Everton interested in signing Billy Gilmour

Everton have been linked with a move for Billy Gilmour this summer, and now a new update has emerged from a reliable source on the club’s pursuit of the player.

What’s the latest?

According to The Daily Telegraph reporter Matt Law, Everton are interested in signing Billy Gilmour this summer.

In Law’s latest article for the publication, the journalist details that the Toffees are still interested in signing both Gilmour and fellow Chelsea youngster Conor Gallagher during the current transfer window.

Delph replacement

Everton have midfield outgoings in the squad this summer with Donny Van de Beek returning to Manchester United following his loan deal and Fabian Delph leaving next week due to the expiration of his contract, so Gilmour will surely be welcomed with open arms to replace the latter at Goodison Park.

Gilmour is no stranger to Frank Lampard, as the Everton boss gave the Scottish youngster his Premier League debut at Chelsea when he was managing the team at Stamford Bridge when he was just 18 years old, so Lampard will have no trouble knowing how to deploy Gilmour effectively in the team.

The £10.8m-rated gem most recently went on a season-long loan deal to Norwich City and despite the side being relegated, Gilmour gave glimpses of his talents and continued development whilst playing with the Canaries last season.

In the Premier League, the Scotsman delivered one assist and created one big chance, making 1.7 tackles, 1.2 clearances and winning 3.8 duels on average per game, whilst being successful in the majority of his dribble attempts (68%) and tallied up a pass accuracy of 91% in his own half over 24 appearances.

Since the 21-year-old’s debut back in 2019, the young midfielder has been the recipient of high praise, with former Liverpool captain Graeme Souness hailing the player “exceptional” during an ITV Sport pundit analysis of his performance for Scotland against England in 2019;

“He doesn’t give the ball away. He’s got that fantastic habit for a midfield player of passing the ball to the same colour shirt. He keeps the ball in tight spaces and kept Scotland ticking over.

“For a 20-year-old to come in and play in that atmosphere with very few games under his belt this year, I thought it was an exceptional performance. He was the best player on the pitch (against England).”

Ultimately, Thelwell could secure a great signing and replacement for Delph this summer if he can seal the deal for Gilmour and the player will surely be tempted by the move to be given the opportunity to work under his former boss again.

AND in other news, Lampard could land his own Jude Bellingham in Everton swoop for “special” £50m dynamo

Liverpool keen on sealing Gavi move

Liverpool are willing to trigger Gavi’s €50million (£42.5m) release clause at Barcelona this summer, according to an exciting transfer report from Spain.

The Lowdown: Gavi’s future not yet decided

The 17-year-old is considered one of the most prodigiously gifted young players in world football, having been described as a ‘spectacular’ talent by Xavi.

Gavi is already featuring regularly for both Barcelona and Spain, registering six assists in 46 appearances for the former and winning nine caps for the latter.

The midfielder is yet to sign a new deal at Barca however and his current contract expires next summer, with Liverpool linked with a move in the recent past and Fabrizio Romano revealing on Friday there is still no agreement over a new deal just yet.

The Latest: Liverpool still keen on move

According to Spanish outlet Beteve, the Reds are still interested in signing Gavi this summer and are happy to pay his £42.5million release clause.

It is thought that his preference is still to remain a Barcelona player, but he is yet to be impressed with their contract offers and the Reds would be willing to give him €9m a year, which equates to about £147k-per-week.

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The Verdict: Feels unlikely

While the idea of seeing Liverpool sign Gavi is hugely exciting, it is a move that feels unlikely, given his ties to Barca and the loyalty he will likely show to his boyhood club.

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In Xavi, he has a legendary figure to learn from as manager and he and his representatives will surely feel that it is best for his development to stay put and mature at the Camp Nou.

It is great to see Liverpool even in the conversation for such a special talent, however, further highlighting the force Jurgen Klopp has turned them into.

In other news, one player is set for a Liverpool medical. Find out who it is here.

Leeds set for ‘really exciting’ summer

Leeds United could be set for a busy summer in the market after retaining their Premier League status, according to transfer insider Dean Jones. 

The lowdown: Early transfer business

Jesse Marsch’s side survived on the final day of the season with a victory over Brentford, but some big names could still be set to depart Elland Road as the likes of Raphinha and Kalvin Phillips continue to be linked with moves away.

Exits aside, the Whites look set to secure their first summer signing in the shape of Red Bull Salzburg attacking midfielder Brenden Aaronson, and it could be the first of many to come through the door.

That’s the view of one respected onlooker, who has had his say on the situation at the Yorkshire giants…

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The latest: ‘Really exciting’ summer ahead for Leeds

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Jones has claimed that it looks set to be an active summer transfer window for Leeds and director of football Victor Orta, with Marsch set to demand that the Whites aren’t left with such a close shave with relegation again next year.

He explained: “I think it now gets really exciting for Leeds. They can look for additions all over the squad and they will look to make sure that they’re not in this position again in a year’s time.

“Jesse Marsch will be saying ‘please, please now just see what I’ve given, the character I’ve put in this team is there and it’s going to be different from what you saw under Bielsa but it could be every bit as special’.”

The verdict: Overhaul required

Having failed to make any additions in January, Marsch and his predecessor Marcelo Bielsa were left bereft of options in the Leeds squad in order to arrest an alarming slide towards the drop zone. Ultimately the American won four of his 12 matches at the helm, just enough to stave off relegation to the Championship.

In order to avoid another season of similar struggles, Andrea Radrizzani must sanction a raft of incomings in order to bolster a young squad with an average age of just 24.7, regardless of who stays and who goes in the meantime.

Whether or not Marsch can indeed recreate the feel-good factor harnessed by Bielsa remains to be seen. However, with money to spend and hopefully the right recruitment, there is certainly the hope of a prosperous summer and a much-improved 2022/23 campaign.

In other news, Sky Sports drop worrying update on Leeds star. Find out who it is here

Newcastle team news vs Man City

An injury expert has now dropped a worrying Newcastle United claim on Ryan Fraser.

The Lowdown: Howe verdict

Speaking in his pre-game press conference ahead of their 1-0 loss at home to Liverpool in the Premier League last time out, Eddie Howe admitted that he was not sure if Fraser would be able to play again this season.

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The former Burnley and AFC Bournemouth manager does not think that it is a serious injury, but it looks as if the Scotland international will struggle to get back into the team from now until the end of the campaign.

The Latest: Dinnery reacts

Speaking to Football Insider, Ben Dinnery, who runs the Premier Injuries site and has a background in both medicine and data analysis, has claimed that while Fraser’s injury is not extreme, it is ‘worse than we thought’ and just ‘serious’ enough to keep him out for the rest of the term:

“Howe always maintained that the setback for Fraser is only a minor issue.

“But if we are calling into question whether he might be out for the season, that might mean it is actually a more serious grade two problem.

“In the grand scheme of things it isn’t too major but it is worse than we thought and enough to keep him out for a few weeks.

“But Newcastle are safe and don’t really have anything to play for. There is no need to take any chances with any player but particularly Fraser.

“His hamstring problems go back to the beginning of December. He’s had tightness and cramping.

“So it’s about addressing those problems and making sure he is fully ready when he does come back.”

The Verdict: Blow

It certainly is a blow to Howe and his squad if they are to lose Fraser for the rest of the season.

The winger has been a key part of a turnaround that has seen the St. James’ Park faithful steer clear of the relegation zone, contributing two goals and two assists in the top flight since February and being a mainstay in the side (Transfermarkt).

Nonetheless, they will no doubt want to finish the campaign strongly, but losing Fraser makes that more difficult, especially considering that they have to visit the reigning champions on Sunday afternoon.

In other news, find out who may now be sold by NUFC this summer here!

Royals still pondering middle-order riddle

How they would handle their middle order was a question that cropped up as soon as they lost the services of Steven Smith. They are yet to find the answer, even as a spot in the playoffs slips further away

Varun Shetty in Indore07-May-20181:58

‘We need more partnerships’ – Bahutule

Rajasthan Royals have inched closer to having no chance of making the playoffs this year – another loss would be almost certain disqualification – without coming close to sorting out their middle order. On Sunday, the Royal’s crashed from 81 for 2 in ten overs to a below-par 152 for 9 at the Holkar Stadium, the smallest ground across the tournament, best known for that match last year when Mumbai Indians chased down 199 with more than four overs to spare. During the middle phase of the innings, between the seventh and 15th over, Royals lost 4 for 65.It was a potential problem that surfaced well before the tournament began, with the news of Steven Smith’s ban. Now it’s becoming more and more likely that the plan was not to work around his absence, but to change the plan entirely.A straight swap with replacement batsman Heinrich Klaasen might have, at best, posed the problem of whether he should be ahead of or behind Sanju Samson and Ben Stokes in the batting order. Instead, Royals have spiralled down a pattern of changing the line-up around so much that it’s hard to tell – perhaps even for their own players – who is going to show up when.On the face of it, the biggest beneficiary has been D’Arcy Short, who might not have been a regular in the XI with Smith coming in at No. 3 after the expected first-choice opening stand of Ajinkya Rahane and Rahul Tripathi. Short has been scoring at five runs per over in the Powerplay this season, returns that would not have earned too many other openers six chances in the IPL. He has never played as a non-opener in 31 T20 innings, so it’s the other openers in the team – and Royals have plenty of those on their roster – who have had to move. To the extent that Jos Buttler, who isn’t a frontline T20 opener, has become their best option at the top.After the loss on Sunday, spin-bowling coach Sairaj Bahutule said that “overall” Royals’ batting had been all right. The problem, he said, was the lack of partnerships.”The batting obviously has been very inconsistent,” Bahutule said. “Buttler has been batting really well. It’s just that we really needed to get this batting going. We didn’t have a partnership and we lost a lot of wickets between the 11th and the 15th over. When you don’t have a lot of partnerships going in the T20s it makes it difficult. We have been inconsistent with the batting but it’s just that we have been 20 runs short – the final total we got today. Overall it’s been good from the batting point of view.”BCCIOn close inspection, that is hardly the case. Only one team has scored slower than Royals during the middle overs and that is Sunrisers Hyderabad (7.41), a traditionally top-heavy team who focus on making sure one of the top three bats as deep as possible. Kings XI Punjab match Royals’ scoring rate during that phase with 7.71, but is also a top-heavy team that makes its highest impact in the Powerplay.The big differentiator between Royals and those two teams is the wickets. Royals have lost 30 in nine innings during that phase and average 20.06 per wicket, far behind Kings XI’s 24 wickets at 24.79.Royals aren’t setting alight the Powerplays or the death-overs phase either, with middling numbers for both. Even if there has been anything good about their batting, it doesn’t go past individual efforts from Samson or Buttler.”As I said earlier, partnerships are important. We have good players. We have Jos opening now, we have Stokes and Tripathi. Sanju also has been batting well. It’s just that one big partnership of 50 runs changes everything and that has not happened consistently,” Bahutule said. “That has been the area where we have been working on.”Royals’ biggest partnerships for the four wickets after the opening stand this season have all involved Samson. Three of those have come in winning causes (two in the same game, in fact), so there is merit in saying that the partnerships are where Royals seem to be losing it. But how do they fix that?Stokes has had an ordinary season, with 160 runs in nine innings. An out-of-position Tripathi, despite some chances up the order, is struggling with 99 runs in nine innings and their most successful opener, Rahane, cannot open if Buttler is also opening.The option to drop Short and play Klaasen at No. 5 opens a hole at No. 6 that can only be plugged by Stuart Binny, Jatin Saxena or Prashant Chopra, who is also an opener. And the same thing happens if Short is replaced by an overseas bowler. Are they, then, willing to have K Gowtham bat at No. 6? Or handing that responsibility to the very young Mahipal Lomror or Aryaman Birla?With a required win-rate of a 100%, they might not have enough time to even think about it. Whichever way you look at it, the lack of depth in both the playing XI and in the squad – despite several replacement opportunities – are red flags that should have been picked up on much sooner. For now, all they can do is hope that at least two-thirds of their three most expensive players will have five good days together.

Finn fights a losing battle with his demons

Steven Finn has every attribute a fast bowler could hope for, and the best judges in the game believe in him. But his battle is between the ears, not against the batsmen

Jarrod Kimber at Edgbaston05-Aug-2016The crowd in the Eric Hollies stand roar. The ball they have seen is short and fast, to them it has such menace Azhar Ali is ducking for mere survival. But the Hollies stand is side on, and while they see a ball just missing a scared batsman, from front-on it’s far different. The ball is wide and short. Azhar has ducked on length, but he could have just stood there and watched the ball fly safely by outside off stump.The crowd might have seen something fast and dangerous, but Steven Finn didn’t.***Just go out there and bowl fast. Whang it. Sling it. Hurl it. Just run up and let go. Don’t think. Let it fly. Let it rip. Pace like fire. Get it up ’em. Bounce ’em. Bomb ’em.It is the sort of advice given to quick bowlers when they are struggling. As if the search for pure speed will somehow clear their mind of mortgage payments, over-coaching and whether they left the stove on. All their troubles will suddenly disappear, now they are focused on one thing, bowling as fast as humanly possible.At times it has worked. The young quick who has been worried about wrist position and his place in the team, freed of those worries he whips the ball down the other end with a crazy rotating seam, hits someone on the glove, his team mates rush up to pat him on the head, and he’s back.But for others it does the opposite. It is not always possible to just bowl fast. Slight niggles, bad rhythm and slow pitches come into it. And sometimes, trying to bowl fast make bowlers anxious.Cook said before this Test: “I’ll try and tell him to relax and play.” If someone tells you to relax, chances are it will make you more tense. It’s not advice, it’s a phrase you say when you can’t come up with something that will actually help.It was the same Cook who was up till 2am before making a decision to pick the same Finn for this Test. Jake Ball was good at Lord’s, without demanding selection over Finn at any point, but still good enough to put pressure on him. But the truth is, if you are up at 2am, and Finn flashes behind your eyes, you want him.That bounce, that pace, the wickets. No offence to Jake Ball, but there is no highlight reel to compare it to. Finn, at his best, is a human highlight reel.When telling the press of his selection of Finn, Cook called him a huge talent, but he also said “Finny sometimes can worry too much about it.” He was right, twice.***Steven Finn rues his luck on another wicketless day•Getty ImagesThe roar of the Edgbaston crowd is incredible even before Steven Finn takes his first step. Mitch Marsh is facing a hat-trick ball, and all that time out of the game – the breakdown, his “unselectable” status, all that history rubbish – is being blown away by his greatest spell in Test cricket, with a heaving home crowd cheering him into the crease. He doesn’t take a hat trick, but he does take six wickets and ensures England win the Ashes.It was only a year ago, yet when he started this Test, he didn’t hit the crease like a man full of fond memories. He bowled short, and wide. He started with three maidens in his first four overs, but they weren’t good. His early pitch map to the right-handers looked like he thought Azhar Ali had a weakness to the short wide ball. His pitch map to Sami Aslam was a confusing abstract painting that would have given the bowling coach a headache.He wasn’t scary, he wasn’t intimidating, when he hit Sami Aslam it was with a ball that just didn’t get up as Aslam shaped to duck. It didn’t beat him for pace, it beat him for a lack of hostility.Every over seemed to get him more frustrated. At times he kicked the turf, when four overthrows were given away he just shook his head like an upset child, and during his last spell he had to leave the field clutching his hamstring. He came back on, bowled unsuccessfully again, clutched his hamstring again. The longer the day went, the sadder he looked.And when the new ball was taken, it was Joe Root, and not Finn, taking it for the ninth over.***The stories of Steven Finn in Alice Springs are now well told. As are those about how he had to overcome a law change that seemed to almost exclusively target him. Then there was the time he was dropped during the 2010-11 Ashes triumph, despite being the leading wicket-taker of the series. His economy rates didn’t fit neatly into the Andy Flower spreadsheet.His headlines over the years have been about rhythm, unrewarded efforts, frustrations, stepping up, coming back, labours, atonement, stumbles and unselectability. Even his World Cup hat-trick was met with a global cricket shrug. Even now, back in the team, he is a new-ball bowler who is currently bowling second change, and only in the side when someone more fancied is injured. If Anderson, Broad, Woakes and Stokes stay fit, how does he even find his way back in.He is in a permanent state of flux, there has been no point in his career to date in which he has been safe and happy in the team. His body has been very faithful to him. Other than one stress fracture of the foot, he has managed to stay fit. It is his mind that has struggled to stay in good areas.One of the questions for today’s #PoliteEnquiries was simply, ” is Finn finished for the time being?” It is a question that Finn seems to think about out in the field.***There is a spring in Finn’s step on day three. England are bowling well, and he has to wait for Anderson and Woakes to finish their spells before he gets his turn, so the second new ball is now 23 overs old. But he instantly gets good shape, his length is better, his line is probing. There isn’t blood curdling pace, but he looks good.One ball beats Sarfraz Ahmed and Finn follows through almost all the way down to him, not to intimidate, but just because he has great rhythm. As Cook put it before the Test, he is a rhythm bowler, which is cricket code for it sometimes works, it sometimes goes horribly wrong. But he does look a different bowler to the one he has at times been earlier in the series. He isn’t dawdling between overs, or trudging back to his mark. He is excited.A full straight ball swings away from Misbah. Misbah has looked well set, but this is quick and gets him in a tangle. England have a silly short floating slip under a helmet for the soft-handed dab edge, but this one flies due to Finn’s pace and Misbah’s surprise, and the slip is so close that he can barely react as the ball flies through to the boundary.Later a far more ordinary ball from Anderson finds the inside edge of Misbah’s bat, smashes into his back foot, and then rolls onto the stumps.***Batsmen worry about runs, bowlers think in wickets. When former bowlers look at Finn’s strike rate, they have a little smile. Because Finn is a wicket-taker. It’s not that Finn’s average of 29 is especially poor – in fact, it’s very good for someone in and out the team – but runs and economy rates are for statisticians, wickets are for bowlers.Bowlers know there aren’t many guys like Finn out there. He may be the height of a tree, but his ilk doesn’t grow on them. When he stood with Mikey Holding after play at Lord’s for a TV opportunity during the first Test, the height difference was staggering. Mikey is a big man, but Finn towered above him.Holding is big Finn fan, and he has often seemed baffled when England have turned to other bowlers in his place. Mike Selvey is another fan. Even while Chris Woakes was taking apart Pakistan at Lord’s, Selvey remained obsessed with Finn.And that reason is pace, and height. It excites and frights, depending on whether you are facing or watching it. In Finn’s physical attributes there is a 400-plus wicket bowler. But like Morne Morkel, a man of similar physicality, his battle is rarely between him and the batsman, but within himself. He does overthink, he does complicate, he does worry, he does not always know what it is he has done right. There are Andre Nel bowlers who have a fire within them, there are bowlers like Glenn McGrath who have supernatural self-belief, and then there are the Finn and Morkel types. To us on the outside, Finn has all the skills to pick up a Test match and shake it. But to the man himself, it is never that clear.The ability to be a giant who can bowl fast doesn’t mean you are automatically a cold-hearted psycho bowler looking for blood and wickets.Earlier in the summer Finn talked about the nice things that Holding had said about him. “To have someone who is a great of the game saying nice things about you, just pumping your tyres up a little bit, it’s a great feeling.” Finn is 6ft7in, can bowl 90 miles an hour, has 120 wickets, at under 30, and takes one every 49 balls. He shouldn’t need his tyres pumped up, he should be flying.***Finn is bowling for the last wicket of Pakistan’s innings. He is just running in and bowling, trying to keep it simple, clear his mind. Around him Broad and Anderson are scheming, but Finn is in a zone.Rahat Ali prods at one in a manner that looks like fake slips practice. Cook instantly gets into a great position to take the ball, it carries well due to the extra pace of Finn, and it hits Cook’s hands at a comfortable height, but then hits the ground behind him. Finn bends over at the waist like he is in pain, and then he walks back to his mark looking at the big screen. When the drop is shown, he cocks his head to one side as the crowd groan. He gets one more ball at Rahat, who defends it well. That is Finn’s last ball of the innings.When he gets down to fine leg the crowd give him a hearty applause, but he doesn’t really react at all.Alastair Cook, his captain and one of England’s best ever batsmen thinks he’s a huge talent. Mike Holding, one of the greatest bowlers in cricket history, truly believes in him. Mike Selvey, the best seamer turned cricket writer, is completely in his corner. And the Edgbaston crowd, England’s most riotous and raucous, are completely behind him.But there he was again, down at fine leg, being cheered, and wicketless. Wicketless for the third innings this series. The world can tell him they believe in him. That will not matter, for either one day Finn will understand his game, believe in himself and be the Test bowler he was born to be. Or he won’t, and even the hollow applause will stop.

Four teams, nine combinations

ESPNcricinfo takes a look at the possible top-four teams in IPL 2015

S Rajesh17-May-2015Royal Challengers and Mumbai Indians win
: Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Mumbai Indians, Rajasthan RoyalsRoyal Challengers and Sunrisers win
: Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Rajasthan RoyalsRoyal Challengers win, and a washout
: Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan Royals, Kolkata Knight RidersDaredevils and Mumbai Indians win
: Chennai Super Kings, Mumbai Indians, Rajasthan Royals, Royal Challengers Bangalore
Daredevils and Sunrisers win
: Chennai Super Kings, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Rajasthan Royals, Royal Challengers BangaloreDaredevils win, and a washout
: Chennai Super Kings, Rajasthan Royals, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Kolkata Knight RidersA washout, and Mumbai Indians win
: Chennai Super Kings, Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan RoyalsA washout, and Sunrisers win
: Chennai Super Kings, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan RoyalsA washout, and a washout
: Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan Royals, Kolkata Knight Riders

Pujara passes 2000 runs in a year

Stats highlights of the third day’s play between South Africa and India at the Wanderers

Shiva Jayaraman20-Dec-2013

  • Cheteshwar Pujara’s unbeaten 135 was his sixth Test century and his first away from home. He also completed 2000 first-class runs in 2013 during the innings. He’s scored 2043 runs at 102.15 in first-class matches this year. Only Chris Rogers, with 2391 runs at 48.79 from 28 matches, has more in 2013.
  • Virat Kohli followed his century in the first innings with an unbeaten 77, becoming only the second Indian batsman after Rahul Dravid to get a hundred and a fifty in a Test in South Africa. Only four India batsmen have managed to hit two fifty-plus scores in a Test in South Africa, and three of them did it at the Wanderers.
  • For Kohli, though, this is the second time he has hit a hundred and a fifty in a Test. He had done it against New Zealand in Bangalore in 2012. His present aggregate of 196 in this match is his highest in 21 Tests.
  • Shikhar Dhawan’s wicket was Vernon Philander’s 100th in Tests. Philander is now the fastest South African bowler and the joint sixth-fastest of all time to the landmark, having reached it in 19 matches. Before Philander, Dale Steyn was the fastest South African bowler to take 100 wickets.
  • Philander is joint fourth in the list of fast bowlers quickest to 100 Test wickets. George Lohmann (16 matches), Charlie Turner (17) and Sydney Barnes (17) reached the landmark in fewer Tests. Andy Roberts (19) and Ian Botham (19) took as many matches as Philander but only Lohmann had a lower strike rate than Philander’s.
    Strike rate comparison of fast bowlers quickest to 100 wickets in Tests
    Bowler Mat Wkts Ave SR*
    George Lohmann 16 101 10.55 33.9
    Vernon Philander 19 100 17.77 38.7
    Ian Botham 19 100 18.97 44.7
    Andy Roberts 19 102 21.42 47.1
    Charlie Turner 17 101 16.53 51.2
    Sydney Barnes 17 101 21.44 53.2

    *

  • India’s 284 in the second innings is the second time they have scored 250 or more in both innings of a Test in South Africa. The last occasion was also at the Wanderers, in 1997. This is also only the ninth time they have scored 250 or more outside the subcontinent in the second innings before the fall of the third wicket. The last instance was in Napier in 2009. Including this Test, there have been only three other instances since 2000.
  • The 191-run unbroken partnership between Virat Kohli and Pujara is already India’s third highest in South Africa, and their highest in the second innings of a Test in South Africa. Mohammad Azharuddin and Sachin Tendulkar added 222 runs for the sixth wicket in Cape Town in 1997, which is the highest partnership for India in South Africa for any wicket.
  • South Africa’s bowlers have largely dominated the opposition in home Tests in the last couple of years. So much so that their collective economy rate of 3.51 in India’s second innings was their worst at home since 2012.
  • Philander’s 59 in South Africa’s first innings was his third fifty in Tests and the second-highest score by a South Africa No.8 against India in Tests. Mark Boucher’s unbeaten 68 in Port Elizabeth in 2001 is the highest score by a No.8 South African batsman against India.
  • Pujara paced his innings well today. He started cautiously, scoring 6 off the first 50 balls he faced. Once he got used to the conditions and the bowlers, he started scoring at a faster pace – 25 off the next 50 deliveries. He began to accelerate when South Africa turned to spin bowlers, scoring 95 from the next 100, before slowing down again by making just nine off the last 21.
    Pujara’s innings in blocks of 50 deliveries
    Deliveries Runs Balls SR
    1-50 6 50 12.00
    51-100 25 50 50.00
    101-150 43 50 86.00
    151-200 52 50 104.00
    201-221 9 21 42.85

Three young guns and a wily old spinner

The final part of our series on players to keep an eye on in the World Twenty20

Brydon Coverdale, Daniel Brettig, Mohammad Isam and Umar Farooq18-Sep-2012Glenn Maxwell
Australia

When Australia’s selectors named the 15-man squad for the World Twenty20, Maxwell was the only uncapped member of the group. Having had more than six months to whittle down their preferred T20 squad, it was as if the selectors suddenly decided, what the hell, let’s give him a whirl. They had certainly been keeping an eye on him for some time. Maxwell had emerged in early 2010, when he won his first limited-overs chances for Victoria, and much like Steven Smith, he showed promise with both bat and ball without seeming to favour either discipline. It wasn’t until the next season, when he blasted a 19-ball half-century against Tasmania, the quickest fifty in Australia’s domestic one-day history, that his potential really became apparent. He earned T20 deals with Delhi Daredevils and Hampshire in 2012 and followed that with his initial appearances for Australia in the UAE, where he did not appear out of place at international level.What’s he about?
A destructive No. 6 or 7 batsman, Maxwell makes clearing the midwicket boundary look easy. He scores quickly and rarely appears flustered, which should serve him well in a world tournament. His offspin is handy, but he is not a frontline bowler. However, his value in the field is significant. The captain, George Bailey, has said Maxwell is “one of the best fielders we’ve got, if not the best fielder in this group”. In a squad that boasts David Warner, Daniel Christian, Michael Hussey and Cameron White, that’s saying something.What the team needs
Power-hitting from the lower middle order hasn’t always been Australia’s strength in T20. If David Warner and Shane Watson can get the team away to quick starts, they need to keep that momentum up, and Maxwell is one man who can do that. He could find himself promoted to pinch-hit higher up the order if the openers have provided a strong start, otherwise he will be required for fours and sixes in the dying overs. Maxwell is also likely to be Australia’s second spinner on the turning surfaces in Sri Lanka.Big day out
56* (38) v Pakistan, Sharjah, 2012

If the selectors had any questions about Maxwell’s composure, those were answered in this match. Chasing 245, he came in at No. 7 with 86 runs still required. He played his natural game and, despite losing two partners along the way, steered Australia home with three overs to spare. Such was his confidence that he launched Junaid Khan over long-on for six to complete the win.Trivia and stats
Maxwell enjoyed a productive T20 season for Hampshire this year, scoring 179 runs at an average of 44.75 and a strike rate of 175.49.Of the top 50 run-scorers in the Friends Life t20 this year, only Matt Prior and Scott Styris had higher strike rates than Maxwell.When he scored his 19-ball fifty against Tasmania, the fastest in Australia’s domestic one-day history, he had come to the crease with 102 runs needed at more than ten an over. His efforts propelled Victoria to a one-wicket victory.Quotable
“I’m looking forward to getting some opportunities in the batting order and looking forward to doing what the team needs from me in the right situations, whether that be quick runs or saving our arses.”Thisara Perera
Sri Lanka

An allrounder of similar promise to his school-mate Angelo Mathews, Perera arrived on the domestic scene in Sri Lanka as a 19-year-old in 2008. Just over a year after he made his List A debut, he was part of Sri Lanka’s ODI side, and he has made himself a valuable member of the side in the past two years. Perera has earned contracts with both Mumbai Indians and Kochi Tuskers Kerala in the IPL, and was one of the top ten scorers in the Sri Lankan Premier League this year. Although his lower-order striking is a serious weapon, it is his bowling that he considers his primary function in the team. And while his best work for Sri Lanka has come in the 50-over format, in home conditions this tournament could provide a great opportunity for Perera to explode on to the T20 international scene.Thisara Perera picks bowling as his priority but Sri Lanka will be expecting some big shots off his bat too•AFPWhat’s he about?
As a batsman Perera is most valuable in a finishing role, coming in in the lower middle order and using his power and timing to pierce or clear the boundary. He can be especially effective in chasing situations and has been compared to Lance Klusener by the Sri Lanka coach Graham Ford. As a bowler, he does not have the pace of some of his colleagues but uses his height to his advantage, nibbles the ball off the seam, and has a happy knack of getting big bags of wickets. He is also one of the best fielders in the squad.What the team needs
Although Lasith Malinga and Ajantha Mendis will be key weapons with the ball, Sri Lanka will also look to Perera for wickets. But in this tournament he could well have just as much impact with the bat, coming in late and striking boundaries. In the past couple of years it has become apparent that no team playing Sri Lanka feels entirely comfortable while Perera remains at the crease.Big day out
69* (44) and 2 for 34 v South Africa, Kimberley, 2012

This was a match in which Perera showed the true potential of his limited-overs batting. In a big chase of 300, he came to the crease at 194 for 4, with 15 overs remaining. Though it was his first game of the series, Perera showed no signs of rust and repeatedly dispatched Robin Peterson over the boundary. His fifty came from 30 balls and he sealed the win with eight balls remaining. Perera had also taken two important wickets around the 40-over mark of South Africa’s innings, which stopped them progressing to score closer to 350.Trivia and stats
Perera is the most recent man to take an ODI hat-trick – and the fourth Sri Lankan – having picked up Younis Khan, Shahid Afridi and Sarfraz Ahmed from consecutive balls in Colombo in June.He was the fifth-fastest Sri Lankan to reach 50 ODI wickets, getting there in his 36th match. Only Mendis, Malinga, Dilhara Fernando and Sajeewa de Silva reached the mark quicker.Quotable
“I have been selected as a bowling allrounder so my first priority is as a bowler.”Vettori can put batting sides under pressure with his tight bowling•Getty ImagesDaniel Vettori
New Zealand

When Vettori stepped away from T20 internationals in 2010, it was done with the understanding that he wanted to keep an eye on the major limited-overs events to come in future years. Eighteen months later Vettori’s beard is shaggier, and the attraction of the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka on pitches lending themselves to his artful left-arm spin has proven too much. After a groin injury kept him out of New Zealand’s Tests in India, Vettori made a quiet comeback in a narrow T20 victory over MS Dhoni’s side, and is now lined up to bring his familiar brand of intelligence and fight to the Black Caps’ campaign.What’s he about?
Vettori has evolved greatly as a cricketer down the years, becoming a master of subtle variations in line, flight and pace. This has compensated for the loss of some spinning torque, necessitated by a body that has creaked at times with the weight of a 15-year international career. His batting has also been a credit to Vettori’s determination, growing out of awkward beginnings to a place where it is arguable that no one in the current New Zealand set-up knows better about how to make a hundred. In the shortest format, however, it is his spin bowling that provides greatest value.What the team needs
A calm, experienced head and a potent spinning tandem with Nathan McCullum. At times Vettori has been cast in the role of run-miser, as opposing teams have recognised his threat and treated him with respect. His penchant for bowling at difficult times is unmatched among his countrymen. Freed of the burden of captaincy, and on Sri Lankan pitches favourable to spin, Vettori will need to chase wickets in the company of McCullum, while also pinching pesky lower-order runs where required.Big day out
2 for 11 v Sri Lanka, Colombo, 2009

Ross Taylor made 60 and Jacob Oram plucked a hat-trick, but it was Vettori’s admirably tight spell of four overs that went furthest towards handing New Zealand a three-run win over the hosts. His two victims included Kumar Sangakkara, who popped a catch to midwicket.Trivia and stats
With 35 T20 wickets, Vettori is second to Nathan McCullum among New Zealand bowlers in the format.Vettori’s wickets return has decreased with each World T20 he has played in. He claimed 11 in six matches in South Africa in 2007, four in two in England in 2009, and just three in five in the West Indies in 2010.Quotable
“Not being captain takes a bit of stress off my performance, with the fact that I can just worry about myself and hopefully help out some of the younger guys.”Tamim Iqbal is yet to prove himself in high-pressure T20s•AFP Tamim Iqbal
Bangladesh

Though one of the world’s most exciting openers, Tamim’s credentials in the shortest format haven’t been up to scratch. But not because he has lacked opportunities. In the three World Twenty20s so far he averages only 14. He hasn’t fared well for Nottinghamshire in the format either, with a highest of 47 in 2011. His best performance so far has been for Chittagong in the 2009-10 NCL T20s, in which he averaged over 48. His strike rate in T20Is too has been ordinary. On many occasions he has batted at a faster rate in Tests – he notched up his Lord’s hundred at a strike rate of 103. His much-anticipated inclusion in the IPL amounted to nothing after Pune Warriors didn’t pick him in their XI. His first innings in the SLPL, however – an unbeaten 93 – gives hope for a better World Twenty20 performance this time around.What’s he about?
Tamim has shown a willingness to adapt and is a quick learner. Having worked hard on his leg-side play, he has also shown that he can counter defensive field settings in Test cricket. As the one constant in the Bangladesh top order, he will be asked to prolong his innings past the Powerplay, though he is capable of blasting a few during the six-over field restrictions.What the team needs
Having settled for Mohammad Ashraful as his opening partner, Tamim will be expected to play his natural game as long as he can play a big innings. He has all the shots to make up for a slow start, though it is unlikely he will start slow. His recent experience playing in Pallekele will also be handy as Bangladesh play both their group games at this venue.Big day out
69 not out v Netherlands, The Hague, 2012

Bangladesh had just suffered a demoralising loss to Scotland in the previous game and it was necessary for one of the batsmen to stay at the crease during the 145-run chase against Netherlands. Having been dropped in the first over, Tamim took only a few chances, using his feet against the spinners in the Powerplay. He hammered a few more after crossing 30, and two more boundaries after he had reached his maiden T20I fifty.Trivia and stats
Tamim holds the record for the highest score in an ODI innings for Bangladesh.Quotable
“Personally, I felt happy after the Europe tour. I thought it was a decent effort in conditions which I wouldn’t call ideal for T20 cricket.”Javed Ahmadi
Afghanistan

Ahmadi led Afghanistan Under-19 in the World Cup plate final against Sri Lanka on August 24 in Brisbane and the next day was part of the senior side that took on Australia in an ODI in Sharjah, a 15-hour flight away. At 20, he is sturdy for his age and has a striking energy. He was third on the run-scoring charts in the U-19 World Cup, making 285 at 47.50. Although he has been in the Afghanistan U-19 squad since 2010, he has also turned out for the national senior side at regular intervals, and has played ten ODIs, having made his debut against Scotland in 2010.What’s he about?
Ahmadi’s attacking approach is his defining feature as an opener. He has the tendency to go hard every ball he plays. The off side is his strong area – he loves to drive and compares his batting to former England captain Michael Vaughan, although Michael Clarke is his favourite player. Though he isn’t a regular spinner, Ahmadi can add some value with his fingerspin.What the team needs
For Afghanistan to get a flying start to their innings Ahmadi has to play a key role. They don’t have murderous batsmen like Chris Gayle or David Warner but Ahmadi can do the job at the top.Afghanistan will depend on Javed Ahmadi to give them good starts•ICCBig day out
134 (111) v Scotland, U-19 World Cup, Brisbane


The captain led from the front, bashing 17 fours and four sixes in his 111-ball knock before he was dismissed in the 38th over. His blazing innings powered Afghanistan to a massive total of 336 – the tournament’s second-highest.Trivia and stats
Ahmadi’s 134 was the highest individual score of the World Cup, and he was the third highest run-getter of the tournament.Quotable
“Javed is the bright talented lad in the team. He is the future of Afghan cricket.”
– Kabir Khan, Afghanistan coach Maxwell and Perera by Brydon Coverdale, Vettori by Daniel Brettig, Tamim by Mohammad Isam, Ahmadi by Umar Farooq

A Twenty20 hundred for the purists

Before this tournament started there were two Twenty20 international hundreds. In the last 48 hours that tally has been doubled and Mahela Jayawardene’s even 100 will rank among the finest innings played in the format

Andrew McGlashan in Guyana03-May-2010Before this tournament started there were two Twenty20 international hundreds. In the last 48 hours that tally has been doubled and Mahela Jayawardene’s even 100 will rank among the finest innings played in the format. It proved, beyond doubt, that there is still a place for elegance and grace in the smash-and-grab world of Twenty20.For a while it looked like rain would scupper Sri Lanka, but they managed to race to five overs in Zimbabwe’s chase before another downpour. Now they are likely to progress to the Super Eights, and Jayawardene is going to take some catching as the tournament’s leading scorer if his form continues, having begun with 81 off 51 balls against New Zealand three days ago.On early form it is shaping as a race between him, Suresh Raina and possibly Shane Watson. Raina and Watson made their mark yesterday against South Africa and Pakistan respectively, but they were both innings more akin to this format. That isn’t for one minute suggesting they weren’t worthy knocks, far from it as Raina produced a glorious 60-ball 101 and Watson pulverised Pakistan with a 49-ball 81.But watching Watson, and to a lesser extent, Raina hammer the bowling attack wasn’t nearly as fulfilling an experience as watching Jayawardene toy with the Zimbabwe attack. The bowlers he faced weren’t of the class of South Africa or Pakistan, but Jaywardene was in complete control from the moment he struck the second delivery of the match for four and the third for six as 14 came off the first over. It was a faultless innings.”I’m relieved and happy we managed to play a game out there but I thought the day belonged to Mahela who batted absolutely brilliantly,” said Kumar Sangakkara. “To score a hundred in Twenty20 isn’t easy but the way he is batting I think he’ll keep on doing things that are incredible.”It is a complete justification of his elevation to opening, which has led to Sanath Jayasuriya coming in at No. 8. Only twice in his previous 579 internationals has Jayasuriya batted so low and they were back in 1990 and 1991. Before Jayawardene moved, he had an underwhelming average of 22.05 from 23 Twenty20s and the task of launching the innings was left to Jayasuriya and Tillakaratne Dilshan. Now Sri Lanka have found the way to make the most of Jayawardene in Twenty20, especially with Jayasuriya coming towards the end of his career.”It wasn’t that I was disappointed batting lower down, I had a different role, it’s whatever fits in but I knew I could be a lot more free and express myself a bit better batting higher up the order,” Jayawardene said. “I started in provincial cricket back home and it went well and continued at the IPL, then I had a chat to my skipper. When you are in form you have to make best use of it, and in Twenty20, you need guys to control the innings so the big hitters can bat around you.”Jaywardene has always been one of the most pleasing batsmen on the eye and it is testament to his skill that he has been able to translate that into Twenty20, where the temptation is to leather the cover off the ball. However, regardless of how quickly runs need to be scored, there is no point swinging blindly because the net result is unlikely to be as successful as retaining the basics that make for successful run-scoring in any format. However, Jayawardene could probably make slogging looking graceful.”I had to challenge myself to be a bit different in Twenty20 cricket as well as all the other aspects of the game,” he said. “So you keep pushing yourself to try and be a better cricketer every day.”His impressive IPL form has no doubt played a part in his prolific start to this event, as have pitch conditions in Guyana, which are akin to those in Colombo and Galle. Still, batsmen normally like to take a little time to get their eye in but Jayawardene drove his third delivery over long off to signal his intent. It wasn’t even a half volley, yet the back-of-a-length ball from Chris Mpofu was lofted on the up; in a Test match, or even an ODI, it would have been left or defended with a high left elbow.Against New Zealand he had dominated the scoring – after six overs he had 30 of Sri Lanka’s 36 – and was at it again here, when Dilshan’s poor run continued as he miscued a lofted drive for 2. This time after six overs, Jayawardene had 48 (off 25 balls) out of Sri Lanka’s 59 for 1 and his fifty off 27 balls was the fastest of the tournament to date. Because there was so little outlandish swinging by Jayawardene, the opportunity of the hundred almost crept up, and when he nudged a single into the leg side he celebrated with an understated lift of the bat to the dug-out and the crowd.There has also been a role reversal with his opening partner Dilshan, who led Sri Lanka’s batting at last year’s World Twenty20 but can’t buy a run this time. However, you couldn’t get two more contrasting players and there isn’t a Dilscoop in sight when Jayawardene has his bat in hand. There is no need for such extravagance when the tried and tested methods work so well.

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