Crystal Palace interested in Dwight McNeil

Crystal Palace are reportedly interested in signing Burnley midfielder Dwight McNeil, according to Sky Sports. 

The lowdown: In demand

A product of the youth system at Manchester United, McNeil cut his teeth in senior football in the Premier League and has racked up 134 appearances in the top-flight over five consecutive seasons, scoring seven goals and supplying 17 assists.

After suffering the indignity of relegation from the division with Burnley last season, the 22-year-old former England youth international is seemingly a wanted man with multiple suitors already in the mix.

Previously linked with a move to Everton, Tottenham, Brentford and newly promoted Fulham, an emerging report has claimed McNeil is now on the radar at Selhurst Park…

The latest: ‘Approach’ made

As per Sky Sports, Crystal Palace and West Ham have both made an ‘approach’ to sign the 10-cap England Under 21 starlet.

It’s claimed that McNeil is ‘keen to return to the Premier League’ and is currently ‘considering a number of options’ regarding his future.

The report also states that Burnley are ‘likely to demand a fee in excess of £15million’ for the youngster who was dubbed a ‘sensational player’ by The Athletic journalist Andy Jones back in June 2020.

The verdict: Strength in numbers

Eagles boss Patrick Vieira already has an embarrassment of riches at his disposal in wide areas with Michael Olise, Eberechi Eze, Jeffrey Schlupp and Malcolm Ebiowei all capable of operating on both wings.

Furthermore, despite the incessant links to a move away from South East London, including this summer with AS Roma touted as potential suitors, talismanic winger Wilfried Zaha remains in situ in the Palace squad.

However, still just 22, McNeil has already proven to be a capable operator at the elite level and would therefore be a superb addition to the ranks ahead of what looks certain to be a long campaign with a World Cup thrown into the mix.

Although the Englishman supplied only £16.2million valued ace still managed to outperform Zaha when it comes to what many would say is the Ivorian’s forte by completing 2.4 successful dribbles per outing compared to the Palace favourite’s 2.3 completed attempts.

All told, at the suggested price, McNeil would be an impressive signing for the South East Londoners.

Liverpool can sign new Mane with Gnabry

Liverpool have made three signings so far in the transfer window with Calvin Ramsey, Darwin Nunez and Fabio Carvalho all joining the Anfield outfit, but they have in an equal measure lost a number of players this summer.

Divock Origi, Taki Minamino and Sadio Mane have all left the club to take on new challenges elsewhere, with Mane’s unexpected exit the most likely to cause disruption in the team following his fantastic number of goal contributions.

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The Senegalese winger made the decision to leave the Reds just 12 months before his contract was due to expire with Mane joining Bayern Munich on a permanent move. Now, Liverpool could ask a favour of the Bundesliga champions in return.

The Merseyside club has been linked with a move for Serge Gnabry this summer, and despite playing predominantly as a right winger he can offer the goal contributions and attacking capabilities needed to replace Mane.

Gnabry has scored 64 times and delivered 40 assists in 171 appearances, impressively with a goal contribution every 105 minutes for Bayern, but it’s not just his goals and assists that have been attracting the attention of the powers at Anfield over the last season.

The £34m dynamo created a whopping 17 big chances, making 1.4 key passes, 1.4 tackles and taking two shots on average per game, as well as winning the majority of his duels combined (51%) and being successful in the majority of his dribbles (61%) over 34 Bundesliga appearances.

This season Gnabry ranked ninth for G/A contributions, shot-creating actions, and ranked seventh in the entire top five European leagues for key passes completed.

The Germany international has been the recipient of high praise, with Rio Ferdinand branding Gnabry “world class” on BT Sport (via Daily Mail);

“His stats are phenomenal. He’s sitting in the top level, world class.

“He’s come to Germany and set the place on fire, he was absolutely stunning tonight. His decision making has been extraordinary.”

With all considered, the former Arsenal man would be a great addition and a valuable asset to the team, especially if Mohamed Salah leaves next summer as he plays mostly on the right wing so it could be a win win situation for FSG ahead of next term.

AND in other news: Offer made: FSG closing in on Liverpool deal for “special” £35m gem, he’s Coutinho 2.0

Everton interested in signing Billy Gilmour

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

What’s the latest?

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

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

Delph replacement

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Liverpool keen on sealing Gavi move

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

The Lowdown: Gavi’s future not yet decided

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

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

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

The Latest: Liverpool still keen on move

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

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

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The Verdict: Feels unlikely

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

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

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

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

Leeds set for ‘really exciting’ summer

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

The lowdown: Early transfer business

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

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

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

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The latest: ‘Really exciting’ summer ahead for Leeds

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

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

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

The verdict: Overhaul required

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

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

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

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

Newcastle team news vs Man City

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

The Lowdown: Howe verdict

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

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

The Latest: Dinnery reacts

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Verdict: Blow

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

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

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

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

Is Pujara's luck running out?

He has been part of seven of India’s last ten run-outs in Tests, the latest one coming as India’s top order did battle under grey skies at Lord’s

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Aug-2018England v India, Lord’s, 2018
Cheteshwar Pujara run out 1
After a washed out first day, India got off to a shaky start on day two of the second Test at Lord’s, losing both their openers to James Anderson under grey London skies. Pujara was never at his fluent best over his 25-ball stay, battling for survival against England’s quicks on a stop-start day. Just before another spell of rain would pause proceedings, Pujara tapped one to point and started running. Kohli initially responded, but, with both men halfway down the length of the pitch, turned back, leaving Pujara stranded. Another Test match, another addition to Pujara’s run-out tally.South Africa v India, Centurion, January 2018
Cheteshwar Pujara run out for 19
Pujara became the first batsman to be run out twice in a Test since December 2000. In a tough chase of 287, he had managed to survive 47 balls and, with three top-order wickets already lost, was crucial to India having any chance of reaching the target. His partner, Parthiv Patel, played the ball to third man, where Lungi Ngidi made a good sliding stop and parried the ball to AB de Villiers. Pujara, inexplicably given the match situation, went for a third run, and despite a dive was found short.ESPNcricinfo LtdSouth Africa v India, Centurion, January 2018
Cheteshwar Pujara run out for 0
Pujara denied himself the chance of batting on a dry pitch that may have suited his game by getting run-out first ball. He defended the ball firmly to mid-on and, perhaps in an attempt to show the “intent” his captain had encouraged from his players, set off for a single that was not there. Ngidi, on debut, picked up the ball and hit the stumps direct, leaving Pujara well out of his crease.Sri Lanka v India, Colombo, August 2017
KL Rahul run out for 57
On the first day of the second Test of India’s 2017 tour of Sri Lanka, India were in a commanding positon at 109 for 1. KL Rahul pushed a Rangana Herath delivery to extra cover and set off for a run. Pujara, at the other end, set off too, but then changed his mind and sent Rahul back, in effect leaving his partner stranded. Rahul could be heard shouting “my call” as he walked back, miffed. Pujara made up for the mix-up by scoring a century.India v Australia, Dharamsala, March 2017
Pujara run out for 0
Pujara ended a prolific series with a duck, and it was poor running that did him in again. With India chasing 106 to win the Test and the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, he played the fifth ball he faced to point and set off for a quick single. But mid-way, he stuttered, giving Glenn Maxwell just enough time to nail the stumps at the non-strikers’ end. India were left 46 for 2 and under a bit of pressure, but they won by eight wickets in the end.India v New Zealand, Indore, October 2016
M Vijay run out for 19
This time it was M Vijay who was sent back by Pujara after he had set off for a quick single. Vijay had got a leading edge into the cover region and hared out of his crease. He did not seem to see Pujara sending him back and when he eventually did, a sharp pick up and throw from Martin Guptill had dismissed him. India were in a dominant position, though, after getting a 258-run first-innings lead, and Pujara scored a second-innings century to set up a win.West Indies v India at Kingston, July 2016
Pujara run out for 46
After toiling for 159 balls, Pujara missed out on a half-century because of a misjudged single. He tapped a delivery from Jason Holder to square leg and went for the run, but, despite a dive, was found short by Roston Chase’s direct hit at the non-striker’s end. India went on to score 500 in their first innings at a run-rate of less than three an over. After rain washed out the fourth day, the match was drawn. Pujara was dropped for the next Test, with India opting for Rohit Sharma in his place.

Left-arm quick, right-arm quicker

Lahore Qalandars have unearthed a truly unique prospect in Yasir Jan, an ambidextrous quick who can generate serious pace with both arms

Umar Farooq21-Sep-20161:53

‘Bowling with both hands is something I want to keep doing’

Pakistan have produced a number of gifted fast bowlers through their cricket history. Now, a talent hunt conducted by the Pakistan Super League team Lahore Qalandars may have unearthed someone truly unique: Yasir Jan, a 21-year-old quick who can bowl with both arms, and generate serious pace with either.According to Aaqib Javed, the former Pakistan fast bowler who is now Qalandars’ head of cricket operations, the ambidextrous Yasir can clock “around 145kmph with his right arm and not less than 135kmph with his left arm”.Qalandars have signed up Yasir on a 10-year developmental contract.Yasir hails from Charsadda, a town situated 29km from Peshawar. He moved to Islamabad at the age of 12, where he has been working with his brothers at the family’s vegetable shop. Cricket had been a “part-time passion” until he took a break from his work earlier this month to attend the talent hunt in Rawalpindi. The event has journeyed throughout Punjab, starting in Bahawalpur and ending in Lahore, taking 22 days to cover all the major cities.He didn’t take long to catch Aaqib’s eye.”He was bowling with his right arm, but then he came to me and told me, ‘I can bowl with left arm too,’ which caught my attention,” Aaqib said at a press conference at the Lahore Press Club, where he introduced Yasir. “It was a surprise for me, because I have never seen anyone doing that. I have seen cricketers throwing with both arms, and even saw a bowler bowling spin with both arms, but this is someone extraordinary.”This isn’t the first time Aaqib has discovered an unusual fast-bowling talent. In 2008, it was he who unearthed Mohammad Irfan, the 7’1” left-arm quick who was working at a plastic pipe factory at the time, earning around Pakistani Rs 8,000 (US $76 approx) a month while playing club cricket in the town of Gaggu Mandi in eastern Pakistan. Two years later, Irfan made his debut for Pakistan.Aaqib said Yasir was “raw” at present, and that it would take him another year or so to become ready to play competitive cricket.”Fast bowling is almost unnatural because you roll your arms and produce speed with an extreme level of muscle coordination,” Aaqib said. “So him bowling with his weak arm with the same intensity and speed was something that is unique; I don’t think anyone else in the world I know has done this. Like we had found Mohammad Irfan some time ago, now we have found a bigger talent with such an amazing ability.”We just wanted to encourage this talent and develop him, and get him ready for top-level cricket. I have signed a 10-year contract with him as a part of his grooming and taking care of all finances by Lahore Qalandars, so that he doesn’t have to worry about his future. I hope he works hard and keeps his focus, and we will be able to give a future star to Pakistan in coming years.”Yasir is confident about his future, and is happy to have found a platform. He has not played any competitive cricket so far. “It’s a great moment for me that I got such a platform,” he said at a conference, before signing his contract. “I have been running a vegetable shop and playing cricket in my spare time. I thank Aaqib for his support, and I promise that I will remain focused and work very hard to make everyone proud. Playing for Pakistan is a dream for every kid playing cricket and I also want to see myself at the top in coming years.”

Nepal dare to dream again

About 70 days after the earthquake, the team is back together and looking to make it to its second World T20

Sharda Ugra10-Jul-2015There’s an expression among young Indian sports journalists these days: find the ” story.” is a Hindi word that covers everything between motherly compassion and all-round empathy. A story is “human interest” with larger helpings of emotion. A tear-jerker, lump-in-throat tale. Rags to riches, hardship to the heights of glory; sweat, tears and hopefully not too much blood.By that score, Nepal cricket itself should qualify as a sitter of a story. A country where cricket has gone into hyper mode over the last five years. An unexpected, disarming appearance in the 2014 World T20. A year later, less than three months before the qualifier for the 2016 World T20, the country was hit by the most devastating earthquake in its modern memory. The team regrouped, picked itself up, and plays its first match at the tournament this week.It is not how they sees itself. Nepal’s cricket team knows it must find the perfect balance between what needs to be done and what can at most possibly be done. Between the April 25 earthquake and their game in Belfast on Friday, the first of six, Nepal have travelled, trained and played across continents and conditions. From recovering, still after-shocked Kathmandu, the team moved to Dharamsala, Bath, Amstelveen, Rotterdam and Belfast. They found themselves playing against each other, the Gloucestershire 2nd XI, Netherlands, Oman and the UAE.They know exactly where they stand. They need to finish in the top six of 14 teams to make it to the 2016 ICC World T20 for the second time running. The captain, Paras Khadka, is clear what his team, as “the first batch” of Nepal’s international cricketers, must do. “It is a big responsibility for us to see that our fans don’t get disappointed.”Cricket has become Nepal’s leading sport•Sharda Ugra/ESPNcricinfo LtdHad the phrase come out of European club football, it would be a platitude. But Khadka’s words ring real. Within two decades, these cricketers have become their nation’s premier sportsmen: Nepal’s cricket team, the country’s favourite national squad, the source of collective aspiration and dreaming.When they play, wherever they do, on the handful of turf wickets in Kathmandu, Pokhara or Bhairawa, the people turn up. They fill bleachers, grass embankments, it is standing room only. Coach Pubudu Dassanayake has worked with the team since November 2011, after stints in Sri Lanka and then Canada, where he now lives. Canada had structure, facilities; Nepal has none of that, but Nepal has “it”. Nepal “gets” cricket at an intuitive level.Dassanayke has seen it all: “Nepal plays, 20,000 turn up. In Canada you couldn’t get 100 to watch. Give a bat to a 10-year-old in Nepal, he would know forward and backward defence straight off.”These should be the best of times for any country newly allured by cricket, because the world game has never been richer. Yet when most required, cricket’s financial excesses exist alongside a paucity of a genuine global vision. The sport has protectively closed ranks around its most wealthy, just as the game has sparked obsessions in two countries either side of South Asia’s most formidable mountain ranges. Afghanistan cricket’s growth around the Hindu Kush is driven by a generation that found itself in a cricketing nation across the border. Nepal’s has followed a zig-zagging, eccentric path.Pubudu Dassanayake with ACC development officer (and former India spinner) Venkatapathy Raju, in Dharamsala•Sharda Ugra/ESPNcricinfo LtdCricket always played itself out in the corner of Nepal’s eye, pictures and sounds coming in from television or radio from its giant neighbour. There were always club matches, village matches, school matches. The game spread through a steady osmosis due to Nepal’s geographical proximity to the Indian border; through Nepalis who worked and lived in India before returning home, like left-arm spinner Shakti Gauchan’s father, who was part of the Indian Army’s Gurkha regiment. It gave Gauchan a chance to play club cricket in Mumbai and, many years on, to work in a training camp with Rajasthan Royals. Gauchan is now a team elder in every way – their oldest player, an example to the rest in endurance, fitness, skills and counsel.Young left-arm spinner Bhuvan Karki, who missed out on the ICC World T20 qualifer squad clearly remembers hearing “BSNL ” on the radio. is Hindi for a four, BSNL one of India’s state telecom companies that tagged its name onto every boundary in every Indian match being offered on radio commentary – well before the IPL’s DLF-maximum days. Basant Regmi, about eight years older than Karki, from Bhairawa, grew up playing the game with a cork ball. Switching from bowling gentle-paced cutters to left-arm spin after breaking a finger, he learned from watching Daniel Vettori and Ashley Giles on TV. Anil Mandal from the eastern town of Janakpur learnt the game from older boys at his local club. Gyanendra Malla grew up in the old town in Kathmandu, played in courtyards as a boy with the courtyards’ own rules, watching Navjot Sidhu teach viewers how to hit sixes, and Anil Kumble coach them on legspin on a programme called . In 1996, Nepalis watched the world play in the neighbourhood, and to their delight a team from the neighbourhood won the World Cup.Veteran Basant Regmi•Sharda Ugra/ESPNcricinfo LtdNepal’s domestic cricket is played between nine regional teams plus a team each from the Army and the Armed Police Force. Two events – one T20 and one 50-over tournament – that make up one month’s cricket every season. It took other rungs of other ladders to get Nepal to where they are today. Mostly the ICC’s World Cricket League (WCL) divisions and events*, held far away from the attention of Full Members. The Asian Cricket Council (ACC) provided the developmental coaches, which is what brought bringing Roy Dias to Nepal, working with the Nepal juniors and seniors from 2001 to 2011. He shepherded Nepal to the plate runners-up titles at the 2002 and 2006 Under-19 World Cups and the ACC Youth Asia Cup in Karachi. It is this unglamourous developmental work that ensured that Basant played in Quetta and Bahrain, Bhuvan in Namibia, and Mandal in his first big competition, an Under-15 tournament, ten years ago.Raman Shiwakoti, the team’s data analyst, its chronicler, photographer, day-to-day manager, and if required, also an accredited Level 2 umpire, has been with the team since 2012. Nepal cricket’s ascent into a wider national consciousness, he believes, came from 2011-12 onwards, when the team began to work its way up the WCL ranks*, up through Divisions IV and III. The qualification for the World T20 last year through Division II is what lit the touchpaper. From then on, all of Nepal was drawn in, obsessed, enchanted. “From the prime minister to the rickshaw-,” Khadka smiles.The qualification through to the ICCWorld T20 in 2014 marked the moment when as Sharad Veswakar remembers, “everything changed”. After 2014, the players were given contracts – US$350 per month for Group A, $250 for Group B, and groups C and D $100. Companies stepped forward to sign players for sponsorships and “ambassadorships”. Jobs in the army and Armed Police Force were offered, and spots on their teams. Less than two years after the magic of 2014, the ACC, which had provided coaches and a clutch of continental events, has been disbanded under the Big Three’s new restructuring. Neither Dassanayake nor his players understand why or what this means for their future.For the moment, they are in Belfast. When Dassanayake first arrived in Nepal he told journalists at the airport that his job was to make the team mentally believe that they belonged at a higher level and to take them to a World Cup. “People laughed,” he chuckles. The expectations from his team will always remain, but that pleases him: “Now we have created a pressure, we need to go and perform.”The players ring their coach at the HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala, with the Himalayas looking on•Sharda Ugra/ESPNcricinfo LtdDharamsala, with its scenic surroundings and five-star cricket facilities, where the team trained for a fortnight after the quake, was far removed from Kathmandu’s damaged Tribhuvan Stadium. After the shudder of the first day subsided and the phone lines came back up, the players reached out to each other. Basant to Khadka in Australia to tell him the team was by and large fine. Subash Khakurel and Shiwakoti to set up conversations on Facebook and Viber between the group of about 25 front-line cricketers. The players had gathered to meet, train and meditate at Tribhuvan. Early on, the senior cricketers and the coach they call “Pubu” were trying to get the boys to turn their attention to cricket, but a series of aftershocks sent the younger players rushing home to faraway villages. They returned in a straggle, scarred but resolute.How will Nepal go at the qualifier? Malla, who spent a few weeks playing club cricket in Canada, says the lack of experience in his team can be countered by a shift in mindset: “It’s one guy with a bat and one guy with a ball.” Gauchan believes that, through cricket, Nepal have a chance to tap into a memory he has of another sport, another country, another time. In March 2011, Japan was hit by an earthquake and a tsunami that led to a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant. In July, its women’s football team became the first Asian team to win the sport’s World Cup. “If we do well at the qualifier to start with, it will be like a gift to our people. Like it was for the Japanese that year.”Khadka is sitting among his buddies in a storeroom under the slope that leads to the Dharamsala practice pitches. He has spoken with affection about his team-mates. “We’re united, we’re tight, we’re committed, there’s pressure on everyone to deliver.” He has run his broadsword through the administration. “If you come to the board, make sure you are there to develop the game and not yourself. Most cricket administrators are part-time. It is all bullshit, it is all about egos. If we were part-time about cricket, we never would’ve got here.”He is a captain cut from a cricketing cloth that South Asians recognise. Kardar had it, Pataudi had it, Ranatunga had it. He may not belong to a front-line cricket nation but Khadka has it too – ambition, confidence, charisma. He had started in cricket like boys in South Asia do, all year round, non-stop, at school, during classes, at home. “You were a kid, you loved cricket, you played. I never dreamt of it – playing for Nepal.”Then came the ICC World T20 debut in Bangladesh: packed crowds, day-night cricket and Nepal’s cricket team in the middle of it. Their flag, their anthem. Its reverberations were felt, growing in strength and power, by Khadka, his team, his country. “The feeling you get after that, is that you want to get to every World Cup from now.”*The references to ACC’s Division Four and Five have been changed to divisions in the ICC’s World Cricket League

South Africa's invincibles

The last time South Africa beat Australia at home was nearly 44 years ago. Four protagonists from the series remember those heady days

Firdose Moonda30-Jan-2014Ali Bacher’s first taste of Test cricket at home was against Australia in the summer of 1966. At that stage, he knew only victory. He had been part of the South African outfit that had beaten England in England for the first time in 30 years, in 1965, and sensed victory almost from the moment the Australians landed in his country. described Bobby Simpson’s side as carrying a “six or seven-man tail”, and having an attack that was “the weakest ever to represent Australia in South Africa”.Success came by a margin of 3-1 and earned Bacher a pay cheque he will never forget. “The whole team was given bonuses when we won. We all got R75,” Bacher said. “I remember it because I was recently married and my wife and I were renting a flat in Killarney [a Johannesburg suburb]. Our monthly rent was R75. We were so excited when we found out we could cover a whole month’s rent just because of cricket.”Bacher’s last taste of Test cricket also came at home against Australia. It was the summer of ’69. Neither he nor any of his team-mates had played any international cricket in the three years since Australia had last toured South Africa, so he still only knew what it was like to win, not lose.And it was all that Bacher would experience at the highest level. He captained the side he calls “the best I ever played in” to a 4-0 whitewash and today jokes that all he had to do was “turn up and win the toss”.Only two times have South Africa got the better of Australia in a series at home. Since South Africa’s readmission, Australia have played six series in the country, and won four. The 1969-70 tour became the stuff of legend. It showed off a South African side that Bacher said was “extraordinary in that we had so many allrounders” and revealed their dominance over a team Mike Procter called “unofficial world champions”. It also marked their disappearance from the international stage for two decades.All that history meant that though it was one-sided, the series remains one of South Africa’s most cherished contests.The build-up lasted years. With such a long gap between Test series, Procter remembered being “very excited” when he was told Australia would be touring. “There was so little Test cricket at the time that we just couldn’t wait to play, especially against a team who were so highly rated. They had the world’s best batsman in Ian Chappell and best bowler in Graham McKenzie.”In the preceding years, Australia had beaten almost every opposition that came their way. In 20 series between October 1956 and December 1969, they had been defeated only twice. Not only did they have form on their side, they also had recent match time. Just a month before they were due in South Africa, they completed a five-Test tour of India, which they won 3-1.The South Africans had only played domestic cricket, so they stepped up their preparation. “We trained a bit harder,” Procter said. Peter van der Merwe, the former captain, writing in the official tour brochure noted: “People who saw the Springboks prepare… were highly impressed by the business-like air in their camp.”Australia’s performance in India was not a cause for worry. “In those days, a tour of India was tough,” said Bacher. “Now it’s magnificent, but then it was a challenge, and from that, they came straight here. We were quietly confident – not arrogant – that we would beat them.”The most obvious casualty of Australia’s tour of the subcontinent was McKenzie. After finishing the 1966-67 series as Australia’s leading wicket-taker, and having been their most successful seamer in India, much was expected of him. “[But] he picked up a virus or something like that in India and didn’t fire as he could,” said Graeme Pollock. McKenzie only took one wicket and a lucky one at that – Bacher stood on his stumps in South Africa’s final innings of the series – so Australia had to rely on others to do the damage.

“Barry told us that if Gleeson had a lot of fingers over the ball, it was the legbreak and if you only saw thumb and index finger, it was the offbreak. That just showed the genius of Barry”Ali Bacher

They had a trump card in John Gleeson, the legspinner who could also bowl a deceptive offbreak. “We’d heard that he was a flick bowler, like Jack Iverson, and he was a bit of mystery bowler,” Bacher said. “Australia were clever with him because in the matches against the provinces whenever one of our Test players came in to bat, they took him off, so none of us could see him.”Bacher was the first to front up to Gleeson, on day one of the series, in Cape Town, and he immediately saw why Australia were saving him. “He was bowling from the Wynberg End, and his ball to me, I thought, was an offie but it was a leggie. This kept happening and he was making me look like a clown. Eventually I decided to just put my foot down the wicket and hoist him over midwicket and it paid off. I got to 57 not knowing what he was bowling.”The only South African who had the measure of Gleeson after that first sighting was Barry Richards. Although he did not face him much, Richards figured him out, which Bacher regarded as South Africa’s own ace. “That night at the team meeting, Barry told us that if Gleeson had a lot of fingers over the ball, it was the legbreak and if you only saw thumb and index finger, it was the offbreak. That just showed the genius of Barry.”Despite Gleeson’s four-for in the second innings, South Africa set Australia a massive target of 451 and won handsomely, by 170 runs. Richards made only 29 and 32.That changed in the second Test, in Durban, a match where, Procter said, the crowds queued overnight “like at Wimbledon” to get in. Richards brought up his maiden Test century, scoring at a strike rate of over 85, and partnered Pollock in a stand Bacher describes as “batting you will never see the likes of again”. “It was like Barry and Graeme were trying to outdo each other.”Richards only remembers being in the zone. “It was one of those days when you were just playing well. I always felt we should be attacking upfront and that’s what I did.”He was dismissed for 140 but Pollock batted on. And on. And on. He set a new South African record for the highest individual score, 274.”Barry set the tone and I think we put on 100 runs in the hour after lunch. It was one of those situations where things were going nicely,” Pollock said. “My dad died two weeks prior to the Test series and he had always said to me, ‘If you want to be seen as a top-class player you’ve got to get big scores. You’ve got to keep going. Don’t give it away. Don’t just get 100, 150 or even 200. Keep going.’ So I did.”As the runs mounted, Richards and Pollock asked Bacher if he was considering declaring, but he refused. “I just thought of how in the past South African teams always got clobbered by Australia and I saw an opportunity to pay them back in some way,” he said.On 622 for 9, Bacher finally decided it was enough and his bowlers proved him right by securing an innings win.Among Australia’s failings on the tour, perhaps the most notable was Ian Chappell’s. He had arrived in South Africa with a big reputation but managed only 27 runs in the first two Tests, with two ducks.”During the first press conference, Bill Lawry said Chappell was the best batsman in the world but it didn’t happen for him out here,” Bacher said. “Even though he battled, West Indian bowlers who I came across later told me they rated him very highly and would rather bowl to his brother Greg than Ian.”Chappell’s luck improved only marginally in Johannesburg, where he made 34 and 0. South Africa won by 307 runs to seal the series. It was there that they saw Australia deflate. “They arrived with high hopes but lost momentum and became dispirited,” Richards said.South Africa went for the kill. In Port Elizabeth they struck the final blow, with Procter claiming career-best figures of 6 for 73.”I had a bit of flu that day and Peter Pollock had done his hamstring, but I was hungry as hell to do well,” he said. “Like everyone in the team, I wanted to win bigger and win more. Everyone was just at the top of the game.” Afterwards Procter did not have much strength left for the celebration but remembers the party being huge. “You cannot believe what a big deal it was,” he said. And the payment? “I think we got bonuses of R150.”Back then money wasn’t a motivating factor to play cricket, and most of the players had other jobs. Winning was the only thing that mattered, which is why everyone, including Bacher, felt that had there been a fifth Test, they would have won that too. But none of them got to play another Test for South Africa after that, and all have some regret.Ali Bacher is carried on the shoulders of his team-mates after the series win in Johannesburg•ESPNcricinfo LtdBacher wonders how South Africa would have done if they had toured Australia in 1971-72 and how they would have fared against Dennis Lillee. Procter and Richards knew that tour was never going to take place. In England, the winter after South Africa blanked Australia, they could see South Africa would be isolated. They were the only two who made a living from cricket thereafter.Pollock could have done the same but he turned down county offers. “I was married with kids and I had a pretty good job,” he said. “And I suppose I was expecting we would get back onto the international scene sooner. I don’t think anybody foresaw isolation would be for 22 years.” Instead, he played the rebel tours, and Bacher got on with his career as a doctor.They all look back at the summer of ’69 as the highlight of their careers. “There was such a great spirit,” Pollock said. “We all got on so well,” Procter said. “It was the best side I played in,” Richards said. “We were formidable,” Bacher said.All four believe the current South African team have many of the same qualities and expect them to be the first since readmission to beat Australia at home. “Both teams have two outstanding attacks and I think the series will be decided on how the Australian batsmen deal with South Africa’s bowers,” Bacher said. “I’m not convinced about the Australian top order.”Neither is Procter, who said that although the Australian turnaround has been fantastic, he can’t see them overcoming the South African attack. Richards believes even though Jacques Kallis’ retirement “takes some of the edge off and that there are a few selection issues, barring any injuries, South Africa can win”.Whatever happens, Pollock predicts, “one hell of a series”.

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