Ambitious move on £7.2m-rated England man would be just what the doctor ordered for Leeds

The Tavern has been active of late as Leeds fans continue to read about the possible transfers involving the club. Since Bielsa has joined, Leeds have been linked with a host of players and there’s another one they should consider.Â

When you’re behind, Roberto Firmino, Sadio Mane, and Mohamed Salah, it’s going to be quite difficult to get a game for Liverpool. The front three were outstanding last season and due their consistent performances, the likes of Dominic Solanke and Danny Ings have been spending most of the time on the bench. As a result, Sky Sports confirmed this month that the latter will be allowed to leave this summer.

The Liverpool striker has endured a tough time at Liverpool due to two seriousÂknee injuries. His return against West Brom in April was only his second start for Jurgen Klopp and ended a 930-day wait for a Liverpool goal.

According to ESPN, Leeds had been interested in signing the former Burnley man last year and a move for Ings this summer might be a wise move.

Leeds need to strengthen their attacking options and have been heavily linked with a move for Derby striker, Matej Vydra. While the Championship’s top goal scorer would be a superb signing, the Lily Whites should still consider a move for Ings who may be available for a cut-price fee.

A loan move for the forward may not be the best option for the Yorkshire club considering Ings’ likely high wages but signing a player who scored 32 goals in 75 league games for Burnley, would signal Leeds’ intent for the upcoming season.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

So Leeds fans, should the club try to sign Danny Ings?

Player Ratings: The three players who impressed England fans most versus Panama

England further elevated the sudden optimism surrounding this young and promising side on Sunday by obliterating Panama 6-1 in their second World Cup Group G clash. The win ensured England’s place in the first knockout round but much more than that, it also instilled real belief in a new breed of Three Lions player who appear brave and technically gifted enough to play attacking football at major international tournaments.

After the match, we asked England supporters to issue performance ratings for each of those involved in the 6-1 victory. Here’s a rundown of the three players who impressed Three Lions fans the most, picking up the highest average scores out of ten…

Kieran Trippier – 7.4: He was arguably more effective against Tunisia with those Beckham-esque deliveries from out wide but the Tottenham star played a key hand in getting England on the front foot on Sunday, setting up John Stones for the early opener with another precision ball from a corner. Few right-backs or right wing-backs have impressed as much as Trippier at the World Cup so far.

What do you think of the World Cup so far? Let us know and win any World Cup shirt of your choice.

Harry Kane – 7.8: The Tottenham talisman may have bagged a hat-trick but it appears his overall performance didn’t resonate that loudly with England supporters. In fairness, Kane notched up two penalties before claiming the match ball with the most fortuitous of flicks, deflecting a Ruben Loftus-Cheek shot to send the Panama goalkeeper the wrong way.

Jesse Lingard – 7.9: The roaming No.8 slots have been a key feature of Southgate’s England setup and Lingard particularly has thrived in the role, showing off not only his quality on the ball but also his relentless energy in pushing on from midfield to join the attack. The Manchester United ace was a crucial component of Sunday’s win as well – claiming the foul that allowed Kane’s first spot kick before curling an absolute beauty into the back of the net. He now appears to be one of the first names on Gareth Southgate’s team sheet.

View the results in full below…

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

Gayle walks on air as West Indies fly back

Chris Gayle whipped up the fifth fastest century by balls faced in Test history as West Indies refused to be blown over on a dramatic and heated day in Perth

The Bulletin by Peter English17-Dec-2009West Indies 2 for 214 (Gayle 102, Dowlin 55) trail Australia 7 for 520 dec (Katich 99, Watson 89, Haddin 88, Hussey 82, North 68) by 306 runs

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were outNo, Chris, we should be bowing at you: Gayle kneels down to mark his awesome century•Getty Images

Chris Gayle whipped up the fifth fastest century by balls faced in Test history as West Indies refused to be blown over on a dramatic and heated day in Perth. Gayle unleashed the controlled fury of a captain who had watched his bowlers struggle for penetration with a 70-ball hundred that catapulted his side to 2 for 214, a promising collection which still leaves them 306 behind.Australia felt chirpy after declaring at 7 for 520 but were soon silenced by Gayle’s hot blade as he clumped 102 within 25 overs. The WACA has hosted some brutal innings and this one probably included the biggest six at the ground, with one of his straight sixes off Nathan Hauritz landing on the roof of the towering Lillee-Marsh Stand.That rocket, which was powered by his charge down the pitch and a free-flowing swing, took him to 91 and it was appropriate that his century came with another six, this one sailing over the sightscreen. It was his fourth clearance off Hauritz and sixth of the innings, prompting him to drop to his knees for a praiseworthy celebration. Everyone watching deserved to be bowing down at him.After a hard-working, unbeaten 165 in Adelaide, which re-floated his side after their three-day defeat in Brisbane, Gayle followed up in his traditional style. This was a batsman preening and flexing, exterminating the frustration of time in the field.Sulieman Benn, the giant spinner with a seriously grumpy alter ego, had signalled that West Indies would not slip away meekly when he started a lengthy confrontation with Brad Haddin that ended with Mitchell Johnson pushing the bowler away. Gayle then showed the right sort of aggression for a modern cricket field, an innings containing defence and leaving with Twenty20-style explosions thrown in.Gayle is without two of his best batsmen – Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Adrian Barath are out injured – on a surface with a reputation for supporting fast bowlers. He didn’t care. His team might look fragile but he was not going to be pushed around. Four boundaries were taken in Johnson’s opening two overs to set Gayle’s tempo and he would calm down only momentarily.The debutant Clint McKay was initiated with a four in front of point first ball and returned after tea to be swatted down the ground and lifted for a six to long-on. Gayle barely followed through and with his score on 79 from 46 balls there was a chance he could tackle Viv Richards’ record of 56 deliveries. It didn’t happen but, like Adam Gilchrist’s 57-ball effort in Perth during the 2006-07 Ashes, it didn’t matter.Strokes that would usually wedge in the mind were replaced at the speed of a wedding-ceremony slideshow. When Gayle flicked Doug Bollinger over square leg to bring up his half-century from his 34th ball it seemed like the shot of the series. An effortless swing cleared the fence on one of the world’s biggest grounds and the batsman’s heart-rate would not have fluttered. More grunt followed the grace.

Smart Stats

  • Australia’s total of 520 is the second-highest score that did not feature a single century. Only India’s score of 524 for 9 declared against New Zealand is ahead on the list and featured six fifties against Australia’s five.

  • Marcus North and Brad Haddin scored the 14th and 15th half-centuries for Australia in this series, but the hosts are yet to register a hundred.

  • Chris Gayle’s century was the fourth for the visitors in the same time.

  • If the Australian batsmen fail to register a century in the second innings, this would become only the ninth time that Australia have gone through a series of at least three matches without a century.

  • The 15 half-centuries Australia have scored is already the highest scored by any team in a Test series where it did not score any centuries.

The Australians were in shock and awe, especially Hauritz, who will do well not to have nightmares of Gayle’s right leg stepping down at him. Ricky Ponting kept Hauritz on hoping for a mis-hit, and there was an edge on 81 that was spilt by Michael Clarke at first slip. If Gayle missed a century it would have been a bigger crime than the physical confrontation of Benn and Johnson.He didn’t and after such carnage his dismissal was as weak as the winds in the eye of a storm, a limp waft at a short ball floating to Shane Watson at point. Bollinger was the bowler but the noise that followed was for Gayle’s innings of 72 deliveries, which also had nine forgotten fours. As he exited to the first ball of the 24th over he had all but 34 off his side’s 136.Travis Dowlin was the almost silent partner but his 55 was hugely valuable until he scooped a catch to gully off Johnson. By stumps the tourists had Ramnaresh Sarwan on 42 and Narsingh Deonarine on 10, while Johnson, McKay and Hauritz were left to tend their bruises.It was a day for runs, none of which went to Ponting. He did not bat due to his injured left elbow, but closed the innings midway through the second session after Haddin had built on the work of Watson, Simon Katich, Michael Hussey and Marcus North. On another day Haddin’s 88 from 91 balls would have been the most memorable and North’s confident 68 would have been discussed with appreciative nods. Sorry, but Gayle’s special circumstances relegated them to small mentions.Australia resumed the second day at 3 for 339 and quickly lost Hussey for 82, with Haddin soon doing his best to impersonate Gilchrist. Gayle did a better job, but Haddin’s collection was important in inflating Australia’s total, which is still intimidating despite West Indies’ forceful reply.Haddin threatened to become the first Australian of the series to score a hundred, but instead became the 15th local to reach a half-century during a purposeful innings that gained intensity with his elongated debate with Benn. The complicated exchange inadvertently brought in Johnson when the bowler pointed at Haddin and accidently brushed his partner’s shoulder.It had all begun when Haddin took offence at Benn and Johnson running into each other when the bowler was fielding in his follow-through. The ultimately harmless episode was an unnecessary and ugly period that showed both teams have some fight left after three weeks of play. It didn’t help Benn though, as he returned 1 for 87 off 28 overs, but added to the excitement of a breathless day.

Mysore to host Ranji Trophy final

The Ranji Trophy final between Karnataka and Mumbai will be played at the Gangotri Glades Stadium in Mysore, and not at Bangalore’s Chinnaswamy Stadium

Siddarth Ravindran at the Chinnaswamy Stadium 06-Jan-2010The Ranji Trophy final between Karnataka and Mumbai will be played at the Gangotri Glades Stadium in Mysore, and not at Bangalore’s Chinnaswamy Stadium. This will be the first Ranji final since 1996-97 to be held away from the primary venue of the hosting association but it’s clear the hosts have decided to back their bowlers on a pitch likely to have pace and bounce.”The centre wicket is being regrassed here [Bangalore], that’s why they are not able to give us a good bouncy track,” Karnataka coach Narasimha Sanath Kumar said at the Chinnaswamy Stadium soon after the semi-final against UP. “Our strength is fast bowling. It is a little difficult for the fast bowlers here and that (Mysore track) probably will be a better one.”Mysore has already hosted a league match and the quarter-final against Punjab this season, and both games drew decent crowds. Rahul Dravid, the Karnataka captain, had no apprehensions about a small city hosting perhaps the biggest match in the domestic calendar.”I’m sure the game will be very well supported, there will be a lot of crowd on all the days,” he said. “It will be a great advertisement for the game, it’s a good chance to develop the infrastructure at Mysore and take the game away from the big cities and to the smaller towns, which I feel is where the future of the Ranji Trophy is.”It was Dravid’s chanceless double-century that virtually shut UP out of the semi-finals, and Karnataka are still fretting over his availability for the finals, which ends on the 15th. India’s first Test against Bangladesh starts two days later. Last-ditch efforts were still on to advance the final by a day, so that it finishes on the 14th, which will make it easier for Dravid to participate.”I’ve had a chance to speak to the Indian team management and they expect me to be in Dhaka by the 15th evening, latest,” he said. “To do that, it (the Ranji final) will probably have to be preponed by a day, if not, it may not be possible.”Dravid has only played in four of Karnataka’s eight matches this season, and even without him the state has steamrolled opposition. That left coach Sanath confident, irrespective of Dravid’s availability. “Obviously it’ll make a big difference if he’s there,” Sanath said, “but we have won outright three out of the four matches when he didn’t play.”

England Women beat India Women by 90 runs to secure third place

England women have beaten India women in the Women’s Cricket World Series at
Lincoln, New Zealand today by 90 runs in the play off for third and fourth
place

ECB Media Release25-Dec-2009England women have beaten India women in the Women’s Cricket World Series at
Lincoln, New Zealand today by 90 runs in the play off for third and fourth
place.The win means England move up the world rankings, from their position of
fifth at the last world cup in 2000, to third.England Captain, Clare Connor speaking after the match said “it was
fantastic to beat India by such a convincing margin today after yesterday’s
victory off the last ball. Our overall game was excellent today with
Kathryn Leng batting superbly for 80. We have discussed the need to post
190 plus as a winning total.The bowlers then bowled aggressively, and straight, as we have talked about
and the whole team effort in the field was first class. As it turned out,
today’s game was the most important match of the tournament for us because
we had a chance to move up the rankings to third in the world; and we took
that opportunity”.England won the toss and elected to bat, having defended a winning score of
208 against India team. Today, England were all out for 191; Kathryn Leng
making 80 from 109 balls, her highest one-day score for England. India
missed two chances to run her out, when she was on 25 and again on 38, but
Leng remained composed and drove the Indian attack with power, particularly
when her half century was secure.England reached their 150 in the thirty-fifth over with 3 wickets down,
having seen off a feisty opening spell of pace bowling from Goswami, the
player who had missed the chance to score the winning run in yesterday’s
game which England won by one run.The experienced spinner Neetu David, who together with Al-Khadir ripped
through the England middle order once Arran Thompson had been run out three
overs later, eventually bowled Leng. David bowled England Captain, Clare
Connor for 2; Al-Khadir had Laura Newton stumped by Naik for 4 and bowled
Dawn Holden for 6.With England on 164-8, a recovery was led by England’s leading wicket taker
Clare Taylor and Laura Harper, who put on 24 before Taylor was run out for
14. Taylor’s batting has improved considerably in recent years, and she has
passed her previous highest one-day score twice in this Series following a
successful spell of top order batting with NZ state side Otago this winter.Following her elegant innings of 98 yesterday, England knew they needed to
remove Mithali Raj, and with opener Paranjpe trapped lbw by Pearson in the
first over, Raj and Sharma set about building a platform. Pearson was
unlucky to take just one wicket in a blisteringly quick opening seven-over
spell which yielded just 18 runs and saw two catches dropped.But it was a day for the spinners, as Laura Harper and Clare Connor bowled
in tandem to inflict irrevocable damage on India’s batters. Connor had
Sharma caught and fellow Captain, Chopra, lbw. Harper gained the prized
wicket of Raj as the batsman attempted to sweep her, having found runs the
same way from the previous delivery but deceived by extra flight.At 55-4 and with Raj gone, England knew they couldn’t be caught and set
about achieving a comprehensive victory. With miserly bowling from Collyer
in particular, India didn’t ever trouble the run rate. Only the ‘keeper,
Naik, showed any resistance, reaching 23 before the ever reliable Taylor
took a sharp catch from Harper’s bowling. India were 90-9 and added just
eleven more runs before Collyer bowled Goswami for the second time in two
days to end India’s innings and ensure England the victory.

Second ODI shifted to Gwalior

The second ODI of South Africa’s India tour, on February 24, has been shifted to Gwalior

Cricinfo staff05-Feb-2010The second one-day international of South Africa’s India tour, on February 24, has been shifted to Gwalior.The Indian board (BCCI) confirmed the shift via a media release but did not specify the reason. However, it is reportedly believed that a section of the Green Park stadium, allotted for students, was not in good condition and thus the officials did not want to risk hosting an international match. The Uttar Pradesh Cricket Association has apparently decidedly to rebuild the stand in question.The Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association was quick to offer its support to the BCCI by hosting the match. South Africa’s touring security unit will travel to Gwalior to inspect the Captain Roop Singh Stadium, which last hosted an ODI in November 2007 when Pakistan toured.Kanpur was the venue for India’s series-squaring Test win over South Africa
in April 2008, where the visitors lost the final match by eight wickets after their batting line-up crumbled on an under-prepared surface. Kanpur last hosted a Test between India and Sri Lanka late in 2009, and an ODI between the hosts and England in November 2008.The first ODI will be played in Jaipur on February 21 and the third and final game will be held in Ahmedabad on February 27.

Hussey returns to lead Victoria

David Hussey will return to captain Victoria for their Sheffield Shield match against Western Australia in Perth this week as they aim to move a step closer to securing a home final

Cricinfo staff01-Mar-2010David Hussey will return to captain Victoria for their Sheffield Shield match against Western Australia in Perth this week as they aim to move a step closer to securing a home final. The Bushrangers are all but guaranteed a place in the decider – they lost one point for a slow over-rate in their previous match and technically can miss out – but the all-important hosting rights could yet go to Queensland.They will be without the spinner Jon Holland, who hurt his shoulder playing club cricket on the weekend and was set to see a specialist on Monday. The injury was not expected to be a season-ending problem but it has opened the door for the veteran Bryce McGain to return to the four-day line-up having been kept out by Holland since Christmas.The batsman Lloyd Mash has been axed after a disappointing string of matches in which he failed to cement the spot made vacant by the retirement of Brad Hodge. Rob Quiney is in the 12-man group and Victoria hope he will be fit by the morning of the match, having been sidelined recently by a groin complaint.Hussey has flown home from New Zealand following Australia’s two Twenty20 games and will take back the reins from Andrew McDonald, who led Victoria to defeat in the FR Cup final on Sunday. The Bushrangers will need to regroup quickly after the disappointment of losing their fourth straight one-day decider.”It’s a big game. It’s a matter of shoring up that home final, which is what you want in the Shield, it’s been important over the years,” McDonald said after the one-day loss to Tasmania. “We’ve had a pretty hectic schedule since we boarded a plane for India [for the Champions League Twenty20 in October].”We’ve been jam-packed and we’ve been able to switch our focus pretty quickly from each format to the next format. I think that won’t be a problem, it’s just a matter of the bodies, how the boys got through tonight’s game.”Victoria squad Nick Jewell, Chris Rogers, David Hussey (capt), Aaron Finch, Rob Quiney, Andrew McDonald, Michael Hill, Matthew Wade (wk), John Hastings, Damien Wright, Darren Pattinson, Bryce McGain.

Stewart called to cover for Taylor and Franklin

Injury doubts over Ross Taylor and James Franklin have led to the elevation of the uncapped Shanan Stewart to New Zealand’s squad

Cricinfo staff07-Mar-2010Injury doubts over Ross Taylor and James Franklin have led to the elevation of the uncapped Shanan Stewart to New Zealand’s squad ahead of the third ODI in Hamilton on Tuesday. Stewart, the Canterbury batsman, is in the middle of an excellent season and has won some recognition following the hamstring problems of Taylor and Franklin.The pair is in doubt for the remainder of the five-match ODI series, with Taylor pulling out before the loss in Auckland and Franklin hobbling off during the game. Mark Greatbatch, New Zealand’s coach, said they were unlikely to play on Tuesday but Taylor was the greater chance to return for the final fixtures.Stewart, 27, is in outstanding form after making 227 against Central Districts on Sunday and has been redirected to Hamilton. “Shanan has been in our thinking for the Twenty20 World Cup, he’s in great nick, he’s got a couple of hundreds and a 200 today,” Greatbatch told NZPA.”He’s an experienced middle-order player, a very dynamic one-day player and we feel he plays the aggressive game we’re looking to play against the Australians.” Stewart was chosen last week in New Zealand’s 30-man World Twenty20 squad and will be keen to impress if given an opportunity.

Promoted Tim Bresnan impresses in draw

Set to chase a mammoth 392 in 91 overs, unbeaten leaders Yorkshire made a great tilt at the pursuit only to run out of steam in the final hour and finish on 300 for 5

Mark Pennell at Canterbury24-Apr-2010

ScorecardTim Bresnan was shifted up to No. 3 and responded with 70•PA Photos

In the 27 matches played between Kent and Yorkshire in Canterbury since 1885 some 11 have been inked into the record books as draws, but few of these will have been as entertaining as this four-day clash at St Lawrence where honours deservedly finished even.Set to chase a mammoth 392 in 91 overs, unbeaten leaders Yorkshire made a great tilt at the pursuit only to run out of steam in the final hour and finish on 300 for 5. When the sides shook hands on a draw just before 6pm the visitors were still 92 short of their target, leaving a battling, injury-hit Kent side to bank nine Championship points to Yorkshire’s eight.Yorkshire were given a solid, if sedate start to their pursuit in the form of a first-wicket stand worth 155 in 49 overs between left-handed opening partners Adam Lyth and Joe Sayers who batted with common sense beyond their collective ages of 48. Without frill of fuss the pair were content to see off the new ball and then manoeuvre it around into the gaps to edge their score along at a shade over three over. Most crucially to their cause was that they simply stayed out there.They deserved the odd stroke of luck, indeed Kent’s spearhead Amjad Khan beat the outside edge on numerous occasions without feathering the blade. The one time Kent did find the edge, with Lyth on 30, Geraint Jones downed a tricky chance stood up off Darren Stevens.However, just at the time when they needed to accelerate their run-rate in the mid-session, so Yorkshire’s openers perished in the space of six deliveries. Lyth (84) was unfortunate to nick a leg glance against offspinner James Hockley into Jones’ gloves then, without addition to the total, Sayers (61) followed a turning delivery from James Tredwell and steered it gently into the hands of Martin van Jaarsveld at slip.The experienced duo of Anthony McGrath and Tim Bresnan built on the solid foundations with another excellent third-wicket stand of 123 in 26 overs either side of tea that took the visitors into the final 20 overs needing 151 for a famous win at the rate of 7.55 an over – no more taxing than a reasonable par score for a Twenty20 encounter.England allrounder Bresnan survived a king pair to post a 73-ball half-century with five fours, while former Yorkshire skipper McGrath reached the milestone from 77 balls but with only three boundaries. Their fun ended three overs into the final hour when McGrath (55) holed out to Joe Denly at wide long-on off the bowling of Tredwell who, in his next over, enticed Jacques Rudolph to drive into the hands of the same fielder at long off and make it 289 for 4.The asking rate had risen to 9.8 going into the final 10 overs when Andrew Gale, having failed to score off the first three balls of a Tredwell over, mistimed a drive to extra cover and set off for a suicidal single that left Bresnan high and dry. He was comfortably run out by van Jaarsveld’s throw to the keeper at the striker’s end and went for an excellent 70 from 92 balls – Yorkshire’s outside chances of victory went with him.

Namibia complete crushing win

Raymond van Schoor and Ewaid Steenkamp Intercontinental Shield record opening stand of 374 helped Namibia complete a crushing innings victory over Bermuda in the Intercontinental Shield match in Windhoek

Cricinfo staff05-Apr-2010Namibia 583 for 8 dec (Steenkamp 206, van Schoor 157) beat Bermuda 214 (Hemp 52, Verwey 5-46) and 184 (Hemp 65, Klazinga 5-45) by an innings and 185 runs.

Scorecard
Raymond van Schoor and Ewaid Steenkamp’s 374-run opening partnership helped Namibia complete a crushing innings victory over Bermuda in the Intercontinental Shield match in Windhoek.Namibia take the full 20 points on offer and move second in the table, nine points behind Uganda after winning a match they dominated from the off. Bermuda were bowled out for 214 after winning the toss and opting to bat first with captain David Hemp, the former Warwickshire batsman, the only man to put up any fight. He scrapped his way to 52, but wickets kept tumbling around him as Bermuda collapsed from 173 for 3. Tobias Verwey was the pick of the bowlers, collecting 5-46, his maiden five wicket haul.What looked a below-par total turned out to be barely credible as van Schoor and Steenkamp set about building Namibia’s response. Without taking undue risk the pair marched relentlessly past the Bermuda total, with both openers making centuries on their way to a record stand in Intercontinental Shield cricket. It was Steenkamp’s first hundred at first-class level and he cashed in, converting to 206. The partnership finally ended when van Schoor fell to Foggo for 157. The pair had added 374 in 84.5 overs and had almost made the match a formality for Namibia.Craig Williams, the Namibia captain, made the most of the damaged morale, punishing all the bowlers on his way to a 74-ball 110 not out. In total he hit nine fours and three sixes, sharing a 76-run stand with Verwey to push the score to 583 before declaring 369 ahead.It was a mountain Bermuda were unlikely to climb and when they lost their openers in quick succession to leave them 25 for 2, there looked no route back. Once again Hemp provided the only resilience, making the most of his first-class experience that stretches back to 1991, to score his second battling half-century of the match, ending with 65 off 86 balls. Louis Klazinga chipped his way through the Bermuda line-up to collect 5 for 45 and deliver his side their first win of the tournament.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus