc this year.Captains, coaches and team composition
A couple of stories that serve to illustrate the power vested in coaches and captains in some IPL franchises. One franchise had the opportunity of snapping up a leading West Indies allrounder for a throwaway price at an auction, but had to pass up the opportunity as a member of its coaching staff didn’t share a good relationship with the player, who was eventually bought by Kolkata Knight Riders.

“‘It isn’t only the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament that people see, but also the Ranji Trophy. We have seen over the past few years that a batsman who has a strong technique can survive in any form”Delhi Daredevils team analyst Panish Shetty

Another story goes that a south Indian franchise, egged on by its star captain and coach, was keen on going for broke for a leading Sri Lanka player. However, the player’s middling T20 record, accentuated by his inability to hit sixes made the franchise’s team of analysts feel he was not a good pick. According to one of the analysts, it took them a lot of convincing to get the team owner to plump for an uncapped overseas allrounder instead. To the analyst’s relief, the second choice ended up playing a pivotal role in the team’s run to the final.Former IPL chief operating officer Sundar Raman, who currently works with Mumbai Indians’ owners the Reliance Group, thinks teams mirror the styles of the captains and coaches. “Most of the teams have had stable captains for a very long time. Stable captains have obviously built in a certain amount of discipline in the process. They may have a wish list of players.”Non-cricketing (f)actors
Ahead of the auction in 2015, Delhi Daredevils were reportedly under pressure from their sponsors to have a marquee Indian player as captain. It was an open secret that they would go all out for Yuvraj Singh, and they bought him for a record Rs 16 crore, staving off Royal Challengers Bangalore, who had paid Rs 14 crore for Yuvraj the previous year, in a hectic bidding war.So the question remains: how much do business considerations or the owners’ will influence auction decisions? A franchise official complained about the interference of the team’s executive arm. “Sometimes these people tell the coaches which XI to pick,” he says.K Shanmugam, the CEO of Sunrisers Hyderabad, says while certain decisions pertaining to the auctions are made collectively, the team’s coach, Tom Moody, and mentors, VVS Laxman and Muttiah Muralitharan, handle the cricket side of things. “This year we don’t need to really break our heads to find out because we already have a set team in place. We probably might have just few places to be filled in. May be next year we have to really work on the strategies and how to go about,” he says.”We do definitely have meetings on uncapped players. Of course, we have mentors like Murali and Laxman who handle things day to day. They know who would be right, and coach Tom is there. Certain decisions are jointly taken with the management. Laxman, I am sure, is in touch with most of the cricketers and he follows cricket more than any of us do. Their inputs will be correct. In case we have to discuss something that is critical, or something where we feel we will have to take a joint call, then we sit and discuss.”Desai says, “At RR, over a period of time, we [coaching staff] were able to win certain battles. But look, everyone needs to respect difference of opinion,” he says. “We try to challenge a few decisions from our research and experience.”At CSK, we picked Samuel Badree when most teams didn’t pick overseas spinners. From a pressure-index view, he was very good as the pressure he created cushioned the bowler at the other end”•BCCI”Also with trial and error, the fact is, we have also got a few decisions wrong, which I try to own up for. Shivil Kaushik last year was a classic case of risk taken for base price on my request, and I would like to believe his performances, especially in the semi-final against Hyderabad, convinced owners that such calls are also good business calls.”Raman feels owners don’t make sentimental decisions. “I don’t think any owner is interested in acquiring a player. Every owner is interested in winning the IPL,” he says. “If buying a player is only going to help win the IPL, then there is a reason, but these are not discussions that are taken on the fly inside the auction. It is discussed, debated, the roles of individual assigned and the planning done much ahead before all this is entered into the auction room.”Shanmugam says there is a ballpark figure given to the coaching staff about how far they can go for each player. “We know what is required for the team and it is not about paying so much for the player. At the end of the day it should not become a situation where the player also feels that he is overpaid and he gets tense that he has to perform,” he says.Running the show
As COO of the IPL from its inception to 2015, Raman believes a structure has been put in place to make sure the auction follows a smooth pattern. “I think the interesting thing is we set the [system of] marquee [players], and then we have a flow which is starting with the batsman, wicketkeeper, allrounder, fast bowler, spin bowler etc,” he says. “The sequence is maintained, which allows you to sort of prepare yourself from a team-composition standpoint also while you are in the auction. When the player-sets are being made, you make them based on multiple criteria: Test cap, ODI cap, T20 caps, current national players, captain of a national team, captain of a state team, number of franchises who have requested for them.”He says the entire process was simulated ahead of the day of the event. “We used to simulate how the auction will flow, how long it will last, what is the total purse that will be spent, how many players will be bought, the average player price, and who will be outlier players,” he says.”We know that this phase will be the slowish phase because we also need to time-manage the auction as it is a live broadcast. In the sequence of auction, for instance, between the first round of capped players and the first round of uncapped players, we believe there will be a bit of lull. There will be a lot of ‘unsold’ because people are giving 1:20 rather than 1:1 in terms of ratio of need to supply.While he believes the processes put in place are stable, he admits that there is scope to enhance operational efficiency. “The timing of getting the uncapped players into the system [involves] actual contact. Maybe there are better ways to do it,” he says. “Maybe you can say that anybody who has played Ranji Trophy for the state in this current reason automatically gets registered. You could circumvent the process of paperwork and documentation by sending them an e-link. Who knows one day in the future there may be an e-auction?”

'Yet again shows a 10-team World Cup is madness'

Here’s how Twitter reacted to Scotland’s astonishing upset of England in the one-off ODI at Edinburgh

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Jun-2018

Hardened by tough choices, Anshuman Rath ready for captaincy challenge

UK visa policy and the ECB’s restrictions on Associate players forced him to give up an economics degree and forego a place in Middlesex’s first XI, but Anshuman Rath, Hong Kong captain at just 20, has still done pretty well for himself

Shashank Kishore in Dubai16-Sep-2018Last month, during a preparatory tour in Malaysia ahead of the Asia Cup Qualifiers, Anshuman Rath heard a knock on his door late at night. It was Babar Hayat, Hong Kong’s batting lynchpin, who said he wanted to give up captaincy. The team needed a new leader, and Hayat wanted to convey the news to his vice-captain.Rath, all of 20, had been long earmarked for a leadership role, and had taken over the vice-captaincy from Aizaz Khan in September 2017. He accepted the challenge immediately, and left his first imprint as captain when he led Hong Kong to a thrilling win over UAE in the final of the Asia Cup Qualifiers to seal a place in the tournament proper.The spontaneity of the decision surprised many in Hong Kong, but for Rath it was a challenge he simply couldn’t let go of, especially since he had shelved an economics degree in the UK after being told he had to choose between studies and cricket because of visa restrictions.”Whenever I make a decision, I weigh the negatives with the positives,” Rath tells ESPNcricinfo. “This [putting his degree on hold] was a big one, as big as moving to England and doing boarding school at 14. Continuing university there when my future was unclear would’ve been a wrong step. I wouldn’t have been able to manage time. I’d have had to pay for the full year at college, would I have been able to attend? I didn’t think so.”Rath moved to the UK for boarding school – the famous Harrow School – as a 14-year-old in 2011 and emerged as one of the most promising pathway cricketers alongside future England players Sam Curran and Ollie Pope. He was a regular in Middlesex’s second XI and consistently made runs for four seasons, doing so well that Angus Fraser, the director of cricket at the county, spoke to to the ECB last year and presented a case for Rath to be considered for the first XI. However, the ECB’s restrictions on players from Associate countries meant the plan didn’t materialise.”I was at university and I’d just finished a second-team game for Middlesex. I’d just hit 140 not out against Kent, and I got called in to the office next day at Lord’s,” Rath remembers. “Throughout the entire winter, I had discussions with Angus Fraser about contracts. They felt I was first XI material and talks were going forward in the summer of 2017. Then I had a busy winter with Hong Kong. While he said there were a few visa discrepancies, they were confident of sorting it out.”Then I get a call the day after the Kent game. I go into the office and I sit down, I’m fairly excited because in my mind I’m thinking ‘This is where I put pen and paper down and everything’s going to be official. I love playing for Middlesex and everything’s going to be good.’ But Gus (Fraser) sat me down and said they can’t sign me for visa reasons. I can’t remember what he said after that, because everything was a blur.”I went back to university and sat still for two hours thinking if it really happened. Then I played club cricket the next day, but again I got a call from Angus Fraser telling me I can’t play club cricket too. It was a tough pill to swallow, but I can’t thank Middlesex enough for the effort they put in to try and fix it. They backed me 100% through all this. They still want to sign me, but unfortunately the way Brexit and the immigration office operate, I don’t think it is likely to happen, but you never know. Maybe the ECB will relax their rules, but for now, I’m just holding my breath.”Rath thought about it for a while, met his professors to tell them he was putting his degree on hold, and returned to England with a sportsperson’s visa to play for the Brondesbury Cricket Club, a deal facilitated by Fraser who wasn’t going to give up. “I spoke to Angus over the winter, and he wanted to me to come over and play club cricket for one of the Middlesex premier league clubs, which meant I had to change my visa status,” Rath says. “Sportsman visa doesn’t entitle me to play county cricket because of the Associate tag, but it enables me to play club cricket, so I gave up my rights as a student.”Giving up those rights wasn’t easy. Rath had to work hard to convince his parents. “There were some heated discussions, I’m not going to lie,” he says. “They acknowledge that when I was younger, academics and cricket was always together. When I started to go on more tours with Hong Kong, and started doing well, academics had to take a back seat.”They realised it wasn’t practical to miss so much university by going on these tours and just write exams, it’s near to impossible. Their mentality of being ‘typical Indian parents’, they didn’t see a reason at first, but came around to it once they saw the real picture. We concluded at the end of the day that if my future is not in the UK, my academics will have to go where my cricket goes. I’ve put a little bookmark on my academics for now, and see where cricket takes me over the next few years and see where I go.”Rath’s decision to concentrate on cricket seemed vindicated when he impressed for Galaxy Gladiators Lantau during the Hong Kong T20 Blitz earlier this year. It was there that he caught the eye of his team-mate Kumar Sangakkara. An endorsement from a legend drove him to become even better. While he wasn’t playing club cricket in the UK, he was training in Hong Kong with the senior team and head coach Simon Cook. In the little window he had to work on his game while matches weren’t on, he went to India to train at the Dav Whatmore Academy in Chennai.It’s these sacrifices Rath hopes will eventually pay off, even though he’s still hopeful of finishing his degree. “I hope that if circumstances have put a hindrance on my degree because of uncertainty where I’m going to end up, once I’m more stable, I’ll get back to university,” he says. “I’ve got a five-year window where I can carry my university credits. Unfortunately the way the immigration system works, I can’t play cricket in the UK and study at the same time. I can’t do both.”For now, his immediate goal is to compete and live the dream at the Asia Cup. As a child, he was fascinated watching India-Pakistan matches in Hong Kong, where his father had to pay big money to subscribe to the cricket channel. Now he has an opportunity to play against the same teams, not just as an international cricketer, but also as captain of his team. And when he steps onto the field to play India, his community in Bhubaneswar’s Gautam Nagar will root for their boy in red.

Liverpool confident of winning race for "superb" £80m ace ahead of Man Utd

Liverpool are set for an exciting summer after they become Premier League champions and Arne Slot’s men are now confident they can beat Manchester United to the signing of an exciting star, per reports.

Liverpool's summer transfer plans accelerate

The Reds are nearing a second league title of the modern era and could even put the seal on a triumph of enormous significance this weekend, should a victory over Leicester City be accompanied by Arsenal losing out at Ipswich Town.

Arne Slot has become a hero at Anfield, and Liverpool supporters will be desperate for the Dutchman to earn backing in the summer transfer window, which may see significant changes to his squad as they scale up for next season.

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot

Eyeing further goals from the engine room, the Reds have positioned themselves to sign Athletic Club’s Oihan Sancet amid his £68 million release clause at San Mames.

Similarly, Ajax defender Jorrel Hato has been identified as a Liverpool target. The Netherlands international has been tracked by Arsenal for a number of years, and news that they have rival interest for his signature hasn’t gone down well in North London.

At this point, the summer transfer window is beginning to take shape, and so many names are on the horizon as clubs begin to set out their stall.

Liverpool eye back-up goalkeeper who's statistically similar to Andre Onana

Liverpool already have one new keeper arriving this summer, but they have their eye on another arrival.

ByBrett Worthington Apr 18, 2025

Aiming to defend their status as impending Premier League champions, Liverpool will likely face fierce competition from divisional competitors to land players with an X factor that could threaten their title charge next term.

Nevertheless, Slot’s men look to have counteracted this suggestion and retain confidence they can beat some of their arch rivals to sign a talented striker, per recent developments.

Liverpool confident they can beat rivals to Hugo Ekitike signature

According to Football Insider, Liverpool are confident they can win the race to sign Hugo Ekitike from Eintracht Frankfurt despite Manchester United and Newcastle United being firmly in the mix to sign the France Under-21 international.

The outlet claim the Reds will need to stump up a fee of £80 million to land his services. Previously, talks have been held between Slot’s men and Ekitike’s representatives over a potential move.

Hugo Ekitike’s key statistics in 2024/25 for Eintracht Frankfurt – Bundesliga

Goals

14

Assists

5

Shots on target

40

Chances created

39

Completed dribbles

46

Aerial duels won

37

Labelled “superb” by scout Jacek Kulig, the 22-year-old has registered 21 goals and nine assists in 43 appearances this campaign across all competitions, catching the attention of elite clubs from the continent.

Evaluating his situation, Eintracht Frankfurt’s elimination from the Europa League at the hands of Tottenham Hotspur may hasten his potential exit, albeit they are still in contention for Champions League qualification via the Bundesliga.

Now, the onus is on Liverpool to put forward a proposal that he cannot refuse as they search for a number nine to spearhead their attack for years to come.

Arteta says Arsenal star is now set for 'earlier than expected' return from injury

da dobrowin: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has given an encouraging injury update prior to the Gunners’ mouth-watering Champions League tie against Bayern Munich.

Arsenal prepare for Bayern Munich amid injury doubts

da apostaganha: Arteta’s side welcome Bayern to the Emirates Stadium on Wednesday in what promises to be a defining European encounter, with the Premier League title favourites riding high following their dominant 4-1 North London derby victory over Tottenham last weekend.

Arsenal delivered a masterclass against their bitter rivals, showcasing the attacking fluidity and defensive solidity that has characterised their strongest displays this season.

That emphatic win not only reinforced Arsenal’s credentials as top title contenders domestically, but also provided the perfect psychological boost ahead of this crucial European test.

Arsenal’s unbeaten run in all competitions since defeat to Liverpool

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal’s preparation has been complicated by several injury concerns, with captain Martin Odegaard still touch and go after failing to make the matchday squad for Spurs.

Arsenal star makes transfer admission and says club "want" to sign him

He’s responded to the speculation around his future.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 14, 2025

Gabriel Martinelli and Noni Madueke returned to the side on Sunday following their respective injuries with both men ready to play a part tonight, as did Riccardo Calafiori, but Odegaard, Viktor Gyokeres, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Magalhaes and Gabriel Jesus were all nowhere to be seen.

Arteta may well be forced to play Mikel Merino as a makeshift number nine once again, a challenge the Spaniard has relished throughout 2025, with this game still coming too soon for Jesus.

That being said, Arteta has some good news about the Brazil international.

Gabriel Jesus in line for 'earlier than expected' Arsenal injury return

According to Arsenal’s manager, speaking in his pre-Bayern press conference, the 28-year-old’s recovery is actually further along than expected, and he’s about to be knocking on the door.

Jesus hasn’t played a single minute since rupturing his ACL during Arsenal’s FA Cup defeat to Man United in January, so it is approaching a year since he was last able to take part.

The former Man City star is on record stating this is the worst injury he’s ever had, and Jesus was repeatedly linked with a winter window exit following the arrival of Gyokeres in the summer.

Jesus, though, has poured cold water over the possibility of a transfer multiple times recently, even though he confirmed his intention to one day return to Palmeiras.

Arteta, meanwhile, has also said that he’s looking forward to welcoming Arsenal’s ‘unpredictable’ weapon back into the fold.

Klaasen misses Afghanistan game as precaution over left elbow injury

Tristan Stubbs was also not included in the playing XI in South Africa’s tournament opener

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Feb-2025There was no Heinrich Klaasen or Tristan Stubbs in South Africa’s team sheet for the Champions Trophy game against Afghanistan in Karachi on Friday afternoon, and CSA confirmed that Klaasen had been ruled out “as a precautionary measure due to a left elbow soft tissue injury”. Stubbs might not have been a contender for the first-choice XI anyway.South Africa, who won the toss and asked Afghanistan to field first, still had a formidable-looking batting line-up, with Ryan Rickelton and Tony de Zorzi up top, and Temba Bavuma, Rassie van der Dussen, Aiden Markram and David Miller in the middle, and the allrounders Wiaan Mulder and Marco Jansen at seven and eight.But Klaasen is one of their big players, and the form player in ODIs. In the four ODIs he had played in the past few months, all against Pakistan – at home late last year and then the one in the tri-series preceding the Champions Trophy – his scores were 86 in 97 balls, 97 in 74 balls, 81 in 43 balls and, in the latest game, 87 in 56 balls.Overall, he averages 44.12 from 54 ODI innings – in which he has scored 2074 runs – and strikes at 117.44. Crucially, keeping the venues of the Champions Trophy in mind, Klaasen has a strike rate of 125.31 against spinners in ODIs since the start of 2020, all while averaging 57 runs-per-dismissal against that kind of bowling.Among 97 batters to have faced 500-plus balls of spin in this period, Klaasen’s strike rate is the highest and comfortably better than the next best – Rohit Sharma’s 111.59. In this game, against Afghanistan, South Africa will likely face at least 20 overs of spin, with Rashid Khan and Noor Ahmad among the frontline bowlers, and Mohammad Nabi in the mix too.South Africa’s next Champions Trophy game is against Australia on February 25 in Rawalpindi.

Arsenal star was playing like Saka, now he’s being treated like Smith Rowe

While he has made some mistakes, Mikel Arteta has got an awful lot right during his time in the Arsenal dugout.

The Spaniard has overseen a complete overhaul of the squad, instilled a new philosophy, and turned them from a fallen giant into serial challengers for both the Premier League and the Champions League.

However, there were plenty of moments early on in his managerial career when it felt like he was hanging onto the job by his fingertips, including a period in which Bukayo Saka and Emile Smith Rowe practically saved him.

Since then, the former has established himself as the club’s talisman, while the latter has fallen away and been sold to Fulham. Interestingly, there is a player in Arteta’s current squad who once felt like the next Saka but could now be closer to becoming the next Smith Rowe.

How Smith Rowe and Saka save Arteta

Even though the club were coming off their 14th FA Cup triumph, the start of the 20/21 season was nothing short of disastrous for Arsenal.

The North Londoners actually won their two opening games, against Fulham and West Ham United and even picked up a third win of the campaign in their fourth match.

However, the losses started coming thick and fast, and from the 8th of November to Boxing Day, the team didn’t win a single league game.

So, when Chelsea rocked up at the Emirates on Boxing Day, Arteta decided to roll the dice and start Smith Rowe in the ten, a decision that instantly paid off as the Gunners came out 3-1 winners and the youngster provided the assist for Saka’s goal.

From that point, results started to improve, and the two Hale Enders were crucial to that, with the midfielder racking up a tally of four goals and seven assists and the winger doing even better with seven goals and seven assists.

The duo continued to impress the following season, with Smith Rowe producing 13 goal involvements and the mercurial number seven producing 19.

However, a combination of injuries and the squad being strengthened around him saw the Croydon-born gem slowly lose his place in the side over the next two seasons.

Finally, after making just 14 appearances in the 22/23 season and then 19 the year after that, the Hale Ender was sold to Fulham for around £34m, while Saka went on to become arguably the team’s best player.

Interestingly, or perhaps unfortunately, there is currently a potential star in the making in Arteta’s squad today who at one point looked destined to follow in Saka’s footsteps, but might now be more likely to become the next Smith Rowe.

The Arsenal gem who could become the next Smith Rowe

It would be fair to say that, as seasons go, last year wasn’t a particularly enjoyable one for Arsenal fans.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The club looked miles off in the title race and were beset with injuries to key players, only this time they didn’t have the squad depth they do today.

However, there were at least a few bright spots from the campaign, notably the emergence of Ethan Nwaneri.

The youngster had long been a prospect fans were excited about; he became the youngest player in the Premier League, after all.

Yet, it was the injuries to Martin Odegaard and specifically Saka that meant he ended up getting far more first-team minutes than supporters were expecting, and to say he made the most of the opportunity would be an understatement.

Nwaneri in 24/25

Appearances

37

Minutes

1378′

Goals

9

Assists

2

Goal Involvements per Match

0.29

Minutes per Goal Involvement

125.27′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

For example, the often “unplayable” dynamo, as dubbed by Jack Wilshere, scored nine goals and provided two assists in 37 appearances, totalling 1378 minutes.

In other words, the Hale End phenom averaged a goal involvement every 3.36 games, or more crucially, one every 125.27 minutes, which helps to justify Joe Cole’s claim that “he’s the most exciting footballer in England and maybe Europe.”

It was these numbers, plus the moments of brilliance on the ball and his time out wide, that led many to see him as someone who could and probably would follow in the steps of Saka and become a key part of the squad in the coming years.

However, fast-forward to today, and it would be fair to describe his situation as more akin to Smith Rowe’s in his final seasons at the club.

For example, as things stand, the teenager has made just ten appearances for the first team, totalling 427 minutes.

Moreover, he’s started just three games all season, two of which came in the League Cup and another in the club’s Champions League clash with Slavia Prague.

Worryingly, the Enfield-born gem has also only scored one goal and, like the Croydon-born star before him, has seen fresh competition arrive in the shape of Eberechi Eze and Noni Madueke.

Nwaneri in 25/26

Appearances

10

Minutes

427′

Goals

1

Assists

0

Goal Involvements per Match

0.1

Minutes per Goal Involvement

427′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

However, it is still early in the season, and while it’s clear that the manager isn’t as keen to pick the Hale Ender as he was last year, there is still plenty of time for things to change.

Therefore, so long as Nwaneri does get more game time across the rest of the campaign, he could still follow in Saka’s footsteps, but if he doesn’t, he could be another Smith Rowe.

Their new Ozil: Arsenal ramp up move to sign £88m "generational talent"

The incredible talent could be a real game-changer for Arsenal and become Arteta’s own Mesut Ozil.

2

By
Jack Salveson Holmes

3 days ago

موعد مباراة الزمالك القادمة بعد الفوز على زيسكو يونايتد في الكونفدرالية

انتهت مباارة الزمالك وزيسكو يونايتد، بنتيجة 1-0 لصالح الفريق الأبيض، في اللقاء الذي جمع بينهما مساء اليوم ضمن مواجهات بطولة كأس الكونفدرالية.

وأقيمت المباراة بين الزمالك وزيسكو يونايتد على أرضية استاد القاهرة، في إطار لقاءات الجولة الأولى من مرحلة المجموعات لـ الكونفدرالية.

ويتواجد الزمالك على رأس المجموعة الرابعة ببطولة كأس الكونفدرالية، والتي تضم معه أندية المصري وكايزر تشيفز الجنوب إفريقي وزيسكو يونايتد الزامبي.

طالع | ترتيب مجموعة الزمالك في الكونفدرالية بعد فوز المصري على كايزر تشيفز

ويواصل الزمالك خوض مبارياته في مرحلة المجموعات أمام كايزر تشيفز الجنوب إفريقي، ضمن مواجهات الجولة الثانية من مرحلة المجموعات لـ الكونفدرالية. موعد مباراة الزمالك القادمة بعد الفوز أمام زيسكو يونايتد في الكونفدرالية

وتقام مباراة الزمالك أمام كايزر تشيفز الجنوب إفريقي، يوم السبت 29 نوفمبر الجاري، في تمام الساعة 3 عصرًا بتوقيت القاهرة.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus