A double-hundred and two ducks

Stats highlights from the third day’s play of the Test between Pakistan and England in Sharjah.

Shiva Jayaraman03-Nov-20152003 The last and the only time that Shoaib Malik took a four-for in Tests before his 4 for 33 in England’s first innings. Malik had taken 4 for 42 against South Africa in Lahore. Malik, who has announced his retirement from Test cricket, made his comeback to Testa after a gap of over five years in this series and also made his top score – 245 – in the first Test at Abu Dhabi.47 Runs Shoaib Malik has made in this series after his 245 in the first innings at Abu Dhabi. Malik’s scores after that innings have been 0, 2, 7, 38 and 0. Among those who have hit a double century in a series, there are only two other instances before Malik when a batsman has failed to aggregate at least 50 runs from the other five or more innings played. The last such instance was also against England when Gary Kirsten made 210 in the third Test of the series at Old Trafford, but accumulated just 47 runs from the other seven innings. England’s Bill Edrich is the other batsmen: he aggregated only 21 runs from his first-five innings in a five-match series against South Africa before making 219 in his last innings of the series.14 Number of instances before Shoaib Malik a batsman had got two ducks and a double-hundred in the same series. His duck in Pakistan’s second innings was his second of this series. He had made a double-century in the first innings at Abu Dhabi. The last such instance was by Jacques Kallis in a series against Sri Lanka in 2011-12 when he made 224 in Cape Town following a pair in Durban. Malik though is in elite company with others such as Don Bradman, Brian Lara, Sachin Tendulkar, Sunil Gavaskar and Viv Richards among the 14.4 Number of Pakistan openers who have more fifty-plus scores in Tests than Mohammad Hafeez. Hafeez now has 20 such scores and he went past Hanif Mohammad’s tally with his 97* in this innings. Saeed Anwar (36), Mudassar Nazar (24), and Taufeeq Umar (21) are ahead of Hafeez, who has made 3186 runs, including eight hundreds and 12 fifties, at 40.80 while opening in Tests.1.28 Stuart Broad’s economy in this Test – his most economical figures in the 87 matches he has played. Broad has bowled 25 overs including 12 maidens and has gone for all of 32 runs in this match. James Anderson, too, has been economical in this series, with his economy of 1.94 being his best in any series. Anderson’s economy of 1.81 in this match is his second-best in any Test. His best had come in the last Test, when he had an economy of 1.81.4 Number of England’s top-order batsmen (No 1 to No 7) who got out in the forties in the first innings. Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, Jonny Bairstow and Samit Patel all did so. The last time before this that four or more top-order batsmen had got out in the forties in a Test innings was in 1978 when Sunil Gavaskar, Chetan Chauhan, Dilip Vengsarkar and Syed Kirmani had been dismissed for scores between 40 and 49 in their first innings against Australia at the SCG. Overall, this was only the fifth such instance.105.16 James Taylor’s average in first-class cricket in his last five matches including his 76 in England’s first innings and his career-best of 291, which came against Sussex in July this year. Taylor has made 631 runs with two hundreds and two fifties in just six innings. Before this Test, Taylor had made 1078 first-class runs at an average of 51.33 in 2015. His 76 in the first innings is his first fifty and his top score in Tests. Taylor had played two home Tests against South Africa in 2012 before his comeback to Test cricket in this match.1 Number of fifty-plus opening stands by Pakistan in Sharjah before the 101-run stand between Mohammad Hafeez and Azhar Ali in their second innings. Ahmed Shehzad and Khurram Manzoor had added 114 runs for the first wicket against Sri Lanka last year. Pakistan’s first wicket had averaged 22.28 in 14 innings before their second innings in this Test. This was also only their second fifty-plus stand in six innings in this series. Hafeez and Shan Masood had added 51 in the first innings of the Dubai Test.

KP's reprieve

Plays of the day from Delhi Daredevils’ home match against Rajasthan Royals

Devashish Fuloria03-May-2014The decisionThe umpires in the IPL have been kitted with a portable camera strapped on to their hats, a kind of a third eye. But in the seventh over of Delhi Daredevils’ innings, all eyes were on Sanjay Hazare, the square-leg umpire, for his non-use of technology. Kevin Pietersen was on 2 when he wandered out of the crease after being hit on the pads, not realising the ball had not gone too far to the leg side. By the time he turned back, Sanju Samson, the wicketkeeper, had fired a direct hit. It all looked close to the naked eye but Hazare chose not to check with the TV umpire. As it turned out, Pietersen was a few inches short. Shane Watson and Rajat Bhatia protested the decision briefly, but to no avail. Embarrassed by the TV replays, Hazare could just afford a sheepish smile.The shotQuinton de Kock has shown a preference for leg-side play during this IPL and it reflected in three shots he played during his attractive innings, all of them to deliveries outside off. He bent his knees to drag a full ball outside off to the fine-leg boundary in the third over to bring his 2000th T20 run and played a similar shot later in his innings to Rajat Bhatia, off a low full-toss. The best of the lot, however, was an effortless flick shot off Watson, again, from outside off that sailed all the way over deep backward square leg.The short runPravin Tambe’s double-strike had forced Daredevils into a rebuilding mode. That didn’t mean that the runs entirely stopped coming though; with two quick men – Dinesh Karthik and JP Duminy – runs kept on coming in ones and twos. Karthik showed urgency in one such attempt for a double after Duminy had driven the ball to wide long-on. He was fast on his feet and quick to judge the second and his pace even forced the fielder to fumble the ball. However, he only had to blame himself as the umpire signalled a short run, as Karthik had been well short of the crease on the turn.The celebrationOne look at M Vijay’s celebration after taking Ajinkya Rahane’s catch and you immediately knew he had spent a lot of time perfecting that little jig with his former Chennai Super Kings teammate Dwayne Bravo. He turned towards the crowd and showed off his dance moves. The catch – a full-length dive low to his left – was well worthy of it too.

Wanted: knees and ankles for Freddie

The impact of one player grasping a match by the neck and throttling it until it stopped squeaking, Flintoff’s efforts on an unresponsive wicket on rebellious knees were staggering

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013

Hello again Confectionery Stallers. I wrote last week about how the Cardiff Test made me feel like a teenager again, with its Australian dominance and voracious run-scoring painfully echoing 1989 and 1993. At Lord’s my regression continued – I felt like the 10-year-old that I was in 1985, watching England casually demolish substandard Australian bowling, then blast through a tentative top order. Is Freddie Flintoff really the new Richard Ellison?To complete that distinctly mid-80s Ashes feeling, five Australians were good enough to get themselves out pulling or hooking in the first innings – as if an entire team of cloned Andrew Hilditches had taken the field.At the age of 34, having never seen England even come close to defeating Australia at Lord’s (the last time England even took a first-innings lead over the Aussies at Lord’s was 1975), I had long since assumed this would simply be something that I would never see in my lifetime, alongside such distant but hopeless scenarios as England fielding a four-prong wrist-spin attack, the monarch leading Britain into battle again, Neil Armstrong landing on the moon for a second time, a dog being elected prime minister of a G8 nation, the Vatican becoming a Test-playing nation (although St Peter’s Square remains one of the flattest batting tracks in the Catholic world), the development of the self-cooking chicken, the extinction of the wasp, and lasting peace in the Middle East.I am still finding it hard, therefore, to adjust psychologically to the fact that Hedley Verity is no longer the last man to have bowled England to victory in an Ashes Test at Cricket HQ.Aside from being a jubilant occasion for English cricket, the first for a considerable time, this was a fascinating match. There was much good cricket, mostly by England, alongside a considerable amount of quite bad cricket, mostly by Australia. Everyone wants to make history at Lord’s, but few have done so quite as spectacularly as Mitchell Johnson, who recorded the most expensive 20-over analysis in Ashes history, as he cleverly removed the docile pitch from the delicate equation of cricket by aiming to pitch the ball wide of or beyond it.Overall, it has been an evenly matched series so far, in that both sides have played one good match and one mostly rubbish one. If they both play well at the same time, or indeed if they both play rubbishly at the same time, we are in for a truly unforgettable game at some point in the series.England got away with their Cardiff blooper, saved by a combination of Collingwood, a stubborn tail, fourth-day rain and a comatose pitch. Australia were not so fortunate at Lord’s. Monty Panesar’s sudden and unexpected conversion to being a genuine allrounder – a latter day St Paul, with similar publishing opportunities in the pipeline − now looks even more precious than it did at the time.The unquestionable highlight of the second Test was the iconic, quintessentially Flintoffian second-innings bowling display by, appropriately enough, Andrew Flintoff. This was classic Flintoff – majestic, charismatic, unstoppable, game-changing, but statistically unremarkable. Relatively, at least. As momentous spells of bowling go, the figures of 5 for 92 barely scratch at the surface of what Flintoff did – the same analysis as Graham Dilley etched onto the Edgbaston honours board against Pakistan in 1987, and slightly inferior to Chris Silverwood’s immortal 5 for 91 as England subsided to an innings defeat at Cape Town in 1999-2000, or Paul Wiseman’s epoch-defining 5 for 90 for New Zealand in Bulawayo in September 2000.5 for 92 – not quite as numerically memorable as Laker’s 10 for 53, Ambrose’s famous spell of 7 for 1, or Botham’s 28-ball stint of 5 for 1 at Edgbaston in 1981. Or even as his own, strikingly similar, 5 for 78 at The Oval in 2005.The game was labelled by some as ‘Flintoff’s Match’ – rightly so, as his performance is what the game will be remembered for above all else – yet, as an all-round display, it was not quite as impressive as Abey Kuruvilla’s effort for India against Sri Lanka in Mohali in 1997-98. Kuruvilla scored 35 not out, compared to Flintoff’s 34 for once out, and took 6 for 117, as opposed to the English titan’s comparatively profligate 6 for 119. Few in the cricket world, however, talk excitedly of ‘Kuruvilla’s Match’. None, in fact. Not even members of the Kerala quite-quickman’s immediate family.Yet, for drama, hostility, and the impact of one player grasping a match by the neck and throttling it until it stopped squeaking, Flintoff’s efforts on an unresponsive wicket on rebellious knees were staggering. If England take the series, Flintoff will retire from Tests as the first bowler in history to be able to claim that 50% of his career first-class five-wicket hauls had played decisive roles in securing Ashes.He is a cricketer who transcends statistics. He will not be remembered for his apparently unremarkable numbers. Which is fortunate, because his statistics themselves are hugely misleading, to the extent that any half-decent judge would throw them out of court as evidence in the case of R. versus Flintoff’s Claims To Cricketing Greatness.Ignore his career bowling average of 32.17 – identical to Ewen Chatfield’s to two decimal points, almost a run-per-wicket worse than Alan Mullally’s. Flintoff was barely even a bowler at all when he began in Test cricket. He took seven wickets in his first 10 Tests, and just 43 in his first 26 games, spread over five years to the end of the 2003 series with South Africa. His first Test wicket was just his eighth in first-class cricket, hardly the sign of a natural wicket-taker destined to take the world by storm. More the sign of a poor man’s Derek Pringle.Essentially, Flintoff had to learn to bowl in the international arena (even today, over the course of his career, he has taken only 124 wickets in 104 first-class matches outside Test cricket, which is a fair few more than I have taken, admittedly, but fewer than the average county trundler). Since 2003, however, his long and usual bowling apprenticeship complete, he has taken 182 Test wickets in 51 games, at an average fractionally under 28 and with a strike-rate of 56 – figures in the same bracket as the likes of Jon Snow, Angus Fraser, Jeff Thomson, Merv Hughes, Darren Gough, Graham McKenzie and Wes Hall.If modern batsman can be mentally debited around five runs from their career averages due to a combination of dead pitches, knackered bowlers, space-age bats and advertising-age boundaries, then bowlers should also be credited a little. If Flintoff had been bowling in the 1980s, and had entered the Test game somewhere near fully formed, I would suggest that his career average would almost certainly have been in the mid-to-low 20s.Flintoff’s self-improvement, particularly as a bowler, aided by patience on the part of selectors and captains, is one of the most remarkable stories of modern English cricket. Seeing the shuffling 20-year-old who made an uncertain, ineffectual debut in 1998 against South Africa – two matches which brought him 17, 0 and 0 with the bat, and one wicket for 112 – who would have predicted that he would score even 370 Test runs or take 25 wickets, let alone 3700 and 225?By all of which, what I really mean is: I’m going to miss him, and Test cricket is going to miss him. I don’t care if he sometimes bowls a bit too short, habitually gets out poking at something nondescript outside off stump, has occasionally drunk from a flagon containing something other than an isotonic sports drink, and hasn’t been involved in many England wins in recent years. (The last of these is hardly Flintoff’s fault. England haven’t been involved in many England wins of relevance in recent years.)And if anyone is willing to donate a healthy pair of knees and ankles, I personally will contribute to a surgery fund to keep him going as a Test cricketer for the next five years. Whether he likes it or not.To celebrate the once-in-anyone-under-the-age-of-75’s-lifetime occasion of an England Ashes win at Lord’s, The Confectionery Stall is delighted to announce the launch of the first ever Official Confectionery Stall Multiple Choice 2009 Ashes Mid-Series Quiz. The questions will be issued in the form of two exam papers, the first on Saturday, and the second on Monday.If you score over 99.94% (the mark achieve by a computer simulation of the late Sir Donald Bradman when it sat this test), you will win the chance to captain your country in a Test match (subject to permission from the selectors and players of the relevant team).

Emerging into the light

Zimbabwe shocked the big boys with convincing wins but showed few signs that they were ready to return to Test cricket

Liam Brickhill25-Dec-2010After the genuine progress made in 2009, it was tentatively expected that 2010 would be a watershed year for Zimbabwe cricket. In certain respects it has lived up to that billing, and wins over West Indies, India and Sri Lanka suggested that all the hard work was beginning to pay off. A series win over Ireland also calmed a few nerves, but a winless tour of South Africa and the 3-1 drubbing by Bangladesh that followed confirmed Zimbabwe’s continuing limbo status: too good for the Associates but strugglers against the big boys.The year began on a positive note with the news that both Heath Streak and Grant Flower were chasing the job of coach of the national side. That position eventually went to Alan Butcher, Surrey’s coach until 2008, but Streak was retained as bowling coach and Flower signed on to work with the national team’s batsmen after his final season with Essex. The trickle of former players returning to domestic cricket continued, and with them came another wave of English county and former international players – many of whom played in the successful second edition of the Stanbic Bank Twenty20 competition.Brian Lara was the most notable signing, and although he played just three games for Southern Rocks, his participation lent a veneer of class to the week-long Twenty20 competition and helped spark increased local interest. News that he had signed a contract as batting consultant to the national team followed. However, it is widely thought Lara’s interest in Zimbabwe is merely as a stepping stone to the IPL, and the news that he had been paid an extravagant US$30,000 for his fleeting Twenty20 visit was greeted with incredulity.While good PR may help win influential friends as Zimbabwe seek a steady position in cricket’s mainstream, it doesn’t win cricket matches and there is a strong feeling that the money being spent on Lara could have been used on grassroots cricket, and that it is a decision that needs consideration.Central to those considerations will be Ozias Bvute, Zimbabwe Cricket’s managing director. Berated as a divisive influence during Zimbabwe’s decline, Bvute can now take plenty of credit for Zimbabwe’s improving image, as can sports minister David Coltart, a former human rights lawyer and one of the founding members of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, who has placed a particular focus on cricket. A feeling persists that Peter Chingoka, Zimbabwe cricket’s long-serving and controversial chairman, remains the obstacle preventing the resumption of full international cricketing ties, particularly with England. Bvute has thus taken a prominent role in the running of cricket, with Chingoka now firmly in the background. An injection of youth helped overhaul Zimbabwe Cricket’s media department, and where acrimony had once existed, a healthy working relationship with the cricketing media has been fostered.Perhaps the most valuable lesson learned this year is that, out of the direst straits of the last few years, it is possible for cricket in Zimbabwe to blossom once again – provided there is a collective will for it to do so. At times the players have shown real determination to improve their dismal reputation, and wins in the first two games of their West Indies tour suggested a corner had been turned after their capitulation for 44 all out to hand a one-day series win to Bangladesh in November 2009.

Zimbabwe cricket to be in robust health, particularly in the domestic game, which has gone from strength to strength under the new franchise system. A return to Tests is imminent, although Zimbabwe could well struggle to beat the likes of Bangladesh, New Zealand and West Indies for some time

Brendan Taylor, with three fifties and two hundreds – including a career-best 145 not out against South Africa in a losing cause – has had a year to be proud of and topped Zimbabwe’s ODI run-scoring tables. However, his success was tempered somewhat by the failure of his opening partner Hamilton Masakadza. A stand-out performer in 2009, when he scored 1087 runs in ODIs, Masakadza’s form fell away alarmingly and he ended 2010 with the ignominy of falling to more ducks in ODIs in the year than anyone else apart from Kenya’s James Ngoche, and was struggling to hold his place in the side.Masakadza and Taylor’s opening partnerships had been a major factor in Zimbabwe’s successes in their home tri-series against India and Sri Lanka, relieving the pressure on a brittle middle order. Zimbabwe’s spinners can also take a lot of the credit, and Prosper Utseya, Ray Price and Graeme Cremer will be a crucial part of the team’s World Cup plans.A return to Test cricket remains the ultimate goal for the Zimbabweans, and it was with this objective in mind that they originally fielded a team for the first-class Intercontinental Cup, which ran from July 2009 to December 2010. After wins over Kenya, Canada and Netherlands and draws against Ireland and Afghanistan – the eventual winners – Zimbabwe XI were in the running for a spot in the competition final. There is still no escaping the influence of politics in Zimbabwean sport, however, and after Scotland’s decision not to tour the country Zimbabwe forfeited their final game and fell out of contention. An unofficial Test series against New Zealand A in October also tested the mettle of Zimbabwe’s second string in the absence of the touring senior players. Zimbabwe will need to play many more matches of this sort as they look to find their feet once more in the cauldron of Test cricket.High point
In June, Zimbabwe enjoyed a fairytale run to their first final in a tri-series involving only Test-playing nations since the NatWest Series in 2000. The series signalled the return to Zimbabwe of top-level cricket – although India and Sri Lanka sent relatively inexperienced squads, which took some of the gloss off – and most importantly the hosts tasted victory and emerged from the tournament with a new sense of self-belief. They could not extend their run to the final, where they crashed to a nine-wicket defeat, but the successes set the positive tone for the year.Low point
The fragility of Zimbabwe’s development was in evidence just a month before their home tri-series success as they imploded in spectacular fashion against New Zealand at the World Twenty20, losing their last nine wickets for 26 runs to be all out for 84. Their collapse was made all the more unforgiveable as they had toured the West Indies just weeks before and should have been familiar with the conditions at the Providence Stadium, where they had recently won an ODI against West Indies.New kid on the block
Craig Ervine looked like just the sort of level-headed middle-order finisher Zimbabwe had been hoping for when he stroked an ice-cool unbeaten 67 on debut to seal the six-wicket win over India in May. Two single-figure scores followed that effort, but Ervine restored his reputation with innings of 145, 59 and 177 to set up Intercontinental Cup victories over Netherlands and Canada. A frustrating inability to turn good starts into substantial scores and an apparent weakness against spin appeared to have crept into his game as he registered five scores of between 14 and 24 against Ireland and South Africa, but Ervine cemented his position by topping the Zimbabwean batting table on a bowler-dominated trip to Bangladesh, with 134 runs at 44.66.Craig Ervine can steady Zimbabwe’s middle order•International Cricket CouncilFading star
Niggling injury and the pressure of captaincy had a disastrous effect on Elton Chigumbura’s form during the year. Replacing Utseya as leader after Zimbabwe returned from a dismal showing at the World Twenty20 in the Caribbean, Chigumbura looked like the man for the job as Zimbabwe reached the finals of their home tri-series in June. That success masked his lack of potency with both bat and ball, and a mediocre season of county cricket with Northamptonshire didn’t seem to help. By the end of the year he was playing as a specialist batsman, and with an average of 19.78 with the bat and 140.00 with the ball as captain, were he not in charge he might be struggling to justify his place in the line-up.What 2011 holds
Zimbabwe cricket to be in robust health, particularly in the domestic game, which has gone from strength to strength under the new franchise system. A return to Tests is imminent, although Zimbabwe could well struggle to beat the likes of Bangladesh, New Zealand and West Indies for some time. Like the country itself, on the surface there is plenty to be positive about but there have been ominous stirrings from Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party, with the old man suggesting that the unity government, under which a semblance of stability returned to the country, had run its course, and there’s a strong chance there could be fresh elections in 2011. Whether cricket can survive whatever political turmoil that brings could be the real test next year.

Cashing out on quality

Martin Williamson reviews The England Cricket Miscellany and No Balls and Googlies

Martin Williamson23-Sep-2006

The England Cricket Miscellany by John White
Carlton Books, 160pp, £6.59No Balls and Googlies by Geoff Tibballs
Michael O’Mara Books, 196pp, £5.99First an admission. I approached the task of reviewing these two books with real enthusiasm as being a bit of a nerd, as my colleagues will verify (the word ‘anorak’ – Ed) I have rather a penchant for trivia and miscellany and am the owner of more than a few similar publications covering a range of subjects at home.Cricket lends itself to miscellany more than almost any other subject. It is a game with a rich history of eccentrics, oddities and statistics. This kind of book is not meant for cover-to-cover reading – they are aimed at the coffee-table reader (which usually seems to mean people who browse on the loo) and so are for dipping in to. They have few rigid limitations, but one thing they have to do is make sure that the information they contain is right.Unfortunately, The England Cricket Miscellany by John White fails to fulfil that basic requirement. The first page contains a howler – it states as fact that Fred Spofforth ended WG Grace’s first-class career when Grace played Test cricket for 12 years after Spofforth finished, and first-class cricket for more than two decades. There are other errors which are apparent on a first read, and while it might seem petty to make that observation, it raises suspicions that other less common trivia might also be wrong.The content itself is, however, interesting and White, who specialises in this kind of publication across a plethora of subjects, has struck the right balance which should appeal to fan and casual reader alike.No Balls and Googlies by Geoff Tibballs is tighter with its facts but is far too reliant on lists of stats. Those present two problems. One is that they are quickly out of date – many were probably so even before the book hit the shops – and secondly that long (stale) lists of them are of little interest to many people. My first impression on being confronted with pages of such content was that it had been used with little discrimination to pad out the publication. That might be doing Tibballs a disservice, but surely there is more to the game than numbers.One final gripe. White goes to great lengths to list his sources, and compiling a book of this kind inevitably means using a wide range. Tibballs, however, offers no such aknowledgments. It seems remarkable if he had all those statistics, quotes and anecdotes in his head. All the more so if he made a mistake which Cricinfo also made until it was flagged with us and corrected last week. It just confirms the suspicion of a rather rushed job to exploit a resurgence in the game’s popularity.

RB Leipzig want £52m Chelsea flop to be included in Xavi Simons transfer

RB Leipzig are reportedly ready to bring Christopher Nkunku back to Germany, as part of a blockbuster deal that would see Xavi Simons join Chelsea in a £60 million ($81m) move. The Bundesliga side have floated the sensational idea of a player-plus-cash swap with Chelsea preparing to move out several players, including Nkunku, before going all-in on their top attacking targets.

Leipzig eye Nkunku return in Simons dealChelsea prepare squad overhaul before window shutsGarnacho remains on Blues’ transfer radarFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Nkunku arrived at Chelsea in June 2023 for £52m ($70m) with a reputation as one of Europe’s most dangerous attacking weapons. But the dream quickly soured. A long-term injury wrecked his debut season, stalling his progress and leaving him struggling to establish himself in the starting XI. Now 27, the France international has made it clear he wants a fresh start before the transfer window slams shut. Chelsea agree it’s time to part ways, and Leipzig could be the perfect escape route.

AdvertisementAFPTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Nkunku’s final season in Germany was nothing short of electric, with 16 goals in 25 appearances. Leipzig have never truly replaced him, and the chance to reunite with their former talisman is proving too tempting to ignore. But this isn’t just about nostalgia. Leipzig believe Nkunku could instantly elevate their attack, especially after losing striker Benjamin Sesko to Manchester United in a £74m ($99.5m) switch earlier this summer.

DID YOU KNOW?

Even if Chelsea strike gold with Simons, their hunt for Alejandro Garnacho will continue. The 21-year-old Argentina international is open to the move, but United are holding firm at £50m ($67m). The Blues, however, believe they can haggle the price down before deadline day.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GETTYWHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

Chelsea have already been making waves in the market, signing Liam Delap, Joao Pedro, Jamie Gittens, and securing Brazilian prodigy Willian Estevao. The aim is clear: depth, competition, and a frontline that can adapt to any tactical demand. The Blues will begin their Premier League campaign against Palace on August 17. 

Australia A vs India A to provide lead-in to Border-Gavaskar Test series

A two-match Australia A vs India A four-day series will precede the Border-Gavaskar Trophy later this year to give players on the fringes of both sides a chance to press their claims.The two matches will take place at Great Barrier Reef Arena in Mackay from October 31-November 3 followed by the MCG from November 7 to 10.The entire Indian squad – comprising both the main tour party and the A team – will then have an internal warm-up fixture at the WACA between November 15 and 17 ahead of the opening Test at Optus Stadium in Perth which begins on November 22.India have a run of five home Tests prior to heading to Australia with two matches against Bangladesh and three against New Zealand on the FTP from late September to early November.From Australia’s perspective, the two A matches will overlap with the ODIs and T20Is against Pakistan so the selectors may need to decide whether there are any players involved in the white-ball teams who could potentially feature for the A side. They will also likely clash with Sheffield Shield fixtures.The T20Is against Pakistan are unlikely to feature any of Australia’s Test players given their proximity to the India series.Although the indications have been that Steven Smith will remain as an opener, the structure of Australia’s batting order could still be a debate ahead of the India series. The A matches could be a chance for the likes of Cameron Bancroft, Marcus Harris and Matt Renshaw to push their claims.Last season Pakistan faced the Prime Minister’s XI, which was effectively an Australia A team, in Canberra ahead of the Test series.On their previous tour of Australia in 2020-21, there were also two warm-up matches against Australia A prior to the Test series. India won that series 2-1.The India women’s team are also touring Australia for three ODIs in early December which will be played around the second men’s Test in Adelaide.

سلوت يوضح سبب بكاء محمد صلاح بعد مباراة ليفربول وبورنموث

علّق المدير الفني لفريق ليفربول، آرني سلوت، على موقف محمد صلاح، النجم المصري، بعد مباراة الأمس ضد بورنموث، في بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

وبدأ ليفربول مشواره في الموسم الجديد من الدوري الإنجليزي، 2025/26، بمباراته ضد بورنموث، حيث حقق فوزًا بأربعة أهداف مقابل هدفين.

وبعد إطلاق صافرة النهاية، قام لاعبو ليفربول بتحية الجماهير، التي ظلت تردد اسم الراحل ديوجو جوتا، مما أدى إلى تأثر محمد صلاح بشدة لدرجة البكاء.

وسُئل آرني سلوت عن شعور محمد صلاح بعد رد فعله المؤثر عقب المباراة، حيث رد: “لست متأكدًا لأنني لم أسأله، في الواقع لم أرد مغادرة الملعب بعد المباراة على فور لأنني وجدت رد فعل جماهيرنا مميزًا للغاية، وكيف استمروا في الغناء لـ جوتا في النهاية”.

اقرأ أيضًا.. جماهير ليفربول تختار أفضل لاعب في مباراة بورنموث بـ الدوري الإنجليزي

وأضاف: “أعتقد أن طوال اليوم والمباراة، في كل مرة تعتقد أنه لا يمكنك توقع المزيد من جماهير ليفربول، تجدهم يتفوقون على ذلك، يا له من تكريم، أعتقد أن محمد صلاح شعر بمدى تميز ذلك وربما شعر بالعاطفة”.

وواصل: “كنا جميعًا نعلم أن عائلة جوتها وزوجته وأطفاله هنا، قد يكون من المميز بالنسبة لهم سماع مدى حبهم له هنا، ومع الجماهير واللافتة، وما فعلوه”.

وأوضح: “لكننا نشعر كذلك بمشاعر الحزن التي ما زالوا يشعرون بها، ربما أدت هذه المشاعر المتضاربة إلى تأثر محمد صلاح، وأعتقد أنني شعرت بنفس الشعور دون أن أبكي، لكنني بالتأكيد شعرت بنفس المشاعر”.

Chelsea goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic set for unlikely Premier League transfer as Blues cash in despite impressive Strasbourg loan

Chelsea are set to cash in on goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic, with an unlikely Premier League move in the offing.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Petrovic set for shock PL moveImpressive loan at Strasbourg last year Blues cash in on goalkeeperFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Blues stopper is on his way to Sunderland for a deal worth around £21.5 million ($29m), according to journalist , as the Mackems look to boost their squad on their Premier League return.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Petrovic had a fine loan at Strasbourg last season but Chelsea have decided to cash in rather than keep him on their books. The Serb made 31 appearances for the Ligue 1 side, who qualified for the Conference League.

DID YOU KNOW?

Petrovic's departure would leave Robert Sanchez and Filip Jorgensen as the two leading goalkeepers on Chelsea's books, though there is some suggestion the move is not as advanced as initially reported. The Guardian's claims Petrovic still has interest from elsewhere.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

It remains to be seen whether Chelsea make a move for a new goalkeeper ahead of the start of next season, having been linked with AC Milan's Mike Maignan. For now, their focus is on Saturday's Club World Cup quarter-final against Palmeiras.

'That's my impression' – Santos chief offers update on Neymar's future after Brazil star's father reveals talks with Champions League clubs

Santos president Marcelo Teixeira claimed that he is hopeful that Neymar will extend his stay at the club beyond this summer.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Santos chief hopeful Neymar will sign new dealNeymar in talks with Champions League clubsCurrent Santos contract expires after June 30 Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Neymar's future is once again a subject of speculation after his father confirmed talks with Champions League clubs. It was earlier revealed that the Brazil icon wants to return to Europe once his short-term deal with Santos expires.

AdvertisementWHAT SANTOS CHIEF SAID

Amid speculations over the 33-year-old's future, Santos president Teixeira told : "We are talking to Neymar’s team. It is a step forward, we are making a lot of progress in the new negotiations and we are very close to a new agreement to allow Neymar to stay for a new period.

"We hope it happens as quickly as possible. It can't be rushed. It's not a case of, if Neymar doesn't renew, he won't play tomorrow or Sunday. That's not the case. We have no need for Neymar to play now or for the team to return to action. That's my impression. I'm very hopeful for a favourable outcome."

Getty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The club chief added: "It’s different from the recent period, but today, given the progress and the way we talked, I think it’s a good possibility. We’re not behind or too far ahead. I’m very honest: there was no displeasure or displeasure. We sat down at the table and made our position clear, as did NR. Look, this is the possibility, the chance. Our financial, legal and marketing teams, along with their team, are putting this in a direct and practical position. Is it possible that there will be a favourable outcome? Yes."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR NEYMAR?

Jose Mourinho's Fenerbahce are also keen on signing the ex-Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain star. The player's current deal expires after June 30 and it now remains to be seen if he will stay back at his boyhood club for a longer period.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus