Fortaleza divulga Top 10 de defesas na temporada 2022

MatériaMais Notícias

da fezbet: Através das redes sociais, o Fortaleza divulgou um compilado onde consta o Top 10 de defesas mais bonitas feitas pelos goleiros do Leão do Pici na temporada recém-finalizada.

Além da presenças de intervenções importantes feitas tanto por Fernando Miguel como também por Marcelo Boeck (não renovou o vínculo que se encerra em dezembro deste ano) e Max Walef, jogador que se transferiu em julho deste ano para o Dnipro-1, da Ucrânia, a coletânea ainda tem uma curiosa “surpresa” na lista.

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Isso porque o zagueiro Marcelo Benevenuto também aparece na relação como uma “defesa bônus” apresentada pelo Tricolor. Todavia, o defensor sequer precisou usar as mãos para aparecer no conteúdo, pois se trata do corte providencial de cabeça, em cima da linha, na partida contra o Colo-Colo-CHI, pela fase de grupos da Libertadores deste ano.

Buscando a interatividade com seus seguidores, o Fortaleza ainda questionou em sua publicação se os torcedores escolheriam outras intervenções para constarem nesse ranking.

CONFIRA!

Bas de Leede leads the line as Durham close in on crushing win

Dutchman stars with bat and ball to fire promotion surge as Sussex stumble

ECB Reporters Network05-Sep-2023Durham are closing in on victory in their LV= Insurance County Championship Division Two clash against Sussex following another dominant performance on day three at Seat Unique Riverside.Bas de Leede produced an excellent all-round display as he notched his maiden first-class century before he claimed three wickets with the ball. Graham Clark posted his highest first-class score of 128 as Durham posted 505 for nine declared, their highest Championship total against Sussex.Matthew Potts made immediate inroads into the visitors’ line-up before Matt Parkinson grabbed the vital wicket of Cheteshwar Pujara, opening up the lower order. De Leede removed Oli Carter for a valiant 80 before adding two further strikes to put Durham on the brink. But, Sussex led by Fynn Hudson-Prentice battled on to take the game into the final day with a slender lead of 24.Already in a commanding 158-run lead at the start of the day, Durham pressed home their advantage through De Leede, who surged towards his maiden first-class century. As Clark did in the previous evening, De Leede cruised through the nineties with back-to-back boundaries against Jayev Unadkat to move into position. After a slight pause on 99, De Leede found the gap through gully to the fence to reach the milestone for the first time from 137 balls.The Dutchman fell to Henry Crocombe from the next delivery, ending his partnership with Clark for a brilliant 207 that manoeuvred Durham from a strong position to a dominant one. Crocombe did end the innings on a high note with a further three wickets, including Clark for a career-best 128 after he slammed a drive straight to cover. Scott Borthwick called in the final pair with a commanding 239-run lead to give his bowlers a 20-minute spell before lunch.Tom Clark survived a drop at first slip, but Potts ensured it was not a costly mistake by pinning the left-hander lbw. The England seamer then produced a beauty to remove Tom Haines’ off-stump, leaving the visitors 24 for two. Pujara’s arrival at the crease was a pivotal moment in the game, and after failing in the first innings, the India international was intent on defying the hosts’ victory push.However, it did not stop the fall of wickets at the other end. Tom Alsop fell to a sharp piece of keeping from Ollie Robinson, while Borthwick claimed a good catch at second slip to remove James Coles, presenting Potts with his third wicket.Pujara needed help to stem the tide, and Carter offered the foil he required to blunt Durham’s surge through the line-up. Together the two batters held firm throughout the afternoon session through tough spells from Potts and Parkinson.Pujara worked his way to a patient half-century from 95 balls, while Carter grinded his way to his fifty alongside his skipper for the seventh time of the campaign. But, Pujara’s resistance was ended by a brilliant delivery from Parkinson, who dismissed the India batter for the second time in the game, breaking a partnership of 83 for the sixth wicket.De Leede then made a decisive impact with the ball following his excellence with the bat earlier in the day. He yorked Carter but was cruelly denied when the ball struck the stumps and failed to dislodge the bails.But, he preserved and ended Carter’s innings for 80, pinning the wicketkeeper lbw before removing Jack Carson and Aristides Karvelas to edge Durham closer to victory. Hudson-Prentice held up the home side even with the extended half-hour with an unbeaten half-century, guiding Sussex into a narrow lead.

Durham force Yorkshire to play another day in pursuit of long-awaited victory

Home side begin final day needing 33 runs with two wickets remaining

David Hopps13-May-2023Durham 227 and 213 for 8 (Jones 56, Lees 38, Fisher 4-56, Thompson 3-40) require 33 runs to beat Yorkshire 254 and 218 (Raine 4-36, Potts 4-61)Yorkshire have not won a Championship match for 17 matches. The 18th is in abeyance after they claimed the extra half-hour, but failed to force victory against the leaders Durham at Chester-le-Street. Durham begin the final day needing 33 runs with two wickets remaining. A riveting match remains in the balance.This sounds appallingly like hindsight, but Yorkshire would have been better leaving the last two wickets until the morning when the weather is overcast and the ball might swing. Their impatience to finish the job was understandable, but their seam attack (or at least those seamers the skipper Shan Masood entirely trusted) was weary, the sun was shining (no, really, it was) and their impetus was already on the wane.Durham added another 18 in nine overs as Ben Raine and Matthew Potts resisted gamely. Durham need a win to stay top of Division Two and their supporters talk proudly of a side in good shape; Yorkshire need a win to help them block out the perpetual grumbling from the outer and convince themselves that promotion is a realisable objective. Both sides have been a credit to Division Two.To add to the uncertainty, Brydon Carse will walk out at No.11, if needed, after having scans on a “trunk injury” that restricted him to only five overs in Yorkshire’s second innings. The results of those are not yet known. Carse, fully fit, would be a danger. Carse, severely restricted, might be impotent. Nobody really knows.Matthew Fisher, who holds four wickets overnight, said: “We chucked everything at them, we just needed one to roll. As much as it’s stressful and you’re knackered, we know that we need to go again in the morning. I didn’t really want the extra half hour because it would have been nice to get off and freshen up.”Durham’s target was 246, a tall order that had sizeable chips removed from it during a new-ball assault by Alex Lees who made 38 from 37 balls, driving in carefree fashion as Fisher and Jordan Thompson began timidly and inaccurately as if a long run without success had crept into their consciousness. A failed to attempt to change the ball after 3.5 overs summed up their state of mind as there was little swing to be had.Masood dealt with the situation shrewdly, withdrawing Fisher from the attack after two overs, giving him time to reflect and reintroducing him at the Lumley Castle End. If the ball was not swinging, there was soon further confirmation that it would occasionally keep low as Fisher seamed one through Lees’ gaping gap.Lees dealt with, Durham abruptly slowed as Michael Jones took the long view. Scott Borthwick clipped Thompson to short midwicket, but Jones gradually expanded his range, Mickey Edwards looked too leaky for such a tight match on a surface where accuracy was essential and, at 126 for 2, Durham were edging the match as a series of borderline lbw shouts did not fall Yorkshire’s way.Then came a random moment to shift the emphasis. Bess’ career has stalled at Yorkshire, not helped by the county’s appetite for internecine strife. Runs have eluded him and his bowling average is in the mid-40s. Unsurprisingly, he had struggled to hide his disfavour as several lbw decisions did not fall his way. Then he was clunked on the knee when Graham Clark pulled Matthew Revis fiercely into the ground and limped off with four overs to his name, returning later to sound effect.Masood was forced to return to Hill, who was carrying an onerous responsibility on his slender frame. It immediately paid dividends as David Bedingham was held by Jonny Bairstow, an excellent one-handed scoop as the ball died in front of him.Fisher’s return came with a sense that the game could be turned. So it was as he took wickets in three successive overs: Ollie Robinson’s flashing drive flying to first slip, Jones falling lbw by virtue of the totting-up procedure, and Bas de Leede joining the growing list of bowlers to chop on.If there was ever a time for Jordan Thompson to live up to his somewhat optimistic nickname of “the man who makes things happen” it had arrived and he added two in two as Graham Clark also dragged on and Axar Patel, who had tormented Yorkshire in the first innings with some last-man tomfoolery, losing his magic upon his promotion to No.9 and immediately falling lbw.Bess deserves credit for returning later, ice and painkillers applied, and maintaining an excellent holding operation against admittedly obsessive Durham defending. Against tiring bowlers, in bright sunshine, Durham might have been better giving it a go. But they will ridicule that notion if they steal the game in the morning. A new ball is only 10 overs away and they will surely want to wrap things up by then.Yorkshire had been evenly placed at the start of the day – their closure at 91 for 3 giving them a lead of 118. With Malan and Bairstow at the crease – a rare Championship alliance between two England internationals – they had a chance to kill the game. Just as it seemed they might, Ben Raine dismissed both in successive overs courtesy of excellent catches by Ollie Robinson.Ollie Robinson is quite an upgrade for Durham, released by Kent because the presence of Sam Billings and Jordan Cox meant limited opportunities. He sprang a long way to his left when Malan chased a wide one and then even further to his right when Bairstow edged an attempted drive. Both had scrapped for around two-and-a-half hours, but the first half-century of the match was still awaited.That fell to Hill, who continued an excellent all-round match with 51 from 52 balls until Potts had him caught at second slip with a wide outswinger on the stroke of lunch. A more graceful player than when he first appeared in the side, he made light of the introduction of spin, in the shape of Patel, and played Potts in an assured fashion as anybody.Whatever the outcome, Yorkshire could recognise his growing importance by immediately capping him. They can’t afford it, but then they can’t afford to turn the lights on.

Moeen Ali penalised for using 'drying agent' on bowling hand without notifying umpires

Moeen Ali has been fined 25% of his match fee and handed a demerit point on his return to red-ball cricket after spraying “a drying agent on his bowling hand” on the second day of the first Ashes Test.Moeen admitted the offence and accepted the sanction proposed by Andy Pycroft, the match referee. “In reaching his decision to sanction the player, the match referee was satisfied that Ali had used the spray only to dry his hands,” the ICC said.”The spray was not used as an artificial substance on the ball and consequently it had not changed the condition of the ball, which would have been in breach of clause 41.3 of the ICC playing conditions – Unfair Play – The Match Ball – Changing its Condition.”Related

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Moeen is returning to Test cricket after an absence of nearly two years and bowled 29 overs on the second day, taking 2 for 124. He has not bowled in a red-ball match since September 2021 and ESPNcricinfo understands that he has a small blister on his spinning finger as a result of the increased workload.During the 89th over of Australia’s innings, Moeen was seen spraying a substance from an aerosol can on his bowling hand while fielding on the boundary, before bowling the following over. The ICC said he had defied “the umpires’ pre-series instruction about [players] not using anything on their hands without prior approval”.This being a Level 1 breach of the ICC Code of Conduct, one demerit point was added to Moeen’s disciplinary record. It is his first demerit point in the last 24 months and he will not be suspended unless he accumulates three further points in the next two years.The charge had recent precedent. During India’s home series against Australia earlier this year, Ravindra Jadeja was penalised under the same article of the ICC’s Code of Conduct after applying a soothing cream to the index finger of his bowling hand.

Tim Murtagh offers Lord's prayer as Middlesex batting leaves them fearing the drop again

Veteran strikes with three quick wickets but Hannon-Dalby five-for gives Warks the edge

Andrew Miller19-Sep-2023Warwickshire 72 for 4 (Rhodes 36*, Murtagh 3-17) trail Middlesex 121 (De Caires 40, Hannon-Dalby 5-29) by 49 runsThere’s a chance that Tim Murtagh was feeling rather sheepish when, shortly after 4pm, he stepped out of the pavilion as Middlesex’s No. 11 to witness – in the middle distance, and on the most central and prestigious strip that Lord’s has to offer – a guard of honour lined up to mark his impending retirement.The gesture was touching, as was the roar of approval when he blocked his one and only delivery from Chris Rushworth straight back down the pitch, but the timing was a touch discombobulating. After all, at 100 for 9 on the first day of Middlesex’s – and therefore, potentially, Murtagh’s – penultimate match of the season, it wasn’t as if the prospect of a later, and more terminal, visit to the crease was off the table just yet.And besides, there was something about Middlesex’s distracted display up to that point – even by the standards of their flatlining season – that had reeked already of “benefit match”. Murtagh’s inclusion, for his 264th first-class appearance and his 91st at Lord’s, had come at the expense of the club captain Toby Roland-Jones, and so (apart from anything else) had further weakened one of the most brittle batting line-ups in the land. On the face of it, it seemed an odd moment to ignore the realities of their ongoing race to the bottom with Kent.Warwickshire’s Oliver Hannon-Dalby duly reminded them what was at stake with a route-one haul of 5 for 29 in 10.5 overs: each of his first four wickets was the reward for a hint of movement on a probing off-stump line, until Josh De Caires, counterattacking gamely at No. 7 for an enterprising 40 from 58 balls, clipped him low to midwicket to leave Murtagh high and dry on 0 (1). All out for 121 then, with an uptick of zero batting points to Middlesex’s survival bid.But with Kent’s own bonus-point quest being stymied by Tom Lammonby and Lewis Goldsworthy down at Taunton, up stepped Murtagh for his main event, and for the penultimate time on his favourite stage. Seven overs and three wickets later, he’d shown once again that – in bleak autumnal conditions and in your county’s hour of need – sometimes a timeless display of ball-on-a-string seam bowling is all a team needs to get back on an even keel.Murtagh is 42 years old now, and has effectively been a Lord’s specialist this season, with five of his six Championship appearances now coming at HQ. But what a specialist, and how effective! His ten-wicket haul against Kent in April remains the key reason why Middlesex are not (quite) in the relegation positions, and on this evidence – though Warwickshire closed the day with a degree of poise through Will Rhodes’ 36 not out – it’s not out of the question that Murtagh ends up accounting for half of Middlesex’s four Championship wins in this campaign. There’ve been 14 wickets on this first day, after all. Even allowing for a two-hour rain delay, it’s hard to see this one finishing as a draw.Murtagh needed a solitary ball to sow those familiar seeds of doubt, as Rob Yates flinched outside off to a delivery that typically was there to be hit until it was not. His next offering was more inviting still, swinging across the left-hander and gathering shape as it did so, to induce an uncertain flat-footed cut and a fat inside-edge into his stumps – Warwickshire were 0 for 1 after two balls, and the game was unquestionably afoot.Three overs later, with just one run chiselled from his offerings, Murtagh struck again, courtesy of a superb diving take from John Simpson, flinging himself low to his right to scoop up a snick off Kraigg Braithwaite that was never destined to reach the cordon. Alex Davies then flapped his second ball over the cordon for four as Murtagh hit the seam and found extravagant bounce outside off; that shot was almost certainly on his mind six balls later, as he stabbed a fat front pad down the line to be pinned for the plumbest lbw imaginable.Even when his spell was done, Murtagh’s impact was arguably still apparent. Ethan Bamber replaced him at the Nursery End, and duly struck with his second ball – from round the wicket, with a touch more pace behind his nip off the seam, to crash past Dan Mousley’s defences and into his off stump. At 42 for 4, the contest was properly in the balance, but Rhodes and Ed Barnard quelled the threat as the light faded, to leave much more of the same required on Wednesday – at Lord’s and at Taunton – if Middlesex are to keep their hopes alive.If, however, the worst does come to pass for the club, then there’s really no escaping where the fault will lie. Another sickly batting card has left them relying on a soon-to-be-retired stalwart for one more bail-out, and even that is unlikely to be enough if the second innings serves up a similarly passive display.Warwickshire won the toss and the wickets were quickly passed around, not unlike a puppy at a primary school – soft and moreish. Rushworth struck the first blow, snicking Mark Stoneman’s edge for 13, one ball after he’d induced an almighty waft outside off. Hannon-Dalby bagged the second, as Sam Robson planted his front foot on off stump and was surprised by a hint of nip back into his pads. Craig Miles then came round the wicket to unroot Jack Davies’ off stump, before Ed Barnard struck one over later, condemning Ryan Higgins’ own stump to a similar fate.Barnard then made it two in four overs as Simpson wafted into a flimsy cramped cut and feathered an edge through to Michael Burgess for a duck, as Middlesex limped to lunch, five-down and freefalling.And once the afternoon rain had abated, it was over to Hannon-Dalby, flapping his limbs like a latter-day Bob Willis as he cantered in from the Nursery End, hounding a succession of techniques with high-kicking, stump-threatening line and length. Only De Caires, in the midst of a fine late-season flurry with bat and ball, found the gumption to resist, with a deft scoop over the keeper among his five fours, and a flat slam into the Grandstand for six for good measure. But Murtagh aside, not too many of his team-mates have yet found the fight to match their team’s needs.

'The top Mexican players, when Chivas comes calling, now hesitate' – Mexico legend Hugo Sánchez dives into Rojiblancos' struggles

Big-name players like Pulido, Chicharito, Gutiérrez, Guzmán, Mozo, Alvarado, and Romo were unable to lead Chivas to the Liguilla in the Clausura 2025

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  • Vega, Antuna, Zendejas, and Huerta didn’t shine at Chivas, but have since become key stars on other teams
  • will have a month of vacation that started this Monday
  • They will also have to face MLS teams in the Leagues Cup, which will begin at the end of July
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    For Hugo Sánchez, a legend of both Real Madrid and the Mexico National Team, playing for Chivas no longer guarantees a successful career in Mexican football. According to the , “The top Mexican players, when Chivas comes calling, now hesitate,” he said during an appearance on ESPN, where he currently works as an analyst.

    “From a sporting perspective, there have been poor decisions that have derailed a club as big and historic as Chivas. When Fernando Hierro came in, it looked like something serious was finally being done, but that project eventually fell apart. They’ve tried to replicate it since, but haven’t been able to get it right. Chivas should be home to the best Mexican talent, but the front office hasn’t had that special ability – that pull – to convince those players to come. Now, given the club’s current form, players really think twice. There was a time when you just didn’t say no to Chivas.”

    Hugo’s comments come at a time when, in recent years, several analysts and experts have questioned Chivas’ ability to attract the best available Mexican players. While some top talents now aim for a move to Europe, others have chosen to sign with clubs like América, Cruz Azul, Tigres, Monterrey or MLS teams instead of joining .

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    In recent years, Chivas have seen several of their most talented players leave the club after failing to deliver results, only to thrive elsewhere. The team has also struggled to get the most out of experienced, high-profile signings, many of whom have failed to perform at the expected level. More and more, players are beginning to think twice before joining .

    Names like Alexis Vega, Uriel Antuna, Alejandro Zendejas, and César Huerta didn’t shine at Chivas as expected, but have since become key stars for their respective teams. Even homegrown talents like Jesús Orozco, who did make an impact at Chivas, have been transferred out. Meanwhile, a new generation of Mexican talent – including Erick Sánchez, Diego Lainez, Sebastián Córdova, and Carlos Gutiérrez – is flourishing at other Liga MX clubs.

    As Sánchez said, there was a time when no one would dare say no to Chivas. Now, players think twice.

    Big-name players like Alan Pulido, Javier 'Chicharito' Hernandez, Erick Gutiérrez, Víctor Guzmán, Alan Mozo, Roberto Alvarado, and Luis Romo were unable to lead Chivas to the Liguilla in the Clausura 2025. So, the question is: did these players underperform, or is there a deeper issue within the club that needs to be addressed at the root in order to restore its greatness?

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    WHAT HUGO SÁNCHEZ SAID

    "The feeling a striker has when they're left on the bench in a crucial match is one of overwhelming helplessness. He voiced his frustration, and because of that, he didn’t play. The frustration of warming up and not being able to help your teammates is tough," said Hugo Sánchez, showing empathy toward Hernández after he was left out of Chivas' final match of the Clausura 2025.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CHIVAS?

    Eliminated from the Clausura 2025 and without a coach, will have a month of vacation that started this Monday. They will also have to face MLS teams in the Leagues Cup, which will begin at the end of July.

"انتصار جديد للنادي"..  فيفا ينصف الإسماعيلي في 3 قضايا

أعلن مجلس إدارة الإسماعيلي، الحصول على حكم من الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم فيفا، بشأن ثلاث قضايا تتعلق بأزمة القيد، ووصفه النادي بأنه انتصار لقلعة الدراويش.

وأكد الإسماعيلي في بيانه، حصوله على حكم رسمي من غرفة تسوية النزاعات بالاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم فيفا في ثلاث قضايا، برفض الشكوتين المقدمتين من نادي أوكام السنغالي والمتعلقتين بأزمة قيد وانتقال الثنائي عبد العزيز سيسه وسليماني كوليه.

طالع| رئيس الإسماعيلي يوضح تطورات إيقاف القيد ويؤكد: موضوع الهبوط انتهى

وأشار مجلس الإسماعيلي، إلى رفض غرفة التسوية، الشكوى المقدمة من اللاعب سليماني كوليه. بيان الإسماعيلي بشأن 3 قضايا

تهنئ إدارة النادي الإسماعيلي، جماهيرها عقب نجاح الإدارة القانونية في تحقيق انتصار جديد لصالح النادي، وذلك بصدور حكم رسمي من غرفة تسوية النزاعات بالاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم “فيفا”، في الثلاث قضايا برفض الشكوتين المقدمتين من نادي أوكام السنغالي والمتعلقتين بأزمة قيد وانتقال الثنائي عبد العزيز سيسه وسليماني كوليه.

كما رفضت غرفة التسوية الشكوى المقدمة من اللاعب سليماني كوليه.

ويؤكد مجلس الإدارة تقديره الكامل للجهود الكبيرة التي تبذلها الإدارة القانونية في الدفاع عن حقوق النادي في مختلف القضايا، ومواصلة العمل باحترافية وشفافية للحفاظ على مصالح الكيان.

Zak Crawley: 'This isn't the end because it's the Ashes, it's the start'

By the time Monday came around, the rains had ceased in Manchester. The clouds were finally empty after a weekend of showers. And just to rub it in, the sun dipped in and out of view as a reminder it was still up there on this, the first morning in which the 2023 Ashes were no longer live.An abandoned match and a draw in the fourth Test has Australia taking the urn back with them, boasting an unassailable 2-1 lead heading into the fifth Test at the Kia Oval. The great decider that was supposed to send English cricket into the stratosphere is now signposted as the tourists’ chance to win their first overseas Ashes series since 2001.Nevertheless, mimicking the two-all scoreline of 2019 is a huge motivation for this England side. Unlike then, when the fifth Test had a very end-of-term feel, with the only thing missing being both sides playing out the match in jeans, Ben Stokes’ charges have the opportunity to affix an asterisk to Australia’s retention.They believe they have been the most assertive across the series so far, despite the fact they were 2-0 down after two. And while it may only be an asterisk that those in the dressing-room can see, the fact that the weather stopped them from going into the final match on Thursday with it all to play for has England feeling robbed. A squared series at the end, to them, would represent some form of justice.”I think 2-2 would be fair,” said Crawley, whose stunning 189 from 182 deliveries drove England to 592 for a 275-run first-innings lead that they could not cash in. “They had the better of us at Lord’s, Edgbaston could have gone either way. We probably deserved this one and Headingley could have gone either way. So I think two-all would be right. We’ll see, hopefully we can get it.”We’ll play the same way and to know we can make a big score. It suits us to have a little in the wicket – we’ll see what happens. That’s the beauty of a five-Test series; you get a look at them, work out tactics and nuances. I’ve never played a five-match series before this one.”We’re massively up for it. And as Stokesy says, we’re building as a team, this isn’t the end just because it’s the Ashes. It’s very much the start, hopefully.”Even amid the positivity, Crawley admitted the Old Trafford dressing-room was flat when the match was eventually abandoned on day five, at around 5.24pm. A consistent downpour across days four and five meant England were only able to bowl 30 out of a possible 180 overs to push for victory.Up until Friday evening, England had played more or less the perfect game; reducing Australia to 113 for 4 in their second innings, trailing by 162, by stumps on day three. Alas, it was all in vain.”It’s pretty flat,” said Crawley of the mood among the squad. “We’re disappointed we’ve played a lot of good cricket in this game. We wanted to win, we were in a good position to win, and two days of rain cost us. But that’s how it is.”Related

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As for Crawley personally, his innings took him to the top of the run-scorers charts this series – comfort for a player derided as a weak link throughout Stokes’ and Brendon McCullum’s time in charge. He arrived into the fixture with handy starts, including 61 in his first knock of the series, which he marked by striking the first ball of the first Test at Edgbaston for four off Pat Cummins.He continued on in a similar vein and, as such, his 385 runs so far – at an average of 55.00 – have come from just 428 deliveries. Number two on the list, Australian opener Usman Khawaja, has scored his 377 from more than twice as many (961).”I feel I’m as good a player as I have ever been,” Crawley said, having now passed 2,000 career runs and lifted his 38-cap average to 31.01. “I feel good about my game, I’m pleased with how I’m playing – I’ve just got to build on it. I have a bit more experience now, things to fall back on in different conditions, so yes, I feel I can kick on now.”Crawley agreed that Australia’s extra pace throughout their attack has been a contributing factor to his upturn in performance. And on what should be an Oval pitch favouring batters, the Kent batter hopes to cash in once more before the Test summer concludes.”I think so, I certainly feel quicker attacks do. Fast bowling suits my game. The Australian attack is a quick attack and I think a bit less when they’re faster. I think that just suits my game a bit more. They are unbelievable bowlers, they present different challenges.”I love batting at The Oval for Kent, and I have played one Test match there and did okay (five and 69 not out against South Africa last summer). Hopefully it’s a decent wicket and a good game.”

'Football is going in the wrong direction' – Ex-Everton boss Sean Dyche slams tactical intricacies of modern game and insists 'uprising' is taking place

Sean Dyche has slammed the state of modern football, insisting there are just too many tactical intricacies in the game at the top level.

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Dyche out of work after leaving EvertonSlams state of modern gameBelieves 'philosophy' is prized over everythingFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Dyche has launched a broadside against the current state of football, arguing that the game is becoming overly focused on tactical intricacies and straying away from its fundamental principles. The former Burnley and Everton manager believes an "uprising" is taking place as fans are growing bored with the emphasis on passing in deep areas and the perceived lack of directness in modern attacking play.

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Dyche's outspoken views tap into a long-standing debate within football regarding the balance between pragmatism and idealism. His managerial style, often characterised by direct, physical football, has been both praised and criticised for its perceived lack of sophistication. Dyche's success at Burnley, defying expectations with limited resources, cemented his reputation as a manager who aims for substance over style, but he was also sacked by Everton.

WHAT DYCHE SAID

Speaking on Stick to Football, Dyche said: "Football is going in the wrong direction now and I think there's an uprising. I speak to a lot of fans, and they go, ‘I’m getting bored of it, I’m getting bored of people passing it around the six-yard line’. Managers go, ‘It’s our philosophy’, but how about changing your philosophy and staying in the Premier League rather than getting relegated.”

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

Dyche is currently looking for a job after his departure from Everton. It remains to be seen where he will end up next.

Lateral-direito Fábio está próximo de se tornar reforço do Grêmio

MatériaMais Notícias

da betsul: Irmão gêmeo de Rafael, jogador do Botafogo, o lateral-direito Fábio está próximo de se tornar mais um reforço do Grêmio na montagem do elenco visando a temporada 2023. A informação, divulgada inicialmente pelo ‘ge’, foi confirmada pelo Futebol Latino/LANCE.

Segundo o que foi apurado, verbalmente as partes já tem acordo em caráter avançado, restando a liberação por parte do Nantes-FRA, sua atual equipe. O contrato de Fábio com o time da França tem validade até junho de 2023, permitindo que ele assine com outro clube sem a necessidade de compensação financeira para o Nantes.

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da realsbet: >Diego Gonçalves deixa o Botafogo e encaminha acerto com clube da Série A

Caso a questão verbal possa evoluir para a documentação que viabiliza a transferência, a previsão é de que o atleta de 32 anos de idade viaje no intuito de conhecer seus novos companheiros apenas em janeiro. Mais precisamente, no dia 2 de janeiro, data que o plantel retoma os trabalhos de pré-temporada após o recesso de Natal e Ano Novo.

Assim como seu irmão, Fábio se formou na base do Fluminense e foi rapidamente observado pelo Manchester United, gerando saída sem que ele tenha sequer atuado profissionalmente pelo time do Rio de Janeiro. Depois, ele passou por Cardiff City e Middlesbrough (clubes de participações na Premier League) antes de desembarcar, em 2018, no futebol francês.

Desde sua chegada ao Nantes, o atleta acumula 95 jogos entre Campeonato Francês, Copa da França, Copa da Liga Francesa e Liga Europa.

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