حصل محمد صلاح، نجم فريق ليفربول، على تقييم جيد بعد مشاركته في مباراة وست هام يونايتد في دور ربع النهائي من كأس الرابطة الإنجليزية.
ونجح ليفربول في الفوز على وست هام يونايتد بنتيجة 5/1، في إطار منافسات دور ربع النهائي من كأس الرباطة الإنجليزية.
واستضاف فريق ليفربول نظيره وست هام يونايتد في دور ربع النهائي من مسابقة كأس الرابطة الإنجليزية “الكاراباو” على ملعب “أنفيلد”.
اقرأ أيضاً.. فيديو | محمد صلاح يسجل هدف ليفربول الرابع أمام وست هام في كأس الرابطة
وشارك محمد صلاح بحلول الدقيقة 60 من عمر اللقاء، حيث كان متواجدًا على مقاعد البدلاء، حيث نجح في تسجيل الهدف الرابع للريدز بحلول الدقيقة 82.
وبحسب شبكة “فوت” العالمية، حصل محمد صلاح على تقييم 7.5/10، حيث شارك في 30 دقيقة من عمر المباراة، نجح في صناعة فرصة وحيدة وقام بالتسديد على المرمى في 3 مناسبات، فيما وصلت دقة تمريراته إلى 82 %.
Moeen Ali believes it was his ability to shut out the background noise and negativity that led to his return to form in Christchurch
George Dobell24-Feb-2015
Moeen Ali scored his second ODI hundred to help get England’s World Cup up and running•Getty Images
Moeen Ali believes it was his ability to shut out the background noise and negativity that led to his return to form in Christchurch.Moeen stroked 128 as England secured their first win of the tournament at the third attempt. And while the victory came against a relatively unfancied Scotland side, after two absolute thrashings in their opening games England were hardly in a position to take any result for granted.They were also struggling for confidence. Some self-doubt was probably inevitable after the magnitude of those first defeats, but it was only increased after criticism from the media and even friends back at home. The match against Scotland – a no-win encounter in some ways – loomed.For Moeen, at least, the secret was to relax and not over-think his game. Which sounds simple, but when you receive constant reminders of your side’s struggles, it is far from easy.”With the way we have been playing, people have been talking negatively,” Moeen said. “It was difficult [to be positive] with the lack of performances against Australia and New Zealand.”Family and friends text you saying ‘do this, do that’ and you end up thinking ‘it’s not that easy’. You do get a sense of negativity.”Sometimes it’s friends, sometimes it’s random people telling me to take my time or do this or that. You can’t listen to everyone. I try to reply but there’s one or two when I think, ‘You’re taking the Mick now!'”It is telling that Moeen choose to work with Paul Farbrace in between games. While some coaches may be verbose or critical, Farbrace – who led Sri Lanka to World T20 success only a year ago – tends to be simple and positive. And, when you only have a few days between games, it is that uncomplicated assistance that most players prefer.So Moeen was reassured over his level of talent and informed that if he trusted that natural ability, rather than feeling the need to premeditate strokes, he would flourish.”Paul Farbrace took away everything negative and just told me to be true to myself,” Moeen said. “He told me to play the way I wanted to play. He said it didn’t matter how many I scored as long as my mindset was right, I played with freedom and I kept it really simple.”As a batter you aren’t always 100% and then you perhaps search for it a little bit more. You try to take bowlers down. But I think if I just bat the way I bat, with my reactions I will still score quickly enough. We always talk about reacting to the ball and playing on instincts a lot. That century against Scotland was the first time [in the World Cup] I didn’t premeditate, I just reacted to balls and enjoyed it.”When you premeditate you play shots that are probably not there. Yesterday I 100% backed my reactions and most of the time, when you are playing well, that’s what you do. It’s just when you haven’t scored for a couple of games you go away from that.”You have to stay positive, I know it is a cliché but keep it as simple as you can and go back to basics and enjoying it like it’s a game in the park, not take it too seriously.”It is easier to relax, of course, when the opposition are Scotland rather than New Zealand or Australia, so the real test will come on Sunday when England return to Wellington to play Sri Lanka. But as far as Moeen is concerned, the principles will remain the same: England have to continue to “express themselves” and ignore the media, the crowd and the messages from home that might cause any doubt to creep in.”Everyone is trying to get the players to play the best cricket they can,” he said. “Everybody wants England to do well and it can be frustrating for everybody as well as us.”Sometimes, because of all that, we probably go into our shells a bit rather than going out and expressing ourselves. We should take away all that attention, enjoy it again and go out and have a bit of fun and still be clinical.”I speak to the right people as much as I can. People who I feel are positive and are not talking about the pressures. I try to speak to my parents, my brother. Paul Farbrace is really good for that.”I just take my mind away from cricket a little. Sometimes, you think about cricket and do so much that it can easily take over everything. I go back to reading, doing something else, so when the cricket time comes I’m ready.”While Moeen was able to play the fearless cricket that England often talk about but seldom show, his team-mates struggled to follow suit. Gary Ballance, who has scored 10 in each of the first three games, has looked especially out of sorts and could be replaced for the Sri Lanka game by Alex Hales, the only England player to make a T20 century.
A round-up of the Ranji Trophy Group A matches on January 29, 2015
ESPNcricinfo staff29-Jan-2015 ScorecardKL Rahul’s unbeaten century and brisk unbroken stand of 178 with Shreyas Gopal helped Karnataka build an early advantage against Uttar Pradesh. The pair added their runs at over four to the over, carrying Karnataka from a dodgy 148 for 4 to a very comfortable 326 by stumps. The early damage was done by seamer Praveen Kumar, who claimed two of his three wickets in the same over, and left-arm spinner Ali Murtaza who cut short a threatening innings from Robin Uthappa. Karnataka’s solidity in the second half of the day, though, means UP – who sat at the bottom of the table coming into this round of games – are already well behind in the game. ScorecardSeamer Anureet Singh followed up his five-for against Jammu & Kashmir in the last round with 4 for 45 to help bowl out Bengal on day one for 268. He was ably backed up by offspinner Arnab Nandi, who struck twice during a mini-slide that rocked the Bengal top order. Anureet started it with the wicket of Abhimanyu Easwaran, before Nandi and a run-out reduced Bengal from 118 for 1 to 126 for 5. A 129-run stand between Manoj Tiwary and Shreevats Goswami ensured the innings did not fold, but once they were separated – again, by Anureet – four more wickets fell for 13 runs. ScorecardStands of 129 and 93 among Jalaj Saxena, Naman Ojha and Devendra Bundela helped Madhya Pradesh recover from a poor start, in which they fell to 26 for 2, to 271 for 4. Saxena and Ojha both got into the 80s, but neither could push on to a hundred. Bundela, who ended the day unbeaten on 62, will hope to get there on the second day to further build MP’s advantage. MP handed a debut to former India legspinner Narendra Hirwani’s son, Mihir, who was picked after strong performances in junior cricket. Mihir, 20, is a legspinner.Baroda v Mumbai: Munaf and shot selection hurt Mumbai
Na tarde desta terça-feira, o Internacional oficializou a contratação do volante Bruno Silva, que defendia o Fluminense. O acordo com o meio-campista de 33 anos é válido até dezembro deste ano, com a possibilidade de renovar por mais uma temporada.
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Desejo antigo da diretoria Colorada, o novo reforço chega para fortalecer o elenco que disputa a reta final da Libertadores e a sequência do Brasileirão. Por defender o Flu na Copa do Brasil, o atleta não poderá atuar pelo time gaúcho na competição.
Na visão da comissão técnica, Bruno Silva tem grandes chances de suprir a ausência de Edenilson, titular absoluto, mas que sentiu uma lesão muscular no duelo contra o Cruzeiro, pela semifinal da Copa do Brasil.
Primeiro treino
Antes de ser anunciado pelo Internacional, Bruno Silva participou com o restante do elenco do treino no CT Parque Gigante nesta manhã. Agora, ele aguarda o seu registro no Boletim Informativo Direto da CBF para estrear com o novo clube.
Torcida contesta a contratação
Na última segunda-feira, assim que a possível chegada de Bruno Silva foi praticamente confirmada em Porto Alegre, a torcida Colorada invadiu as redes sociais para criticar a diretoria. O pedido era que desistissem do atleta e buscassem um novo zagueiro para ficar de reserva da dupla formada por Cuesta e Rodrigo Moledo.
Já sem vínculo com o São Paulo,Biro Biro foi, enfim, anunciado oficialmente como reforço do Botafogo, com contrato de um ano, nesta quarta. O meia-atacante já treina com o elenco de Eduardo Barroca desde a semana passada, mas ainda não tem data para conceder a entrevista coletiva de apresentação.
Biro Biro se desligou do São Paulo no último dia 5, quando acertou com o Nova Iguaçu por três temporadas e foi emprestado ao Alvinegro até 30 de junho de 2020. Este ano, ele só atuou em duas partidas pelo Tricolor paulista.
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Seja bem-vindo ao Glorioso Botafogo, Biro Biro!
Que seja uma trajetória de vitórias e muitos gols! #VamosFOGO ⭐️ pic.twitter.com/SFFYPiuKiV
— Botafogo F.R. (@Botafogo) 10 de julho de 2019
Sem espaço no São Paulo, o jogador de 24 anos vai chegar para disputar posição pelo lado esquerdo do ataque do Botafogo. Luiz Fernando e Rodrigo Pimpão, que se revezaram no setor durante o primeiro semestre, tiveram atuações irregulares.
O Botafogo,com problemas financeiros e dificuldade para contratar,possui poucas tentativas para melhorar a equipe para o restante do Brasileirão. A aposta em Biro Biro se encaixa dentro do perfil do clube e do padrão esperado por Barroca. Victor Rangel também chegou como aposta, recentemente.
JÁ REGULARIZADO
Pouco depois do anúncio oficial, Biro Biro teve o seu nome (Diego Santos Gama Camilo) publicado no BID da CBF. Assim, regularizado, já pode estrear neste domingo, quando o Botafogo visita o Cruzeiro, no Mineirão, pelo Brasileiro.
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Alex Hales had no doubt that his match-winning hundred against Sri Lanka was the most important contribution of his international career to date.
Alan Gardner in Chittagong27-Mar-2014Alex Hales had no doubt that his match-winning hundred against Sri Lanka, the first time an England batsman had reached three figures in a T20 international, was the most important contribution of his international career to date. Hales’ stunning innings led England to their highest chase in the format to reignite a smouldering World T20 campaign.”It’s an amazing feeling. It still hasn’t sunk in what’s happened,” Hales said afterwards, looking remarkably cool despite having just launched an enormous six to win the match with four balls to spare. Twice out in the 90s previously, Hales broke the three-figure barrier by clearing the boundary off Nuwan Kulasekara’s penultimate over, from which 16 runs came in total to bring England’s target of 190 within reach.”I always had the confidence I would get the chance again,” he said. “Hundreds don’t come around very often in the short format so I’m buzzing I got it today and in a huge fixture for our country.”Alex Hales made England’s first hundred in a T20•Getty ImagesAfter a shambolic performance in the field, when England dropped four catches and missed a run-out, they flopped out of the blocks at the start of the chase, Kulasekara removing Michael Lumb and Moeen Ali in a double-wicket maiden. Hales and Eoin Morgan, slowly at first and then with increasing assurance, rebuilt the innings and by the time their 152-run partnership was broken, the pendulum was beginning to swing England’s way.”It wasn’t an ideal start but we saw by the way they batted it was an excellent wicket and the way Morgy came in straight away and took the game back to them made my job a lot easier,” Hales said. “We had plans to stay in the game as long as we could, get a partnership and reassess at the halfway stage. It paid off.”Morgan and Jos Buttler fell in the same over but Ravi Bopara deftly glided his first two balls from Lasith Malinga for four to keep England up with the asking rate. Although they had needed to score two runs a ball for around half the innings, Hales said that he began to feel the victory was possible “with six or seven overs left”.”We needed about 12 an over so we always knew it would be a tough ask,” he said. “But Morgy played brilliantly and then Ravi came in against the danger man Malinga and hit the first two balls for four. It was brilliant to see.”The win, against the No. 1-ranked side and one of the favourites for the competition, pushes England back into contention into what is turning into a close-fought group. A difficult winter in Australia has been followed by stop-start limited-overs form, a young and experimental squad disrupted by injuries while uncertainty remains about the currently vacant head coach’s position. Reaching the knockout stages in Bangladesh would an unexpected, and welcome, success”It would be massive for us, we are underdogs in this tournament, playing in the subcontinent historically we haven’t gone too well,” Hales said. “This win will help us build momentum for the next two games, we’ve still got to play Holland and SA. I think if we perform to the best of our ability we’ll get two wins.”Hales was dropped by Mahela Jayawardene on 55, small change after England donated four similar straightforward misses during the Sri Lanka innings but ultimately of great importance. Two overs later, Hales targeted Ajantha Mendis repeatedly through the leg side, hitting three sixes in an over that cost 25. In 2014, Hales had previously made 125 runs in seven innings for England; he almost equalled that in one dramatic fusillade here. A celebratory glass of wine has been well earned.”It hasn’t been a great winter personally, I probably didn’t do as well in the Big Bash as I’d have liked,” Hales said. “But I’ve still felt confident, I’ve been hitting the ball well in the nets and felt a big score was close. I’m pleased it came today in a winning side.”
Mumbai, the defending Ranji champions, who are missing key players, take on a confident Gujarat at a result-conducive venue, as both teams make a final bid to secure a spot in the knockouts
The Preview by Amol Karhadkar29-Dec-2013
Mumbai will miss the services of Zaheer Khan and Ajinkya Rahane in Valsad•AFP
Irrespective of whether they are playing at home or away, Mumbai usually appear the stronger and more confident unit when the two sides train on the eve of a Ranji Trophy match. Sunday was definitely an exception to the rule.While the Gujarat squad was relaxed during its training at the Sardar Vallabhai Patel Stadium in Valsad, a quaint town almost midway between the traditional home grounds of both the teams, Wasim Jaffer’s Mumbai outfit was far from a confident lot. The rhythm during the pre-match training was somehow missing. One felt that on the back of a mediocre run in the last three games, Mumbai was the side under pressure.The fragility was so obvious that Gujarat captain Parthiv Patel pronounced what every opposition captain avoids even thinking, let alone speaking, ahead of their match against the 40-time Ranji champions. “Obviously we are confident that we can defeat this Mumbai unit,” Patel said.Tremors in the Mumbai camp were understandable as they enter the game as one of the most inexperienced Mumbai units. Barring stand-in captain Jaffer, not one player has played two full seasons for the outfit. Sachin Tendulkar has retired. Zaheer Khan, Rohit Sharma and Ajinkya Rahane have been donning the national colours. Abhishek Nayar and Dhawal Kulkarni have been sidelined due to injuries. All this culminated in Mumbai, who were topping the group charts at the midway stage when Zaheer was leading from the front, being far from assured of a place in the knockout stage.Going into the last league round, Mumbai have to first attain at least a first-innings lead, and then, depending on how Punjab are faring against Jharkhand, will have to determine whether an outright victory is a must for them to progress to the quarter-finals. Gujarat, on the other hand, find themselves in a more favourable scenario. All they require is to avoid an outright loss and they will be ensured of a place in the last eight. That, however, is slightly tricky considering the pitch in Valsad has recently been result-oriented. Only one of the last five matches played at the ground has been a draw.Mumbai’s list of injuries got bigger on the eve of the match as Siddhesh Lad, who has scored three fifties in his debut season, suffered a suspected disc injury while playing football during the team’s warm-up and was ruled out. Lad’s unavailability would further unsettle the combination of the visiting side.Gujarat, on the other hand, appears to be a far more settled team than the visitors, who have tried a whopping 22 players in the season so far. The trend of results at this venue is likely to continue. If Mumbai are to avoid being on the wrong side of it, which would all but put an end to their title defence, they will have to get the better of Gujarat’s blend of youth and seasoned campaigners.While Parthiv has been at his best with the bat, Venugopal Rao and Rakesh Dhurv have also been contributing handsomely all through the season. It has resulted in the job of the home-grown youngsters being made easier, and most of them have justified the faith that has been shown in them for a better part of the past two seasons. If they continue with the good work, they will not only keep their Ranji campaign alive, but also oust the defending champions from the tournament.
ScorecardChris Woakes took four wickets to take his match tally to seven•Getty Images
Andrew Gale’s disappointment at letting a strong position slip away to hand Warwickshire the chance to claim a third straight win would have been felt more sharply had events elsewhere not favoured Yorkshire. Derbyshire’s surprise win at Hove guarantees his side stay top, while Durham’s defeat at Lord’s leaves the title rival whose results were concerning them most with some ground to make up. Moreover, he left the ground in steady rain, which he will not have minded at all if it is a foretaste of what lies ahead on the final day.Even so, it had been a poor day compared with the opening two, beginning with a sloppy opening session for which Gale could offer no excuse, not least because he was guilty of one of two bad drops that enabled Jeetan Patel to score 63 when he should have been out on 37 or 42. Jack Brooks spilled the first chance, on the square leg boundary, and Gales the second, at short midwicket. Adil Rashid, the legspinner, was the bowler feeling the pain.Those chances came during a stand of 99 between Patel and Keith Barker, who played some fine cricket shots in making 49 and felt he was unlucky to be given run out as he came back for a second to a firm stroke through cover off Rashid retrieved by Brooks. Patel, with less finesse, hit 10 fours and a six over long-on off Ryan Sidebottom that gave Warwickshire an unexpected lead.It was the kind of turnaround that gives one side a fillip and creates uncertainty for the other and it was no surprise in that respect that the eight overs Yorkshire had to negotiate before lunch brought more problems as Chris Woakes removed both their openers. Alex Lees, failing to move his feet, edged to third slip before Adam Lyth, playing across a full length ball, was leg-before.Yorkshire fought back after lunch, Gale seeking to make amends for his drop and Gary Ballance continuing to enjoy his run of form. They added 76 before Gale, trying to adjust to extra bounce, fended a ball from Boyd Rankin that looped to William Porterfield at gully.Yet more wastefulness followed as Rashid, whose early season form with the bat seems to have deserted him, fell to a poor attempted hook and Azeem Rafiq – batting despite a damaged wrist – was caught off bat and pad. When Ballance was bowled by a full-length ball from Woakes off an inside edge, Warwickshire were again firmly in control. Woakes then had Liam Plunkett caught behind – much to the obvious anger of the batsman, who was adamant he had not hit the ball – to finish the day with 4 for 31.When bad light and then rain curtailed play early, Yorkshire’s advantage looked dangerously small at 141, raising the prospect that Warwickshire might need less than half a day to forge a path to victory, should the weather be kind to them. If they pull it off, the gap between themselves and Yorkshire will be 21 points.”We were not at our best this morning, it was uncharacteristic,” Gale said afterwards. “We missed a couple of easy chances, my own included, and we did not bowl well enough, and we probably took a bit of that into our batting.”It would have been nice to be four or five down rather than seven but if we can get anything over 200 I think it will be game on tomorrow. And if there is rain about, results elsewhere have gone for us and it might be one of those days you look back on and think that things have gone our way even though we didn’t play well.”