Man Utd eye move for £80m star who Man City would "love" to buy in January

Manchester United are fighting to bring a talented Premier League star to Old Trafford and may face a straight shootout with Manchester City and Arsenal for his services.

Ruben Amorim looks ahead to Crystal Palace vs Man Utd

There has been plenty of noise at Old Trafford following Manchester United’s bitter defeat to Everton on Monday night, something supporters will hope can be rectified when their side take on Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park this Sunday.

More than anything, a lack of penetration going forward led to a subdued atmosphere as proceedings rolled on, albeit Ruben Amorim has now urged his side to improve as they look to get back to winning ways against the Eagles.

He said in his pre-match press conference: “They are a different club (Crystal Palace) and they are doing things better than us so that is quite simple.

“We play in a different way and they are just doing things better than us. They are doing things really well and they play more in transition than us. We have to look at all of these things when we compare our teams but of course, in every position, we can do so much better.”

Shades of McTominay: Man Utd star is now their "most underrated player"

Manchester United now have a player who has certainly gone under the radar over the last couple of months.

ByEthan Lamb Nov 28, 2025

Looking ahead to January, Wolverhampton Wanderers star Andre could answer the Manchester United call for a midfielder, though it would be naive to think that is the only area of the field Amorim wants to bolster ahead of the run-in.

With that in mind, the Red Devils and INEOS have put themselves in a direct fight with the elite to sign an England international who is becoming an interesting commodity in the Premier League.

Man Utd eyeing move for Newcastle's Tino Livramento

According to CaughtOffside, Manchester United are keen on Newcastle United star Tino Livramento, and they could rival both Arsenal and Manchester City to land the England right-back.

The outlet shed some light on the situation, which read: “City would love to sign Livramento in January. That currently looks unlikely, but it could be a major saga next summer, when we can also expect United and Arsenal to come into the conversation.”

Capable of playing in either full-back position, Livramento has made 90 appearances for Newcastle, scoring once and registering three assists in total.

Fresh back from his latest injury setback, he is valued at around the £80 million mark by the Magpies and could be tempted by the possibility of switching clubs, even if he isn’t exactly agitating for a move elsewhere.

Manchester United have begun to improve under Amorim and will hope they stand a fighting chance of completing a deal. Nevertheless, they may need to fend off some stiff competition to land their man, who is coincidentally six matches unbeaten against the Red Devils.

Chelsea preparing club-record £133m bid for "monster", Enzo could play key role

Chelsea are now preparing a club-record bid to sign Atletico Madrid forward Julian Alvarez, with it being revealed Enzo Fernandez could play a key role in the potential transfer.

The Blues’ interest in signing a new centre-forward comes amid a slow start to life at Stamford Bridge for Liam Delap, with the 22-year-old failing to score in his opening four Premier League games since making the move to west London in the summer.

Joao Pedro has been more promising, picking up four goals and three assists in the league, but the Brazilian was given the nod in a slightly deeper role against Wolverhampton Wanderers last time out, upon Delap’s return from a hamstring injury.

The 24-year-old excelled in attacking midfield, scoring the second in the 3-0 rout, and Enzo Maresca has suggested he is also better-suited to playing with a partner, saying: “We know that he can play as a number nine or he can play as a number 10,”

“In both positions, I think Joao is very good, but probably when he has another number nine next to him, he is playing better.”

As such, there may be space in the squad to bring in another new centre-forward, and a huge offer is now in the works…

Chelsea preparing club-record bid for Julian Alvarez

According to a report from Spain, Chelsea are now preparing an offer of around €150m (£133m) for Atletico Madrid star Julian Alvarez, which would make him their record signing, should they manage to get a deal over the line.

Fernandez could play a key role in the transfer, as the Blues are hoping the Argentinian’s presence at Stamford Bridge will convince Alvarez to make the move, given that they are international teammates.

BlueCo clearly mean business, but it looks unlikely that a deal will be straightforward, given that FC Barcelona are also in the race, and Atletico Madrid are reluctant to enter negotiations over a sale.

Should the Spanish club soften their stance, the 25-year-old could be a fantastic addition to Maresca’s forward line, having made a flying start to the campaign, chipping in with 13 goal contributions across his opening 15 matches in all competitions.

Lauded as a “monster” by journalist Pablo Gonzalez, the 49-time Argentina international also found the back of the net 17 times in La Liga alone during his debut campaign, while a tally of 11 goals and ten assists in the former Manchester City man’s final campaign at the Etihad Stadium indicates he is very well-rounded.

Signing Alvarez would be a major statement of intent from Chelsea, and if they were able to get a deal done this winter, the World Cup-winning forward could be a real difference-maker in the Premier League title race.

Julian Alvarez has been named as one of the best strikers in the world

The Best 15 Strikers in World Football Ranked (2025)

Who is the best number nine right now?

By
Charlie Smith

Nov 20, 2025

Elly De La Cruz Shares Touching Moment With 'Favorite Player' Derek Jeter

Elly De La Cruz is a first-time All-Star this season and among his experiences this week, meeting his favorite player will probably rank at the top.

On Monday night, as De La Cruz sat at Fox's baseball desk for an interview, he revealed his favorite player was sitting there with him. The 22-year-old Cincinnati Reds shortstop said, "I grew up as a [Derek] Jeter fan. He was my favorite player growing up." At that, Jeter reached across and shook his hand.

That's an incredibly sweet moment. A young star and a Hall of Famer connecting on the field at the 2024 MLB All-Star Game. Beautiful.

De La Cruz is one of baseball's brightest young stars. He finished the first half slashing .256/.346/.483 with 17 home runs, 43 RBI, a .830 OPS, 3.2 WAR and an MLB-best 46 stolen bases. He's electric and seeing him turn into a fanboy in the presence of Jeter was great.

Giants to Hire Tennessee Baseball Coach Tony Vitello As New Manager

The San Francisco Giants are hiring Tennessee Volunteers baseball coach Tony Vitello as the franchise's new manager, according to a report from ESPN's Jeff Passan and Pete Thamel.

The 47-year-old Vitello is making history, as he is becoming the first coach to ever jump from the college level to MLB as a manager without any professional coaching experience.

The Giants confirmed the hire on Wednesday afternoon.

"We're thrilled to welcome Tony to the Giants family," Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey said. "Tony is one of the brightest, most innovative, and most respected coaches in college baseball today. Throughout our search, Tony's leadership, competitiveness, and commitment to developing players stood out. His ability to build strong, cohesive teams and his passion for the game align perfectly with the values of our organization. We look forward to the energy and direction he will bring, along with the memories to be made, as we focus on the future of Giants baseball."

It's an outside-the-box hire for Buster Posey and the Giants, who in hiring Vitello are getting an elite college baseball coach. Vitello's teams at Tennessee have made five NCAA regionals, four super regionals, and three College World Series appearances. The program finally broke through in 2024 when they captured the national championship over Texas A&M.

Vitello will finish his career at Tennessee with a 341-131 record in seven seasons.

He will replace veteran MLB manager Bob Melvin, who was fired last month after two seasons.

Alex Rodriguez: Shohei Ohtani's Talent Transcends What the MLB Has to Offer

Shohei Ohtani's brilliant performance in Game 3 of the 2025 World Series led one former MVP to issue an apology.

During Fox's pregame show before Game 4 of the World Series, Alex Rodriguez was asked about recovering from an 18-inning game and playing the next day. He said comparing how he would handle it to how the Dodgers superstar would wasn't fair because, "I'm human and Ohtani's not."

"You know, Major League Baseball is the greatest, the baddest, the most amazing league around the world of baseball. I now want to take an opportunity to apologize to Shohei Ohtani because he belongs in a higher league if this is all we have to offer," Rodriguez said. "But in all seriousness, this is uncharted territory… we've never seen this before and we'll probably never see this again."

That's high praise from Rodriguez, who, like Ohtani, was a three-time MVP and won a World Series in 2009.

Shohei Ohtani's historic Game 3 numbers

Ohtani was incredible during L.A.'s 6–5 win in the 18-inning marathon that was Game 3. He was 4-for-4, with two home runs and two doubles, then the Blue Jays smartened up and stopped pitching to him. Toronto walked him in each of his next five at-bats, four times intentionally. He reached base times, which is an MLB postseason record and tied the all-time record.

Blue Jays manager John Schneider all but said his team would continue walking Ohtani when his up rather than pitch to him moving forward.

Ohtani set several records during Game 3, including becoming the first player with two home runs and two doubles in a postseason game. He is also the first player to have five walks in a World Series game, while becoming the first player in MLB history to have four hits and five walks in a game, regular season or postseason.

The soon-to-be four-time MVP is also the first player to have four extra-base hits in a World Series game since White Sox second baseman Frank Isbell smacked four doubles against the Cubs in the 1906 Fall Classic.

It's not hard to see why Rodriguez is so in awe of what Ohtani is doing.

Of winning hearts and fulfilling big dreams: the rise of Kavisha Dilhari

Atapattu calls the youngster “positive, free and energised”, and Siriwardene expects her to do her job once she quits

Annesha Ghosh29-Feb-2020A Dilscoop for four in the penultimate over of a nervy chase against India in just her second international match made heads turn. A wily run-out in her delivery stride to dismiss South Africa’s Sune Luus for leaving the crease at the non-striker’s end became a talking point. Only a year into her international career, Sri Lanka’s spin-bowling allrounder Kavisha Dilhari had made quite the splash with her pluck, smarts and offspin darts – enough for Chamari Atapattu to identify her as one the “most positive, free and energised cricketers” she had “ever seen play for our nation”.”I feel she is like me; in my little age, I used to be like her – aggressive, wanting to do more, wanting to prove myself through my cricket,” Atapattu told ESPNcricinfo as she watched Dilhari go through a lengthy nets session at the Murdoch University Field in Perth last week. “That Dilscoop was one of the most audacious things I have seen a teen cricketer pull off.”I know she’s positive, but I didn’t expect her to Dilscoop a pacer with such ease. That was special, as were the wickets she took of the dangerous Harman [Harmanpreet Kaur] on that tour; I scored a hundred in that match, but it was Kavisha who turned the game in our favour with that over, that shot; she won my heart.”Atapattu is not the only Sri Lanka player to gush over Dilhari, now 19 and playing her second T20I World Cup.”I am going to retire [from international cricket] after this World Cup,” senior offspinning allrounder Shashikala Siriwardene said, “and I feel she is the one who will fulfill my role in the team. When I came into the side, my passion for the game and, of course, my skills, were quite similar to hers. She has the talent and tenacity to serve Sri Lanka cricket for a long period.”A native of Rathgama, the southern village close to Galle town, Dilhari’s journey from playing cricket for several years with just two pairs of training pants to being among the 20 centrally contracted players has demanded resilience from the young allrounder both on the field and off it.”When I was 14, my father bought me two sets of pants – really cheap ones – from Colombo, so I could start training,” Dilhari said. “But even then it ate considerably into the modest income he would earn from fishing. But he realised I must start early. He would see me grow eager by the day to get into a formal set-up every time I read some newspaper article on Inoka Ranaweera [the left-arm spinner] and her,” she adds, pointing coyly at her idol Siriwardene, who volunteered to play interpreter for this interview.

“She is one of the best young players in Sri Lanka, in the world and I trust her to be one of our bests of all time. I know her talent and potential, so I explained why it’s important to get her back into the side.”Chamari Atapattu on Kavisha Dilhari

“This is my second World Cup, and she [Siriwardene] will soon be gone, but I don’t think I would have been playing this tournament here in Australia had it not been for the support of seniors like her, the captain, and others who guided me through my recent injury layoff, the most difficult, testing phase of my career so far.”A beneficiary of the SLC inter-school structure and the charity organisation Foundation of Goodness, Dilhari started out as a right-arm medium-pacer but switched to bowling offspin on the advice of her school coach Mahesh Sandaruwan. The decision fast-tracked her graduation to the national level but played a part in an injury that grounded her for over seven months.”At an SLC Under-19 inter-school tournament in 2015-16, I took three-wicket hauls in the semi-finals and final for Devapathiraja College,” Dilhari recounted. “A coach in my school said SLC were looking for young spinners for the 2016 T20 World Cup in India and my offspin was key as I started getting noticed around that time.”A call-up for a national camp materialised that year, where “the exposure, and knowledge received on spin bowling and batting became pivotal”, by Dilhari’s own admission, towards her debut for Sri Lanka in a home ODI against Pakistan in March 2018. A year on from stepping on to the international arena, though, a problem emerged. A stress fracture.Unnoticed – and indiscernible – to some degree, remnants of her front-on, open-bowling pace action could have played a part in in the injury, which she sustained on the left of her back during a practice match against England at home in March last year. “I was just 17, so I thought my career as a spinner would take a blow if I couldn’t be part of the England series,” she said. “But my seniors made me see merit in the decision to just focus on regaining fitness without thinking of what is, at the end of the day, part and parcel of every athlete’s life.”Overcoming the disappointment of missing top-flight international cricket for a protracted period, Dilhari put her mind into recovering in time to thrust herself back onto the selectors’ radar. With help from team physio Tasneem Yusuf and head coach Harsha de Silva, she changed her action to a more side-on one, “a big step towards a comeback”. The four-team Asian Cricket Council Women’s Emerging Team’s Cup in October last year, where she finished as Sri Lanka’s leading wicket-taker, marked her return to competitive cricket. A month-and a half later, the South Asian Games Women’s Cricket Competition where Sri Lanka finished runners-up to Bangladesh, brought more game-time in a largely uncertain lead-up to the T20 World Cup squad announcement.”Just after her injury, she was struggling both as a bowler and batter. Her all-round performance fell because she didn’t get much time to practice,” Atapattu recalled. “But after the Emerging Cup, I spoke to her because a lot of the Sri Lankan management said she is not good.”But I told them that we have to back her; she is one of the best young players in Sri Lanka, in the world and I trust her to be one of our bests of all time. I know her talent and potential, so I explained why it’s important to get her back into the side.”Coach de Silva echoed Atapattu’s words after Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup opener last week. “Her recovery took longer than expected, but I think with her the strength is her consistency with the ball, the control that she has,” de Silva said after his side’s match against New Zealand where Dilhari picked up the wicket of veteran Suzie Bates. “She has the potential to become probably a good like a good all-round cricketer in the future.”An admirer of Nathan Lyon, Dilhari, who counts her Dilscoop moment among her favourite experiences in her nascent career so far, said her time away from the competitive circuit had taught her to embrace the uncertainties of international cricket.”I try to think back about my good performances when my morale is down,” sh said. “That’s what I did when I was out of the side for so long. The Dilscoop, that dismissal (of the non-striker backing up), the wickets, the injury – everything is part of my journey. My dream is to get the team into the top four rankings across formats. If I am able to do that, I know it will be all worthwhile and I would also be able to fulfil a major part of my other dream: to become one of the world’s best allrounders.”

Everton Weekes and the call of the inner artist

Vaneisa Baksh celebrates a cricketing life lived to its fullest

Vaneisa Baksh05-Jul-2020Cricket was always the backdrop, but it was hardly what we talked about. My memories of Sir Everton Weekes nestle within his unpretentious appreciation of beauty, art and the intellect. This is where I will go to find the man I came to know five years ago.His cricketing years had long passed, but he had not paused. Like a puddle that filled itself until it became a shimmering lake, this extraordinary gentleman lived every minute of his life so fully that death after 95 years and 126 days could have been the only force powerful enough to stop him.He didn’t fear death; at 90, his practical mind had already calculated its proximity, but vigilant as ever, he kept an eye out, “I listen to the obituary notices, not to find out if I am there, to see if I recognise anyone, because I don’t suppose I’d be listening to the obituary notice if I am there.” He was so tickled by his humour that it took him a few moments to muse, “Why would I do a thing like that?”He knew how full his life had been and he celebrated that. “To put all those years together, one would say you’re over a hundred and fifty, but it doesn’t work that way. A lot of these things can be done within a time frame, but that is a way of giving back for what the country has done for you. I enjoyed every moment of it.”This, to me, is what he would want us to do. When an icon departs, especially when it symbolizes the end of a cherished era, it is natural to feel the loss more acutely. But we could not ask one more day of him–from the moment his beloved world started shrinking and he could no longer engage his free will–it would be too selfish.His life was everything but selfish. Born into poverty, he knew what it meant to be without–times when food was scarce, clothes were ragged, and one knew the doors that would never open for you. He had a remarkably succinct way of vividly depicting complexity. Did he and Frank Worrell visit each other’s homes as children?”We were too far apart really. I didn’t visit his. He didn’t visit mine. And there was not a lot of visiting in those days. I don’t think there was enough mauby to go around …and lemonade; money was fairly scarce. There wasn’t a lot of entertaining.”He emerged from those circumstances simply by yielding to the call of his inner artist. He knew his lowly childhood disqualified him in Barbados for the path that Worrell and Clyde Walcott had, but he accepted that. At 13, he was playing for the Barbados Cricket League (BCL); at 14 his formal schooling ended; at 17 he entered the army. In the years between, he was content to play his cricket, go fishing with friends to get money to buy matinee tickets and to pass the time reading. It was Worrell who pushed him to believe there could be more.Everton Weekes flicks one to leg•William Vanderson/Hulton Archive/Getty ImagesThe elements of his life that gave him the most pleasure were the ones that appealed to the artist in him. First, the cricket. Nothing gave him more joy than plastering bowling. He could read a ball, he could read a field, and he was determined to bat forever. Fortunately, cricket enabled everything else. It exposed him to a world that would not ordinarily have come his way.He loved music, particularly jazz, after Dizzy Gillespie blew him away on his first visit to New York in 1947. He became a collector. In 2016, when I first visited his home, a large piano dominated the living room. A sophisticated sound system covered an entire wall. Books, vinyl records, video tapes and trophies were abundant among the beautifully crafted wooden furniture. The house, I was told, was named Balcony Rock, after a Dave Brubeck composition.What were his pastimes? Apart from coaching and mentoring, he generously gave his time to serving on committees and commissions. He was a champion bridge player. He feasted on literature. He reveled in food and drink. He told me he could cook anything, and he enjoyed entertaining, something unheard of in his childhood. He loved to dance; the three Ws were known for putting down the latest moves. He would go swimming every morning at six until he was around 90. Even then, he continued driving himself everywhere. He was a true intellectual, happy to enjoy stimulating conversation, although he disliked small talk.In his later years, he enjoyed his solitude and developed a measured air, appreciating what he found and dismissing the banal and the vexatious with his dry wit.”I remember one night I was catching a bus from Rochdale to Bacup. Frank dropped me there. And you could hear them whispering, the people on the bus. I suppose they were discussing something to do with colour… and a little argument ensued from these two or three people. One of the gentlemen mustered up enough courage to ask me which part of India I was from. I told him I was from the West Indies, and I didn’t pay much attention to them. Later when I was nearly getting off the bus, one of the chaps said, ‘but you have an English accent.’ The other said, ‘Oh, he must be from one of those African countries they have in India.'”It got more ridiculous and more ridiculous,” he said with a straight face, before allowing himself a chuckle.I could listen to him forever. I know he made five consecutive Test centuries and 15 in all. I know he was an amazingly gifted cricketer, but that is secondhand knowledge. What I saw firsthand was a marvellous human who started his journey with little, but left the world a truly remarkable legacy.Trinidad Express

Gilchrist's Hobart mayhem to India's Boxing Day blues: five rearguard efforts that turned Tests

Following the Buttler-Woakes rescue act in Manchester, we turn the clock back to other memorable chase-altering gigs

Andrew Miller10-Aug-2020Australia v Pakistan, Hobart, 1999
It’s been more than 20 years since Adam Gilchrist announced his intentions to shred the Test-match batting manual with his often-imitated-but-never-bettered brand of lower-order violence, but as soon as the Buttler-Woakes alliance started stretching into ominous territory, “Hobart” was probably the ghastly reference point playing out in the minds of every Pakistani fan. There really have been few statements of intent quite like it. Gilchrist had been made to wait for his turn while the great Ian Healy played out his final days, but now, in his second Test, he was presented a stage that most combatants might have baulked at. Australia had slumped to 126 for 5 with 15 overs remaining on the fourth afternoon, with their target of 369 a pipedream. By the close, however, Gilchrist had almost lapped his steadfast partner, Justin Langer, in romping to 45 not out, and the following day he continued in the same belligerent yet chanceless vein. Saqlain Mushtaq, Shoaib Akhtar, Waqar Younis and Wasim Akram was about as fearsome as an opposition quartet could get, but in breaking their chase down to ten-minute intervals, Gilchrist and Langer turned all the pressure back on their vastly vaunted opponents.David Williams celebrates getting to a half-century on his way to tripping up England in Trinidad•PA Photos/Getty ImagesWest Indies v England, Trinidad, 1997-98
The diminutive David Williams is but a speck in the annals of West Indies’ cricketing history. He started his career as an under-study to the mighty Jeff Dujon, and spent several series in Junior Murray’s wake too before Ridley Jacobs’ emergence. But in Trinidad in February 1998 he stood taller than at any other moment in his career, to thwart England in a hastily rearranged second Test, and set West Indies on course for the retention of the Wisden Trophy in a series that threatened to be closer than its eventual 3-1 scoreline. Days after the fiasco of the Sabina Park abandonment, the Caribbean was braced for further embarrassment as England took control in Port of Spain, largely through the indefatigable efforts of Angus Fraser, whose first-innings 8 for 53 had secured a precious 23-run lead in what promised to be a low-scoring dogfight. Alec Stewart’s 73 set up an imposing target of 282, and at 124 for 5, following Fraser’s 11th of the match, there could be only one winner. But then, fatefully, Fraser dropped Williams off the first ball of the final day, and as the target was whittled down to double figures, the belief began to ebb from England’s endeavours. Williams knuckled down for a priceless 65, in support of Carl Hooper, whose 94 not out was further evidence of his late-blooming maturity. Though England bounced back to square the series at the same venue a week later, the missed opportunity would cost them dear.Dion Nash, who hit a career-best 89* in New Zealand’s first innings and the winning runs in the second, is all smiles on the final day of the Wellington Test•Getty ImagesNew Zealand v India, Wellington, 1998-99
“It was just after Christmas,” wrote Wisden, “but India rather overdid the gifts.” The Boxing Day Test featured a brace of improbable New Zealand batting revivals. They rallied from 208 for 7 to 352 all out in the first innings, with Dion Nash digging deep for his career-best 89 not out, and the teenaged Daniel Vettori doing likewise for his second Test fifty. But it was their second innings that took the biscuit, as India – defending a middling target of 213 – belatedly found their A games to shred the top order at 74 for 5, effectively six, after Nathan Astle had had his hand broken by a Javagal Srinath lifter. But once again, New Zealand’s lower-order stood firm, with Craig McMillan’s fluent 74 not out being joined by a typically hard-hitting 61 from Chris Cairns, who cracked nine fours and a six in a sixth-wicket stand of 137 that only ended when he launched what had intended to be the winning runs straight to cover. Nash, however, made no mistake one ball later, as New Zealand closed out a contest that they had been dominating ever since Simon Doull’s first-innings haul of 7 for 65.New Zealand’s Christchurch hero of ’94, Shane Thomson, seen here batting against Surrey the same year•Getty ImagesNew Zealand v Pakistan, Christchurch, 1993-94
Shane Thomson could have been a contender. At Auckland in 1990, he’d given a precocious account of himself as a 21-year-old debutant – no major runs or wickets to speak of, but the sort of Test-match bearing that implied he had a future as a spin-bowling allrounder, especially with Richard Hadlee only months from retirement and New Zealand in need of a new pivot in their lower-middle order. Yet seven years later his first-class career would be over, amid the realisation that his bowling just wasn’t quite up to the standards required. He will, however, always have Christchurch – the scene of his one and only Test century, and a formidable knock at that, as he stared down the might of Wasim and Waqar in their prime, and in partnership with Bryan Young, who also reached three figures for the first time, transformed a lost cause with a buccaneering stand of 154 for the fifth wicket. Chasing 324 to avoid a series whitewash, the pair had come together at 133 for 4 – and given that Waqar had made the old ball talk in claiming his last five wickets for 19 in the first innings, the omens were hardly promising. Still, Young and Thomson endured to secure one of New Zealand’s finest Test victories.Graeme Smith is mobbed by his team-mates after leading South Africa to their first series victory in England since 1965•Getty ImagesEngland v South Africa, Edgbaston, 2008
Legend has it that Graeme Smith mounts the heads of England Test captains on a pike outside his house to ward off intruders. Three times in three England tours, his presence coincided with the resignation of his opposite number. If the exit of Andrew Strauss in 2012 perhaps had more to do with Kevin Pietersen’s antics than his opponents, then both Nasser Hussain and Michael Vaughan were hounded out of office by a pair of furiously committed innings. Smith’s 277 at Edgbaston in 2003 was in many ways his statement innings – his highest score as well as his first century as South Africa captain, but his 154 on the same ground five years later was arguably his greatest innings. The series was up for grabs, but the challenge was stark – a target of 281 would be no stroll in the park against an England attack featuring Andrew Flintoff at his most lethal (his first-innings duel with Jacques Kallis was a bout for the ages) and the fingerspin of Monty Panesar, for whom the conditions seemed tailor-made. At 93 for 4, South Africa were up against it, and at 171 for 5 with AB de Villiers gone, their hopes of a late rally seemed to be fading. But Mark Boucher has always been a doughty combatant, and he was in no mood to shift. Smith, meanwhile, just kept grinding and grinding, eventually claiming the extra half-hour to bury his crestfallen opponents. A day later, Vaughan resigned in tears, aware that he could carry his team, and his career, no further.

Did an erroneous short run deny Kings XI Punjab victory?

We also look at Ravi Bishnoi’s impressive IPL debut against Rishabh Pant

Nagraj Gollapudi and Shiva Jayaraman20-Sep-20203:10

IPL 2020: ‘Decorum’ v ‘Common sense’: Manjrekar and Moody discuss the short-run incident

The short run that denied Kings XI victory?Kings XI Punjab needed 21 runs from the final 10 deliveries. Having lofted a one-bounce four on the second ball of the 19th over, Mayank Agarwal pushed the next delivery – a yorker from Kagiso Rabada – to the empty mid-on area and ran two. Chris Jordan, Agarwal’s partner, was running to the danger end, and did well to complete the second run. Yet, Nitin Menon, the squre-leg umpire, declared a short run, signalling that Jordan did not tap his bat past the crease at the wicketkeeper’s end before turning back for the second run.TV replays subsequently indicated clearly that Jordan had in fact crossed the line and it was a legal run. Eventually the match was tied in regulation time after Rabada pouched Jordan at square leg to deny Kings XI victory after they needed just one to win off the last delivery. The incident saw a lot of people posting the replay on Twitter, with former India batsman Virender Sehwag, who incidentally was also once Kings XI’s team director, highlighting the controversial umpiring decision by saying “it wasn’t a short run”.

Bishnoi trumps Pant on IPL debutLegspinner Ravi Bishnoi’s first ball of his maiden IPL was not a legbreak. Bowling from wide of the crease to Rishabh Pant, Bishnoi pitched it on off stump and angled it away from the batsman. Pant left it alone for a wide. Bishnoi repeated the act on the next ball, but this time bowled better by pitching it slightly fuller. Pant was aware of the plan and went for the reverse sweep, noticing the third man had been brought inside the 30-yard circle.If he thought he had read Bishnoi’s plan well, the Delhi Capitals batsman was actually beaten by the away spin. Bishnoi would continue to beat Pant with that angle as Pant would swing and miss twice in the same over. Bishnoi finished unscathed allowing just four runs in the over.Before Sunday, if you had looked at Pant’s numbers against legspin you would find no deficiency: 387 runs off 237 deliveries at a strike rate of nearly 160. Yet there remains one weak area for Pant: he is not the best player on the off side against the ball that is spinning away from him. His natural inclination is to play to the leg side with his balance mostly titled on his back leg.As he showed in the Under-19 World Cup earlier this year, where he was the leading wicket-taker, Bishnoi’s favourite delivery is the googly. Off the 13 deliveries he bowled to Pant on Sunday, Bishnoi had a dozen googlies and one slider. The one time Bishnoi bowled from closer to the stumps, he pitched it on good length on middle stump which Pant slammed for a four over long-on. However, the next ball, attempting to clear another googly over midwicket, Pant played-on.A maiden IPL spell of 4-0-22-1. Bishnoi can be proud of his effort as he even made Anil Kumble, rarely emotional, clapping in appreciation from the dugout.Jordan delivers, Stoinis dispatchesThe wide yorker is a delivery bowlers have fired at Australia and Capitals allrounder Marcus Stoinis frequently. The slower ball is another useful option in the death overs, something Chris Jordan once made a name with. But these deliveries never rolled out of Jordan’s hand when he bowled the last over of the Capitals innings to Stoinis.Stoinis took an off-stump guard and Jordan kept bowling in the slot for Stoinis who stayed in his crease, shifted his balance and cleverly blended power and skills to clear the field. The first ball Jordan bowled wide outside off but Stoinis moved swiftly to his right and used his strong wrists and arms to loft a six high over deep square leg. Second ball outside off again, Stoinis swung and got a thick edge to third man for four. One towards the stumps and Stoinis whipped it past short fine leg. A wide delivery easily lofted over the covers for another four and then a full toss flicked for six to bring up his fifty off 20 balls.Marcus Stoinis powered the Delhi Capitals innings at the end•BCCIJordan leaked 30 runs in the over, the joint-most off the final over in the IPL. The 49 runs by Stoinis in the last three overs of the innings is the third-highest by an individual in that phase of an IPL match. It was, undoubtedly, a match-changing innings.Kings XI’s death over weaknessKings XI have already been confronted with a big question: do they have enough death overs bowlers? In the absence of Afghanistan spinner Mujeeb ur Rahman on Sunday, captain KL Rahul had three options: Sheldon Cottrell, Mohammed Shami and Jordan.Cottrell’s economy rate in the final four overs is 8.84 compared to Jordan’s 9.70 and Shami’s 10.99. That weakness came to the fore against the Capitals as Rahul bowled three of Shami’s overs in the powerplay as the India fast bowler dominated the Capitals’ top order with pace, seam and bounce. He returned in the 15th over and quickly dismissed the Capitals captain Shreyas Iyer.Kings XI are one of the three teams that have only one experienced (at least 40 overs bowled) death bowler (Cottrell) whose economy rate is under 9. The others being Jasprit Bumrah (Mumbai Indians) and Jofra Archer (Rajasthan Royals). All other teams have more than one such bowler.That is a big challenge for Kings XI: finding a bowling combination that is well-equipped to shield them at the death from a Stoinis-like assault.

Umpires need to call a dead ball if a batsman tries to switch-hit

The shot gives batsmen a huge unfair advantage. Bowlers will take matters into their own hands if the officials don’t step in

Ian Chappell06-Dec-2020The switch hit has attracted a lot of attention in cricket circles in the last week, fuelled mainly by Glenn Maxwell’s amazing exploit in depositing a ball in the back of the Bob Hawke stand at the Manuka Oval in Canberra.In this case, Maxwell faced up in his normal manner as a right-hander, but before Kuldeep Yadav delivered the ball, he altered his stance and grip on the bat to effectively become a left-hander. Maxwell’s shot was an amazing example of skill and superb hand-eye coordination, but was it fair? The answer is a resounding no, as far as I’m concerned.One of the main tasks of a cricket administrator is to frame laws that maintain a reasonable balance between bat and ball. If the laws or playing conditions favour one or the other unfairly then the game becomes a diminished contest.ALSO READ: Glenn Maxwell on the switch hit: It’s up to the bowlers to evolveIn the case of the switch hit, the batsman has one prime objective in mind: to make the bowler’s field placings redundant. Considering the bowler – in consultation with his captain – places his field taking into account the batsman’s style, how can it then be fair that the batsman becomes the opposite type of player with the bowler having no recourse to a change of field? This obviously hands a huge advantage to a highly skilled switch-hitter.The respected former international umpire Simon Taufel suggested the already heavily burdened on-field officials would find it difficult to adjudicate on any switch of the hands or feet. With all due respect to a man who has done the job very effectively, I disagree.The square-leg umpire is already paying close attention to the batsman’s feet in case there is a stumping, so he’ll notice any change of order. If a batsman changes the order of his feet, then the square-leg umpire ought to simply declare the ball dead and no runs result.

Don’t worry, Glenn, history shows bowlers will move to combat the switch hit, but will it be in a manner that benefits the game?

If this became the law then batsmen would have no incentive to switch-hit and balance would be restored in that individual contest.Referring to the switch hit after the game, Maxwell said: “It’s within the Laws, batting has evolved in such a way that it’s just got better and better over the years. [I] suppose it’s up to the bowlers to try and combat that.”There’s one sure way for bowlers to combat the switch hit. They can simply refuse to deliver the ball every time a batsman starts to make a move to change his feet. This would further slow over rates that are already approaching glacial pace, but it would also send a strong message to any reluctant administrators.If the administrators’ prime concern is to favour hysterical commentary and please fans who only want to see a bowler’s head on a spike then they won’t budge. However, they should do so in the knowledge that bowlers will eventually say enough is enough and take the law into their own hands.The history of the game provides administrators with multiple examples of what happens when the balance between bat and ball gets seriously out of whack. Go back to the gradual evolution from underarm to sidearm to today’s overarm bowling. These changes were forced on the game by bowlers determined to be involved in a fair contest.There are plenty more examples where bowlers have become fed up and declared war. These include the Bodyline series, chucking and ball-tampering, all of which were strong protests against a game that had become lopsided in favour of batsmen.Don’t worry, Glenn, history shows bowlers will move to combat the switch hit, but will it be in a manner that benefits the game?If batsmen want to reverse-sweep or play a ramp shot without changing the order of their feet, that’s fine. By playing in that manner, the contest remains roughly a fifty-fifty proposition.However switch-hitting greatly favours batsmen and therefore alters the balance of the contest. It’s very skillful, but it’s not fair.

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