Newcastle transfer news on Nunez

Newcastle United are reportedly now ‘keen’ on signing Darwin Nunez in the summer.

The Lowdown: Standout season

Nunez has had a standout season at Benfica, scoring no fewer than 34 goals and making a further four assists in just 41 games in total over all competitions (Transfermarkt).

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He was described as an ‘absolute beast‘ by Liverpool podcaster Hari Sethi after an impressive performance in the UEFA Champions League against the finalists, showing that he is more than capable of making the step up to the Premier League.

The Latest: Newcastle ‘keen’

Taking to Twitter, journalist Jacque Talbot, who regularly breaks transfer news and updates, has revealed that the St. James’ Park outfit are just one of a number of clubs in the top flight who are ‘keen’ on signing Nunez.

“Darwin Nunez will be going to the Premier League, with Eugenio Lopez as his agent, the rep who brokered the deal of Di Maria and Man United. Newcastle keen. Liverpool and Spurs among it.”

The Verdict: Get it done

If the Magpies can put the right offer on the table, then there may not come a better opportunity than to sign a player who promises to be one of the best strikers in Europe over the next few years – Jorge Jesus says he will become ‘world class’.

Indeed, Nunez is only 22 years of age, and so has the potential to reach the very top.

The Magpies looks set to face some stiff competition from teams that can offer him Champions League football, and so the Toon must act as soon as possible if they are going to get this deal done.

In other news, find out who PIF are now ‘ready’ to sign this summer here!

Rodrigo disappoints for Leeds yet again

A late injury-time goal from Pascal Struijk kept Leeds United’s hopes of remaining in the Premier League alive heading into the final game of the season after a 1-1 draw with Brighton and Hove Albion at Elland Road.

Jesse Marsch’s side went behind to an early, albeit well-deserved, goal from Danny Welbeck but a raucous home support just about saw the Yorkshire giants over the line.

Whites striker Joe Gelhardt, who had gone close to an equaliser himself, bundled the ball across goal for the Belgian-born colossus to slot home and the draw meant that Leeds moved one point clear of the relegation zone.

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However, Burnley have a game in hand in midweek, so they could be two points behind heading into the final game of the 2021/22 season.

It could have been an all too different story in west Yorkshire, though, as Marsch’s attacking struggles continued once again and that can’t be too much of a surprise as he constantly persists with the inclusion of Rodrigo, who has been nothing short of a flop.

On an afternoon where he managed fewer touches (40) than all but one fellow starter, including goalkeeper Illan Meslier (52), he failed to contribute anything of note in the final third in another “anonymous” outing.

Throughout the 90 minutes, the Spaniard failed to register a single shot on target, also failing to do much with the ball as he made just 68% of his 28 passing attempts, via SofaScore.

Rodrigo also appeared to be lightweight in his battles, winning only 30% of his ten duels and also losing possession of the ball 12 times, once every 3.3 touches.

LeedsLive journalist Beren Cross also noted the £13.5m-rated passenger’s poor display in his post-match ratings column, where he wrote: ‘Gathered himself after the break with one delightful, arced pass in behind, but the standard was set low in an abject first period which would have warranted a half-time bath.’

Perhaps Marsch should have hooked him at the break as his struggles in the final third almost cost the side dearly against the Seagulls.

The £100k-per-week has started the majority of matches under the American, so heading into the final game of the season, he must stop persisting with the out-of-sorts forward.

AND in other news, Marsch could already have Leeds’ next Liam Cooper in “really strong” 17 y/o colossus…

Fast-learner Ollie Pope makes rapid strides towards England contention

The Surrey batsman has enjoyed a prolific season to push him into contention and has shown the ability to quickly adapt his game

Daniel Norcross02-Aug-2018Barbados. March of this year. A collection of England’s brightest and best future prospects have been divided into North and South teams to contest three 50-over matches.The South squad contains some pretty familiar names: Sam Curran, Dom Bess, Nick Gubbins to name but three. When Paul Collingwood, coach of the North team, was asked to name the South player most likely to play soonest for England he didn’t name the two 20 year-olds who debuted in the Test team against Pakistan earlier this season. He plumped for Ollie Pope. As it transpired both Bess and Curran earned their chances first due to injuries in the Test team, but it was quite an endorsement for Pope.It wasn’t as if Pope had a particularly spectacular series in Barbados. He scored 110 runs off 111 balls across two innings, whereas Gubbins had stroked two immaculate centuries, but it was the way he scored the runs and his versatility. Pope had started at No. 6 in the second match and was deployed as an emergency opener after Gubbins tore his hamstring in the third game. He also kept wicket.Since then he’s scored 684 runs in the County Championship, the second-highest aggregate in the country, at an average of 85.50, the best by a margin, and a further 244 runs at 40.66 in both white-ball formats. This from the lower middle order and in his second season of first team cricket. After 15 first-class matches he averages 63.25, the second-highest average of any Englishman at the same stage in their career. The only man above him is the unexpected figure of Hampshire wicketkeeper Adrian Aymes who, assisted by seven not outs in 16 innings, managed 64.22.In his fledgling career Pope has scored a match-saving unbeaten hundred against Hampshire, a match-winning unbeaten 158 against Yorkshire, coming in at 69 for 4, and a number of supportive 30s from the middle order in T20s to see his side either home in run chases or to massive scores batting first. He’s put the likes of Aaron Finch and Kumar Sangakarra back on strike when the situation demanded it, and taken control when there was no one else to turn to. He might just be the most dynamically anonymous batsman out there right now. He’s 20, yet somehow he knows exactly how to play any hand dealt to him.”I work it out on my own, to be honest,” Pope told ESPNcricinfo. “I try to find a way of getting to 15 off 10 balls. The hard thing about batting in the middle order in T20 is getting in without chewing up too many balls.”He has quickly developed a reputation for innovation but is acutely aware that you can’t stand still in T20 cricket. The bowlers get to know your tricks and adjust accordingly. “Last year a lot of people hadn’t seen me so I looked to ramp and reverse ramp. Now it’s changed. They start with third man and fine leg back so I’ve started hitting it straighter and over the top.”ESPNcricinfo LtdBut how does he know when to innovate and when to play in orthodox fashion? “[Against Somerset last year] I thought it’s a pretty big boundary. Long-on is out. I don’t think I can clear him. I remember thinking the only real gap in the field is behind me on the off side, so I tried a shot I’d never tried before and it came off. There is technique involved but it’s not always trained technique. It’s practical thinking on my feet.”He does, of course, work tirelessly on technique, always trying to stay one step ahead of the bowlers. “I imagine the field set to me. A lot of teams now have mid-off up so I practice getting it over the top. But I also try to hit every area I can off the same ball.”Playing for Surrey, with its exceptionally strong squad, has simplified matters. “I was told at the start of the season, with players away, I’d get the first few games. I told the management I understood that they had an overseas player coming in. Jason Roy and Mark Stoneman would be back at some stage, but I want to put you in a position where you can’t drop me.”He’s done that and more besides. For many Surrey fans he’s among the first names they look for on the team sheet, but how does he stay grounded after such a giddy start to his professional career that has seen him selected for the England Lions and even touted in as a possible replacement for Ben Stokes in England’s middle order against at Lord’s when the allrounder stands trial in Bristol?”You just keep doing the same thing. Don’t overthink. I try to keep my game as simple and structured as possible.”By his own admission he’s been lucky to play alongside some of the best players of the modern era across multiple formats in Sangakarra, Finch (ranked No. 1 in T20Is) and most recently Alastair Cook when turning out for the Lions. “I pick their brains. Cook is one of the best players to have played in India so I asked him what his method was. You find out what you want to know. Of course you learn by watching, and how they go about practice but you have to be proactive. You have to ask them the questions you want the answers to. With Finch, for example, he’s one of the best power hitters there is. He reckons I need to set my stance a bit earlier to get power into my game.”He has also savoured playing in the Vitality T20 Blast, a tournament he believes can stand up alongside the Big Bash which he saw at first chance during his stint in Grade cricket with Campbelltown-Camden in Sydney last winter where he played 23 games across multiple formats and came away with 997 runs.”In front of 28,000 at Lord’s and 25,000 at The Oval, it really doesn’t get much better,” he said. “The games have been of a really high quality and I don’t think it’s much different from the Big Bash. The crowds are not like that everywhere of course but I think the city-based tournament [set for 2020] is a great idea. Of course some people will come for the cricket, some for beers with their mates. Same as any cricket tournament in the world. Yes it would be good to get the spectators more supportive of the teams in The Blast but this year I’ve seen a lot more kids at the games.”Currently, though, he is eyeing Surrey’s first County Championship title since 2002. “There’s no better feeling that winning a four-day game because of the amount of effort you’ve put in. You’ve put in the work with a group of lads for four days straight. Winning the Championship is the pinnacle.”It may feel like the pinnacle for Pope right now, but don’t be surprised if this wonderfully adaptable, intelligent and thoughtful cricketer isn’t facing, and answering a whole new set of questions for England before he knows it.

Boult's late strikes give New Zealand the edge

22-Sep-2016On a dry-looking pitch with plenty of cracks, India opted to bat and opener KL Rahul got off to a brisk start•BCCIBut he fell to spin, which was introduced early, when he edged a delivery off Mitchell Santner•BCCIM Vijay was his usual self, displaying patience and concentration. He left plenty of short deliveries from Neil Wagner and…•Associated Press… forged a solid stand with Cheteshwar Pujara, who looked at ease against the spinners and used his feet very well against them•BCCIBoth struck fifties in their partnership of 112•Associated PressBut persistence from the New Zealand spinners paid rich dividends after lunch. Mitchell Santner took a return catch to dismiss Pujara for 62•BCCIAnd Neil Wagner’s short-ball weapon worked when Virat Kohli top-edged to fine leg on 9•Associated PressThe wobble continued as M Vijay edged Ish Sodhi behind for 65 just before tea…•Associated Press… And Ajinkya Rahane lobbed an easy catch to short leg off Mark Craig, falling for 18. India had slipped from 154 for 1 to 209 for 5•BCCIR Ashwin and Rohit Sharma steadied the innings through a 52-run sixth-wicket stand•BCCIBut before he had pulled India out of trouble, Rohit gave it away, lofting one to long-on•BCCIWriddhiman Saha received a peach from Trent Boult that kissed the top of leg stump after swinging back in•BCCIBoult followed it up with the scalps of Ashwin and Mohammed Shami to give New Zealand the edge as stumps neared•BCCIRavindra Jadeja, not out on 16, along with Umesh Yadav who was unbeaten on 8, hung in there as India closed out the opening day on 291 for 9•BCCI

Pietersen's campaign to swing the voters

Runs were plundered in Cardiff, but not by Kevin Pietersen in his first meaningful innings of the season. Still, this was just the start of his quest for an extraordinary return to the England team

David Hopps in Cardiff19-Apr-20151:30

Pietersen begins Surrey comeback

The nationwide tour of Division Two Championship grounds that Kevin Pietersen hopes will propel him into the gratifying glare of an Ashes Test series has begun. Reviews for the opening matinee performance in Cardiff will be mixed. He made 19, and looked in decent order in doing so, but he recorded Surrey’s lowest score of an untroubled day, not the sort of score that smacks of unstoppable momentum.”Ni-ni-ni 19, 19, ni-19 19.” The scoreboard as Pietersen departed might have lacked the gravity, or the impact, of Paul Hardcastle’s protest song against the Vietnam War, 30 years ago now, but when Pietersen edged Craig Meschede to slip, driving confidently at a delivery that might have nibbled away a little, his ambitions briefly took on a similar sense of synthesised stutter.Meschede, a young South African on a season’s loan from Somerset, had made a name for himself, except that he has not been in South Wales long enough for anybody to be entirely confident how to pronounce it. There are around 56 versions, the same number as he had first-class wickets. The preferred pronunciation has two syllables: Mesh-da. If it has not seared itself into KP’s soul, it might have singed it a little.Immediately upon Pietersen’s dismissal, social media sprang into action, encapsulating the great divide that will forever surround the most flamboyant England batsman of his generation. Crowing that KP looked in marvellous touch gave way as he returned to the pavilion to personal slights.Fifteen months have passed since Paul Downton judged him persona non grata in English cricket, Downton’s mishandling of the situation has brought about his removal, and the divide between supporters and detractors remains as wide as ever.It is appropriate that Pietersen’s attempted comeback is taking place in the middle of an election campaign because it is all intensely political. When he took a hundred off the students of Oxford last week, the sort of thing that good county batsmen tend to do in their sleep, in cricket’s Spin Room one observer even ventured that it just showed that England could have won the World Cup if only they had picked him.Cardiff was the first vaguely meaningful test. Not far sort of 3,000 wandered across Sophia Gardens, the spring borders in glorious bloom, enticed by free admission and a chance to judge whether Pietersen could add impetus to his comeback attempt or whether, in England terms, he was merely a king of oblivion. The reception was a warm one, interspersed with a few cheers. He has become a popular anti-authoritarian figure and, as a new regime at the ECB seriously seeks to reconnect the game with the public, it is a self-imposed problem they could have done without.The irony could hardly be overlooked that a century fell to the Sri Lankan, Kumar Sangakkara, a batsman who can hardly wait to call time on a prolific Test career, and while away the whole of next season at Surrey, rather than the batsman who needed it as evidence.Sangakkara: a world-class batsman comfortable with his CV; Pietersen, an equally world-class batsman bent upon rewriting one. Steve Davies, whose decision to abandon wicketkeeping last season, as good as ended his own England chances then added another one. His game looks as mature as it ever has as he batted alongside Sangakkara in a stand of 213 in 51 overs. Most of the crowd remained until a chilly evening began to set in.Glamorgan’s supporters fear that their seam attack is lightweight this season and the fact that Surrey racked up 363 for 3 did nothing to allay their fears. Their most potent bowler, the Australian Michael Hogan, is absent because of hamstring trouble. Meschede, a lively allrounder with most pedigree in one-day cricket, is not a permanent deal; Andy Carter has been loaned by Nottinghamshire for only a month. David Lloyd has only seven first-class wickets.Carter memorably grumbled as he left for Glamorgan that just because he had suffered injuries, that didn’t mean he was injury prone. Pietersen could try something similar: just because he has occasional strops, it doesn’t mean he is stroppy.He looked in bountiful form, bringing oohs and ahs when he easefully deposited Carter to the midwicket boundary, but a top-edged hook was the first sign of vulnerability before Meschede beat him on the drive.Pietersen’s ambitions should not be rubbished. Great players have a right to rage against the dying of the light, especially in Pietersen’s case when the candle has been extinguished by an ECB-inscribed snuffer. He has forced his quest to be taken seriously, the odds on an Ashes return tumbling from 25-1 to 2-1. Surrey players always accept the chance to speak well of him. But the PR company for the Caribbean Premier League still presumes he will be heading to St Lucia Zouks.This is an extraordinary phase in the rich history of Championship cricket. There must be thousands of brusque comments made in Yorkshire every day, and most of them cause only light bruising at most, but when Colin Graves, the incoming ECB chairman, pointedly responded that if Pietersen had England ambitions he had better start by playing some Championship cricket – more a statement of the obvious than anything else – it turned into into an invitation to dream.In less than three months, on July 8, the first Ashes Test takes place on this very ground. The big Grandstand which gives this ground a lopsided look, will be packed and the excitement will be palpable. He has arrived early, and imagined how it would feel. It would be remarkable if he was back for the real thing, a chapter in the history of England cricket that few could imagine.

Clarke (just about) survives Mornzilla

A blow-by-blow account of Morne Morkel’s fearsome attack on Michael Clarke

Jarrod Kimber in Cape Town01-Mar-2014Short ball.Ribs. 40.6.Morne Morkel bowled two of his first three balls to Clarke full. He bowled all three over the wicket. That was a massive waste of time and effort. That over didn’t start when Steyn went off after one ball, and it didn’t start with Morkel’s over the wicket ball in the corridor, it started when Morkel came around the wicket and slammed the ball into Clarke’s ribs. Clarke didn’t play it, he just clutched it to himself like an injured bird. There was now little chance of Morkel coming back over the wicket. Or Clarke getting tested with the full swinging ball.Short ball. Short ball. Elgar over.Arm. 42.3Morkel now had his aim right. It was somewhere between the arm pit and left nipple. Clarke was moving back and across and into the missile’s trajectory. He was a slow-moving target, and Morkel hit him right on the arm. It looked like, to paraphrase Clarke himself, “a broken f**ken arm”. Which is something that one of the South Africans might have mentioned to him. The super slow motion looked like a shock ad to teach you the lessons of not wearing arm guards. At the end of the over, when Clarke was touched by the physio, it looked like he’d rather not be.Warner tried to protect his captain by keeping strike a couple of times. One ball that Warner called two on Clarke just jogged the one to get back on strike. Clarke had moved back to No. 4. Clarke hadn’t made any runs. Clarke would not hide at the non-strikers end.Short ball. Short ball. Elgar over. Short ball. Short ball.Shoulder and head. 44.3.Clarke had had enough of standing upright and being hit, so he dropped to get under another ball on an armpit-nipple length. This time the ball didn’t quite get up, but Clarke couldn’t see as he had turned his head away, and the ball crashed into his shoulder. From there it ricocheted up into his jaw. Clarke tossed his bat, stumbled off the pitch and was surrounded by worried South Africans. None more so than Morne Morkel. Seemingly everyone within Cricket Australia with a first aid certificate came out to check on the captain. The cameras found Shane Warner looking worried on the balcony, an odd twist on the grieving wife shot. They decideed that Clarke is okay. After a few minutes, he faced up again.Hand. 44.4.The ball was straight back at him, Clarke flinched early, he took his eye off it, this time it hit his hand and flew straight up in the air. Clarke had no idea where the ball is. JP Duminy rushed in like a mad man from a deepish short leg, the ball beat him to the ground, but went very close to the stumps. Clarke could have been caught, Clarke could have been bowled, and Clarke could have had a broken hand. Clarke is under attack.Gut. 44.5.Clarke was now clearly over just being hit and decided to try the attacking option. The pull shot to get away from the short ball worked for him in Adelaide when England tried the same thing. This time he just sort of got hit around the gut as the ball ended up behind him.When Warner faced a short ball from Morkel it ended up smashing it’s way to the fine leg boundary between two fielders. The difference was as great between Warner and Clarke as it was between Mornzilla and Elgar Smurf. Everyone at the ground wanted to fast forward the Elgar overs or any balls when Warner was facing. No one even worried much about Steyn’s injury.Short ball. Elgar over. Short ball. Short ball. Short ball. Short ball. Elgar over. Short ball. Morne taken off.Thumb. 86.3.With the new ball Morkel achieved some sideways movement. And for a while, he pretended that Clarke was just another batsman. Clarke even pushed one through mid-on in what looked like very civilised cricket. More shockingly, Clarke smacked a pull through midwicket. But Clarke wasn’t just another batsman, and Morne went back to the beautiful barbaric nature of armpits around the wicket. Leg slip came back in smelling blood. And Morkel produced it with another ball that almost ripped the top of Clarke’s thumb off. Much time was taken to reattach the thumb nail. Blood was wiped away. And then Clarke took any chance he could to get off strike for the next ball, surviving a possible run-out and getting a well earned five.Finally Clarke could rest at the non-strikers end. He had nothing left to prove, and nothing left to injure. He had survived.

Schools give South Africa the edge

Higher standards in grassroots cricket, and warmer weather, are two vital advantages South Africa has over England

Will Hawkes31-Jul-2012Not all South Africans resent every run Kevin Pietersen scores against their side. “I’m very proud [of him] – every time he hits 100 I feel bloody happy for the bloke,” says Mike Bechet, who taught Pietersen cricket at school. “He’s gone beyond the idea of being a traitor. I just see him as a professional, the same as an accountant going to work in London. I’ve got no hang-ups about anyone playing for England. We’d rather they played for South Africa, but there you go.”Bechet and his fellow South Africans can afford to be magnanimous. It is no exaggeration to say that over the past half-dozen or so years, South Africans – or, to be more exact, Southern Africans – have done much to reshape and improve the English game.That’s most obvious in the role that Pietersen (for all his risible uncertainty about whether he wants to play one-day internationals) and Jonathan Trott have played in establishing England as the world’s foremost Test side. And then there’s Andy Flower; Bechet is probably not alone in his country in regarding England’s tough-nut coach as a South African, philosophically at least. “For Andy Flower, read Southern African,” he says.This advance in Test cricket has been matched by a similar revolution in county cricket, where an influx of tough, hard-working South Africans, be they Kolpak, overseas or English-qualified, has undoubtedly raised standards. “English cricket has come a long way in the last ten or 15 years,” says Surrey allrounder Zander de Bruyn, who has played extensively in both countries. “The cricket here is just as hard now as it is back home.”Among those who have done particularly well are Martin van Jaarsveld (who played for Kent under Graham Ford, when the club was jokingly referred to as Kent Free State) and Jacques Rudolph (once of Yorkshire, most recently of Surrey), both of whom were among the heaviest run scorers in the first decade of this century.Until the Kolpak regulations were tightened, it was not unusual to find five or six South Africans in a single county team: when Leicestershire faced Northamptonshire in a 50-over game in May 2008, there were 11 South Africans on the field.Few counties have felt short-changed. “I would think the majority of South Africans that have come to this country have given great service to county cricket,” says Brian Rose, director of cricket at Somerset. “There aren’t many examples of people that have gone home early, for example, or done badly. I can’t think of very many at all.”

A look at the England top order demonstrates how crucial schooling is, particularly for batsmen: those who didn’t grow up in South Africa (Andrew Strauss, Alastair Cook, Ian Bell) went to private school. They benefited from the sort of facilities that most cricket-loving youngsters can only dream of

Even now, in the post-Kolpak era, the three highest run scorers in the County Championship First Division (at the time of writing) were born in South Africa: Nick Compton, Ashwell Prince and Michael Lumb. And be in no doubt that there are still plenty of South Africans about. When Compton’s club Somerset hosted Middlesex in a Championship match in April this year, seven of the 22 players had been born in South Africa.Among them was Craig Kieswetter, the South Africa Under-19-turned-England one-day-international wicketkeeper. He is the brightest star in a gaggle of young England hopefuls with links to the land of Nelson Mandela.Anyone expecting the South African influx to end any time soon is likely to be disappointed. This also means that there have been fewer opportunities for cricketers raised in the UK. Some would say they have been hard done by, others that the standard of young cricketers in the UK is still not as high as it is in South Africa.That’s certainly the view of Rose. “Young South African cricketers seem to be two or three years advanced in both maturity and physical strength compared to people in the UK,” he says. It’s clear that while England has taken plenty from the Rainbow Nation, there are still lessons to be learnt about player development.Few people have a better insight into why this might be than Bechet, the first XI coach at Maritzburg College in KwaZulu-Natal since 1993. Bechet is also a selector for the South African Schools and Under-19 sides. He knows South African youth cricket inside out – and having presided over six schools tours of England since 1993, he understands the English game pretty well too.It is his view that England’s school cricketers still aren’t as tough as their South African counterparts, for all the apparent advances made in the professional game. For him, South African schools cricket is more competitive, more disciplined and – perhaps most controversially – more democratic than England’s system.”We’ve got a hell of a competitive school set-up here and guys go hard at each other,” he says. “We’ve got regular inter-school competition – there’s a lot at stake, there’s history behind it and people keep a close eye on who’s beating who. With no disrespect, because I think English cricket is in a great situation at the moment, the schools there don’t seem to be as competitive.”Some might question the significance of schools cricket. Does it matter that so many English schools appear to have forgotten cricket exists, for all the good work done by Chance to Shine? Don’t the clubs pick up the slack?A look at the English top order demonstrates how crucial schooling is, particularly for batsmen: those who didn’t grow up in South Africa (Andrew Strauss, Alastair Cook, Ian Bell) went to private school. They benefited from the sort of facilities that most cricket-loving youngsters can only dream of.To describe South African school cricket as democratic would be a stretch, perhaps, but it might be in a better state than England’s private-school dominated scene. In South Africa, a number of state schools (Maritzburg is somewhere in between: it is part of the government system but charges some fees) can compete on a level playing field with the private schools, even given the dismal legacy of apartheid.The English school that Bechet describes as “the yardstick of English school cricket” is, inevitably, a private one – Millfield in Somerset, where Kieswetter completed his education after he moved to England at the age of 17. Here, as in the professional game, a South African approach has reaped rewards, says Bechet.”They’re tough,” says Bechet. “I think [Millfield cricket coach and former England seamer] Richard Ellison has brought a toughness to that school because he’s worked in South Africa. He came out and played here a bit. I remember the first time we played them, he said, ‘My boys can learn a lot from you guys. Little things, like discipline, how we all dress the same on the field.'”Some may dismiss Bechet’s words as those of a proud South African, but the results of his school’s last tour to England, in 2010, bear him out: played 15, won 15. Eton were beaten by 102 runs, Wellington College by eight wickets, Millfield by 72 runs. These are scorelines that suggest Martizburg, at least, are significantly tougher than their English counterparts.Not everyone believes the superiority of South African youngsters is all down to a culture of high-intensity competition, though. The weather plays a key role too. South Africa’s warmer weather makes for better, more reliable wickets – crucial in a batsman’s development. “You get a sharp eye at an early age,” says Rose. “If you compare that to playing on some low wet wickets, dull wickets in England – it takes longer to develop. People are leaving school at the age of 18 in England who are still very young in nature.”Jacques Kallis plays with schoolkids in London during the 2008 tour•PA PhotosSeen in this light – or lack of it, in England’s case – it might be that South African-raised youngsters will always be a step ahead of their England counterparts because they’ve played more cricket, thanks to the weather. It’s a factor that de Bruyn noticed when his son was over last summer. “He always wants to be outside and playing, but when it’s raining you can’t really go outside,” he says. “They play more in South Africa because of the weather. People get outside more.”For all that English cricket is engaged in a constant losing battle with the weather, though, it’s undoubtedly true that the game at the top level has toughened up of late. Few can have failed to notice that the England players are fitter than ever and that they seem more focused than ever. The fact that it has become worthy of comment now when England field badly demonstrates the advances in professionalism that have been made.Bechet is not alone in thinking that this toughness has come from South Africa. One player, for him, demonstrates how England has cleaned up its act. Trott has drawn frequent criticism from English observers for his ponderous, sometimes ugly approach, but even his biggest critic must admit he has an enviable desire to win.It’s a desire to win that was honed on the fields of South Africa, Bechet says. “He is a bit of a nutter. When he was at school here at Rondebosch [a boys’ school in Cape Town], he was an aggressive bugger. I know that, I saw him. My teams have competed with him. He is tough, tough. I don’t want to say horrible little bastard, but you know what I’m saying? He fights you to the death.”The current series will undoubtedly be defined by a similar intensity, not least because both teams are cut from the same cloth. The English, though, face another battle away from the Test arena if they are ever to be able to thrive without a helping hand from the South African school system.

Learning experience for young captains

Both Suresh Raina and Dinesh Karthik were elevated to the captaincy due to injuries to their respective teams’ leaders. Here’s an analysis of how they went about their responsibilities

Jamie Alter at the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi19-Mar-2010Raina celebrates hitting the winning runs•Indian Premier LeagueShuffle rhythm

Raina began by taking a leaf out of Dhoni’s book of captaincy, but took it one step further. After Albie Morkel conceded nine runs off the first over, Raina brought on the offspinner R Ashwin. The idea was to cramp the left-hander David Warner, but the over cost ten runs. For the third over, Raina swapped Morkel for Joginder Sharma – the hero of the 2007 World Twenty20 final’s last over – and those six balls cost nine runs. The shuffling continued, as L Balaji became the fourth bowler in as many overs. The result was a wicket, as Warner mistimed a pull shot to be gobbled up by Hayden at midwicket. Raina was aware of Warner’s propensity for the pull shot, and put in a deep midwicket, regulation midwicket and square mid-on. The field placement worked a charm.You’ve got to always be aware, skip
Not all off Raina’s field placements were accurate. Off the sixth ball of the fifth over, Virender Sehwag banged a full ball down past mid-on for four. That should have been the end of the over, but the eagle-eyed umpire Billy Doctrove had spotted only three fielders in the ring instead of four, and duly signaled no-ball. Sehwag cashed in on the next ball, making room to carve Joginder past point and cover for four. Up came Delhi’s fifty. It was a black mark for Raina, for it cost nine runs.Catches win matches
He more than made up for his lack of tact with some sharp work in the field. Fielding at midwicket, Raina plucked two sharp chances in successive overs that ultimately made a big difference. The first catch Raina took was a sharp one to his left at midwicket, as Tillakaratne Dilshan skipped down and struck Muttiah Muralitharan very firmly. Five balls later, in Ashwin’s third over, Raina led by example with a reflex catch. AB de Villiers pulled powerfully and Raina fell to his right and plucked another good catch. With those wickets, Chennai stormed back into the game.Shot selection
Karthik looked in good nick, especially when using the dab and late cut to great effect with Raina not plugging third man, but he picked an ill-advised shot that led to his dismissal at a crucial period. Joginder pitched full and straight, Karthik bravely tried the paddle, missed, and was out lbw in the 17th over.Dilshan taken to the cleaners
It’s difficult to stop Hayden when he’s in such belligerent form, but did Karthik err by preferring a part-timer to a specialist spinner? Hayden was looking ominous with that Mongoose bat in his hands, and instead of his specialist slow bowler Amit Mishra, Karthik called on Dilshan’s part-time offspin for the eighth over. It was a bold move, but didn’t work. Hayden, at this time on 41 from 21 balls, thumped three sixes in a 21-run over.Field placements
Karthik made a smart adjustment to the field for the final ball of the seventh over, bowled by the debutant Umesh Yadav. With S Badrinath to face, Karthik called the man at midwicket in closer. Yadav dragged back the length, Badrinath went for a pull, and Mishra held the catch at short midwicket.Karthik to the rescue
This match was all about the bat – namely that Mongoose – hitting the ball and sending it over the boundary, but there was one other routine which stood out. Delhi’s bowlers bowled a number of wides to assist Chennai in their chase, and Karthik found himself leaping about to gather most of them cleanly. In the 12th over, standing up to Mishra, Karthik had to move sharply to his left side to stop a horror wide delivery running away. A few moments later, when Dirk Nannes sprayed the ball down Hayden’s pads, Karthik saved four byes by sidling down the leg side and then diving to gather the ball cleanly. He was at it again in the 15th over, making a clean take outside off when Yadav lost his radar. Shame for Delhi some of their fielders weren’t as sharp as their stand-in captain.Risking it
Karthik gambled for the first ball of the penultimate over, with Chennai needing just 16 runs to win. He brought mid-off and mid-on up in the circle for Sangwan, and M Vijay got a boundary off the first ball of the over with a little chip over mid-on. That was a decisive shot for the visitors.Raina the batsman trumped Raina the captain
Raina’s first 20 overs as captain didn’t exactly go too well, what with his side conceding 185, but he clearly took a deep breath during the brief innings change and came out to do what he does best. When Sangwan came back in the 11th over, Raina didn’t allow him to settle, cleanly swinging him for six over deep midwicket. He initially appeared eager to hit out, but smartly stepped down a gear with Hayden in murderous mood. Happy to play second fiddle, Raina took over when wickets fell. First ball after the strategic time-out, with Chennai needing 30 to win from 24 balls, Raina jumped out and slogged Mishra for six over midwicket. That hit had narrowed the equation significantly, and so Raina went back to gathering singles for the rest of the over. He hit boundaries to ease the pressure, and finally sealed the match with a six, a lovely lofted inside-out shot over extra cover to finish on 49 from 34 balls. What was most important for Chennai was that Raina batted right till the end.

Dattajirao Gaekwad, India's oldest Test cricketer, dies at 95

The former India captain and Baroda legend died of age-related illnesses

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Feb-2024Dattajirao Gaekwad, the former India Test captain and the country’s oldest living Test cricketer at the time of his passing, has died at 95. According to PTI, Gaekwad died at a Baroda Hospital on Tuesday morning of age-related ailments.Gaekwad, whose son Aunshuman also represented India, played 11 Tests between 1952 and 1961 and was captain during the 1959 tour of England. A right-hand batter, he finished with 350 Test runs at an average of 18.42, and his highest score of 52 came against West Indies in New Delhi in 1959.Gaekwad was known for his sound defence and his drives but also made a mark as a versatile fielder. He made his debut under Vijay Hazare’s captaincy at Leeds in 1952 during India’s first tour of England after independence. He started his India career as an opener but settled into the middle-order, with limited appearances in his ten-year international career. Gaekwad’s final appearance was against Pakistan at home in 1961.In the Ranji Trophy, however, Gaekwad was a pillar of strength to Baroda, representing them from 1947 to 1961. In all first-class cricket, he scored 5788 runs (36.40) and 17 centuries with a high score of 249 not out against Maharashtra in 1959-60, one of three double-centuries in his first-class career. Under his captaincy, Baroda also won the Ranji Trophy in the 1957-58 season, beating Services in the final.In 2016, Gaekwad had become India’s oldest living Test cricketer after the death of former batter Deepak Shodhan at the age of 87. The oldest living Test cricketer from India is now Chingleput Gopinath, the cricketer from Madras, who is 93 years and 349 days old.

Revealed: Why AC Milan have opted against signing 'average' Kyle Walker as right-back prepares for Manchester City return

AC Milan have seemingly opted against signing Kyle Walker, with an Italian football expert revealing their reasoning.

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  • Walker has been 'average' in Serie A
  • Milan decide against signing him permanently
  • Spent six months on loan in Italy
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Milan have reportedly taken the decision to allow Walker to return to City this summer, instead of exercising their £4 million ($5m) option to sign the right-back permanently. Daniele Fisichella, an Italian football expert, has explained that "average" performances and the club's failure to qualify for the Champions League have impacted their recruitment plans.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Milan are eighth in Serie A and lost the Coppa Italia final 1-0 to Bologna in midweek. As a result, the prospect of European qualification is all but dead, and Walker, as a result, is likely to head back to Manchester.

  • WHAT DANIELE FISICHELLA SAID

    Fisichella told talkSPORT: "With Kyle Walker staying at Milan, it was always dependent on Milan securing European football. Now Champions League football is out of the way. After yesterday's result, even Europa League football seems very, very unlikely. Therefore, I can understand why the club has taken this decision."

    He added, on Walker's wages: "Those 5 million euros would make him the second biggest earner in Milan's book, just behind Rafael Leo. And as I said before with Milan not playing not playing in Europe next season this is difficult for them to sign a 35 year old.

    "The numbers of Walker this season have been average at best zero goals, zero assist for Milan also for Manchester City to be fair. When you look at the stats in Serie A, in terms of tackles, duels won, passes in the final third, he's not among the top 20 defenders in Italy. He's not been bad, I don't remember him making any big mistakes or causing Milan any trouble that they didn't have anyway. When he's started, Milan have only kept three clean sheets.

    "So he's been average at best. The perception is that he's a player with a a lot of experience but of course he has lost the physical dominance, lost the pace, that made him excel in the Premier League for a long time."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Milan play Roma and Monza in their final two Serie A fixtures of the season. Their campaign has been a disaster, and Walker is unlikely to be sticking around.

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