Crystal Palace finalise Sam Johnstone deal

Crystal Palace are preparing to announce West Brom goalkeeper Sam Johnstone as their third signing of the window.

What’s the word?

That’s according to Ryan Taylor, who released a tweet regarding the finalisation of their top target, Cheik Doucoure.

However, he signed off the tweet by claiming that “Sam Johnstone officially completes move to Selhurst Park on Friday.”

Palace fans can finally relax as they look to squeeze through another couple of impressive deals early on in the window after the acquisition of Malcolm Ebiowei.

Vieira will love it

Sam Johnstone is widely regarded as a very solid goalkeeper, and marks another intelligent piece of business from Patrick Vieira.

Jack Butland had previously held the backup goalkeeper spot, but the opportunity to sign the former Premier League shot-stopper who was a bright spark in an otherwise dull West Brom side will have seen him drop down the pecking order.

Last season, in what was a frustrating year for the Baggies, the England international still managed a wonderful 15 clean sheets, conceding just 33 goals in 36 games. He ranked third in the race for the Championship’s golden glove as his West Brom side finished tenth.

This fine shot-stopping led to his new boss Steve Bruce dubbing him a “wonderful goalkeeper”.

He had the following to say about his development: “I had the pleasure of working with Sam a few years ago and watched his career take off. It’s no surprise. I always knew the talent he has. He’s a very, very good goalkeeper.”

In his last season in the Premier League during the 2020/21 season, he also averaged a fine average SofaScore rating of 7.03 as his side were relegated. Throughout that season, despite keeping just six clean sheets, he did average 4.5 saves per game and even notched up an assist.

He has already proven his class at the top level, and will certainly offer a competitive battle for the number one jersey with Vicente Guaita.

Vieira will be delighted to get yet another fresh face through the door, and further bolster what is turning into a really solid Premier League squad.

AND, in other news: Contact made: CPFC in the race to seal £9m “great signing”, Vieira would love him.

Leeds: Phil Hay drops Marc Roca update

Leeds United are reportedly closing in on the signing of Bayern Munich midfielder Marc Roca, with the Spaniard set to be the club’s third summer addition.

What’s the word?

As per The Athletic’s Phil Hay, a deal to bring to the 25-year-old to Elland Road is now imminent, with the transfer insider revealing that the move “should get done this week.”

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This corroborates an update from journalist Fabrizio Romano who revealed that it is now a “done deal”, with the former Espanyol man set to sign for a fee of around €12m (£10.4m) plus add ons having committed to a contract until 2026.

The Yorkshire side have already acted swiftly to land Red Bull Salzburg duo Rasmus Kristensen and Brenden Aaronson, with the Jesse Marsch revolution currently in full swing.

Supporters will be buzzing

Despite no confirmation from the club as yet, the indication is that Roca is firmly on his way to becoming a Premier League player, bringing to an end what has proven a brief and frustrating stint in Germany.

The £6.3m-rated gem had been plucked from La Liga two years ago for a fee of around €15m (£13m), although has since gone on to make just 24 appearances in all competitions for the Bundesliga champions, failing to score or register an assist.

That may be a point of concern for some sections of the Leeds support, although the £31k-per-week gem is undoubtedly a hugely talented individual, having even been compared to former Liverpool and Real Madrid maestro Xabi Alonso following his move to the Allianz Arena.

In his final campaign for the Catalan side, during the 2019/20 season, the 6 foot playmaker showed just what an impressive impact he can make when handed the chance, having averaged 2.3 tackes, 0.9 interceptions and 1.4 clearances per game in his 35 league outings, while also averaging a solid 2.3 dribbles per game.

Clearly a player capable of doing a bit of everything, he will add quality to a midfield that has been devoid of depth in recent seasons and ultimately been stretched to breaking point, while his arrival will also help to soften the blow should prize asset Kalvin Phillips depart, with the local lad reportedly a top target for Manchester City.

Roca will seemingly be able to take on the Englishman’s role at the base of the midfield if required, with his qualities in and out of possession making him an ideal fit for the role, having been lavished with praise by former Bayern technical director Michael Reschke: “Roca plays like a quarter-back. He has good passing, short and long range, his technique is good and he has a good mentality.

“Defensively, he is very aggressive in one on one situations and brings a lot of emotion to the team. He was certainly well respected by his teammates. The one downside perhaps is that he could be a little stronger.”

That glowing assessment will be music to the ears of the Elland Road faithful, with supporters no doubt buzzing that the club are on their way to securing even more early transfer business, as they look to improve upon last season’s nail-biting, relegation scrap.

IN other news: Leeds now plotting swoop for “reliable” £22k-p/w starlet, he’s the new Dani Alves

Leeds: Marsch intent on signing striker

Leeds United will now ‘go for’ a striker during the summer window, transfer insider Dean Jones has told GiveMeSport.

The lowdown

Jesse Marsch has already made his first signing as Whites manager, kicking off the club’s summer business with a £25m deal for Brenden Aaronson from RB Salzburg.

The 48-year-old already has the likes of Patrick Bamford, Joe Gelhardt and Daniel James available as centre-forward options, but he may be unsure whether he can depend on the former over the course of the season after injury restricted the 28-year-old to just nine Premier League appearances in 2021/22.

Gelhardt may have been deemed too inexperienced to lead the line at this stage, having only turned 20 earlier this month and made just 22 senior appearances for the club; while James might lack the required potency in front of goal, having netted only four times in 37 outings in the most recent campaign.

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The latest

Jones expects three more significant signings to follow Aaronson through the door at Elland Road over the summer, saying that one of those will undoubtedly be a centre-forward.

He told GiveMeSport: “I think, realistically, four good signings is probably what you could expect because of the way the market is going to be in terms of the value of people.

“They’re going to go for a striker, there’s no doubt about that.”

The verdict

Who could the new striker potentially be?

The Athletic’s Phil Hay has previously reported that the Whites would like to sign a Premier League marksman, and journalist Pete O’Rourke has suggested that Liverpool’s Takumi Minamino and Chelsea’s Armando Broja, who spent last season on loan at Southampton, are potential targets.

Marsch may potentially lean towards Minamino because, according to O’Rourke, the Leeds manager ‘knows all about him from his time at Salzburg’. Indeed, the current Anfield ace played 22 times under Marsch in Austria, helping himself to 20 goal contributions in that time.

That surely wouldn’t be a bad thing for Leeds given that the Japan international bagged another 10 goals this season for Liverpool, impressively averaging one for every 101 minutes of action.

In other news, Leeds are the ‘most interested’ club in this transfer battle

West Ham: Where is Simone Zaza now?

After witnessing Simone Zaza’s infamous – and frankly spectacular – penalty miss at Euro 2016, clubs would have been forgiven for halting any interest in the striker, such was the shambolic nature of the Italian’s stuttering run-up and blazed effort in a game of such magnitude.

No strangers to making bold – and often bizarre – deals in the transfer market, though, West Ham United were unperturbed by that spot-kick horror show, eventually signing the player from Juventus on a season-long loan deal later that summer.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing in football, with GSB likely wishing they had heeded the warning signs, as the journeyman forward went on to distinctly underwhelm in a Hammers shirt.

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One of many notable names to have failed to make the grade for the east London outfit over the last decade or so, Zaza’s time in English football is only noteworthy for just how brief it was and how little impact he made.

Having been signed for a reported £5m loan fee by then-Irons manager Slaven Bilic, the Policoro native went on to feature just 11 times for the club in all competitions, spending a mere 571 minutes on the pitch and failing to register a single goal.

In the end, all that came of his Premier League stint was two yellow cards, with those bookings costing the club £2.5m apiece in relation to his loan fee.

Such was the dire nature of Zaza’s time in east London, Bilic and co eventually severed ties with the player just a matter of months into his loan spell in order to avoid having to pay an appearance-related £20m purchase option, as the striker secured a January move to La Liga side Valencia.

Upon his departure, the Italian’s father insisted that it had been a “huge mistake” to make the move to the London Stadium, with the club and their supporters seemingly thinking the same.

Since then, the 30-year-old has somewhat faded from view, eventually making his return to Italy after an 18-month stint in Spain, with the 18-cap international now plying his trade for Serie A outfit Torino.

He has scored just 20 goals in 102 games across all competitions for his current club, notably failing to find the net in ten league appearances so far this term, all of which have come as a substitute.

Such has been Zaza’s decline since his stint in the Premier League, he is now valued at just £1.8m by Transfermarkt, despite having reached a peak of £22.8m back in January 2018 after a brief purple patch at the Mestalla.

As for West Ham, the only saving grace is that they hadn’t agreed to a permanent deal in the first place, with Simone Zaza now just another name on their list of failed centre-forward additions.

In other news, West Ham eyeing swoop for “aggressive” £45m-rated warrior, just imagine him and Rice

Stats – Lasith Malinga, a colossus of ODI cricket

As Malinga prepares for his final ODI, here are some statistical highlights of a career that spanned over 15 years and four World Cups

Bharath Seervi25-Jul-2019ESPNcricinfo Ltd335 – Wickets Malinga took in ODIs. He is the tenth-highest wicket-taker in the format. Among Sri Lanka bowlers, only Muttiah Muralitharan (534) and Chaminda Vaas (400) have more ODI wickets.56 – Wickets taken by Malinga in World Cup matches, the third-most among all bowlers. Only Glenn McGrath (71) and Muttiah Muralitharan (68) have more wickets in World Cup history. Malinga played in four World Cup tournaments (2007, 2011, 2015 and 2019) and took 12 or more wickets in each of them. No other bowler has taken ten-plus wickets in more than three World Cup editions.3 – Number of hat-tricks taken by Malinga in ODIs, the most among all bowlers. He picked up hat-tricks against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup, against Kenya in the 2011 World Cup and against Australia in 2011. He is also the only bowler to take four wickets in four balls in ODI cricket, a feat he achieved against South Africa, en route to his first hat-trick.163 – Wickets taken by Malinga in the four-year period between 2011 and 2014, which was the best phase of his ODI career. No bowler took more wickets in ODI cricket during that period. After a great start to his career – he picked up 67 wickets in 45 ODIs from his debut till 2007 – Malinga had a relatively lean time from 2008 till 2010, fetching 41 wickets in 30 games. From 2015 onwards, he was in and out of the team several times and did not play a single ODI in 2016.ESPNcricinfo Ltd24.7 – Malinga’s bowling strike rate in wins – the best among all bowlers who have 150 or more wickets in wins. He has taken 212 wickets in wins and 112 in defeats (strike rate 47.0). He averages 20.23 in wins and 45.89 in losses.29 – Wickets for Malinga in Asia Cup (14 matches) – the second-most among all bowlers. Only Muralitharan has more, 30 in 24 games. He played a crucial role in Sri Lanka’s 2014 Asia Cup victory, taking 5 for 56 in the final.8 – Five-wicket hauls for Malinga in ODIs – the fifth-most among all bowlers. Three of those five-fors came against Pakistan.

Lasith Malinga in each ODI World Cup
Edition Mats Wkts Ave SR
2007 8 18 15.77 19.4
2011 7 13 20.76 22.4
2015 7 12 29.50 31.8
2019 7 13 28.69 28.4

6 – Number of times Malinga dismissed Shane Watson – the most he got a batsman out in his ODI career. Shahid Afridi, Martin Guptill and Mohammad Hafeez are the next on the list with five dismissals each. Incidentally, Hafeez and Virender Sehwag are the only batsmen to be dismissed for ducks by Malinga twice.56 – Malinga’s highest score as a batsman in ODIs, which came against Australia at the MCG in 2010. It is his only half-century of in ODIs. He shared a 132-run stand with Angelo Mathews for the ninth wicket, which is the highest partnership for the ninth wicket or lower in ODI history. Chasing 240, Sri Lanka were 107 for 8 when Malinga and Mathews joined hands to clinch a one-wicket victory.

How the world discovered World Series Cricket

A look back to the time two Australian journalists touring England broke the news of one of cricket’s most seismic events

Daniel Brettig09-May-20170:00

How WSC transformed cricket

“Oh, Kerry wouldn’t do that, son.”With these words, the News Limited chairman Sir Kenneth May cooled the jets of his young group cricket writer and fellow South Australian Alan Shiell. It was April 1977 and Shiell had just told May all he knew about a prospective breakaway cricket competition to be helmed for television by the owner of the Nine network, Kerry Packer – a notion so apparently preposterous that May rejected it out of hand.The two met in Sydney, the afternoon before Shiell was due to fly to England with Australia’s Ashes tourists. Forty years after eventually breaking the story of World Series Cricket alongside his fellow correspondent Peter McFarline, Shiell wonders how things might have panned out if he had pushed the issue that day.

“I was surprised that Peter had gone to such lengths to keep me out of the way for the sake of a story – I suppose that’s journalism for you”Journalist Brian Mossop on losing out on the big story to McFarline

“I had told Ron Boland, editor of the in Adelaide, and he told me to tell Sir Kenneth.” After at first refusing to believe the story, May said: “Well, see what more you can find out over there and send the story through as soon as possible.””I could have written something based on what I had at the time, and I wonder what difference that would’ve made to the trip, and whether some of those players would have toured at all,” Shiell says. “I didn’t realise it was going to be quite as big as it was, but I guess I was naive.”A similarly bright-eyed exchange had taken place a little less than a week before, at the Newmarket Hotel in Adelaide. Shiell was there for lunch with his friend the recent Test debutant David Hookes, who rather changed the tone of the afternoon when he let slip the biggest secret in the game, partly as a favour to Shiell ahead of his first overseas assignment with News Limited.”He was worried about his future and whether he’d be able to play Test cricket again,” Shiell says. “He didn’t think he would, and was quite concerned. He didn’t know for sure but he assumed everyone was in on it, but he wasn’t completely comfortable. He was pretty happy about the money, A$25,000 a year, but the more it went on and the closer it got, the more he became worried about it and went to see Packer, who told him there was no way out of it.Alan Shiell in the Adelaide Oval press box in 1989•Mark Ray”They all knew what it involved from the start. Some might not have liked it, but they all knew they wouldn’t be playing Test cricket. He would have been speaking to me as a friend too, chatting all about it knowing I wasn’t going to write it the next day, but once it all broke he never had a go at me about it in England and was always comfortable about it there.”As a former batsman of some distinction for South Australia, Shiell’s contacts among the players were impeccable. But he was also wary of the impressive connections built up by McFarline, the irascible and competitive correspondent for the in Melbourne. A few hours after being rebuffed by May, Shiell dined with McFarline at Sydney’s Boulevard Hotel. Both were booked on the same Qantas flight that would convey Australia’s Ashes tourists to England. Though he had filed a broad story the previous October about televised cricket on Nine, McFarline needed more.”McFarline didn’t know anything, really, until I told him that night at the Boulevard,” Shiell recalls. “But there was that fear that because he knew so many officials like [Victoria Cricket Association secretary] David Richards and others, and because he used to get fed a few more stories than me, that he would drop it [into print] before me. So I thought it was better to take him into my confidence and we’ll both work together, so I was guaranteed it either way then.”

“I wish I’d had a mobile phone or better phone connections then. I should’ve phoned Sydney, I should’ve phoned the sports editors to vouch for the story. But in those days you didn’t make unnecessary phone calls!”Alan Shiell

Their resources duly pooled, the pair joined the team on the plane to England. In the early days of the trip both missed opportunities to follow up. McFarline, who died in 2002, recalled that several players, including the England fast bowler John Snow, greeted him with the words “See you in Australia next summer”, which seemed odd with India slated to tour.”It was strange in hindsight that I didn’t ask much more about it immediately after I got to England,” Shiell says, “particularly not talking more about it to Greg [Chappell], who I’d roomed with for South Australia. But I was so bloody busy filing for morning papers, evening papers and Sunday papers. Murdoch’s Sydney papers weren’t taking AAP then either, so I was having to do the scores as well. I had the , the Murdoch Sundays, the and the . The and the drove me mad!”So it was that the touring team and its attendant press pack reached Hove in Sussex for a tour match starting on Saturday, May 7, with little inkling of the storm about to break. At this point it actually seemed most likely that the WSC story would emerge from either Packer’s own magazine the , which was quietly preparing an official version about the venture for June, or the respected English correspondent Ian Wooldridge, who was taken into the confidence of Packer’s prime consultant, Richie Benaud.Wooldridge had called Benaud at his home in London and got an evasive response initially. Some hours later Benaud called Wooldridge back with the words, “I think you’d better come round for a chat”, leading to a comprehensive story being published in the on the Monday. By that time, Benaud and Packer had expected their formal letter to inform the ACB would have arrived on the desk of the board’s chairman Bob Parish. Rain at Hove proved the catalyst for a more hectic turn.Peter McFarline and the break the news that would change cricket forever•The AgeAfter the Australian batsmen Greg Chappell and Craig Serjeant sought cover with the score 35 for 1, Shiell wandered from the press area to a corporate tent, where he bumped into the business manager of another former South Australia batsman, Barry Richards. That conversation helped Shiell learn far more about the international implications of WSC, fleshing out the one part of the story where he was most sketchy.Returning to the press corps, Shiell found that other conversations had also taken place. “When I got back, an English journalist came to me and said, ‘What do you know about an Australian TV mogul going to start up a rebel series in Australia?'” Shiell says. “I pleaded innocence, that I didn’t know, and he replied, ‘Wooldridge will have the story in on Monday.’ Once I heard that, I said to McFarline, ‘We’ll have to do it now for the Monday morning papers’, so we went to see Greg after play was called off early.”When I told him, he had a funny look on his face and said, ‘It sounds like an interesting proposition. I’d like to know more about it before committing myself.'”McFarline was a friend of John Snow’s, and he’d organised to go off to Tony Greig’s place to a party that night. And McFarline went to that and I went to the hotel and wrote what I knew. McFarline came back later that night, told me a bit more of what he’d been able to glean about more players being involved from other countries, and that was it.

Ian Wooldridge had called Richie Benaud at his home in London and got an evasive response initially. Some hours later Benaud called Wooldridge back with the words, “I think you’d better come round for a chat”, leading to a comprehensive story in the

“I still had time that Saturday night to ring the London bureau, and rang the story through to John Murche, who took it down and then put it on the telex through to Sydney, the and the . I wish I’d had a mobile phone or better phone connections then. I should’ve phoned Sydney, I should’ve phoned the sports editors to vouch for the story, but without that, they weren’t quite sure what to do with it. As it turned out it was on the front page of the , the ran McFarline’s story inside, and I’m not sure where the ran it. It should’ve had bigger exposure, but in those days you didn’t make unnecessary phone calls!”While Shiell worried over whether the story would get its due, McFarline hatched a plan to ensure an Australian exclusive, inviting fellow reporters Brian Mossop and Norman Tasker to a Sunday morning round of golf that ensured they were out of range for their respective offices.Mossop offers a wry chuckle when reminded of what had seemed a jovial offer to get away from cricket for a few hours. “So off I went to golf, and it was only when I got back that I discovered there was a flurry of speculation going around. Fortunately I had at least one friend among the cricketers, Ian Davis. I was sitting with Norm Tasker back at the Dudley Hotel when he came over and said, ‘Oh, dramatic events eh?’, then unveiled what those events were.Cricketers’ wives express their approval of the World Series in the , November 1977•The Australian Women’s Weekly”I ran off to find out whatever I could and it snowballed from there. I think I managed to get a stop press or something in the , because by then it was pretty late at night Australian time, by the time I’d finished paddling around on the golf course. I phoned the office and said this was going on and that was about the end of it for that night. Of course all hell broke loose and then it was a case of filing stuff about both tours almost every day.”I was surprised that Peter had gone to such lengths to keep me out of the way for the sake of a story – I suppose that’s journalism for you. I wasn’t amused, but there wasn’t much I could do about it after the event. It was a big story and a bit of a pain to miss out on it… If I’d had a good day’s golf it might have been a bit more acceptable!”As Mossop, McFarline and Tasker sauntered around the links, Shiell took it upon himself to inform the tour manager, Len Maddocks, and his assistant, Norm McMahon. “They didn’t believe it and didn’t want to believe it, but they soon had to believe it!” he says. “That was the end of their comfortable trip. Things were never the same, on the tour or after it.”What followed was a bizarre few months for players and journalists alike. Initial disquiet at McFarline’s tactics faded away, but it was apparent that a cricket rebellion of this size had changed things irrevocably for the players and also the correspondents commissioned to report on them. For one thing, the usually comfortable relationship between the players and the press soon began to be eroded by the desire for further scoops.

“When I got back, an English journalist came to me and said, ‘What do you know about an Australian TV mogul going to start up a rebel series in Australia?’ I pleaded innocence, that I didn’t know”Alan Shiell

One Australian paper sent an investigative reporter to the tour, who soon mucked in with the cricket correspondents. At collegiate dinners or pub meetings he had little to say, but then wrote several lengthy pieces about it all that appeared to be chapter-and-verse renderings of bar talk. The stories resulted in Mossop and others being harangued by their editors along the lines of “why didn’t you write that?”, when they had reasoned much of this information would have jeopardised an already febrile triangle between the press, the players and the tour management. It seemed, like so much else about WSC, to foreshadow a wilder future.”Every day they wanted a political story apart from the cricket story,” Shiell says. “There was a real undercurrent on the whole tour – you saw someone talking to someone else and you’d wonder what they were talking about. You felt sorry for the four guys who weren’t involved, Kim Hughes, Gary Cosier, Geoff Dymock and Craig Serjeant. They felt left out when there were meetings among the players and they weren’t involved. It just put pressure on everyone and hung over the entire tour.”Mossop’s memories are similar: “The news was out, so one or two players were prepared to say a few things they previously had not admitted to, and as these things happen gradually, bits come out and you get a whiff of something, so you chase that. It was a fascinating time, apart from the fact I missed the first edition. So having missed that, it was a case of chase, chase, chase and make sure you didn’t miss anything else!”We had basically two tours going on from then on. We were writing about the tour we were on and writing about the tour to come – the break-up of cricket. It was pretty split between those who had been approached and those who hadn’t, but the atmosphere was different from a normal tour. It wasn’t terribly antagonistic but some of the guys felt very left out. There were two camps, and it was a fascinating tour to be on.”Something else Shiell recalls keenly is the savagery of the criticism directed at the players, a trend started by Wooldridge’s copy, headlined “Cricketers Turn Pirates”. “Back then, when cricketers were so terribly underpaid, it was surely an accident waiting to happen,” he says. “And yet they got no sympathy at all in the press, particularly the English press, who were really savage on them, but I’m sorry to say the Australian papers said much the same thing.Kerry Packer dragged cricket into the future•Getty Images”They felt that Packer was a media competitor and treated it as such. I was told certain things about how to tackle it. But when you boiled it down, the players were so terribly underpaid, it’s a wonder it didn’t happen earlier. So many players had given the game away prematurely because they couldn’t afford it, and when you think about how far they’ve come now, 40 years on, it’s terrible to think about how little sympathy the players got from anyone. No surprise from there how many players around the world jumped in on it.”Shiell and McFarline attended Packer’s first press conference at Lord’s after the venture became public, scene of his infamous declaration: “Now it’s every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost.” Later Shiell served as wicketkeeper in a press match, where Packer stood beside him at second slip. “McFarline had a freer rein, whereas I couldn’t be spared from the tour,” Shiell says. “I had to file scores every quarter of an hour at the county games. He stayed on for a little while after the tour and wrote , which was fair play to him because I was stuffed.”At the end I had an offer to join some of the players and go to Amsterdam for a week to play some social games, all expenses paid, and I knocked it back. All I wanted to do was come home to see my son Brad, who was born in January 1976, so by September 1977 he was only one. Getting on that Qantas flight at Heathrow was one of the greatest feelings of my life, I tell you. That plane was a beautiful sight. There have been a lot happier and smoother trips!”In recognition of five months’ work without a day off and a share in the biggest story cricket had yet seen, Shiell was handed an envelope containing one extra week’s pay, and then asked to get back out to cover the SANFL finals in Adelaide. “Difficult days they were,” he says. “Difficult days.”So yes, son, Kerry would do that.

'In my heart I wanted to be a fighter pilot'

Zimbabwe batsman Sikandar Raza talks about his late start in cricket, being independent, and what Test cricket means to him

Interview by Mohammad Isam21-Jan-2016You have played international cricket for a few years now. Has it been enjoyable?
It has certainly been very enjoyable. The best part of this journey has been the different challenges any international cricketer would come across. It certainly hasn’t been easy. Going forward, I hope it will be even more enjoyable. Different sorts of challenges will come in, different sorts of performances you have to put in for the team to win the game.What have the challenges been?
I think settling into international cricket was difficult for us. In my opinion, our domestic structure hasn’t got the quality of spinners or pacers you come across in international cricket. You regularly come across 140-145 clicks, and in domestic cricket we only had one guy who bowled 140. International cricket is a big step up, not just for me but any Zimbabwean coming into international cricket, and that’s why it takes some of us a lot longer to adjust and bring out the performances than the other guys. I am not trying to use that as an excuse. I think if I am realistic, I wouldn’t want to put them under pressure. For me they must come up and enjoy international cricket, work on their game and get better.One of the best days in your short career was leading Zimbabwe unexpectedly and winning that T20 game against India.
I think the game was starting at one o’clock and I was told at about 12.10 in the afternoon that I will be captaining. I think that’s why I didn’t overthink it, which was a good thing.We got the team sheet wrong as well. I didn’t want the opposition captain to be waiting for me because we were hoping Elton [Chigumbura] would be fit. He is one of our best players. The analyst and I had to write in a different team sheet. It was a lot of pressure at that time, but now when you look back you enjoy those moments.

“I felt for the people of Pakistan. For a country whose people love the sport not to have international cricket for six years – I had goosebumps because of how they treated us”

And when you got on the field?
The emphasis was that I was captaining Zimbabwe. I do not care who I play against, but the most important thing for me is to represent Zimbabwe, and I do that with a lot of honour. It was great to lead this great bunch of boys.A captain has to start from the bottom of the queue. You have to take everybody forward. To win an international game, you have to do everything necessary. I was fortunate that most of the guys were playing well. To be honest, the job was made a lot easier because [Graeme] Cremer bowled well. [Taurai] Muzarabani and [Chris] Mpofu finished the game well. I thought it was one of those days when everything happened for us.What did you take away from the game?
I think the game put a sense of responsibility in me that this is how I am looked at by the board and senior players. I wasn’t the senior most but I was asked to captain. My players respected that decision and backed me 100%. I started to bowl a lot more and bat longer after that game.When I became a father, I realised that sense of responsibility even more. In cricketing terms, that game helped me in a lot of ways that I didn’t even know.”I’ve learnt a lot of cricket from the four Tests than the 50 ODIs that I’ve played”•AFPHow do you prepare?
I do homework on who I will be facing. If I am not going to be facing 140kph in the matches, there’s no point in facing 140kph in the nets. I prepare for different tours differently. Some have seam and some have spin challenges. On some tours I may be batting down the order, which means I have to hit out most of the time instead of building an innings. If I can be brutally honest with you, I think one of the reasons I haven’t performed in the last five to seven games is because I haven’t prepared well. I think it is something for which I have to look in the mirror and say, this is what I need to do to prepare myself for the next tour if I am given the honour to be picked in the Zimbabwe squad.Since you are not from Zimbabwe, did it take a lot of time to get to know your team-mates?
It has been 13 years since we moved to Zimbabwe as a family. I was away in Scotland for my studies for a lot of those years. I only started playing cricket in 2009.I think it depends on the sort of person you are. I think culturally, Zimbabwean people are very warm. Their doors are open for you. If you don’t have the right attitude towards others, it will be difficult for them to accept you for who you are. It was never made difficult for me. You expect some differences, because if you don’t then there’s something wrong. I guess in Zimbabwe, in our changing rooms and our culture, everybody is ready to accept everybody.How was it playing in Pakistan?
In the first game we certainly had some goosebumps. I felt for the people of Pakistan. For a country whose people love the sport, not to have international cricket for six years – I had those goosebumps because of how they treated us. The amount of love they showed. Some of the Pakistani players were quite emotional as well. I felt their pain.

“I still watch programmes about fighter planes with a lot of interest. It gets me emotional”

There are now many cricketers like yourself, uprooting themselves from where they were born and brought up, and playing cricket for another country. When you come across anyone like that, do you exchange notes?
For me it was destiny. I was never meant to play cricket. In my heart I wanted to be a fighter pilot. After that dream didn’t come true, I wanted to be a software engineer. That also didn’t come through. I think this shows that God has a better plan for you than you do for yourself. Some guys may have migrated to other countries to play cricket. I didn’t, so when I actually meet some of them, the only word we say is destiny – here we are.I still watch programmes about fighter planes with a lot of interest. It gives me goosebumps. It gets me emotional. It was my dream. The idea was never planted in my head by my family.In Pakistan they have two Air Force cadet colleges. I was lucky enough to go to PAF Lower Topa, which is in Murree, from Grade 7 to 12. Unfortunately, I was medically unfit after the 10th. I couldn’t go to the reunion in the first week of July last year, but I would love to go back there.How many times have you watched ?
Just once, but see, it is just a movie. I am quite a realistic person. Some of my friends who were with me are now fighter pilots. Some of them are on F-16s and some are flying instructors. I feel quite happy and blessed. Some of them were [martyred] trying to protect people. Everyone is going to die, but what better way is there? There was something wrong with their planes, so it was either that they ejected and saved their lives and the plane crashed into a populated area or they tried to take the plane away from that area. Two of my friends were blessed with such a beautiful death.Has the experience of having stayed away from home from the time you were young helped you as a cricketer?
It certainly helps you in making decisions. You have to live by it, whether it is wrong or right. You can’t give credit or blame anyone. My family supported me throughout my time in the boarding schools, studying in Scotland, and now I am playing cricket, which is also like a boarding school.I am never home. I think my son gets affected the most. I think he will understand that the things that I did were for the family and the country who gave me this honour.”Culturally Zimbabwean people are very warm. Their doors are open for you. In our changing rooms, everybody is ready to accept everybody”•AFPDoes the lack of Test cricket affect you in any way?
I think it does affect all of us. Test cricket teaches us the game. I don’t want to take the limelight away from T20s but I’ve learnt a lot of cricket from those four Tests than the 50 ODIs that I’ve played. I think the little success I have had is because of Test cricket. We may not see the side effects this year but not playing Tests certainly has taken the shine out of our ODI and to some extent, T20 cricket.Does it bother you that cricket is a game where one bad performance can take it all away?
I have moved past that insecurity. I will use this tour as a perfect example. I was dropped for the last game [second T20 against Bangladesh]. I haven’t performed in the last five or six games. I deserved to be dropped, and playing for Zimbabwe is something you have to earn. You can’t expect things to fall into your lap. The decision to drop me didn’t hurt me but what hurt me was that I hadn’t been doing well. Sometimes it is not a bad thing to take a step back and watch it from outside. You can see where you’ve gone wrong.Last year I played all 42 games for Zimbabwe. I played the first six games this year, so I have played nearly 50 games in a row, and I feel blessed to have done so. When the selectors came up to me and the coach and said they were going to drop me, I didn’t have any bad feelings. I took it on the chin. I just want to prove it to myself – you have to get back and score runs, take wickets and catches.Keith Miller once said, “Pressure is a Messerschmitt up your arse. Playing cricket is not”. You are someone who can actually relate to it.
I used to train to be a pilot. Now that I am training to be a cricketer, it could be slightly easier. I think training for a pilot would be a lot more difficult. ()

Rogers: 5 fifties, 0 hundreds

Stats highlights from the first day of the fourth Test between India and Australia, in Sydney

Bishen Jeswant06-Jan-20154 Number of Australian openers who have made five consecutive scores of 50 or more. Chris Rogers has made back-to-back scores of 55, 55, 57, 69 and 95 in this series. The other Australian openers to do this are Mark Taylor, David Warner and Phil Jaques.0 Number of Australian openers who have made five or more fifties in a series without making a hundred. If Rogers does not get a hundred in the second innings, he will become the first Australian opener to have done this. The only openers to have done this across countries are Michael Atherton and Conrad Hunte, who made six fifties each in 1993 and 1965 respectively.200 The opening partnership between Warner and Rogers, the ninth-highest by any team against India. The last 200-plus opening stand by an Australian pair was between Warner and Ed Cowan, also against India, in Perth, in 2012. That was also the last instance of any team posting such a stand against India.4 Number of hundreds scored by Warner against India, including today’s. The only Australian opener to score more Test hundreds against India is Matthew Hayden, who scored six.33 Number of Test matches played by Virat Kohli, the most by any of the players in the current Indian team. The last time that India fielded a team with its most experienced member having played less than 50 Tests was against Sri Lanka in 2001. Rahul Dravid, 48 Tests, was the senior-most member of that team. India lost that game by an innings and 77 runs.1 Number of times that Australia’s top four batsmen have all made 50-plus scores against India at home before today. Australia did this against India once previously, away from home, in Delhi in 2008.79 Runs scored by Australia in the first fifteen overs of the first innings. Since 2001, this is the most runs scored by any team in the first 15 overs of the first day of a Test in Sydney. During this series, India have, on average, conceded 52 runs in the first ten overs of the first innings.

Clarke leads the way on disappointing tour

Australia’s marks out of ten, for the Test series against India

Brydon Coverdale25-Mar-20138
Michael Clarke (286 runs at 47.66)
The only Australian to score a century on this tour, Clarke showed from the first day in Chennai how nimble footwork is key to handling Indian conditions. He scored 130 in that innings, and in the second innings was only done in by a nasty ball that stayed low and turned viciously. That was followed by 91 in the first innings in Hyderabad, which could have become another ton had he not tried to hit out when running out of partners. His move up the order to No. 3 in Mohali failed in the first innings, and in the second he was severely hampered by his back pain. Clarke was such a lone beacon for most of the series that India knew if they could get him, they had won half the battle.6.5
Steven Smith (161 runs at 40.25, 1 wicket at 63.00)
Smith only played in Mohali because of the so-called homework sackings, but the Australians were immediately glad of his inclusion. His 92 in the first innings of that match showed that Clarke was not the only batsman in the side capable of using his feet. Smith was busy against the spinners and always looked confident, which couldn’t be said for most of his team-mates. A mature 46 in the first innings in Delhi added to his value, but given how comfortable he looked, the Australians really needed him to go on and turn one of his innings into a big hundred. His part-time bowling was at times awful, but he produced one perfect legbreak to have Sachin Tendulkar caught at bat-pad in Mohali.Peter Siddle (9 wickets at 33.88, 139 runs at 17.37)
Siddle had little impact in the first two Tests, but became an important player in the second half of the series. His 5 for 71 in Mohali prevented India from stretching their lead into triple figures, and in Delhi it was his batting that provided the greatest value. In his previous 40 Tests, Siddle had not scored a half-century, but he dug in to make 51 and 50, top scoring in both innings. Consequently, he became the first batsman in Test history to score half-centuries in both innings at No. 9. His efforts showed up his batting team-mates, and kept Australia in the contest.6
Ed Cowan (265 runs at 33.12)
Although Cowan didn’t build the big scores required of a Test opener, he at least showed his ability to learn. Early in the series he thought the best approach was to attack India’s bowlers, but dancing down the wicket, attempting to go over the top, got him stumped in Chennai. In the next two Tests his scores and time at the crease grew as he changed tack, and chose to occupy time, forcing the Indians to get him out rather than getting himself out – although a poorly judged sweep in Delhi went against that reasoning. M Vijay was the only player from either team to face more balls in the series than Cowan, and his steadiness was admirable given the carnage that often took place around him.James Pattinson (9 wickets at 27.77, 68 runs at 17.00)
The stand-out Australia bowler in Chennai with his 5 for 96 in the first innings, Pattinson used his pace through the air to challenge India’s batsmen in spite of the slow pitch. There was no question that Pattinson was the most sorely missed of the four men dropped in Mohali for failing to complete a homework task set by coach Mickey Arthur, and when he returned in Delhi he didn’t have quite the same impact. Like all of Australia’s tail, he also showed plenty of fight with the bat.In the final Test in Delhi, Nathan Lyon showed that he had learnt how to bowl in India•BCCINathan Lyon (15 wickets at 37.33, 54 runs at 18.00)
The axing of Lyon for the second Test in Hyderabad was one of the most surprising selection strategies of the tour, for although he leaked copious runs in Chennai, he did pick up five wickets, and nobody could have controlled MS Dhoni in such an unconstrained frame of mind. In the final Test in Delhi, Lyon showed that he had learnt how to bowl in India, avoiding too full a length, and adopting an around-the-wicket line to the right-handed batsmen that brought lbws firmly into play. He collected nine wickets for the match, and it should have been ten but for a dropped catch by Matthew Wade. His resilience with the bat at No.11 showed up some of his top-order teammates as well.5
Moises Henriques (156 runs at 31.20, 2 wickets at 77.50)
Chosen for his first Test in Chennai, Henriques showed remarkable resolve with the bat in both innings, and scored 68 and an unbeaten 81. Although he ran out of partners in the second innings, and missed the chance for a hundred on debut, he was the first Australian since 1979 to score a half-century in each innings of his first Test. However, his batting in Hyderabad and Mohali did not live up to his Chennai promise, and as a bowler he lacked penetration.Mitchell Starc (2 wickets at 100.00, 145 runs at 36.25)
This may seem a generous mark for Starc given his failure with the ball, but it is a reflection of the fight and skill he showed with the bat in Mohali. In the first innings he very nearly became the second Australian centurion of the tour, but was caught behind for 99. His 35 in the second innings almost got Australia into a position from which they could dream of preventing an Indian win. His two wickets for the series came in one over during a spell of outstanding swing bowling, but when the ball wasn’t moving, he was of little threat to India’s batsmen.4.5
Brad Haddin (51 runs at 25.50, 4 catches, 1 stumping)
Given another chance in Test cricket due to Wade’s ankle injury in Mohali, Haddin was clean behind the stumps, and even found himself acting as on-field captain when Clarke was off having his sore back treated. He made starts in both innings but was unable to go on.4
David Warner (195 runs at 24.37)
Despite making two half-centuries, Warner had the worst series of his short Test career. His 59 on the first day of the tour was scratchy, and his only innings of real note was 71 in Mohali, when he and Cowan put on 139 for the opening stand. Two edges from loose flashes outside off with no footwork in the first couple of overs in Mohali and Delhi, were especially ugly.Glenn Maxwell (7 wickets at 27.57, 39 runs at 9.75)
The so-called “Big Show” had no impact with the bat, despite being promoted to open in the second innings in Delhi. He did manage to collect four wickets in Hyderabad, and three in Delhi, but has a long way to go before he can be considered a Test batting option.3.5
Phillip Hughes (147 runs at 18.37)
For two and half Tests, Hughes was mesmerised by India’s spin and the conditions, and at one stage had a drought of 58 deliveries against India’s spinners without scoring a run. A new, more aggressive approach helped him in the second innings in Mohali, and he was unlucky to be lbw for 69 to a ball clearly missing leg. In Delhi he contributed 45 in the first innings.Matthew Wade (113 runs at 18.83, 4 catches, 1 stumping)
One decent score – 62 in Hyderabad – was not what Australia needed from Wade after deciding he could serve as a top six batsman on this trip. He had an up-and-down time behind the stumps, sometimes making impressive saves, and on other occasions letting through byes that could have been stopped. Keeping wicket in India is tough, but his lack of footwork did not help his cause. Wade dropped a regulation chance when Dhoni edged Lyon in Delhi, and missed a couple of difficult stumping opportunities.2
Shane Watson (99 runs at 16.50)
This was a hugely disappointing tour for Watson, who chose to embark on it as a specialist batsman in the hope of avoiding bowling injuries. Twice he was out pulling, which is risky on pitches with variable bounce, but found a number of other ways to lose his wicket as well. The homework saga and his reaction to it was Australia’s off-field low point, and although he returned and was given the captaincy in Delhi, overall this series could hardly have gone worse for Watson.Xavier Doherty (4 wickets at 60.50, 24 runs at 24.00)
A limited-overs bowler with limited weapons in the longer format, Doherty played in Hyderabad and Mohali, as the Australian selectors struggled to find their best attack. He was tighter than the other spinners but also far less of a threat.0
Mitchell Johnson (0 wickets, 3 runs at 1.50)
Johnson’s tour consisted of one Test, figures of 0 for 60, a golden duck, an innings of 3 that featured two close lbw shouts, a near run-out, and ended with a leave to a carrom ball that took off stump. He was also sloppy in the field, costing Australia a couple of boundary overthrows, and failed to complete a homework task. Enough said.

Minimal experimentation from South Africa

Alviro Petersen returns while fast bowler Marchant de Lange has been called up, but the selectors could have done more to test the bench strength

Firdose Moonda06-Dec-2011There are very few times in professional sport when the opportunity for experimentation presents itself. On the training ground, where time and creativity permit, trial and error has its place. In warm-up matches, combinations can occasionally be shuffled and strategies can be tested. But, in match situations, there is little room for any of that and teams are expected to go in with clear tactics, solid game plans and a settled unit. For the upcoming series against Sri Lanka, South Africa had that opportunity.Given the current form of the Sri Lankan side – who last won a Test in July 2010 and have not won away from home since January 2009 in Chittagong – there was room to juggle. While balance had to be maintained between treating the opposition with due respect and fielding a strong enough team to keep consistency, the window for introducing wild-cards and rewarding accomplished domestic performers was also open and the selectors have only crept through it.South Africa’s squad has one old name and one new added to it from the group who faced Australia – and have left many other names behind.Alviro Petersen has been recalled, amid calls about the unfairness of dropping him after just nine Tests, in which he scored over 500 runs. Petersen was a victim of the impossible-to-ignore form of Jacques Rudolph, whose bat was the King Midas of the pitch.So strong was the belief that Rudolph would turn the international stage to gold that Petersen was shunned. Rudolph was unable to replicate the magic, and the alarming ways in which he was dismissed – with clumsy and often reckless strokeplay – has resulted in Petersen being brought back to being some old-fashioned sobriety to the batting line-up, if he plays.For Petersen to play, either Rudolph will have to be dropped, which would be harsh, given that he has only played two Tests since making his comeback, or moved down the order, which would also be harsh, given that it is not his preferred position. Some will remember that Rudolph batted in the middle order when he started at Yorkshire and will question why he can’t do that again. They will forget that Michael Vaughan was still playing and Rudolph had little say regarding where he could bat.A No. 6 batsman – which is only position Rudolph could occupy- rarely has the liberties to play a shot a ball, like Rudolph has been doing. Often, as Ashwell Prince has proven on numerous occasions, that batsman has to have the temperament to weather a storm. Rudolph’s performances against Australia do not suggest he is ready to do that.Prince remains under pressure, as has always been the case, with his only saving grace the half-century he scored in the Wanderers Test against Australia. It was an innings that helped drag South Africa off the cliff and his partnership with AB de Villiers put them onto steadier ground. Prince did not enjoy the best of series and should he fail again the reality of being dropped will become starker, but he was one of the few batsmen who, at times, showed the composure required to craft a Test innings. More importantly, with Mark Boucher out of form and South Africa’s tail having grown, with the inclusion of Imran Tahir, a solid No. 6 is a must.If Prince is to be replaced, JP Duminy has been touted as his likely successor. Duminy was dropped from the Test squad with questions about his technique still being asked but he would be a better choice than Rudolph for the middle order, given that is his regular playing position. Another option, overlooked on numerous occasions, is Dean Elgar.Elgar, the Knights batsman, has averaged over 50 in the two seasons prior to this one and has shown the maturity required to play in the longest form of the game. With fast-tracking creeping into the selection strategy, particularly in the Marchant de Lange case, it remains a mystery why Elgar has been strung along with no reward so far.de Lange’s pacy rise up the ranks has come as something of a surprise, given his first-class experience is only 14 matches. He is genuinely quick and his raw talent has given the management reason to be excited but even his franchise coach, Matthew Maynard, admitted that, like any tearaway, de Lange needs to be taught about control and consistency. Those are skills he will learn, to some extent, while spending time with the national squad but to a greater degree from experience in the first-class game. Vernon Philander is testament to that.de Lange’s inclusion in the national squad will aggrieve the likes of Wayne Parnell. The left-armer has been on the fringes for the last three years, been included in tours, been injured, been discarded and eventually been left to do what Philander had to. There is reason to think the same will happen to de Lange.South Africa’s fast-bowling reserves have expanded, after initial concern that they were dwindling. Lonwabo Tsotsobe, who missed out on selection because he is still recovering from a side-strain, provides ample competition for Philander at Test level and Rusty Theron, who has long been in the queue, does the same for the third-seamer’s spot in the shorter version of the game.While de Lange’s inclusion is a tick in the column of fuelling young dreams, how he is handled going forward will be the real Test of the management’s commitment to developing the next generation, something they have failed in, in the most concerning department – wicket-keeping. While a back-up wicket-keeper is unheard of in a home series, it would have been crucial for this one. Boucher’s cricket mortality is becoming an unavoidable topic and the need to find a replacement is ever-pressing. Talk during the Australia series was that a successor would be found and groomed by the man himself but that idea appears to have been shelved.Thami Tsolekile, who will play in the Invitation XI, Heino Kuhn, who has featured in previous A team matches and Daryn Smit, who is growing in confidence and competence, have all been identified but not nurtured. Without a focused plan for who will take over, none of them can be blamed if they chose to follow in the footsteps of Nic Pothas and Kruger van Wyk, and make their futures outside of South Africa. The selectors have left possibility of adding to the squad open and would take a giant leap in the right direction by adding a gloveman to the squad, even if he does not play.With tours to New Zealand, England and Australia in the coming 12 months, the window for experimentation opens and closes with the series against Sri Lanka. Like many windows of opportunity, it needs to be flung open and enjoyed and, so far, it has not.

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