Spurs eye next Dele Alli in EFL star

Tottenham Hotspur are among the teams interested in Brennan Johnson…

What’s the word?

That’s according to football.london reporter Alasdair Gold, who claims that Spurs are taking a look at the 20-year-old, as well as his Nottingham Forest teammate Djed Spence ahead of the summer transfer window.

Although it could be dependent on their league status heading into next season. The Reds will face Huddersfield Town in the Championship playoff final on Sunday afternoon.

It remains to be seen if the Midlands outfit would be open to a sale and for exactly how much. Previous reports back in January suggest that they were looking for in excess of £20m.

[snack-amp-story url= “https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/tottenham-hotspur-latest-news-updates-transfer-rumours-gossip-spurs-thfc-conte-paratici” title= “Read the latest Spurs news, transfer rumours and more!”]

Dele Alli 2.0?

This would not be the first time that the north Londoners have looked to the EFL for a new signing, though this has brought them mixed success.

On one end of the spectrum is Joe Rodon, who has struggled to break into the first team but on the other, there’s Dele Alli, who was once one of the Premier League’s best young midfielders following a move from MK Dons.

Indeed, during the 2016/17 season, the Englishman bagged a whopping 18 goals and laid on a further seven assists, leading to Lilywhites legend Darren Anderton comparing him to Paul Scholes and Steven Gerrard (via Goal.com).

“I’ve got to say that I loved Stevie G as a player and Scholesy but Dele Alli for his age is just a freak of a talent,” he said.

Johnson has been putting up those sorts of numbers in the Championship this campaign, having provided Forest with 18 goals and ten assists across 48 appearances, also averaging 1.3 key passes per game, via WhoScored.

His performances and undoubted talent have led to quite the praise.

“[He] is just an unbelievable player with the right mentality,” once claimed his former manager Sabri Lamouchi, whilst The Athletic’s Paul Taylor believes he has “remarkable potential”.

Both players are capable of playing in the middle as a creative no.10 and out wide, too, so on the above evidence, Spurs could well stumble upon their next Alli in the Reds prodigy.

AND in other news, Paratici eyeing Spurs swoop for £60m-rated “phenomenon”, just imagine him and Romero…

Why Imran Tahir is the daddy of modern white-ball legspin

Almost everything we see now in limited-overs legspin we saw first in him, starting at the top of this decade

Osman Samiuddin05-Jul-2019Imran Tahir is never not feeling it but right now he is feeling it. He’s feeling it so deep that he almost doesn’t understand that around him his side is falling apart. He’s not even sensing that, right now, he’s the one keeping them together.Kagiso Rabada and Lungi Ngidi have already let slip the initiative. The fielding is already sluggish and it will soon be falling apart. Not Tahir. This is Lord’s, the home of his game. He is here representing his home against his old home. It’s one of the last times he will be on such a big stage. No, Tahir doesn’t ever need a reason to be feeling it, but he’s so alive right now, he has life enough to populate a planet. There’s real danger the Tahir parody could become real.He has almost taken a spectacular catch in the outfield, has two wickets, the second of which is off a breathtaking return catch. Each ball is drama. Everywhere you look is Tahir, party on top of his head, piety on the bottom of his face. Quinton de Kock drops an edge and Tahir crumples to the ground, like he’d been held up all this time by a clothespin. He’s almost in a foetal position. He’s up again in no time.

Tahir’s standout numbers

58 Number of matches he took to get to 100 ODI wickets – the fastest South Africa bowler and eighth fastest overall to achieve this milestone. He was also the joint-quickest South Africa bowler to 150 wickets, with Allan Donald.
18.48 Tahir’s bowling average in South Africa’s ODI wins – the best among 21 South Africa bowlers who have taken at least 50 wickets in wins. Donald is next best, with 19.05. Tahir’s 78.5% career wickets in wins is also the highest percentage of wickets taken in wins by a South Africa bowler.
5 Four-wicket hauls (or better) by Tahir in World Cups. The only other bowler to take more such hauls is Mitchell Starc. Tahir’s 39 wickets in World Cups are also the most by any South Africa bowler.
7 for 45 Tahir’s figures in a match against West Indies in 2016 are the best by a South Africa bowler in ODIs. He is the only South African to have take seven in a match in the format.
146 Number of wickets Tahir has taken in ODIs after turning 35. No other bowler has 100 wickets in the format after that age. Muttiah Muralitharan is second on this list with 87 wickets.

Now the next over and a flipper almost scuttles through. Tahir is down on one knee, in anguish and disbelief that all the powers that could be – God, karma, science, Mohammad Hafeez (the batsman) – have decided to not award this ball a wicket. Two balls later he’s showing us that just as the colour of his passport hasn’t changed, neither has that of his soul. This one’s a googly. This one’s a driftin’ and griftin’ and the batsman’s a sweepin’, and this is out. So plumb that Tahir – channelling Shahid Afridi – is not even bothering to ask his captain for a review. He has told the umpire, though even that’s just following procedure – what he’s really doing is telling the umpire he has no business being out there if he can’t see that’s out. As an afterthought, his captain does ask for the review.Ball-tracking says no. Ball-tracking says ball bouncing over. The walls of the world are tumbling in on Tahir, who is doing what any man in this situation will do: he is chucking his sweater down in disgust. Then he is picking it up. Then he is walking off. Then he is bowling one more over. The purpose of this over is not clear, other than, at the end of it, to frame Tahir looking so defeated that Willy Loman seems a winner next to him. His team-mates are not sure how to be around this, but they’ve seen it so many times. Familiarity is this scene’s ice-breaker.This is from Tahir’s third-last game for South Africa. Now we are coming up to his last. South Africa are long out of this tournament but just try and picture Tahir not feeling it.Go ahead. Try.

****

Ish Sodhi says that if ever there was a WhatsApp group for the world’s leggies, Imran Tahir would be its president. That’s not just out of deference, because Tahir would be the oldest in such a group, it’s also an acknowledgment that Tahir is, in some modest way, the father of modern white-ball leggies.When he did finally arrive on the international scene, just before the 2011 World Cup, it’s fair to say limited-overs legspin had been hiding for a while. It had gone past novelty – Mushtaq Ahmed and Shane Warne had been at the centre of World Cup wins long ago. But in the ten years before Tahir’s debut, only five legspinners had more than 50 ODI wickets. Shahid Afridi was far and away the most prominent (219 wickets), then Brad Hogg (153), then daylight, and then Upul Chandana (73), who was a borderline allrounder and Anil Kumble (63), who played his last ODI in 2007. Sachin Tendulkar is the fifth, and that’s all you need to know. Since then – less than a decade – there are already ten legspinners who have at least 50 wickets, and no spinner of any kind has more than Tahir’s 172 wickets in this period.

At that 2011 World Cup, Tahir was one of eight legspinners for eight teams out of 14 (not counting either Steven Smith or Cameron White). One of them – Adil Rashid – didn’t play a single game. At this year’s tournament there are nine legspinners in just ten teams; only two teams don’t have one.Now nobody’s saying Tahir has gone around planting seeds everywhere he has played. He has not been setting up legspin academies around the world, even though it is true that there are few young legspinners who haven’t been given time by Tahir at some point. T20 has blown up and there’s a causal relationship between that and the increase in leggies. But Tahir has left an unmissable footprint on the genre. Sodhi was asked what one trait he would pinch if he could from his fellow legspinners, and he chose Tahir’s enthusiasm, rather than a specific skill.But that’s probably because almost everything we see now in legspin we saw first in Tahir. The flatter, quicker trajectories; not fretting about not having a big legbreak; turning the googly into a stock ball and not some mystery variation. It was this last that separated him from, say, Kumble, in whom otherwise you could also see this modern template.Tahir had a googly and it was a great one – already in the past tense, see – and so why not use it as often as possible? Two, three, four times an over if necessary. He had a couple of variations on it, a little like the man whose help he sought to better it: Abdul Qadir, who also wasn’t shy of putting it out there.Nowadays the format has swung so far away from bowlers that it somehow feels revolutionary when bowling sides actively attempt to take wickets in the middle overs. But Tahir has been taking wickets in those middle overs all his career. And all his career means he has been taking wickets through whatever sets of fielding restrictions there have been in those middle overs: five fielders out, both bowling and batting Powerplays, no batting Powerplay, four fielders out, batsmen not taking risks, batsmen taking risks.One hundred and thirty-three wickets (of his 172 overall) came in those middle overs; that’s how good he has been. The only spinners with a better strike rate in those overs (with at least 50 wickets since Tahir’s debut) are Rashid Khan, whose numbers are skewed by the opponents he has faced, and Kuldeep Yadav, still very early in his career.

Even besides all this, is his greatest service to legspin: to make it acceptable, even admirable, to be a white-ball champion and not obsess over how the red-ball figures look. In 2011 there was still a degree of old-school snobbery about this – that you couldn’t be a proper legspinner if you hadn’t done it with a red ball and in whites, or if you didn’t break it enough or flight it enough. For a long while, Tahir assessments had a “but Adelaide” religiously appended. You’re forever a product of your time, so it mattered to him too, enough for him to feel that he had “proved” he could play Test cricket when he did return.It shouldn’t have, not then and now it really doesn’t. More than any other leggie before him, that is on Tahir.

****

In the way that there are days when watching Tahir is far more compelling than watching him bowl, the least interesting thing about Tahir’s career sometimes was what he did on the field. His hair yes (clearly googly tips aren’t the only thing Qadir passed on), but imagine that, as he leaves, we know so little about his being a Pakistani – a Lahori no less, so overload – playing for the team that is the least Pakistani team in all of cricket. Imagine how much could have gone wrong when you consider that the difficult aspect of all this is how modern South African teams manage spinners – with all the panache of a seal handling a Rubik’s Cube. How did this not end up in dysfunction, let alone work out as well as it has?If this was England, where he also spent plenty of time, it would be easier to understand. Both the Pakistani experience and the Pakistani cricket experience are deep-set there. South Africa? If he had lived all his life there, then sure. But he was well into adulthood when he moved, and the modern Pakistani experience of that country is thin, centred around the flight of lots of the activists of the MQM – a bolshie, once-major, political party – in the ’90s.There are times when just watching Tahir is even more compelling than watching him bowl•AFPLove helped. He had the support of his wife. But we have, really, only a tiny idea from interviews, and not much beyond the platitudes you might expect. The fervour and vigour of his wicket-taking celebrations, those mad sprints to nowhere, and the kissing-stroke-assault of the Proteas crest, early on felt like little digs at Pakistan for not giving him their crest at senior level. But over time it has become clear how wrongheaded it is to think like that, because he was, after years and years of toil very obviously – and constantly – elated at being able to play international cricket at all, to be operating at the very pinnacle of his sport, for one of the sport’s top teams. Also, by every account, there is not a malicious or bitter bone in his body.There is, in fact, every chance it was as uncomplicated as this, that he was selected and thereafter given respect and treated fairly, and that South Africa needed a quality spinner. A professional equation that turned, quite organically, into a sense of gratitude, loyalty, duty, even love. All of it was evident in every ball he bowled, so much that it’s impossible to think of him as a Pakistani bowler now. Even more in every piece of fielding – every time he ran at a ball, not circled it, or hit the stumps direct, or saved a run on the boundary with his throw. He isn’t a natural athlete but he turned himself into a fielder South Africa didn’t need to hide, in a way a Pakistani fielder would never have been in Pakistan.On Saturday he will bring the drama one last time. The googly one last time, the Qadir-angled run-up one last time, the celebrations one last time. Likely he will finish his spell with a little look up to the sky, a prayer at the end, a kiss of the cap, hugs all around and some applause at the boundary he will be protecting. He will continue bringing it in T20 leagues around the globe, maybe even in T20Is for South Africa, but effectively, this is goodbye, Tahir bursting into that dying light, arms spread, chest out, Proteas crest prominent and proud.

Meet the all-round prodigy with the 'boy-cut' hairdo

India’s Deepti Sharma has broken batting records, bowling records, partnership records – all while still being a teenager

Annesha Ghosh23-Jun-2017On May 15, the eve of the first qualifier of the 2017 IPL, the focus in cricket circles on social media briefly moved to two India women’s cricketers breaking batting records in South Africa. One of them, 19-year old Deepti Sharma, struck eight more fours than her age in scoring 188, the second-highest score in women’s ODIs.Leading the wave of congratulations on Twitter were former India opener Virender Sehwag, whose highest tally of fours in a one-day international (25) was two fewer than Deepti hit in Potchefstroom, and offspinner R Ashwin, with whom Deepti was to have shared the stage at the BCCI’s annual awards night in Bangalore on March 8. She missed the event to play a zonal game.Any disappointment she might have felt at not being present to collect her award after being named the best woman cricketer 2015-16 (junior) was offset by the opportunity to play alongside her idol and India ODI captain Mithali Raj, who won the equivalent award for the senior level. “Mithali would take Deepti to Delhi and Allahabad, where she would send down a few overs, bat in the nets or watch intra-squad matches at the Railways camps,” Sumit says.An increased familiarity with match-like situations brought more confidence. Deepti remembers making an impression at the 2010 trials – her third attempt in a row, and first successful one, to make it to the state’s U-19 side. “I scored 65 and picked up three wickets with medium pace in one of those games.”A 114 against Vidarbha in Kanpur helped her break into the state senior side in 2012. PN Singh Rana, former co-selector at the UPCA, insisted she be drafted into the senior ranks though she was only 15.Former India batsman Rita Dey, who was then the BCCI national selector (central) and the UPCA chairperson of the women’s selection committee, says that along with Deepti’s prolific returns with the bat and ball, “the young girl’s boundless enthusiasm for the game” strengthened her case for a spot in the senior team.Progress was swift, and in parallel, her bond with Dey grew stronger. Dey’s influence on the teenager, both Deepti and Sumit acknowledge, has been “life-changing, not just career-defining”.

“They used to call him Bala. His bowling action resembled [Lakshmipathy] Balaji, and even his looks. I didn’t know who this India bowler was initially, but I kind of liked the name, always”Deepti on her brother Sumit’s nickname

Dey, along with Kala and Rana, felt that Deepti’s medium pace was probably not adequately complementing her strengths with the bat. “This could come in the way to her selection in the national side,” Dey recalls thinking. “She is not among the tallest girls around, and her natural action seemed more suited to spin.” Deepti thereafter switched to offspin.In 2014, an unbeaten 53 for India A earned her a maiden ODI call-up for the series decider against South Africa. On debut, at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, she was run out for 1, but with the ball, she raised hopes of a late fightback by India, breaking through a 109-run stand with a double strike in the 29th over of the chase. India, however, lost the match by four wickets, and so the series.”I never had any such thing as a ‘dream debut’ in my head. But those two wickets gave me confidence that if I may have an off day in one department, I could bank on my other skill to contribute to the team.”Deepti’s all-round skills make her an integral part of the current Indian set-up, according to Purnima Rau, former captain and coach. “As an offspinner, opening left-handed bat, and an agile fielder in any position – whether close-in or on the boundary – India have an unbeatable combination in her.”Rau recounts an incident from India’s home series against Sri Lanka in 2016. “Ahead of the third game, a few issues with her bowling called for some immediate fine-tuning. Just a day of work with her and Aarti [Nalge], the video analyst, and you could tell the bowler Deepti Sharma who took all those wickets was not the same as the one we had to sit with.”Deepti holds the record for the highest ODI score by an Indian woman, and is the youngest Indian to take a five-for in the format•Associated PressIn that third ODI, Deepti became the youngest Indian, male or female, to take a five-wicket haul, andher match-winning returns of 6 for 20 helped India complete a clean sweep over Sri Lanka.For Rau, watching Deepti pick up that six-for was “one of the highlights” of her coaching career with the Indian side. Deepti finished the series as the highest wicket-taker, with 12 at an average of 5.25, and two Player-of-the-Match awards in the three-match series.She would go on to pick up three more such awards in India’s 12 successive ODI wins thereafter, the joint second-longest winning streak in the women’s format.”She looks solid,” says fellow India allrounder Priyanka Roy. “Her temperament is something you respect as an opponent, and you know she’ll come back at you even if you may have subdued one of her skills.”Among the international opponents she has played against so far, Deepti admires the Australia captain Meg Lanning. “From the little I have seen of Lanning, I like the intensity she brings to her game. It is as if she acquires a different personality upon entering the field – you know, a powerful attitude.”

“Deepti is naturally right-handed, but she settled into a left-hander’s grip on her own, without any help from me”Sumit on not needing to train Deepti in some cricket basics

It’s the same type of switching on and off that Rau sees in Deepti’s body language. “When you meet her off the field, there’s something vulnerable about her. She is a teenager, a simple girl. You’d want to protect her. But when she’s out there in the middle, she’ll rarely show any nerves.”This steel shone through during Deepti’s 89-ball 71 in the final of the Women’s World Cup Qualifier, setting up India’s highest successful chase in ODIs and their title win.Deepti finished as the leading run-getter in the series with 253 runs in six innings, including three fifties, and she routinely applied the choke on the opposition during the 53 overs she sent down – the most by any of the nine bowlers used by India – in which she conceded 2.67 runs an over.”She showed good understanding of her responsibilities at the top. In general, she’s calm but knows what she is doing,” said team-mate and T20I captain Harmanpreet Kaur of her performance in the qualifiers.After making 188 during her world-record 320-run partnership with Punam Raut, Deepti said she wanted to dedicate her performance to her mother, Sushila, and personal coach Vipin Awasthi. A retired principal of a government school, Sushila says Deepti’s distractions as a teenager are few and her demands even fewer. A basic feature phone made way for a smartphone only last year, at 18, and that was because all the India squad members had to be on a common WhatsApp group.Former coach Purnima Rau on Deepti Sharma: “As an offspinner, opening left-handed bat, and an agile fielder in any position, India have an unbeatable combination in her”•Getty ImagesExplaining her limited social-media presence, Deepti says: ” [I don’t feel the need]. Cricket keeps me occupied. When I’m not playing, I like to watch video clips of matches, especially those featuring Suresh Raina. I am a big fan of his and I want to master his inside-out six.”She brings that focus to every aspect of her career, even when practising for interviews as part of World Cup media training, or filling out a team questionnaire.”I wanted to make sure I was mentally ready before the interview began, even though it was just a mock thing,” Deepti explains after the team’s sessions in Mumbai. “I took a deep breath to calm myself down. As for submitting [the questionnaire] last, it’s not that I wrote a lot. It’s just that I took some time to arrange my thoughts because it was the first such session I had attended. That extra minute helped me choose the right words. I was able to write exactly what I wanted to write.”Facing the new ball and providing valuable starts to her team against the world’s leading bowling attacks, breaking through partnerships by piling on dot balls, and interacting with non-Hindi-speaking media personnel, Deepti, two months short of 20, will face several challenges at the World Cup. But in keeping with her ethic that drives her pursuit of perfecting that inside-out Raina shot, Deepti will have practised hard enough to make sure she’s game for anything, on the field and beyond it.

'West Indies cricket has lost a man it will never replace'

The cricketing fraternity paid tribute on the passing of a legendary voice of the game

ESPNcricinfo staff11-May-2016

Ten things that are different at this World Cup

And one that will be the same. A look at what has changed since 2011

Alan Gardner26-Jan-20151. Fielding restrictions and Powerplays
In 2012, the ICC made a number of alterations to the playing conditions for ODIs. The one that will likely have the most noticeable effect at this World Cup is the change from a maximum of five to four fielders outside the 30-yard circle for the majority of the innings. There will also be two blocks of Powerplay overs rather than three: the first covering the opening ten overs, when only two fielders are allowed outside the ring; the second, a five-over block to be taken by the batting side before the 40th over, restricting the number to three outside the ring.2. Two new balls
The move to a new ball being used from each end came about shortly after the previous World Cup, in late 2011. Previously the white ball, which is prone to degradation, was changed after 34 overs (although not for a new one). Providing two new balls has made batting more challenging for openers in conditions that assist quick bowlers but also preserves the hardness throughout the innings, meaning faster run-scoring later on. It also means reverse swing will likely be less of a feature.3. Reduced role for part-timers
The first two factors are likely to affect the balance of sides at this World Cup. Rahul Dravid has suggested there will be less leeway for part-time bowlers than four years ago, when India regularly got ten overs out of Yuvraj Singh, due to the lack of protection. The 1992 World Cup was the heyday of wobbly seam-up but even New Zealand are more focused on genuine pace these days, with specialists expected to shoulder the bulk of the workload in most attacks.There might not be much of a role for part-timer bowlers in this World Cup•BCCI4. The swing to seam
Conditions as well as rule changes will contribute to a major shift from 2011, when spin bowling dominated. Australia is generally inhospitable to spinners and that gig has only got harder since the reduction in the number of fielders allowed outside the ring, making it more difficult for sides to defend the boundary. Assistance for seam and swing will be expected in New Zealand, with pace and bounce on the Australian menu – although the fact the World Cup is at the end of the summer, when pitches will likely have become worn, could yet prevent spin from being snuffed out entirely.5. The post-chucking environment
There is another shadow hanging over the spinners, however. The zeal with which the ICC has sought to eradicate illegal actions means even those who have not been called or have undergone remedial work will be wary. The No. 1-ranked ODI bowler, Saeed Ajmal, will be absent; Sunil Narine, currently No. 2, is included in West Indies’ squad despite not having played internationally since being called in the Champions League; and Sachithra Senanayake is being eased back in by Sri Lanka after a ban. It may be up to Shahid Afridi, joint-leading wicket-taker in 2011, to fly the flag again.6. New kids on the block
This is not expected to be a tournament particularly high on those making their first World Cup appearances but there will be a host of fresh faces in the vanguard. Since India’s players hoisted Sachin Tendulkar on to their shoulders and carried him around the Wankhede, several giants of the game have retired or been dispensed with. There will be no Jacques Kallis or Graeme Smith, no Virender Sehwag or Zaheer Khan, no Muttiah Muralitharan, no Ricky Ponting, no Kevin Pietersen. Instead, the likes of Virat Kohli, Corey Anderson, Aaron Finch, Mitchell Starc and Moeen Ali will take centre stage.It will be a tournament short on mega stars•Getty Images7. The DRS
The ICC only confirmed what tools would form part of the DRS a week before the start of the tournament. Real-Time Snickometer, which had not been developed in 2011, is available this time but again there will be no Hot Spot. One thing that will be clearer from the outset is the process for reviewing lbw decisions via ball-tracking technology. Ian Bell’s reprieve in Bangalore four years ago incensed India and forced the ICC to issue revised guidelines; that 2.5-metre rule is now set at 3 metres, beyond which not-out decisions cannot be overturned.8. Increased prize money
The total pool of prize money on offer has been raised by 25% from US$8m to $10m for the 2015 tournament and the winning team could collect more than $4m, if they remain unbeaten. For the first time, the six nations who fail to make the quarter-finals will also be rewarded, to the tune of $35,000 each, with $45,000 also on offer for each group-stage win.9. No Super Overs in knockouts
In 2011, the ICC introduced the one-over eliminator – or Super Over – as the method of determining which team would progress in the event of a tie during the knockout stages. That replaced the Bowl Out from 2007, which had in turn superseded the method famously used to separate Australia and South Africa in 1999: group standings. Now things have gone full circle, with Super Overs dropped for all knockouts, except the final.10. Run rates
This one requires some theorising. The last World Cup was the first to have an average run rate of above five an over, going past the record of 4.95 set in 2007. Tighter fielding restrictions might suggest a continued upward trend, although a year after the regulations were tweaked, little had changed – in fact, armed with two new balls, bowlers had prospered in Australia and New Zealand. However, since the start of 2014, the average runs per over has ballooned to 5.32 in Australia and 5.66 in New Zealand. The dawning possibility of how quickly teams can score at the back of the innings, as evidenced by AB de Villiers’ record-breaking hundred in Johannesburg, means this World Cup could be the most supercharged of all.And one thing that will be the same…In case of a tie in the final, there will be a Super Over•AFP11. The format
Days after the 2011 final, the ICC announced that the next two tournaments would be contested by ten teams, sparking protests from the Associate and Affiliate nations – in particular Ireland, whose feats had helped reinvigorate the event. That decision was duly reversed a few months later, meaning that there will again be two groups of seven from which the eight quarter-finalists will emerge. It may make things somewhat predictable but that is more a consequence of needing to guarantee the major teams a certain number of games for television. A slimmer 2019 World Cup may be sadly lacking in romance.

McLaren run out (b Tredwell)

Plays of the day from England and South Afirca’s Champions Trophy semi-final

George Dobell and Jarrod Kimber at The Oval19-Jun-2013Selection of the day
The selection of James Tredwell and his subsequent success raised an interesting question for England. Graeme Swann believed he was fit enough to play but the England management, keen not to risk him ahead of the Ashes, left him out to avoid any chance of his calf strain becoming a tear and compromising his availability. Bearing in mind how well Tredwell fared, though, it does raise the question of who will win selection for the final if both men are fully fit.Stumping of the day
If you bowl a brilliant offbreak, beat the bat, the ball hits the pad and goes to slip and slip takes off the bails as the batsman is stranded down the wicket, the dismissal is recorded as a run-out. Even though the batsman was not attempting a run and, had the exact same thing happened and a wicketkeeper taken off the bails, it would have been a stumping and the bowler would have been credited with a well-deserved wicket. But that’s what happened to Tredwell, after a smart bit of fielding from Jonathan Trott.Drop of the day
If South Africa were to have any chance of clawing their way back into this game, they had to take every chance offered to them in the field. As it was, though, Joe Root was on 16 when he was beaten by one from Chris Morris only to see his inside edge evade the diving AB de Villiers behind the stumps. England would have been 92 for 3 had it been taken.Catch of the day
Jos Buttler is still learning his trade as a keeper but he produced an outstanding performance in this game to underline his improvement and potential. He claimed six catches in all – equalling the record for a keeper in ODIs, the third Englishman to do so alongside Matt Prior and Alec Stewart – with the best of them an outstanding, diving catch down the leg side to dismiss Rory Kleinveldt.Set-up of the day
When Steven Finn was taken off after three overs and Stuart Broad’s first two overs were expensive, it seemed South Africa might fight their way back into the game. But then James Anderson came around the wicket to Robin Peterson. Four straight outswingers that landed within a few inches of each other set Petersen up; the straight one that followed dismissed him. It precipitated a decline that saw South Africa collapse from 45 for 2 to 80 for 8.Delivery of the day
Like R Ashwin, Robert Croft and Saeed Ajmal, Tim Bresnan’s wife, Hannah, appears to have mastered the art of pausing just before delivery. Bresnan missed training on Tuesday in order to spend time with his wife, with the England management having arranged a driver to take him back to The Oval in time for the game. The baby appeared as hard to get out as Jonathan Trott but, shortly after England’s victory, the birth of Max Geoffrey Bresnan was confirmed.Lap of the day
The break between innings allowed the Cricketeers, the volunteers who have done so much to make the Champions Trophy such a success, the chance to take a lap of honour around the boundary at The Oval’s playing surface. Around 2,600 people volunteered to help with this tournament, with 800 selected to help supporters with directions to and around the ground, to support the media and to fulfil a multitude of other tasks that aid spectators’ enjoyment of the games. Immediately recognisable with their red shirts and over-sized foam fingers, they have been cheerful and willing, with the idea considered such a success that it will be repeated to help with the Ashes.

Fit and fresh Binny becomes Karnataka's go-to man

Allrounder is reaping the benefits of a new attitude and a commitment to fitness with both bat and ball

Nitin Sundar30-Dec-2011It was just after tea on the first day of Karnataka’s final league game against Uttar Pradesh in Shimoga. The visitors had sliced through Karnataka’s top six on a flat pitch, and Stuart Binny had only the bowlers for company as the score limped towards 200. Piyush Chawla, the India legspinner, was searching for a way into the tail, tossing up legbreaks and inviting the drive, while slipping in the odd googly on a similar length around off stump.Binny reached out nonchalantly, getting his front foot inside the line, and swung the bat in a merry arc to carve the ball inside-out for six over the covers. He would go on to play that shot again in the second innings, once again after walking out in a mini-crisis. If you were to pick the stroke that defines the 2011 version of Binny, this would be it. When the Ranji Trophy quarter-finals kick off on January 2, Karnataka will be looking for more of that measured audacity from Binny, who has transformed into their go-to man this season.Binny’s returns cannot be measured by numbers alone, compelling as they are. He amassed 283 runs in Shimoga, taking his tournament tally to 686 runs (at an average of 76.22), making him the third-highest run-getter in the league stage. Thanks to the indifferent form of Karnataka’s top-order, most of his runs have come in fire-fighting causes, yet they have been scored at an eye-popping strike-rate of 83.55, and have included 14 sixes – the most by a single player in the season. Eight years since his first-class debut, it is fair to say that Binny has finally arrived.”I worked quite hard with our coach in the off-season, and this started a good three-four months before the Ranji season” Binny told ESPNcricinfo. “A little bit to do with technique, but more of a mental battle which I had to get past. I wanted to bat through my first 20 minutes to give myself a chance. Until last year I was often getting out for 20s and 30s which wasn’t helping me.”What I did this year was spending those 20 minutes at the crease without giving myself too many options to go at the bowling, and just bat time.”The mental transformation is only one part of the story. The resolve to bat for long periods of time had to be backed by physical fitness, and Binny worked overtime to shed the extra pounds from the past. The new and improved Binny bares very little resemblance to the rotund player of previous years.”Before I started serious nets and practice for the season, I trained really hard to get into shape,” Binny said. “There was not much bowling and batting during that time. I started by training regimen immediately after the IPL and it carried on for two whole months. Initially I did a lot of cardio for two months to drop some weight. Then I gradually got into the gym to work on my strengthening.”I was touching 90 kilos last year, but I am nine kilos down on that now.”Binny’s mental resolve has allowed him to grind his way through the first 20-30 minutes at the crease. His natural aggression then takes over, especially against spin, which explains his high strike-rate. “My game, from the time I was a kid, has always been to attack the spinners. It is all about the shot selection this year. I make a very big effort to hit with the spin most of the time.”I was keen to attack Chawla from the outset [in Shimoga]. Guys who have played Test cricket and come back; if you have a go at them early they don’t like it. I played against Chawla last year when I got a 100 against UP in the second innings. Every time I had a go early at him, he wouldn’t land the ball too well after that. I just backed myself to go over the covers and it came off.”[Similarly] I looked to go over the top whenever I could against Rahul Sharma, in the game against Punjab, though he didn’t give any freebies. As a game plan, this works well for me.”Binny expected to succeed as a batsman, but he’s surprised himself by also making a telling contribution with the ball. Injuries and international duty have meant that Karnataka have been without their main seamers – R Vinay Kumar, Abhimanyu Mithun and S Aravind – for most of the season. But Binny has seamlessly plugged the breach with his medium-pace swing. He has taken 15 wickets at 20.73 this year, including a 10-wicket haul against Orissa.”I only used to bowl the odd four-five over spell in my first few years, because you had Vinay, Mithun, Aravind and Ayyappa doing the bulk of the workload,” Binny explained. “So I used to just bowl just to give them a break. But this year, with some of these guys missing, I needed to bowl a lot, and they had to be good overs – not just fill-in overs.”Once you bowl a bit in four-day cricket, you can experiment with swinging the ball, and try to plan and bowl in different areas. Once I got wickets in Orissa, I guess my bowling automatically went a level higher. It is just the confidence of knowing I can get wickets, and that opportunity comes once you put in the overs. Vinay is a disciplined, intelligent bowler, he is not express. He’s passed that on to the rest of us, how to bowl good areas, and how to work the batsmen out.”Karnataka could only collect two points from their last two fixtures, allowing Mumbai to top Group A. Yet, there were positives to be taken, especially from Shimoga, where the captain Ganesh Satish finally got a big score, and Amit Verma suggested prime form ahead of the knockouts.”We set high standards for ourselves before the Ranji Trophy, and are looking to be in the final,” Binny said. “Everyone is in top firm in the nets. It is a young team, very hungry and there’s a wealth of bench-strength despite us not having three of our top bowlers. I’d say we are looking very good.”Binny credits Kartik Jeshwant’s free-style approach to coaching for Karnataka’s impressive run through the league stages despite the absence of their first-choice seam attack. “”We started the preparation early this year,” Binny said. “Jeshwant Sir took aside four-five of us that he knew really well, helped us plan ahead and made sure that we worked on our games at that point. Even with youngsters, he is a very free coach. He allows you to do things your way.”Some coaches expect you to do everything they say. But he understands your style – if it works it works, else you can go back to the old way. That’s really important, especially with a young team like ours where the average age is 22-23.”

Spin could be India's weapon

India have been compelled to abandon their preferred formula and reinforce their bowling at the cost of their batting. It is a risk, but one worth taking

Sambit Bal in Centurion27-Sep-2009This tournament doesn’t have a pause and that’s the beauty of it. Only five days have passed, and it feels dizzy, and I mean that in the positive sense. The pitches have been interesting; after South Africa’s unexpected loss and England’s unexpected win, both matches involving Sri Lanka, there are no clear favourites any more.And the West Indians, so derided before the tournament, have hardly been pushovers. Incredibly, with a little luck, they could have even been heading their group. And, even more incredibly, there remains a possibility – if only theoretical – of them making it through to the semi-finals still. For that this needs to happen: India must thrash Australia tomorrow, Pakistan must then beat Australia and top the group; and West Indies must beat India by a huge margin in the final group match.But for any of this to happen of course, India have to turn up tomorrow. They came to the tournament as the number one team in the rankings – though that’s not always synonymous with the best team – and, after only one game, they are one game away from elimination. It’s a fate that has befallen them in two out three previous ICC events, yet they have a frighteningly simple task ahead of them: keep winning.Their rivals are the defending champions. A lot has changed since Australia won the Champions Trophy in 2006, and then the World Cup in 2007, but they will bring to this match an 8-1 winning record since the start of this season, and a desire to set a couple of things straight against a team with which they have shared an interesting and piquant recent history. It was Dhoni’s team that precipitated Australia’s one-day slide by blanking them out of the tri-series final in 2008.But those were different times. Australia were slipping from their lofty perch and India, perky, young, energetic and confident, were on the upswing. Ishant Sharma was sensational, RP Singh was swinging it, and Praveen Kumar was the surprising bowling hero. And of course Sachin Tendulkar was batting like a champion.He still is. But it was the pace bowlers who won India the series then, and today they present Dhoni his biggest worry. Dhoni is a remarkably candid man. Yesterday, he minced no words in admitting that his bowlers had let the team down, today, he went a step further by conceding that they were low on confidence. Consquently, India have been compelled to abandon their preferred formula and reinforce their bowling at the cost of their batting. It is a risk, but one worth taking. In fact, they are one match late.It is easy to understand why Dhoni has been wary of going down that path. None of his quick men can bat, and No. 8 is a spot too high for Harbhajan. Australia recovered from 171 for 7 to 275 through Mitchell Johnson and Brett Lee yesterday. Once Rahul Dravid was seventh out against Pakistan, India added ten. Admittedly, the quality of bowling and match situations were different but with Amit Mishra, who is certain to come in tomorrow, the tail will be lengthened. Yet Mishra, a legspinner in the classical mould and was a surprising success in the IPL, could hold the key.As a one-day side, Australia are just about in the same place as India were in 2008. Ricky Ponting is batting majestically; Lee has recovered his zest and fitness, Johnson has grown as a bowler, and in Callum Ferguson, they have found a batsman with poise and skill and in Tim Paine, a young wicketkeeper batsman of unpredictable, and to the Indians, unknown quantity.But if this side has a known weakness, it is against spin. The familiar theme in most of their one-day defeats this year has been a mid-innings struggle against spin. From Johan Botha to Shahid Afridi to Graeme Swann, they have all prospered against the Australian middle order. Expectedly Michael Clarke, who is unlikely to play tomorrow, has been their most prolific batsman against the spinners, but his runs have come at 4.11 per over; James Hopes and Brad Haddin, their two big strikers have scored at less than 4.00 and no batsman managed more than 5.00. Theoretically, Mishra and Harbhajan Singh, if he can find his mojo, could keep them under 80 runs off their 20 overs. Dhoni will miss the handy fillers from Yuvraj Singh and Virender Sehwag, but expect Suresh Raina to wheel away a few.But of course, stats, history and theories are often of little use. If anything, this tournament has made rubbish of conventional wisdom almost every day. Common sense suggests Australia should win. India go in to the match low on talent and confidence, and the knowledge that they can not afford to blink. What they need to find is some inspiration and a couple of saviours.

Manchester United make ‘improved offer’ of £65m plus add-ons for Bryan Mbeumo in bid to break transfer stalemate with Brentford

Manchester United have lodged an improved offer worth up to £70m for Bryan Mbeumo in an attempt to get a deal for their top target over the line.

  • Mbeumo offer worth £65m plus £5m add-ons
  • Third bid believed to be closer to Brentford's valuation
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    United have submitted a third offer worth £65m plus £5m in add-ons for Brentford forward Mbeumo, report . The Cameroon international has been the subject of intense transfer interest from the Red Devils so far this summer and the saga has been plodding along slowly in recent weeks.

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    While it is not yet known if the Bees are likely to accept the offer, the fee cited aligns with the belief relayed in report that the west London club are hoping for an offer bigger than the £62.5m United paid Wolves for Matheus Cunha. Mbeumo was previously the subject of offers worth £55m and £62.5m including add-ons, both of which were swiftly rejected last month. Delays to a deal have reportedly caused frustration for Mbeumo.

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    Mbeumo joined Brentford for just £5.8m from Ligue 2 club Troyes in August 2019, immediately scoring 16 goals and earning a nomination for the EFL Player and Young Player of the Year awards in his first season. Five years on, Mbeumo eclipsed that goalscoring tally for the first time as he struck 20 top-flight goals to earn a nomination for Premier League Player of the Season.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MBEUMO AND UNITED?

    The belief is that Mbeumo wants to join United and the club will be hopeful of getting a deal done, dependent on whether Brentford continue to push up the price. Ruben Amorim aims to have the 25-year-old lining up alongside Cunha by the time their Premier League campaign kicks off, though he hopes to have a deal completed before the Red Devils' pre-season tour begins on July 22.

Sunderland hijack Marseille move as €25m Lutsharel Geertruida deal wrapped up despite agreement with RB Leipzig full-back

Sunderland are set to secure the signing of Lutsharel Geertruida in a shocking transfer victory snatching the Dutch international from Marseille.

Sunderland have reportedly signed GeertruidaPlayer also completed medical with SunderlandGeertruida to join on initial loan dealFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Marseille were under the impression they had sealed the signing of a reinforcement in Dutch defender Geertruida. The French club, in desperate need of a new defender, had reportedly reached an agreement on personal terms with the player, making a transfer seem all but done. However, in a shocking last-minute turn, full-back and centre-back Geertruida is heading to newly-promoted Premier League side Sunderland, according to Fabrizio Romano. The deal is a loan deal for €2.5 million with a purchase option set at €23m (£20m/$27m).

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Marseille's ongoing struggle to strengthen their squad continues. The club's pursuit of Geertruida came after their move for Ecuadorian defender Joel Ordonez failed due to financially demanding negotiations with Club Brugge. The defensive shortcomings for Roberto De Zerbi's side have been obvious and is further underscored by their recent 1-0 loss to Lyon. For Sunderland, this move is a major coup that signals their ambition and financial power after a promising start to the Premier League season.

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The 25-year-old has established himself as a key player for both RB Leipzig and Netherlands, with 17 caps to his name. The player was an integral part of Leipzig's squad playing 39 games for the club in which he scored a goal while providing an assist. The ex-Feyenoord defender was also targeted by AC Milan and Nottingham Forest. 

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR MARSEILLE?

The frustration of missing out on Geertruida for Marseille is immense, and they must now scramble to find a replacement before the transfer window closes. The club are expected to turn their attention to other targets, with West Ham United's Nayef Aguerd, who is close to joining the French club, and Inter's Benjamin Pavard being mentioned as potential alternatives.

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