Jofra Archer: 'I had a bit of a cry' on return to action in Barbados

England quick savours the emotions of his successful return after fearing he was a ‘burden’

Melinda Farrell06-Jun-2024

Jofra Archer savours the prospect of another World Cup match in Barbados•Getty Images

Jofra Archer had tears in his eyes as he surveyed the scene at Kensington Oval, about to represent England but, for the first time, in his motherland. When his name was announced at the start of the second over, his first in the match against Scotland, the cheering could hardly have been louder or warmer than if he had been wearing maroon.The loudest applause came from a large group of children in yellow uniforms, students of Archer’s , Christ Church Foundation. They had been given the day off lessons, along with students from Chris Jordan’s former school, to join friends and family and fans alike in welcoming the not-so-old boys home.”Yeah, it was a little bit emotional,” Archer said, speaking at Windward Cricket Club, just a stone’s throw from his Barbados home. “I had a little bit of water in my eye, a bit of a cry but I was just settling.”The prime minister invited us up to the box when [the match] got cancelled, but she said she pretty much cancelled school, and CJ’s old school, so the kids could come and watch us. It was really, really emotional. As I said earlier, I had a little bit of water in my eye and it wasn’t the rain. It was really, really nice. I saw a clip of one of the reporters as well – she went to primary school with me – and she was going around to people in the ground, by the statue, and that was touching. I felt really supported. I felt unbelievable.”Archer had avoided talking to the media ahead the game, preferring to concentrate on getting his return to Barbados under his belt.”Once you get the first ball out of the way, any nerves are gone,” he said. “You tend to forget everything else and just focus. I feel that’s the best way. There’s so much surrounding the cricket before you bowl a ball. So much goes into playing a game.”Certainly, a lot has gone into getting Archer ready for this tournament, so great is his value to the England side. Since he flew home from last year’s IPL and underwent surgery on his right elbow, his return has been carefully managed with England’s T20 World Cup defence in mind, the caution sharpened by his history of back and elbow injuries.Jofra Archer in action during the Scotland match•Getty Images

“It was just a little bit of luck because, you know, if we’d gone a little bit… it could have gone wrong,” he said. “Maybe I could peak too early and could have missed this. Or I didn’t get up to speed fast enough and I miss it again. So I just feel very lucky that everything had checked along with this block. Hopefully I can peak for all of it.”Archer raised eyebrows during England’s tour of the Caribbean last year when he was spotted playing a local league match for his old school during the Barbados leg of the series, apparently without the knowledge of the ECB. However, he said he had been careful to monitor his own levels to ensure a gradual return to action.”I’ve been playing cricket since November. I’ve been fit since November,” he said. “I’ve just been trying not to do too much or too little. Just trying to be okay for this period, for this summer. Just really glad that everything seems to be going all right. Not just this tour but to finish the summer and continue playing a part. Obviously it’s been a while. I don’t know how much rehab I have in me.”He signed a two-year contract with the ECB in October – he was offered three years but turned it down – and was anxious to return to the fold and repay the faith shown by England Men’s Managing Director, Rob Key.”I found it a little bit worrying, not really frustrating, because I was able to spend most of my rehab here,” he said. “I only live 150 metres from this ground right now, so being able to do your rehab, just get away from the noise back in the UK, was really good. I made a joke with Keysy as well earlier. I said ‘I’m really glad I’m back playing because I reckon I would have lost my contract in October’. And he laughed and said, ‘no you’re all right’.”Sometimes you feel like a burden not playing, and sometimes I’ve seen a few comments as well, people saying he’s on the longest paid holiday I’ve ever seen. You try to not let it get to you, but you can ignore 100 of them but sometimes that 101 is the straw that breaks the camel’s back. I’ve changed a lot of my social media stuff just so you don’t see a lot, but there’s a little that always filters through. But you’ve just got to keep going.”Jofra Archer speaks to the media ahead of England’s match with Australia•Getty Images

In March, Archer played his first competitive cricket since his elbow injury in Barbados. He felt he was fully fit from the first of five club matches. But it wasn’t until he bowled against Pakistan at the Oval in the fifth T20I that he knew his body was up to the rigours of international cricket.”It’s alright to train and it’s alright to play in games here, but to get that last 10% intensity and [feel] actually, the body is okay. You know when you are able to step it up and the body takes it, then that’s really, really refreshing.”Archer will not play Test cricket this summer. But his (hopefully) eventual return to Test cricket is being managed just as carefully as his rehab leading up to this tournament.”I’ve got a PDF file of every single game I’m supposed to play in from now till next summer anyway,” he said. “Yeah, they’ve really planned out almost everything. Probably the only thing they haven’t planned out is the showers I take. It’s been really, really good. Even when I wasn’t playing, they made me feel really involved as well. They sent me targets that I’d keep trying to tick off and it’s really nice that they’re actually falling into place, honestly.”Related

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England have one more match at Kensington Oval before moving to Antigua for the rest of their group matches, the highly anticipated clash with Australia that, after the washout against Scotland, may be crucial to their T20 World Cup hopes. The majority of fans will again be cheering, not just for England, but for one of their own. But there are a few extra guests Archer would like to sneak into Kensington Oval; his beloved dogs. Whether he can get them past security is another matter.”I can definitely try. I can put one of those service jackets on him and probably get caned, something like that.”The animal lover has added a couple of parrots to his menagerie, named Jessie and James. Not after the American outlaw, but for two characters in the Pokemon video game. They play for Team Rocket.England would dearly love to see Archer fire a few rockets of his own when they face Australia on Saturday.

Leeds make contact to sign free agent star who scored 23 goals this season

Leeds United are preparing for their return to top-flight football under Daniel Farke and may now look to muscle aside competitors to sign a clinical striker on a free transfer, according to a report.

Leeds look to add attacking prowess across front four positions

Scoring goals wasn’t a problem for Leeds on their way to securing promotion. However, there is a wider acknowledgement that creative intuition will be needed to break down some of the world’s most renowned defences next season.

Looking to add Premier League experience to the ranks, Daniel Farke has launched a move to bring Emiliano Buendia to Elland Road from Aston Villa following their successful relationship in tandem at Norwich City.

The Argentina international is open to making a switch to Leeds after a frustrating second half of the campaign on loan at Bayer Leverkusen, and murmurs are starting to accelerate that a £16.8 million offer could be forthcoming.

Joel Piroe did a fine job during the Whites’ promotion push. Nevertheless, attracting pedigree in all areas is a strategy Farke appears to be abiding by in a bid to beat the drop with plenty left to spare.

Evan Ferguson, Jamie Vardy and Callum Wilson are all Leeds targets, per various outlets, though it is unlikely they will be the only frontmen on the radar in Yorkshire.

Leeds United’s top scorers in 2024/25 – all competitions

Joel Piroe

19

Daniel James

12

Manor Solomon

10

Wilfried Gnonto

9

Largie Ramazani

7

Patrick Bamford and Joe Gelhardt have faded towards the fringes, and it is reasonable to expect that more options will be needed to ensure Piroe can share the goalscoring burden in the Premier League.

Following through on that mission, Farke’s men are now battling two top-flight competitors for a clinical striker who wouldn’t cost a penny.

Leeds United enter race to sign Davie Selke

According to The Daily Express, Leeds United are in the mix to sign experienced striker Davie Selke as his contract at Hamburg is set to expire at the end of this month.

West Ham United, Fulham and RB Leipzig are keen on the 30-year-old. At the same time, Watford linger in the distance despite being unlikely to secure his signature when Premier League and Bundesliga destinations are on offer.

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Enjoying a superb campaign where he helped Hamburg to secure promotion back to the German top-flight, the former Hertha Berlin man registered 23 goals in 33 appearances across all competitions.

Leeds have made contact to ascertain what Selke’s wage demands would look like, but they may need to rely on RB Leipzig pulling out of the race due to Red Bull owning a stake in both clubs.

Nevertheless, the former Germany Under-21 international would be an inexpensive way to strengthen their forward line during the off-season as Farke could some of his transfer budget towards addressing other areas.

Man Utd's plan to spend £100m+ on Jean-Philippe Mateta and Matheus Cunha

Manchester United are in contact to complete the signing of an “absolutely outstanding” Premier League player alongside their interest in Matheus Cunha.

Man Utd eyeing exciting attacking signings

Big changes are needed in the Red Devils’ attack at the end of the season, with too many players flattering to deceive throughout the 2024/25 campaign, including Marcus Rashford, Alejandro Garnacho and Rasmus Hojlund.

Manchester City youngster James McAtee has been linked with a move to United in the coming months, in a transfer that would no doubt cause some controversy, given the rivalry between the two clubs. A shock move doesn’t appear to be out of the question, though.

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola reacts withJamesMcAtee

Meanwhile, River Plate teenager Franco Mastantuono has reportedly been lined up as a long-term option for the Red Devils, with the 17-year-old potentially costing £38m, which is the amount of his release clause in his current contract.

United’s first signing of the summer could possibly be Wolves star Matheus Cunha, with some reports claiming that a deal is close to being agreed around his £62.5m release clause. That would be an exciting piece of business, and now a new update has emerged regarding another Premier League player who would make up a £100m+ strike force.

Man Utd in contact with "outstanding" Mateta to join with Cunha

According to Caught Offside, Manchester United have already made contact with Crystal Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta, as they look to get a deal over the line this summer. The Red Devils are looking to bring him in with Cunha – not instead of – and the £40m-rated Eagles attacker is described as a “top target” in the report.

Mateta showed exactly what he is capable of earlier this week, scoring a genuine goal of the season contender in Palace’s 2-2 draw away to Arsenal in the league. The 27-year-old produced a delightful lobbed effort over the head of the backtracking David Raya, with Jamie Carragher describing it as an “absolutely outstanding” piece of brilliance.

Mateta could be an excellent signing for United, coming in as an upgrade on Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee, with Thierry Henry praising him last year.

“He’s an old-fashioned striker, you can play a little more direct. He can keep the ball. He’s a boring striker to play against, he doesn’t lose the ball much, and he goes at the last defender. He uses his physicality, he’s good with his head, and he scores. It’s important that a striker like that gives you another dimension. He was also voted Player of the Year at Crystal Palace. It seems to me that he’s not too bad.”

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This season, Mateta has 14 goals to his name in the Premier League, which is more than Garnacho, Hojlund and Zirkzee combined (11), and at 27, he would be joining United at the peak of his powers, hopefully remaining that way for the next four or five years.

Real Madrid offer £34m and "exceptional" player to Chelsea for Fernandez

La Liga giants Real Madrid are prepared to make a part-exchange bid for Chelsea star Enzo Fernández this summer, with a report sharing who Florentino Perez is ready to send to Stamford Bridge alongside a cash offer.

Chelsea could now sign an attacking midfielder this summer

Christopher Nkunku, João Félix and Carney Chukwuemeka are very likely to be sold or loaned out by Chelsea when the transfer window reopens, and this means Enzo Maresca’s side could bring in another attacking midfielder.

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They’ve reportedly made a tempting proposal.

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That is according to reliable journalist Simon Phillips, who also explained that Chelsea would only have Cole Palmer as an option for the role if all three of the aforementioned players do end up leaving the club.

Everton (home)

April 26th

Liverpool (home)

May 4th

Newcastle (away)

May 11th

Man United (home)

May 16th

Nottingham Forest (away)

May 25th

This potential shortage even prompted Chelsea to hold internal talks over re-signing Kevin De Bruyne, who is set to leave Man City on a free contract in July, 11 years after José Mourinho let him depart Cobham for just £17 million.

Since then, it has been reported that Chelsea have cooled their interest in a free deal for De Bruyne (The Telegraph), despite their need for more experience in the squad and a new creator in the middle.

De Bruyne

In his most recent press conference, Maresca hinted that Chelsea require players with more years under their belt, sending a subtle message to the Blues hierarchy.

“When you have experience you have something more, no doubt,” said Maresca.

“But the ones that struggle in terms of experience this year, they have already won more in terms of experience. Next year they can be better. We are a better team today than two or three months ago because we went through this bad moment. And if you want to grow, you need this moment as a team. We are the youngest team in the Premier League. And the second [youngest] in Europe. For some games, we have on the bench three or four players [born in] 2006, 2007 or 2008. Do you see that? No. I see that.”

Real Madrid prepared to offer Chelsea £34m and Arda Güler for Enzo Fernández

According to reports in Spain, while hardly a player of experience, Chelsea could be offered the chance to reinforce their attacking midfield options.

Indeed, it is believed Real Madrid are targeting Maresca’s star midfielder, Fernández, and are prepared to launch a part-exchange bid for the Argentine – involving Turkey sensation Arda Güler.

Real are willing to offer Guler and £34 million to Chelsea in exchange for Fernandez, with the former starting their most recent La Liga game against Getafe and getting on the scoresheet.

However, overall, the 20-year-old has been used sparingly by Carlo Ancelotti, making the vast majority of his appearances off the bench. Guler has still managed four goals and seven assists in that time, impressing in some key games, but he’ll be keen for many more opportunities to start.

The ex-Fenerbache gem already carries a fearsome reputation as one of Europe’s most promising young talents, and Chelsea have displayed a real penchant to go for this type of signing over the last few seasons.

“Arda is showing great personality and exceptional quality,” said José Mourinho about Guler.

“To play at that club, personality is crucial. Players must internalize that they are good enough to play there. They can’t be afraid.”

135/223 – Harry Brook rewrites record books with one-man show

Harry Brook walked out at 5 for 3, which soon became 10 for 4 and 56 for 6 before his six-laden 101-ball 135 lifted England to some respectability

Sampath Bandarupalli26-Oct-202560.53 – Percentage of England’s total of 223 that came off Harry Brook’s bat as he scored 135. It is the highest contribution by a batter in a completed innings for England in men’s ODIs. The previous highest was 60.28 by Robin Smith, who scored an unbeaten 167 in England’s total of 277 for 5 against Australia at Birmingham in 1993.Brook’s contribution is also the sixth-highest by any batter in an all out innings in men’s ODIs.

135 – Brook’s score against New Zealand is the second-highest while batting at No. 5 or lower for England in ODIs. Jos Buttler scored 150 while batting at No. 5 against West Indies in 2019.Brook’s 135 is also the second-highest score for England in men’s ODIs in New Zealand, behind Jonny Bairstow’s 138 against New Zealand in Dunedin in 2018.3 for 5 – England’s score when Brook walked out to bat at the start of the third over. Only two other batters in ODI history have scored hundreds after starting with the team three down for fewer than ten runs – 105 by Sarfaraz Ahmed from 3 for 2 against England in 2016 at Lord’s and 103 by Yuvraj Singh from 3 for 5 against South Africa in 2005 at Hyderabad.

223 – England’s total in Mount Maunganui is the second-highest total in ODIs with eight batters dismissed for single-digit scores. The highest is 272 for 9 by West Indies against England in 1984, where Viv Richards scored an unbeaten 189.England’s 223 is also the second-highest total with only two of the 11 batters reaching double-figures. The highest is 292 for 9 by West Indies against South Africa in 1999, with Shivnarine Chanderpaul (150) and Carl Hooper (108) scoring hundreds.2 – Previous instances of a team going past the 200-run mark despite being four wickets down for ten or fewer runs in an ODI. India’s 266 for 8 against Zimbabwe in 1983 and Pakistan’s 262 for 9 against South Africa in 1997 came after being four down for nine runs.England’s 10 is their second-lowest at the fall of the fourth wicket in men’s ODIs, behind the 6 against Australia in Adelaide in 2018.

57 – Partnership runs between Brook and Luke Wood for the tenth wicket. It is the highest tenth-wicket stand for England in men’s ODIs, bettering the 53 by James Anderson and Steven Finn against Australia at Brisbane in 2011.11 – Sixes hit by Brook. Only two batters have hit more sixes in an ODI innings for England – 17 by Eoin Morgan against Afghanistan in 2019, while Buttler hit 14 against Netherlands in 2022 and 12 against West Indies in 2019.Brook’s 11 sixes are also the joint-third-highest by any batter in an ODI in New Zealand.3 – Sixes off consecutive balls by Brook to bring up his hundred – from 86 to 104. Since the start of 2002, only one other batter has reached his hundred with a hat-trick of sixes in ODIs – Glenn Maxwell against Netherlands in the 2023 World Cup, while Shubman Gill did the same to bring up his double-hundred against New Zealand in 2023 (where ball-by-ball data is available).

Shan Masood quietly steps out of the shade in his newest avatar

Pakistan’s new Test captain is someone who has found a way through several obstacles over the years

Danyal Rasool13-Dec-20234:32

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For a man who often doesn’t seem to be around, Shan Masood is always there. Like that character in a soap opera the credits list as recurring but you could swear features more than most main characters, every seminal moment in Pakistan Test cricket appears to have Masood involved. You think the writers have killed him off, the character arc they’ve plotted surely rendering another yet another return impossible. And then he’s reimagined into existence once more. Shan Masood the debutant, the promising opener, the useful number three, the cool, collected presence in the dressing room.And then you look up, and underneath a blazing early afternoon sun in Perth, he’s stood next to Pat Cummins, the gold Benaud-Qadir Trophy gleaming between them. He’s talking to Cummins about the pitch, and how spicy he expects it to be (“very,” in case you wondered). He’s addressing a smattering of reporters, not quite the throng that crowded around Cummins (the decision to hold the captains’ press conferences on the outfield meant no one stayed longer than they absolutely needed to), but about a dozen nonetheless. He’s talking about leadership, legacy, the Pakistan Way, and Usman Khawaja’s shoes. The most dramatic reincarnation – Shan Masood the Test captain.How did this happen? How does anything happen in Masood’s career, really? He only returned to the Test side five matches ago – something that has felt true about every little stint he’s had in the side. He didn’t set the world alight, though he did score a half-century, his first in over three years, most of which – you guessed it – he spent out of the side. In that time, he was appointed ODI vice-captain, despite not playing any ODI cricket for three years, and then immediately dropped from the ODI side.Related

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Even when he’s not there – and he’s not there a lot, too – Masood is never far away from Pakistani consciousness. The languid elegance that laces his purple patches has supporters swearing his record has never been representative of his quality, his soft-spoken demeanour often touted as an invaluable quality in an oft-frenetic dressing room, his obsessive work ethic to get the best out of his ability regularly cited as the example senior pros should look to set. And he’s never far from selectors’ minds, either; despite playing only 30 of the 78 Test matches Pakistan have played since his debut, he’s the only player in this side to have played at least one Test match every year since 2013. If he was a club footballer, he’d be due a testimonial by now. Only Sarfaraz Ahmed has been around longer.And for all the talk of a posh, effete upbringing cynics have termed totemic of the institutional favouritism that pervades most Pakistani institutions, you don’t survive a decade in Pakistan cricket without the sort of steely resolve only the most mean-spirited would deny Masood possesses. A debut 75 against an attack comprising Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander, Morne Morkel and Jacques Kallis made that evident, a fourth-innings hundred to seal a world-record chase in Sri Lanka cast it in stone. Two Test matches later, he was out in the cold again, and the following three returns to the side lasted two, one and two matches respectively.The only stable run he would be allowed in the team came thanks to an injury to Haris Sohail on the morning of a Centurion Test; Masood was thrust in at number three minutes before the toss. The accidental starter would become an unlikely star for Pakistan on an otherwise dismal tour, finishing second on the overall run-charts in a series Pakistan lost 3-0, with every Test done before lunch on the fourth day.It was followed up with respectable outings in Brisbane and Adelaide the following year in arguably the most dismal of several dismal Pakistan tours to Australia. He got starts in all four innings and a gritty second-innings 68 in Adelaide, demonstrating resistance few of his contemporaries were able to muster. Masood may have been offered more opportunities in life than most of his contemporaries but it shouldn’t need saying that Stomford School or Durham University don’t quite prepare you for the baptism of fire in South Africa and Australia.Shan Masood spoke to reporters on the Perth outfield on the eve of his first Test as Pakistan captain•Getty ImagesBut Masood’s mild mannerisms and generally inoffensive demeanour hasn’t inoculated him from criticism. A frosty relationship with Babar meant he didn’t ingratiate himself with Babar’s supporters in the wake of the former captain’s reluctant resignation and Masood’s ascendancy. And while some of it was directed at Masood the cricketer, Masood the human being wasn’t spared either; a touching social media post marking the anniversary of the passing of his sister was met with plenty of hate and limited sympathy.And while Masood’s record makes him a lightning rod for critique – ridicule, even – when he assumes the captaincy, he has simply done the one thing you need to do in Pakistan to get your chance: hang around. Most cricketers would fade away into obscurity after being cast aside by the system so frequently, but Masood has relentlessly forced himself into the conversation. If red-ball runs dried up, he was tearing it up on the List A circuit.If that didn’t work, he was captaining Multan Sultans to the PSL final, and winning the tournament the following year. If Pakistan wasn’t working out, he made his way to the County Championship in England. There is high regard for his analytical abilities in cricket; at the 2021 T20 World Cup, he did some broadcast work for ESPNcricinfo. At the same tournament the following year, he was Pakistan’s top-scorer in the World Cup final.Masood can wear a lot of hats and look equally comfortable in them all, but today, as he slipped on the green blazer on a searing hot day, he will likely never have felt as good about himself. The one hand he placed on the trophy may be as close as he gets to it all month. But this side already appears as if it’s moulded in its captain’s image, irresistibly watchable while being replete with obvious limitations they will do their best to conceal.As soon as the open-air press conference was done, Masood walked down the tunnel out of sight; perhaps aptly, he had left as soon as he’d arrived. He’d nailed it as usual, speaking at length while creating as little news as possible. He was coy about team selection, even-handed on Pakistan’s style of play, and reticent to be drawn into the messaging on Khawaja’s shoes. There was no goodbye as he walked away; it is Masood after all, and he was bound to be back.Sure enough, a half hour later, a glance down the media box revealed a figure emerging over the boundary towards where the Pakistan team was huddled. There was no green blazer this time, just a Pakistan training kit as he walked over and took his place among his teammates. Yet another hat, same old Shan Masood.

Justin Langer has a little apocalypse now and then

But he’s armed with quotes and ready to rise from the Ashes

Alan Gardner15-Oct-2021Time to check in on the latest update from Australia’s head coach and inspirational-quotes-googler-in-chief, Justin Langer, whose three-year voyage into the “heart of darkness” – aka the Australia men’s team dressing room – seems to be heading towards its natural conclusion.For those who haven’t been following, Langer’s idiosyncratic approach has been a beautiful gift to world cricket, from the moment he took charge of Australia’s first post-Sandpapergate tour and proudly declared that he sledges his own daughter at UNO. Now, to add to barefoot walks on the outfield, “elite mateship” and various other eccentricities, Langer has delivered a social media post from quarantine in the UAE that includes such gems as: “A wise man once said: Don’t give them a taste of your own medicine. If they lied, let their medicine be honesty… Stay true to yourself… Who you are lasts a lifetime. Who you pretend to be changes like the change of seasons… The wise man says: BE YOURSELF. YOU ARE UNIQUE and YOU ARE SPECIAL.”All good advice, for sure, but unlikely to help when it comes to STRIKE ROTATION against SPIN during the MIDDLE OVERS.It’s hard not to think that Langer is playing himself into the Colonel Kurtz role here. For a start, the intensity, the mysticism, the commitment to fully inhabiting the part – it’s all very Brando. And there’s no doubt that Langer has been, figuratively speaking, a long way up the Mekong river for some time. You can almost imagine the exchange with the unfortunate Cricket Australia staffer sent up to check on the coach, shrouded in the flickering half-light of his hotel room: “Did they say why they want to terminate my command? Are my methods unsound?”Of course, the real theatre of phoney war that concerns Australia is the Ashes – and Langer’s loyal lieutenant, Tim Paine, was manning the barricades back home, responding to the latest round of protracted negotiations to confirm England’s touring arrangements by deploying his familiar brand of somewhat-confusing smack talk. “No one is forcing you to come. If you don’t want to come, don’t come. The Ashes are going ahead.” As things stand, the series is on, pending the ECB being satisfied on “several critical conditions” – presumably one of which is that Paine never speaks on the subject again.Here’s hoping that Langer has emerged blinking into the light wearing a beatific smile well before then, having successfully banished some of his demons while at the T20 World Cup. Although, given Australia’s T20I fortunes in Bangladesh earlier this year, the Light Roller fears “the horror… the horror” could well end up being a fairly accurate tagline.

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For those worrying that the greatest finisher who ever finished might be, well, finished, it was a case of bing, boom in the IPL’s first qualifier earlier this week. But that doesn’t mean we aren’t about to enter another MS Dhoni retirement spiral. Oh no. “You’ll see me in yellow next season but whether I’ll be playing for CSK you never know,” Dhoni said gnomically at the toss for Chennai’s final game in the group stage, before a doddery 12 off 15 suggested he really might be on his way. Maybe his mind was already turning towards the next stage of his career – be it as a lollipop man, @CricSuperFan tribute act, or a role in the next Minions movie – but whatever happens in the IPL final, remember, it’s only over when Mahi says it is.

****

News of New Zealand pulling out of their tour of Pakistan, and then England following suit a few days later, was sadly predictable. What we didn’t see coming was Ramiz Raja stepping up to lend some gravity to the whole sorry business. For those who remember Ramiz the commentator chiefly as a talking haircut that you wished would stop talking, his eloquent denunciation of the “western bloc”, which had failed in its obligation to look after the rest of the “cricket fraternity”, came as something of a surprise. So wrong-footed was the ECB that Ramiz’s opposite number, chairman Ian Watmore, gave some widely ridiculed comments about not knowing the USA was going to pull out of Afghanistan (okay, we’ve all tried to forget a lot of what Donald Trump said) and then agreed to step down from the job. Cricket administrators of the world had better watch their step: Rambo means business.

As bad as Pope: Howe must drop 4/10 Newcastle dud who made just 14 passes

It’s one step forward and two steps back for Newcastle United, who were defeated on the road in the Champions League against Marseille, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang at the double.

Eddie Howe’s side responded with vim and vigour after the international break to beat Manchester City at St. James’ Park, but this served as a sobering reminder that there is much work to be done away from Tyneside, with the Toon having won only one game away from home all season.

Harvey Barnes’ fine form continued as he swept home from close range only minutes into the affair, but United failed to channel their counter-attacking approach and were ultimately overwhelmed by the French hosts.

It was a frustrating performance, epitomised by the woes of Nick Pope between the sticks.

Why Howe must consider dropping Nick Pope

Pope joined Newcastle from Burnley for about £10m in 2022, and he has since. This season, he has started all 12 of the Magpies’ Premier League fixtures, though he has failed to keep a clean sheet across five successive matches.

There have been tenuous calls to drop the 33-year-old all year, but these are rising in volume and intensity, and the veteran’s mistake in France will only fan those flames, with United losing clarity and conviction in their performance after the gaffe.

Given that Aaron Ramsdale is patiently waiting in the wings, having been signed on loan this summer, there’s justification for dropping Pope going forward, it may be that Howe needs to drop his mainstay between the sticks and start to rewire his defence, as has already started through the likes of Malick Thiaw and full-backs Lewis Hall and Tino Livramento.

Newcastle still have three wins from five in the Champions League this season, and may yet find the form to seal a place in the automatically-qualifying top eight.

But Howe does need to continue to chop and change, and Pope isn’t the only one whose starting berth is at risk.

Newcastle star is now relegated to the bench

At the end of the 2023/24 campaign, Anthony Gordon was awarded Newcastle’s Player of the Year. But last year was a testing one for the England international, in contrast with United’s resurgence, and he has fallen further into the mire since the summer.

Against Marseille, Gordon’s woes continued as he proved utterly ineffectual in a makeshift centre-forward role.

Writer Firdie Idris remarked that the decision to field Gordon, a pacy left winger, as a central striker “never works”, and his display against Marseille only corroborated that claim.

In his central berth, Gordon only created one chance and hit the target with only one shot. He didn’t even attempt a dribble and won only one of five duels, as per Sofascore. He also completed just 14 passes as an isolated figure in Howe’s offensive line.

Penning their post-match thoughts, The Shields Gazette could only hand the Three Lions star a 4/10 match rating, criticising him for being on the back foot throughout the contest.

Matches (starts)

7 (7)

5 (5)

Goals

0

4

Assists

0

1

Touches*

35.4

39.2

Shots (on target)*

2.0 (0.7)

2.2 (1.0)

Accurate passes*

14.7 (80%)

16.4 (77%)

Chances created*

1.0

0.4

Dribbles*

1.4

1.4

Ball recoveries*

2.6

3.2

Tackles + interceptions*

0.7

1.4

Duels (won)*

4.7 (49%)

4.0 (41%)

Truthfully, Gordon has been out of sorts all season. Prolific on the continent, he has yet to kindle any semblance of good form on the domestic front, and this was not a display to imbue within him a kind of confidence that will be needed ahead of Premier League clashes against Everton and Tottenham Hotspur.

Given that Gordon is one of Newcastle’s most profitable players, there’s reasoning behind the call to cash in down the line. Certainly, given the need for further investment over the coming transfer windows, it’s something PIF might consider as Barnes continues to go from strength to strength.

In any case, Gordon needs to raise his level. He is one of the outfit’s most talented players and is horribly underperforming. Like Pope, Howe would be wise to drop him for the forthcoming fixtures and rekindle his will to win.

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1 ByAngus Sinclair Nov 25, 2025

World Cup No.7 & more history for Cristiano Ronaldo? Stunning prediction from ex-Portugal team-mate as evergreen GOAT considers ‘goodbye at home’

Cristiano Ronaldo is being backed to grace a seventh World Cup, with FIFA’s flagship event heading to Portugal – as one of several co-hosts – in 2030. If the all-time great were to make that event, then more history would be made. Nuno Gomes can see that prospect appealing to CR7, with a contract extension having already been signed at club level with Al-Nassr.

  • Evergreen Ronaldo: CR7 still going strong at the age of 40

    Those terms are only through to 2027, with it yet to be determined what Ronaldo will do beyond that point. He has starred in the Saudi Pro League, with remarkable individual standards being maintained at 40 years of age.

    He continues to make himself available at international level, with 226 caps being earned while scoring 143 goals. Ronaldo continues to chase down 1,000 career strikes – with the record books being rewritten.

    Ronaldo has stated that next summer’s World Cup will be his last, but anything is considered possible where the former Manchester United and Real Madrid superstar is concerned. He has kept himself in the best possible shape and made no secret of the fact that he wants to continue for as long as possible.

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    Home World Cup: Ronaldo backed to make 2030 finals

    Portugal will stage games at the 2030 World Cup alongside Spain and Morocco – with group stage matches also heading to Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay. On Ronaldo bowing out on home soil, former team-mate Nuno Gomes told : “It's a difficult question. I think only him, or maybe not even him, knows the answer because I think he is doing year by year at this age.

    “I think he's still fit to play. He's a really professional player and one of the players that we can point him as an example to follow? For the young generations. But of course he has his age and his capacity is reduced in some qualities, in speed for example. He's not the same Cristiano when he was 18 or 20, but he's still capable to score goals, and in football, it's the most important thing, to score goals and he's still scoring.

    “Of course I think it also depends on the coach. Right now we have Roberto Martinez and I think he adapts the team, having him in the first 11 or not. So I think it will depend on his will, to play more or not. But probably I could tell that it could be his last World Cup. Even though we know that in four years we are hosting some games. And maybe it could be an opportunity to say goodbye at home.”

  • Euro 2028 and beyond: When will Ronaldo retire?

    Ronaldo’s former United colleague Wes Brown told GOAL recently when asked if CR7 will play on to Euro 2028: “If he can bring something to the squad, why not pick him? Does that mean he has to play every game? Look at the last competition, everyone was saying he shouldn’t play but he did ok. He knows the press are going to give him stick anyway as soon as he doesn’t score or give an assist. At the same time, he is still there for his younger team-mates and wants them to do well.

    “In his mind he won’t be finished yet and he can still contribute to the team. I don’t think he will retire from international football until he has retired completely. He’s still got the energy, that same belief, and can still do it. There are not many people that can say that at that level.”

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    Another record for Ronaldo? Oldest player to grace a World Cup

    If Ronaldo were to play towards another major tournament beyond the next European Championship, then he would head into his mid-40s. He will be 41 when representing his country at next summer’s event in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

    The oldest player to make an appearance at the World Cup finals is ex-Egypt goalkeeper Essam El Hadary, who faced Saudi Arabia in 2018 aged 45 years and 161 days. Ronaldo would be 45 years and 166 days old by the time the 2030 competition comes to a close.

فرجاني ساسي بعد خروج تونس من كأس العرب: لم يحالفنا التوفيق.. وسنركز على الإيجابيات

عبر فرجاني ساسي لاعب منتخب تونس، عن حزنه لعدم التأهل إلى دور ربع نهائي بطولة كأس العرب، رغم الفوز على قطر. 

وفاز منتخب تونس على نظيره القطري، بثلاثية نظيفة، في المباراة التي جمعت بين الفريقين، ضمن منافسات الجولة الثالثة والأخيرة من بطولة كأس العرب.

طالع.. فيديو.. بن رمضان يقود تونس للفوز على قطر بثلاثية ويودعان كأس العرب رسميًا

وفشل منتخب تونس في التأهل إلى ربع نهائي بطولة كأس العرب، بعد احتلاله المركز الثالث في المجموعة برصيد 4 نقاط. 

وقال فرجاني ساسي في تصريحات على قناة “الكأس”: “أهدارنا نقاطًا أول مباراتين، ولعبنا على حظوظنا لآخر لحظة، سنبني على الأشياء الإيجابية وليست السلبية”.

وأضاف: “شكرًا جدًا لجماهيرنا، كأس العرب بطولة مفيدة وتحضير لكأس أمم إفريقيا، كنا نريد تحقيق نتائج إيجابية”. 

وتابع: “لعبنا لآخر لحظة وآخر مباراة كان من الممكن أن نسجل أهدافًا أكثر أمام قطر”. 

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