Man City claim emerges on Kalvin Phillips

Manchester City journalist Sam Lee has dropped a behind-the-scenes claim regarding the possibility of the Premier League champions securing a deal for Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips during the upcoming transfer window.

What’s the news?

In a recent report for The Athletic, Lee highlighted City’s reported interest in signing the Elland Road star and the current situation regarding a potential move to the Etihad Stadium this summer.

The journalist wrote: “No doubt, Phillips’ potential arrival has been complicated by Leeds’ Premier League survival. Avoiding relegation puts them in a stronger position financially, so City lost a fair bit of leverage.

“It is still very much on the cards, but a move is not as easy as was previously hoped within City’s offices.”

A product of Leeds’ youth academy, the 26-year-old has made 234 senior appearances for the Yorkshire club across all competitions. In that time, the England international has scored 14 goals and delivered 13 assists along the way.

Taking into account how Leeds only won three of the 18 league games in which Phillips didn’t feature this season and weren’t able to keep a clean sheet in any of those 18 matches, this highlights just how important he is to Jesse Marsch’s team and why they would be keen to keep hold of him for as long as possible.

Big worry for Guardiola

While Lee claimed that there is still some hope that a deal can be struck for the Leeds star this summer, it would be a worry for Pep Guardiola that it may not be as easy to complete as it could have been had the Whites been relegated at the end of the Premier League season.

Bearing in mind how City will be heading into next term without Fernandinho for the first time in almost 10 years, it will be an even bigger concern for the Spaniard to not see his side secure a suitable replacement for the Brazil veteran – such as Phillips – before the start of the campaign.

While the Citizens haven’t been shy in the past when it comes to splashing out big sums of money to bring players to the Etihad from other Premier League clubs, this could be another one of those scenarios where they may be forced to pay whatever Leeds may want for their midfield hero.

In other news: Guardiola can land his next Sane as Man City eye move for “glorious” £128m sensation

Wolves Predicted XI vs Norwich

Wolves host already-relegated Norwich in the Premier League this afternoon with Bruno Lage’s men looking to end the season strongly after a run of five games without a win.

The Molineux outfit have been in poor form of late, shipping ten goals in their last three matches having conceded just 29 in the 33 games prior.

But against a side whose fate is already sealed in the Canaries, Wolves have an excellent chance to sign off in front of their home fans with a victory.

But who is available for Lage’s side and how will the Portuguese opt to set his team up?

Injury News

According to Premier Injuries, both Max Kilman and Nelson Semedo have been ruled out for the season with respective issues whilst defender Romain Saiss could also miss the final two games of the campaign.

However, the Moroccan’s absence will be particularly painful for the Wolves faithful. The defender is likely to leave this summer with his contract set to expire next month.

The only other likely absentee is Daniel Podence who is nursing a foot injury.

Wolves Predicted XI

After a thumping 5-1 defeat by Manchester City at Molineux on Wednesday night, Lage could be tempted to make wholesale changes. However, we expect the 46-year-old to make just a few alterations…

Wolves XI: Sa, Jonny, Coady, Boly, Chiquinho, Dendoncker, Neves, Moutinho, Marcal, Silva, Jimenez

The defensive trio keep their place with Saiss still absent whilst Chiquinho also stays in the side after an impressive full Premier League debut on Wednesday despite the heavy defeat and registered two assists in the draw with Chelsea.

Dendoncker, Neves and Moutinho all keep their spots in midfield too whilst there is a change at left-wing-back with Marcal coming in for Rayan Ait-Nouri.

The £33k-per-week 20-year-old, labelled as “immature” by Wolves legend Steve Bull in an exclusive interview with Football FanCast, had a poor outing vs Manchester City and has struggled for consistency of late.

As for Marcal, the 33-year-old is set to leave Molineux with his contract expiring next month and therefore deserves the chance to play in front of the Wolves supporters one last time.

Then the second change comes up front as Fabio Silva comes back into the fold in place of Pedro Neto alongside Raul Jimenez.

Although the 19-year-old is yet to score this season, he was crowned as Wolves’ player of the month for April and has shown glimmers of the potential that tempted to the West Midlands club to fork out a club record £35.6m almost two years ago.

This afternoon’s match proves to be a good opportunity for Wolves to sign off at home with a victory whilst also allowing players set to depart the opportunity to say goodbye one last time.

AND in other news: Forget Neto: Lage must now unleash Wolves £26k-p/w “top player” who’s “got everything”

Lucky tossers or worthy challengers? Are England really ready to bid for No.1?

Joe Root’s men are in sight of a memorable series whitewash in Sri Lanka, but can their recent failings be forgotten that quickly?

George Dobell22-Nov-2018England have the chance to complete their first overseas whitewash – in a series of three matches or more – since 1963 in Colombo over the next few days.Whatever happens in the Test, England will rise to No. 2 in the world rankings. But, if they win, it will be their first whitewash since the 2011 victory over India that took them to No. 1 and only the third ever inflicted against Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka. On top of that, England have already achieved their first series win in Asia since 2012 and their first in Sri Lanka since 2001.All of which sounds excellent.And it is true that, over the last few weeks, England have found a way to win in conditions which have nearly always troubled them. In developing an attack that can take wickets in Asia and a batting line-up that can score runs against the turning ball, they have developed nicely since the tour of India two years ago. Their allrounders give them remarkable depth in both departments, while the emergence of Jack Leach has helped bring the best out of a spin attack that previously lacked the control required to build pressure. On the basis that Sri Lanka’s record is pretty good and that England will take confidence from this victory, it does seem fair to conclude they have made admirable progress.But this week’s talk of England reaching No. 1 in the Test rankings was just a little uncomfortable. While it is an admirable aim and it could, if results go their way, be achieved with victory in the Ashes, it could also seduce England into thinking they have made a little more progress than is really the case.To be fair to Joe Root, he has always maintained that England are “not the finished article” and he is quite right to celebrate success. But talk of England rising to No. 1 seems premature.For a start, England have won only two of their last 15 games away from home. They were thrashed in Australia and India – both 4-0 – beaten in New Zealand and the UAE (by Pakistan) and held to draws in Bangladesh and the Caribbean. Until several of those results can be corrected, any No. 1 ranking – while welcome – is going to feel just a little hollow.It has to be acknowledged that Sri Lanka are not the team they once were, either. While their recent record is decent – they beat Pakistan in the UAE and had not been defeated at home by a non-Asian side since 2014 – they have been hit by a succession of retirements in recent years (Rangana Herath being the latest) and are struggling to develop replacements of a similar standard.Joe Root sweeps in the nets at Colombo•Getty ImagesEngland might accept they have had some fortune, too. Root has – remarkably – won the toss in England’s last seven Tests. While there are times that matters little, there have been other times – not least in Kandy, Galle and at Lord’s against India – when that has been a substantial advantage.That’s not to detract from England’s success. They won the toss a few times in India, too: it made little difference. A team still has to be good enough to take advantage. But it is a factor that has to be acknowledged.The enduring issues remain, too. In picking Jonny Bairstow as their fourth No. 3 of the series, England have underlined their inability to fill the role since the loss of form of Gary Ballance or, before him, Jonathan Trott, while their newest pair of openers still have lots of questions to answer. Impressive as Rory Burns and Keaton Jennings have been this series, it is premature to view the former as a settled member of the side, while Jennings’ long-term Test record – he averages 28.20 after 14 Tests – remains modest. It shouldn’t be forgotten England were 103 for 5 in Galle and 139 for 5 in Kandy, either. That top-order batting remains fragile.Meanwhile, England are no closer to finding a replacement pair of seamers for James Anderson and Stuart Broad. They still don’t have a proven fast bowler who could give them a realistic chance of success in Australia and they were saved in Kandy – up to a point, anyway – by a couple of outrageously good pieces of fielding and final-wicket stands that added 101 runs across the game.So England deserve great credit for their success and the progress they have made. They are developing into a highly-entertaining side with a very exciting future. But at the risk of bringing some early humbug to Christmas, let’s go easy on talk of No. 1 for a while. There are substantially more difficult challenges to come.

Batting cancer cannot stop spreading

A problem of this magnitude stretches beyond the players immediately concerned. Right now, Australia’s batting is driving down the value of the game in this country.

Daniel Brettig15-Nov-20164:30

Chappell: Australia have dug themselves into a hole since Argus review

On Saturday, a mate took his girlfriend out for birthday brunch at the same time David Warner and Joe Burns walked to the middle in Hobart. By the time they returned home, Australia had been bowled out for 85.On Tuesday, two former Australian Test players checked the scores to see the team were still two wickets down on the fourth morning before heading into work meetings. By the time the pair broke for lunch, the Test match was over.These are but two examples of how far the batting cancer in Australia’s Test team has spread. A collapse of 10 for 83 in the third Test of the series in Sri Lanka was noticed by some, being the third defeat in a row. But those of 10 for 86, 10 for 85 and 8 for 32 so far against South Africa are disturbing the rhythm of Australian life at a time when vast swathes of the community expect to be sitting down to watch the cricket. It is, quite literally, beyond a joke.A problem of this magnitude stretches beyond the players immediately concerned to affect the rest of the team, the support staff, coaches, selectors, management, the Cricket Australia board and the sporting public at large. Right now, Australia’s batting is driving down the value of the game in this country – a rude shock to those administrators who have at times made the team’s performance subservient to the “bigger picture” of growing the game.There was nothing particularly unusual about the way Australia’s batsmen folded at Bellerive Oval. A poor choice of shot by Usman Khawaja ended a partnership with Steven Smith, the new man Adam Voges was placed under immediate pressure, and once he was out the rest fell apart like a slow-cooked lamb leg off the bone.The only salient differences from other days were the fact that the short ball did as much damage as deliveries probing a length around off stump, as South Africa’s pacemen recognised the best way to utilise the indentations left in the Hobart pitch by their spells on day one when the surface was still fresh. Voges and Callum Ferguson both fell when trying to leave shortish deliveries, while Peter Nevill was out fending at a Kagiso Rabada throat ball, in a dismissal that could have been from any number of West Indian victories in the 1980s.It is beyond doubt that the South Africa seam and swing attack has been of the highest quality, as demonstrated by the present career averages of Vernon Philander (21.67), Kyle Abbott (21.83) and Rabada (22.75). But it is equally true that when other highly skilled pace ensembles have charged in at Australian batsmen in the past, whether it be the West Indians, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, or Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock, they have found the baggy greens harder to shift.That’s what Smith referred to in an impassioned address after the match. “I need players who are willing to get into the contest and get into the battle and pride in playing for Australia and pride in the baggy green – that’s what I need,” he said. “At the moment it’s not good enough. I’m quite tired of saying it, to be honest with you. It’s happened five Tests in a row now, for an Australian cricket team that’s humiliating.”Something that has clouded Australia’s batsmen over the past five matches is a state of conflict between the philosophy that informs their approach and the match scenario in which they find themselves. Notions of driving the game forward, being proactive and entertaining are second nature to the team and the coach Darren Lehmann, but as one former player has put it, “you have to earn the right to play that way”.Intriguingly, there was little identification among some members of the team for the way JP Duminy and Dean Elgar dug in on day three of the Perth Test. They did not score at a rate deemed attractive to the public, but did as much as anyone, in their understated way, to decide the outcome of the series.Yet the overwhelming body of evidence now before everyone connected to Australian cricket is that this team is not good enough to attack at all costs, as much as they would like to do so. Basics, and stubborn application, must be rediscovered. “We’re only driving a game if we’re in a position, to be perfectly honest and we haven’t been for a while now,” Lehmann said. “We’ve got to stay in long enough to create those chances and put pressure on the opposition and we haven’t been able to do that.”South Africa have been driving the game barring day one of the Perth game and we had an opportunity there and we didn’t take it. That’s probably happened in the past few Test matches – even in Sri Lanka we had a couple of opportunities to grab the game and didn’t. It’s about these young guys getting better about grabbing the game and taking it from there.”Unquestionably, Australian cricket must refocus on the defensive basics of batting, and also on ensuring players are as focused, prepared and energised as possible when the time comes to pull on the national team kit. South Africa’s cricketers did something similar earlier this year, following an 18-month lull that followed the 2015 World Cup won by Australia at home. What they have now achieved is a strength in depth that Smith, Lehmann and the selectors can only dream about, without anything like the same budgets.After play, the Australians met with the chief executive James Sutherland, the team performance chief Pat Howard, and a quintet of former playing luminaries in Mark Taylor, Shane Warne, Ian Healy, Michael Slater and Tom Moody. That too, provided a reminder of how far this batting cancer has spread, for continued problems will affect the jobs of the administrators and also the salaries of the commentators – a new round of broadcast deals is to be decided over the next year. Chronic batting troubles could reduce the money available to the game.A third example of how Hobart’s events are spiralling ever outwards could be found on the boundary’s edge at Bellerive an hour or so after the final wicket fell. A man had picked up his primary school-aged grandson from school to take him to see the cricket, but there was none to see. Instead they were left to wander around an empty stadium, as South Africa’s winning players caroused in the middle of the ground.

Lyon is Clarke's greatest legacy

It is fitting that spin is playing a key role for Australia in Michael Clarke’s final Test as he has always been a captain who has understood and nurtured the art

Daniel Brettig at The Oval22-Aug-2015If a straightforward grab from the outside edge of Ben Stokes turns out to be Michael Clarke’s final catch in Test cricket, then it will be an entirely fitting epitaph for the captain’s four years marshalling his men in the field.That’s because the catch was taken off the bowling of Nathan Lyon, a man who has grown enormously under Clarke’s wing to become a central player in this team and arguably Australia’s finest offspin bowler. Given the many and varied difficulties faced by the nation’s spinners in the 21st century, the growth of Lyon into a genuinely world-class bowler should stand as Clarke’s greatest legacy to the Australian team.Several months ago in the West Indies, Lyon became Australia’s most prolific offspinner. With his wickets at The Oval, Lyon has climbed into the top 10 offspin bowlers in the history of the game. Of those, only Muttiah Muralitharan, Graeme Swann and Jim Laker have bettered Lyon’s strike rate. By any measure, it is quite a feat.But when the context of Australian spin bowling in a post-Warne world is added to the picture, the achievements of Lyon in partnership with Clarke enter the realm of the extraordinary. All statistical measures of the game indicate that it has never been harder to bowl finger spin down under, while the expectations created by Warne were such that a succession of his replacements were crushed by their weight.Back in 2011, Clarke started his captaincy without even knowing who his spin bowler would be. A relentless cycle of selection missteps and indifferent performances had churned through Stuart MacGill, Brad Hogg, Beau Casson, Cameron White, Jason Krejza, Nathan Hauritz, Xavier Doherty, Michael Beer and a fledgling Steven Smith. On his first tour as captain in Bangladesh, Clarke reflected on what he wanted. Vitally, he made it clear he was not looking for another Warne. That much had not always been clear among others.”The one thing we need to continue to remember though is we’re never going to get another Shane Warne,” Clarke said in a Dhaka hotel room. “He’s one of a kind and I think as the Australian public and the expectation we have with our spin bowlers, things have changed. We certainly haven’t got Warney, we’ve moved from that.”But I do believe spin bowling will play a huge part in Australian cricket’s success going forward, it’s just about using them the right way, supporting them and getting the most out of what they do. Hopefully I can set some good fields and show them good faith and support them as much as I possibly can.”Lyon was then hurled into the fray on the basis of one promising domestic season for South Australia and a short Australia A tour to Zimbabwe. When the Test team arrived in Sri Lanka for Clarke’s first Test assignment in charge, most figured that Beer would play first as the incumbent spinner. But Clarke and the selector on duty Greg Chappell warmed to Lyon’s flight, dip and spin, offering him a debut on a turning pitch in Galle.Right from the start, Clarke proved true to his word in supporting Lyon. Very first ball, he dived to claim a blinding catch when Kumar Sngakkara edged a biting off break. A feel-good five-wicket haul ensued, immediately shoring up Lyon’s place in the XI and also firming his relationship with Clarke. If Lyon and Clarke had little in common off the field, it made negligible difference to their growing affinity on it.The road from Galle 2011 to the Oval in 2015 has not always been a smooth one. Lyon was twice dropped from the team two years ago, first for Doherty when bowling inconsistently in India then for Ashton Agar when bowling rather better in England. But by the third Test of that Ashes series Lyon was back in the XI, and he has stayed there ever since, improving all the time and growing in the sort of confidence a spin bowler must have.One under-rated element of England preparing a pair of grassy pitches for Edgbaston and Trent Bridge was the fact that Lyon was left with little to do, and Clarke with few opportunities to use him. Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting were always at their most comfortable rotating their fast bowlers on lively strips, but Clarke has enjoyed the sleight of hand utilised by a spin bowler and his captain. Like his batting, Clarke’s captaincy has been an affair of skill and subtlety rather than power and muscle. In how he has handled Lyon, Clarke has left a helpful blueprint for successors to emulate.This was never more evident than at The Oval. Though Clarke’s batting has deteriorated badly, his aptitude in the field can still be glimpsed. On day two, he took a six-over-old ball from the hands of his pacemen on a surface where the ball had seamed and swung, allowing Lyon to use it even before Peter Siddle had done so. Clarke had often observed how Ponting generally used his spin bowler last of all in the attack, leaving the impression the captain felt his spin bowler only fourth or fifth likely to take a wicket. Here was the opposite extreme.Increasingly, Lyon has revelled in such commissions, using the hard ball and prominent seam to extract steep bounce and quick turn. Faced with Alastair Cook, Lyon ripped down an off break that curled nicely in towards middle stump before snapping back to flick the outside of off stump. Lyon has not bowled a more gorgeous delivery in all his 46 Tests.On day three, Lyon returned the favour to Clarke by nipping out a pair of wickets when very little was happening for the pacemen. Jonny Bairstow was done by spin and bounce from over the wicket to squeeze a catch to short leg, Lyon’s line a product of now established confidence to bowl from either over or around the stumps with no discernible loss of comfort or danger. Four balls later, and a loopier ball tossed into the rough had Stokes misjudging length and spin to skew a catch to Clarke. From beneath the captain’s white floppy hat, a grin emerged.When Clarke then called upon Smith for an over of speculative leg breaks that reaped the wicket of Cook, the sense that Australia are losing a leader with an innate sense for timing and spin bowling was only enhanced. Australia will leave England with plenty of issues to mull over, but the quality and confidence of their spin bowler will not be one of them. They have Lyon and Clarke to thank for that.

Shivlal Yadav – Ambitious yet controversial

Shivlal Yadav had achieved his dream of building a world-class stadium in Hyderabad, but at a price. His challenge as the new interim BCCI chief will be to keep further controversies at bay

Amol Karhadkar and Nagraj Gollapudi30-Mar-2014Shivlal Yadav’s term as the BCCI chief for all matters barring the IPL will begin on a depressingly familiar note: a court hearing in Hyderabad on April 5 in a case related to alleged embezzlement of funds during the construction of a cricket stadium. Yadav is one of 20-odd Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA) officials facing various allegations, including misappropriation of funds.But that’s not on top of Yadav’s mind now. In fact, he says he is “not bothered” with the allegations and the three-year-old court case. “When you want to do something good, there will be a few people who will always want to stop you and create hurdles. You can’t stop working because of them,” he told ESPNcricinfo.The statement might sound arrogant but for those who know Yadav it is typical: confident and outspoken. The offspinner played the last of his 35 Tests in 1987 and left the game as one of the few Indians at the time with more than 100 Test wickets. Since then, he’s succeeded in entering the club of officials who run the richest cricket body in the world.He was always going to be an administrator; that much was clear from his statements, as a player, of wanting to build a modern cricket stadium in Hyderabad. The former bank officer at Syndicate Bank started off in 1990 as a managing committee member of the HCA, and two years later became the joint secretary. In 2000, he rose to the most powerful post in the state association – secretary of HCA. He gave it up in 2009 but stayed in the association as its vice-president. In between, he had two stints as a national selector – from 1996 to 1999 that famously sacked Mohammad Azharuddin as captain, replacing him with Sachin Tendulkar and from 2001 to 2002 when the Indian team was recovering after the match-fixing scandal.”My ambition was to build a modern cricket stadium in Hyderabad, something that was missing despite our great cricketing tradition,” Yadav said, when asked about what drove him into administration following a prolonged career on the field. “In fact, once the stadium had been completed, I had resigned in 2009 but my colleagues at HCA asked me to stay on.”He did manage to turn his dream into reality, when the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium on the outskirts of Hyderabad emerged as India’s newest Test venue. Arshad Ayub, another India offspinner who was Yadav’s teammate and colleague at HCA for a long time, gives him credit for the hard work he put in the project. “But it wasn’t only him. No doubt he worked really hard, but there were many others in the HCA who worked as hard. It was a team effort,” said Ayub, a former HCA president.That dream project, however, became the focus of corruption charges; it was alleged that, in the decade 2002-2012, around Rs 100 crore was diverted from the BCCI’s annual funding to HCA. In 2011, the Anti-Corruption Bureau began investigating the alleged financial irregularities following a complaint in 2011 by two HCA members, Sagar Cricket Club and Roshanara Recreation Club. The allegations were levelled against several personnel, including Yadav, former HCA secretary MV Sridhar and Ayub.Yadav challenged the order in the Hyderabad High Court. But on the evidence presented by the petitioners the court passed an order later in 2011 that investigations should be carried forward.A fresh affidavit to expedite the probe by the Anti-Corruption Bureau was submitted in the High Court in December 2013. The bureau served a notice on Yadav and 20 others in February, listing out 199 charges including misappropriation. Yadav sought more time to reply in the court. The next hearing of the case is scheduled for April 5.Regardless of what was happening in court, Yadav’s rise in the HCA continued, with the influential people on his side. Sridhar, one of the most prolific domestic cricketers of the ’80s and ’90s, joined HCA in 1998 and has been around in various capacities. A former Hyderabad captain, Sridhar was appointed the BCCI’s General Manager – Cricket Operations during the BCCI’s annual general meeting in September 2013.Yadav’s growing clout coincided with the rise of N Srinivasan, the two men now staunch allies. Yadav has stood firmly behind Srinivasan ever since the latter has been cornered following the IPL corruption scandal that saw his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan arrested and chargesheeted. In September 2013, at the BCCI AGM, a few months after Gurunath’s arrest, Yadav was named BCCI vice-president (South zone).His rivals, who prefer to remain anonymous, paint him in colours that most powerful men are painted with. They call him manipulative and say he’s used that quality to retain control. They also say he has not always followed the HCA constitution. They point to money spent without any sanction or any authority, which the committee is then asked suddenly to ratify. There’s also the charge of buying votes.What ran alongside Yadav’s ascension to power and its attendant controversies, was Hyderabad’s dismal on-field record. Ever since the change in the Ranji Trophy’s format from zonal league to knockout to two-tier league cricket in 2002 (two years after Yadav became secretary), Hyderabad has failed to graduate from the lower rungs of Indian domestic cricket. At the time of the change of format, Hyderabad always belonged to the top rung of the premier domestic tournament. Since then, the graph has kept dipped consistently and Hyderabad find themselves in the bottom third of the restructured three-tier Ranji Trophy league format.Hyderabad cricket connoisseurs say the slide has coincided with Shivlal’s brother Rajesh being the coach for a considerable period and his son Arjun a permanent fixture in the team for most of the last decade. A talented player like Ambati Rayudu, who was also involved in an on-field spat with Arjun in 2005-06, left Hyderabad for Andhra. A year later, there was an exodus from the Hyderabad team when the Indian Cricket League (ICL) was launched in 2007; along with Rayudu, seven other Hyderabad players crossed over.Ever since, Hyderabad has lost to minor teams like Kerala, Goa, Jharkhand and Andhra. More than their on-field performances, they have been in the news for other reasons: doling out either under-prepared pitches – as was the case during their home game against Maharashtra that ended in less than five sessions – or flat tracks, experienced during the last season when two of their four home games resulted in drab draws where even the first innings couldn’t be completed in four days. It is a tide that has not turned even as Yadav has risen to high office in the BCCI.Shivlal Yadav has had a controversial and colourful run as an administrator; it is a pattern that cannot be repeated in the seat he occupies now.

Reality bites for Nepal and Papua New Guinea

One of the reasons for the crushing defeats on Monday, is that weaker teams like Nepal and PNG don’t travel enough and are rarely pitched against superior opposition

George Binoy in Townsville13-Aug-2012Nepal and Papua New Guinea found out the hard way what life must be like for forage fish on the Great Barrier Reef. Both Under-19 teams from Associate cricket nations were annihilated by Full Members in Townsville: Nepal dismissed for 82 by Australia after conceding 294, and Papua New Guinea all out for 116, which West Indies chased in 11.4 overs.After the defeat at the Tony Ireland Stadium, Nepal’s captain Prithu Baskota spoke of how instructive such matches against tough opponents were, of how their U-19 cricketers had never faced bowlers of Harry Conway and Gurinder Sandhu’s speed and ability on such a pitch. The issue, however, is the opportunity to put these lessons into practice against superior teams on a regular basis and master them. Nepal don’t have it.They’ll play two more games against England and Ireland, probably compete in the Plate section of the World Cup and go home, where quality competition is scarce. “We don’t have such opposition back home obviously, we need to go abroad, to Test playing nations close by,” says Baskota. “But we haven’t got that opportunity. Hope it comes along in the future.”Pubudu Dassanayake, a former Sri Lanka Test wicketkeeper, is Nepal’s coach at U-19 and senior level and he too emphasizes the need for a more competitive and organized cricket structure in the country: at school and club level. He simply wants more tournaments so that his players are training and testing their skills more often.”When you see this much of opportunity in the country, I want to see us grow a little faster,” Dassanayake says. “It’s a matter of putting little things in place like schools cricket, club cricket, more tournaments. Nepal can fly.”The situation in Papua New Guinea is not so different. They have been leaders in the East Asia Pacific for years at both Under-19 and senior level, where they are ranked 19th in the world. They have made it to six Under-19 World Cups but never to a senior one. Their head coach Peter Anderson, a former Queensland and South Australia wicketkeeper, believes Papua New Guinea have outgrown their region and need exposure against tougher countries.”Bangladesh, Afghanistan … we have got to get to that Asian region where we play better cricketers. I think that’s the future personally,” Anderson says. “That’s not being detrimental to those countries [in the East Asia Pacific], they also need help. I think PNG have outgrown the region and we have to step up.”Several Associates struggle to grow in cricket because the local population doesn’t take to it. And even if and when they do, the nuts and bolts of the game have to be taught to them. Sides from USA and Canada, for instance, contain a lot of expatriates from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and the Caribbean. Neither Nepal nor Papua New Guinea have that problem.

Several Associates struggle to grow in cricket because the local population doesn’t take to it. And even if and when they do, the nuts and bolts of the game have to be taught to them

“I’ve been in the Associate world for a long time now. Nepal is one of the countries where lots of people watch and follow cricket. The base is there, the interest is there,” says Dassanayake. “Whenever the national team plays in Kathmandu, you’ll see about 15,000 people watching the match.”The BSP School Kriket Programme managed by Cricket PNG won the ICC award of Best Junior Participation initiative for the last two years. “Cricket’s growth is phenomenal, 116,000 children [taking up the game] in the last two years,” says Anderson. “They talk about Afghanistan being a real success story. I think PNG is way up there.”Though Nepal is in the Himalayas and Papua New Guinea a collection of islands in the Pacific Ocean, their cricket structures have more similarities. The sport is centered in one city in each nation – Kathmandu in Nepal and Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.Dassanayake compares the cricket facility at the Tribhuvan University in Kathmandu to the Tony Ireland Stadium – “Nice outfield, decent pavilion, mountains all around” – and says the government of Nepal, the Asian Cricket Council and Cricket Association of Nepal are building grounds in different parts of the country, where facilities and playing experience is sub-standard at present. A goal Dassanayake wants achieved before his one-year contract expires is the setting up of an academy in the capital, where a facility has already been identified.More than 95% of Papua New Guinea’s cricketers come from its capital, and most of them from Hanuabada, a coastal village on its outskirts. That’s because the infrastructure – three turf wickets, indoor and outdoor practice facilities, six synthetic nets – is all at Amini Park Sports Complex in Port Moresby. In 2008, there were no turf wickets in Papua New Guinea.One of PNG’s biggest problems is the below-par infrastructure in areas outside Port Moresby, and travel between islands isn’t cheap•ICC/Thusith Wijedoru “We’ve come a long way in a couple of years,” says Anderson, who succeeded former Australia bowler Andy Bichel as head coach. “We had a lot of squatters so we had to clear all that off and tidy up the grounds. Gradually, we’re getting a really good set up there.”A lot of the internal travel between islands is by air in Papua New Guinea and it is expensive, forming a barrier to entry for talent outside the capital. Most of it never sees the facilities at Port Moresby, where Anderson says Cricket PNG is also working on setting up an academy. And there’s below-par infrastructure on other islands because of the costs of transport.Anderson is also hoping to build a relationship with Queensland Cricket to aid development of his players. “They are really family-orientated people [in PNG] and don’t like being away but what I’ve pushed for is for ten scholarship players to go to the Gold Coast cricket competition, plus four girls,” he says. “We’ve had meetings with Queensland Cricket about one of our players being their 18th contracted player in the KFC big bash.”Most of the cricketers comprising the Nepal and Papua New Guinea senior teams have played U-19 cricket and most of them at the U-19 World Cup in Townsville have come through the age-group structure as well. Dassanayake wants that to change in Nepal. He wants a player at a particular age group to earn his place at the next level and not progress because there’s nobody else challenging from outside the age system.”If someone misses the U-19 right now, it might be hard to get a break at the national level,” says Dassanayake. “That has to change and that’s why we need more tournaments [so players can come from outside the age-group structure]. When one of these youngsters wants to get into the national team, they should really have to perform to get in, and not because one of the [Nepal] seniors has left that they get a place.”And there lies a difference between the cricket structures in these two countries. Lots of Nepal’s cricketers have been and are lost between the ages of 25 and 30 because they have to look outside the game for financial security. While some talent escapes Cricket PNG as well – to work or a laid-back island lifestyle – they have a better structure in place to keep their players. They contract some players and employ more as staff.”We have 18 contracted players. There is money there,” says Anderson. “We employ about 84 staff, and most of them are cricketers. We incorporate them into the system – administration and coaching. So all our guys are actually out on the road coaching throughout Port Moresby.”Nepal have made a small start too. “Cricket Association of Nepal began to pay about 20 players six months ago. It’s not a big amount but something we have started,” Dassanayake says. “The armed police force has a team and they have hired about 15 cricketers so far. It’s a start, but you need to do these things to keep players. Eventually I hope it will grow and we can take care of them better.”Otherwise there’s no way to retain players. They have to look after their life; cricket doesn’t bring any money. Some of the players have been playing for the last ten years. They have given those years to the game without thinking about the future.”One of those Nepal cricketers presently giving years to the game is their Under-19 captain Baskota, who’s from Kathmandu and began playing the game after watching Ricky Ponting bat on television. He’s come through the age-group system and has already played for the national team. Baskota’s hoping he won’t have to make a hard decision in about five years time.”I hope the situation changes because I’m just 19 now,” Baskota says. “If I see a career in cricket I will love to continue in it. If I don’t, I’ll have to think about it.”Baskota’s immediate target, and that of Dassanayake, is to perform better against England than they did against Australia, then try and win the Plate Championship. Anderson believes Papua New Guinea can go the same distance too.

Warriors soar higher and higher

The Warriors are just one rung away from the top of the ladder they set out to climb, but South Australia’s trophy cupboard stays barren

Firdose Moonda in Centurion25-Sep-2010Remember that rasping Creed song, Those scratchy, distressed words could well have been the ballad the South Australian Redbacks and the Warriors waltzed to in Centurion. – a world where hunger knows no bounds.The Redbacks have not won a trophy in 15 years and the parched trophy cupboard is getting anxious. Michael Klinger, their captain, always maintained that the team had high hopes coming into the tournament, and he couldn’t hide his disappointment that they couldn’t fulfil those aims. “It’s definitely frustrating, once we got to the semi-finals, we thought we could go all the way,” Klinger said. “A lot of people didn’t expect us to make it to the semi-finals, but we did. We applied ourselves really well, but we were outplayed in all three aspects today.”The Warriors have an appetite of a different sort. After capturing their first two trophies since the franchise system started last season, they have become addicted to the thrill of victory. Davy Jacobs, the Warriors captain, said before the game that the Eastern Cape side had a vision of becoming the best franchise in the world by next year, but hinted that perhaps their time had come a little earlier.They were ready to ask themselves, With eyes wide open, the Warriors appeared to see everything. The only moment of blur was when Ashwell Prince hung his bat out to dry against the second-fastest ball bowled in the competition. “It’s Shaun Tait’s job to take wickets, you can’t stop that. When Ashwell got out, it was important for the next guy who came in, Colin Ingram, to do the job, and he did,” Jacobs said.Ingram and the captain combined for a second-wicket stand of 104, with Jacobs the dominant partner. His 61 saw him soar to the top of the run charts. Despite his scintillating highs, Jacobs didn’t want to say much about himself. “This is basically the way I have been playing for the last couple of years. But, I don’t like to talk about myself; I’d rather talk about the team.”For the Redbacks, visibility wasn’t always that clear. Strangely, they sometimes saw with the precision of a bird of prey, like when Daniel Harris ran from his follow-through to square leg to dismiss Jacobs. At other times, their eyesight, along with a few other factors, let them down. The Redbacks put down Ingram twice and Mark Boucher once. “Most of the catches were pretty tough and some of them just didn’t stick today. We’ve prided ourselves on good fielding for most of the tournament,” Klinger said.The Warriors were seeing the ball like a pumpkin in the field. Boucher watched it climb a stairway to heaven and spiral down into his gloves to send Harris on his way for eight. Johan Botha almost swallowed the ball, when, three deliveries later, it was hit to him on the midwicket rope. Klinger was gone for 13, and the Redbacks had lost their two kingpins.The one man who may have appeared to have weak visibility was the ultimate Warrior himself, Makhaya Ntini. He laboured in the field and bowled two expensive overs. With the Wanderers pitch expected to be bouncy, will Ntini have fitted his pair of lenses, to be back to his best? “I wouldn’t say he is in bad form, he had a good game in the last match. Perhaps the pitch just didn’t suit him,” Jacobs said, adding that Ntini’s experience can never be underestimated. “He has been playing for South Africa for more than decade and he knows the Wanderers very well.”The Warriors are just one rung away from the top of the ladder they set out to climb. Klinger had some words of praise for his opponents, hinting that he thought the scale was ever-so-slightly tipped in their favour. “They have quite a predictable game, so we knew exactly who was going to bowl which over, but it didn’t matter, because they are so difficult to beat. They probably already had their bad game against Chennai,” he said.So, the Warriors go higher. To Johannesburg. To the final.

'Hell of a player' – Arsenal told how many goals 'machine' Viktor Gyokeres will score in debut season as £64m transfer from Sporting CP nears completion

Former Arsenal midfielder Anders Limpar has shared his view on incoming Gunners forward Viktor Gyokeres, describing him as a "goal machine". Arsenal have agreed to pay Sporting CP £64 million ($86.3m) for Gyokeres, inclusive of add-ons. Limpar expects Gyokeres to be a hit in his debut season at Emirates Stadium and has predicted how many goals he will score.

  • Limpar gives verdict on Gyokeres
  • Predicts how many goals striker will score in debut season
  • Arsenal finally agreed fee with Sporting CP
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Gyokeres transfer saga is finally over as the Gunners have almost reached a full agreement with Sporting CP to sign the striker after months of negotiations. Talks had earlier stalled after disagreement over the payment structure of the €10 million bonus, but the issue has now been resolved.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Limpar, who spent four seasons at Arsenal, has shared his view on his Swedish compatriot's imminent arrival as he hailed the 27-year-old forward as a "machine", while predicting the number of goals Gyokeres will score in his maiden campaign at Emirates Stadium.

  • WHAT LIMPAR SAID

    Speaking to , the 59-year-old said: "I know that pretty much all the Arsenal players are top professionals. I've been to the training ground, spoken to ]Mikel] Arteta. He's Mr. 100 percent professional. And that's what you get from Viktor. He's such a prospect when it comes to looking after himself, no scandals. He is a hell of a player. He's a No. 9, and can sniff a goal chance. He's going to be the perfect icing on the cake at Arsenal. And I don't have to look down on [Kai] Havertz, or [Gabriel] Jesus. But bringing in Viktor at this moment, at his best age and form. He's a goalscoring machine and with all the supply from the wings and from [Martin] Odegaard, he's going to score 25 goals."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

    Mikel Arteta's side will kick off their Asia tour with a friendly against AC Milan on Wednesday at the National Stadium in Singapore. The club will hope that Gyokeres completes all formalities as early as possible and joins the rest of the squad for the remainder of pre-season preparations.

Beth Mooney named captain of WPL side Gujarat Giants

This will be her first captaincy stint in an overseas T20 league, with India allrounder Sneh Rana her deputy

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Feb-2023Australia batter Beth Mooney has been named captain of Gujarat Giants for the inaugural Women’s Premier League (WPL). Mooney, who scored a match-winning 74 not out in Australia’s sixth Women’s T20 World Cup triumph, will reunite with former team-mate Rachael Haynes, Giants’ head coach. India allrounder Sneh Rana has been named the vice-captain.”I am delighted to be given the opportunity to lead the Adani Gujarat Giants in the historic Women’s Premier League’s inaugural edition in 2023,” Mooney said in a statement. “The squad is keen to get the ball rolling soon and put out an entertaining and effective brand of cricket in the debut season of the WPL. It will be fantastic to have the likes of Sneh as my deputy and Mithali Raj, Rachael Haynes and Nooshin Al Khadeer as pivotal parts of the team.”Related

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Mooney was part of Australia’s T20 World Cup winning teams in 2018 and 2020 – she was the Player of the Tournament three years ago – before also lifting the trophy in 2023, apart from winning the ODI World Cup in 2022 and the gold medal at the Commonwealth Games last year. She has also won the Women’s Big Bash League thrice and is the only Australia batter with two T20I hundreds.This will be Mooney’s first experience at leading a side in an overseas T20 league. In the women’s Hundred last year, she was the highest run-scorer for London Spirit. She has only led in a few games at the Women’s Big Bash League, having played for Brisbane Heat, which has been largely led by Kirby Short, and Perth Scorchers, captained by Sophie Devine.Meanwhile, Rana had made a comeback to the Indian side in 2021 and played the semi-final of the T20 World Cup this year, where India narrowly lost to Australia. She represented Velocity in the Women’s T20 Challenge, and has played 25 T20Is, 22 ODIs and a Test for India.Giants had selected Mooney for INR 2 crore (USD 244,000 approx) and Rana for INR 75 lakh (USD 91,000 approx). Giants will kickoff the WPL against Mumbai Indians on Saturday at the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai.

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