Dambulla loses an ODI in revised India schedule

Sri Lanka Cricket has revised the itinerary for India’s upcoming tour of Sri Lanka, allotting just one ODI to Dambulla – as opposed to the previously planned two – and scheduling the remaining four ODIs and the Twenty20 international in Colombo. Dambulla was initially scheduled to host the first two ODIs, but the venue for the second game has now been shifted to the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo. Three of the five ODIs will be played under lights – all of them at the Premadasa – while the first, and the fifth – at the SSC – will be day games.India are scheduled to arrive in Colombo on January 26, and will be left with just over a week to prepare for their subsequent tour of New Zealand after the Twenty20 International on February 10.India last toured Sri Lanka in July-August 2008, losing the Tests 2-1 and winning the ODIs 3-2.Revised schedule
Jan 28 – First one-dayer, Dambulla
Jan 31 – Second one-dayer, Premadasa stadium, Colombo (day/night)
Feb 3 – Third one-dayer, Premadasa Stadium, Colombo (d/n)
Feb 5 – Fourth one-dayer, Premadasa Stadium, Colombo (d/n)
Feb 8 – Fifth one-dayer, Sinhalese Sports Club, Colombo
Feb 10 – Twenty20 international, Premadasa Stadium, Colombo (d/n)

Pundit says Celtic fans are in love with Joe Hart - Exclusive

Anthony Haggerty from the Daily Record believes that Celtic fans have already fallen in love with Joe Hart.

Following their horrendous goalkeeping difficulties last season, the former Manchester City and England shot-stopper arrived hoping to become Ange Postecoglou’s number one.

And whilst it remains early days in Hart’s Parkhead career, he’s already made a huge impact during his three weeks in Paradise.

Prior to the 34-year-old’s arrival, Celtic had made a winless start to their season and had already crashed out of the Champions League in the qualifying round.

However, some three weeks later and the Hoops have won all six matches with Hart in between the sticks – recording consecutive 6-0 wins in the league, progressing in the Scottish League Cup, whilst his impressive first-leg performance against AZ Alkmaar has put the Glasgow giants 90 minutes away from securing their place in the Europa League groups.

When asked what he’s made of Hart’s time in Scotland, Haggerty told Football FanCast:

“I think the Celtic fans love Joe Hart; they just took him to their hearts. Joe Hart gets what it means to play for a big club, this is a former England number one goalkeeper.

“When goalkeepers hit a dip in form, there’s no hiding place, but Joe Hart has been up there, seen it and done it.”

Kayke se defende de polêmica e diz: 'Deixa eles reclamando lá'

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de coroar o Santos com a vitória no clássico por 1 a 0 sobre o Palmeiras, Kayke se defendeu das reclamações de Edu Dracena, que apontou o lance como falta. Ele explicou o lance, ressaltou os três pontos e transferiu a responsabilidade para a arbitragem.

– Muito difícil falar, na hora do jogo tudo é muito fácil. Procurei espaço, procurei sair da marcação e quando vi o Jean tentei ir na diagonal. Quando vi, ele estava no chão, bola na minha frente e a rede. Quantos lances o juiz deu para o Palmeiras e seguiu o jogo? Deixa eles reclamando lá, o importante são os três pontos – explicou.

– Eu não me recordo. A gente se encosta o tempo inteiro. Tem puxão, empurrão, pancada… Se houve ou não a falta, a culpa não é minha. Se o juiz não marcou o Dracena tem que reclamar com ele, não comigo. Eu fiz minha parte e marquei o gol – concluiu.

Com sete gols anotados em sete jogos, Kayke passa a ser o vice-artilheiro da temporada, ficando atrás apenas de Vitor Bueno, com seis. No entanto, no Campeonato Brasileiro o camisa 11 é o artilheiro absoluto com três gols.

O próximo desafio do Peixe é no sábado, contra a Ponte Preta, às 21h, no Pacaembu, pela oitava rodada do Brasileirão.

RelacionadasSantosLevir vê Santos mais competente, mas ressalta: ‘Vi muitos problemas’Santos15/06/2017BrasileirãoCom cara de Libertadores, Santos vence Palmeiras e encerra jejumBrasileirão14/06/2017BrasileirãoATUAÇÕES: Vanderlei ‘supera’ Prass, pega tudo e garante vitória do PeixeBrasileirão14/06/2017

Ojha puts Madhya Pradesh in command

A century from wicketkeeper Naman Ojha put Madhya Pradesh in pole position against Assam in Indore

Cricinfo staff21-Nov-2008
Scorecard
A century from wicketkeeper Naman Ojha put Madhya Pradesh in pole position against Assam in Indore. Resuming on 150 for 2 – Assam were bowled out for 96 on the first day – MP’s hopes for a big first-innings lead were almost dashed after medium-pacers Krishna Das and Ranjitkumar Mali took six wickets in 27 overs. However, the tail hung on with Ojha to help the hosts gain a formidable lead. Assam lost two wickets in 22 overs of their second innings on Friday, and an innings defeat seems on the cards.Das, who took two wickets on the first day, completed a five-for: Devendra Bundela was caught behind for 64, and Jatin S Saxena and Brijesh Tomar did not last too long. Soon after Das’ strikes, MP captain Hrishikesh Kanitkar was out for 44, lbw to medium-pacer Ranjitkumar Mali. Sunil Dholpure also fell to Mali, and Anand Katti had Shantanu Pitre, who took five in Assam’s innings, caught behind. No. 10 Sanjay Pandey, though, played out 71 deliveries for his 23. At the other end, Ojha was picking the runs. His 116 came at a strike-rate of nearly 80, with 15 fours and four sixes.After a 90-run stand, Mali finally dismissed Pandey: he was the third catch of the innings for wicketkeeper K Saikia. Ojha put on 36 for the final wicket at nearly a run a ball with last man Yogesh Golwalkar, before he became Das’ sixth wicket. Das’ 6 for 61 from 31.1 overs was his best figures in a first-class innings.Assam, trailing by 236 on the first innings, lost opener Nishanta Bordoloi and one-drop Deepak Sharma before stumps.

QPR dealt major injury blow

Queens Park Rangers have been dealt a major injury blow ahead of their upcoming Carabao Cup clash.

What’s the latest?

In recent comments cited by the QPR website, Mark Warburton revealed that both Jordy de Wijs and Lee Wallace will not be available for selection in Tuesday evening’s EFL Cup fixture against Oxford United, with the centre-back being ruled out due to an ankle injury picked up in last weekend’s 2-2 draw with Barnsley, while the left-back remains sidelined due to a hamstring injury.

When discussing the current state of his QPR squad, the 58-year-old said: “I’m not going to lie, we’re walking wounded at the moment! Jordy de Wijs won’t be available and Lee Wallace is out too. We’ve got a few out. Hopefully Jordy will be ready for Coventry on Saturday.

“We’ve got to keep tabs on the boys and won’t really know the team until Tuesday morning. The type of travelling we’ve done over the last week can really challenge the squad, which is tight anyway. But we’ll put a team out to go and win the game. Oxford will want to win to progress to the next round and we do too.”

Warburton will be gutted

Considering just how impressive De Wijs has been for QPR this season, the fact the centre-back looks set to miss the Carabao Cup game on Tuesday is sure to have left Warburton gutted.

Indeed, over his four Championship appearances for the Rs this term, the £900k-rated centre-back has helped his side keep one clean sheet, as well as making an average of 2.5 interceptions, 2.3 tackles, seven clearances and winning a whopping eight duels per game.

These returns have seen the former Netherlands U21 international average a SofaScore match rating of 7.17, ranking him as the west London side’s fourth-best performer in the second tier of English football.

However, the 58-year-old Rs manager will have to make do without the defender for the game against Oxford – a fixture in which Warburton will undoubtedly be hoping for a positive result, in order to continue his side’s unbeaten record in all competitions so far this season.

In other news: QPR development confirmed on “excellent” £270k-rated gem, Warburton will be delighted

بدر بانون يعود للمشاركة مع الأهلي أمام المصري بالسلوم بعد غياب 5 أشهر و17 يومًا

شارك المغربي بدر بانون لاعب الأهلي في مباراة فريقه أمام المصري بالسلوم، التي أقيمت اليوم الأحد ضمن منافسات دور الـ32 من كأس مصر.

وفاز الأهلي على المصري بالسلوم بهدفٍ وحيد سجله اللاعب أحمد عبد القادر، ليقود فريقه للتأهل لدور الـ16 من البطولة.

طالع أيضًا.. موعد مباراة الأهلي القادمة بـ الدوري في البروفة الأخيرة قبل القمة

ودفع سامي قمصان المدرب المساعد للنادي الأهلي الذي أدار المباراة فنيًا، باللاعب بدر بانون في الدقيقة 89 من زمن المباراة، بدلًا من كريم فؤاد.

وعاد بانون للمشاركة في مباراة اليوم بعد غياب استمر 5 أشهر و17 يومًا منذ إصابته بفيروس كورونا، الذي تسبب في معاناته من بعض المضاعفات التي أبعدته عن الملاعب لفترة طويلة.

وكان اللاعب المغربي قد سجل آخر مشاركة له مع الأهلي في مباراته أمام فيوتشر في الدوري والتي أقيمت يوم 26 ديسمبر 2021.

Lawyer unhappy over revelation of Asif's identity

Mohammad Asif’s lawyer, Shahid Karim, is unhappy that his client’s name was disclosed by the Indian Premier League for testing positive for a banned substance, despite the fact that the results were not matched with his B sample

Cricinfo staff18-Jul-2008<!–
Mohammad Asif has once again landed in trouble on charges of doping © AFP
–>Mohammad Asif’s lawyer, Shahid Karim, is unhappy that his client’s name was disclosed by the IPL as the player whose sample tested positive for a banned substance, even before the results of the test of his B sample were known.”There are certain rules that were not followed in this case,” Karim told AP. “The authorities should have waited for the B sample test before revealing the identity of the player.”He remained optimistic that Asif, who has since been suspended by the Pakistan board, will escape punishment. “As a lawyer, I am quite hopeful that Asif will come out clean from this doping case and will again represent Pakistan in international cricket.” If Asif’s B sample tests negative, he will be deemed to be clear of the charge.Karim said the date for Asif’s B sample test had been tentatively fixed for July 28; the testing will be carried out at a WADA-accredited laboratory in Switzerland.

Expert tips Arsenal to sign Boubacar Kamara for cut-price fee

French football expert Adam White believes Arsenal could sign sought-after midfielder Boubacar Kamara for a bargain fee.

The 21-year-old is on the radar of a host of clubs after impressing for Marseille last season, where he made 43 appearances.

According to Italian newspaper Corriere dello Sport, Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta rates Kamara highly and is keen to welcome him to the Emirates Stadium. However, the report confirms the Gunners are joined by Italian sides AC Milan and Lazio in the race to sign the defensive midfielder.

Newcastle United have reportedly already launched a bid for Kamara, who has entered the final year of his contract at Marseille.

The Magpies’ move comes having been frustrated in their efforts to welcome top target Joe Willock back to the club having shone while on loan from Arsenal last season.

However, Get French Football News’ White is confident that Kamara would opt for a move to north London instead of Tyneside. The France under-21 international, who can also play at centre-back, is available for a cut-price fee due to his current contract situation.

He told The Transfer Tavern: “I think Marseille will sell Kamara because his contract is expiring and they need to. They’ve spent a surprising amount on transfers this summer for a club that was supposedly in some financial difficulties beforehand.

“I think £15million, perhaps with bonuses, is an absolute steal for Kamara.

“Would he be interested in going to Arsenal or Newcastle? My reading of the situation is that he would see Arsenal as a nice move.”

Howey convinced Gilmour would’ve been good Newcastle business

Signing Chelsea midfielder Billy Gilmour would have been “a good piece of business” for Newcastle United this summer, the club’s former player Steve Howey exclusively told Football FanCast.

Gilmour is currently on loan at Norwich City for the season but was linked with a move to St. James’ Park prior to linking up with Daniel Farke’s side.

According to The Northern Echo, Newcastle were keen on both Gilmour and Tammy Abraham as they looked to do business with Chelsea.

In the end, though, Gilmour opted for Norwich, while Newcastle are now being linked with another young Chelsea midfielder in Conor Gallagher.

The Athletic reports that the Magpies are interested in signing the 21-year-old, though they face stiff competition from Premier League rivals Leeds United and Crystal Palace.

Howey, however, has made it clear that Gilmour is the one he really wanted to see at St. James’ Park.

“A good piece of business would have been the other lad, Gilmour,” the ex-Newcastle central defender said as he discussed the speculation surrounding Gallagher. “He would have been a great piece of business.

“Now, without being disrespectful to Norwich, you’d have thought Newcastle would have been a great option for him.”

Newcastle have also missed out on recent target Mario Lemina following his move from Southampton to Nice, so reinforcing the midfield is proving to be a tricky task for Steve Bruce this transfer window.

Ganguly, Tendulkar, Dravid serve a dish to be savoured

Sachin Tendulkar scores runs with such machinelike regularity it’s boring to watch

Anand Vasu23-Aug-2002Sachin Tendulkar scores runs with such machinelike regularity it’s boring to watch. A century is just another day in the office for him. He breaks records but isn’t a match-winner. He doesn’t have the patience to play long innings when the bowling is restrictive. Sourav Ganguly loses his cool easily and can be chirped into throwing away his wicket. Even little children know he can’t play short-pitched bowling to save his life. He’s been sorted out by a captain with a plan and bowlers with discipline. Rahul Dravid is too caught up in proper technique to score under pressure. He’s never going to make it when bowlers bowl to a field and cut out the singles.Had I been sitting in the press-box at Headingley writing for one of the more liberal Sunday papers in England, the first paragraph would have been negated with a single word. To avoid causing offence, however, I shall avoid the word that comes to mind and confine myself to “rubbish,” belted out in the best Geoff Boycott Yorkshire drawl, as being more appropriate. On a day when India did an Australia, scoring 348 runs for the loss of just two wickets in an astounding 83.1 overs, there’s a serious chance that scribes ran out of superlatives and statisticians ran for cover at some of the milestones crossed. The fans, however, must have been glued to their seats; a better advertisement for Test cricket you’d be hard-pressed to find.It all began, as it so often does in Indian cricket, with Dravid showing his bat-maker’s label to every ball bowled at him and setting up the kind of platform his freer-stroking colleagues could exploit maximally. With the obdurate patience of a trappist monk, Dravid saw off the early movement on a rain-soaked day at Headingley, defied the gloom that shrouded Leeds in the guise of a thick blanket of clouds, and showed his colleagues what was possible with a little application.Making 148 invaluable runs, Dravid strung together the first major partnership of this innings – 170 for the second wicket with Sanjay Bangar.Then came a little man under a lot of pressure. Tendulkar, who has been under the microscope for some perceived lack of form – a bad patch that in 2002 has yielded 924 runs at an average of 61.60 so far – demonstrated his class with a sparkling unfinished 185. Like a guitar riff out his favourite Dire Straits, Tendulkar began slowly yet firmly, lifted his pitch to a more frenetic yet no less solid middle essay, and ended in an explosive crescendo that left you breathless.Offering almost no chances until India was firmly in the driver’s seat, Tendulkar straight-drove with pedigree, pulled with the power normally associated with four-wheel drives, and ran between the wickets like a hare with its tail on fire. That was what he did to get to his 30th Test ton, easing past Sir Don Bradman’s tally and leaving just Sunil Gavaskar ahead of him on that particular race to the top.Tendulkar added 150 in association with Dravid before the Karnataka middle-order bat was foxed by an Ashley Giles beauty, a rare delivery that was not aimed at testing the quality of batting leg-guards.Ganguly is the kind of man people love to hate. Lord Snooty, some call him, in the land where cricket originated, and not too kindly one might add. He responded in kind on the day, dishing out the most unkind treatment to pacemen and spinners alike. Giles, whose brand of fire-it-into-the-legs-and-hope-for-the-best left-arm spin has caused several Indian batsmen to develop an unhealthy, and often fatal, contempt for his bowling, came in for the worst punishment, being hit for 23 runs in an over. The Indian skipper, hitting the ball into the stands with a nonchalance that few in international cricket can match, put team ahead of self and wasted no time in the nervous nineties. Courageous stuff from a man who had been dismissed for 99 in just his last innings.When the light was offered, Ganguly shrugged and said to the umpires, “We’ll play on.” Hussain’s gents walked off the field at Trent Bridge in eminently playable light, lost nine overs, and rued it on the last day when they had all but closed the lid on the Indian coffin and did not have the overs left to drive the nails home.But play on India did, and how! Andy Caddick, returning to Test cricket as England spearhead, returned figures of none for 139, Giles did better at 1/134, Alex Tudor picked up the last wicket to fall ending on 1/113. It was an all-out assault that dismantled every tactic Hussain could conjure up, bruised every carefully cultivated bowler’s ego, and thrilled the fans. Even the kindly old man in the stands whose enthusiasm hardly matched his catching skills, struck full on the head and rendered bleeding by one Ganguly tonk, could hold no grudge. Such was the freedom and joy of the Indian skipper’s 128.Ganguly and Tendulkar, then, in their rendition of the “Charge of the Light Brigade” bludgeoned 249 in 59.3 overs for the fourth wicket.This was the first time in the history of Indian cricket that three consecutive 150-plus partnerships had been constructed in a Test innings. Numbers, numbers, numbers! Frankly, it was also one of the few times an Indian team so pressured by rows with officialdom had come together to ensure that events on the field kept everything else stayed out of the headlines. It was the first instance in a long time the batting order, so prophetically feared by Hussain, had delivered the goods when it was crunch time. It seemed to be the first time that cliques within the team came together and stood as one before the opposition; but India have done that against the British before, haven’t they?The job in this case is not quite done until the Indians bowl well enough to take 20 wickets. Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh will have to do the lion’s share of the work, aided by, to misquote the Beatles, a little help from their friends. Zaheer Khan can breathe fire in short spells, Ajit Agarkar is a skiddy customer, and Sanjay Bangar might prove surprisingly useful.It’s early days yet for crystal-ball gazing, but the spirit smacks of India v Australia at Kolkata. If the Indians can do a Houdini and walk away with that elusive win outside the subcontinent, there will be at least one man in a serious quandary in that city where the miracle against the Aussies was conceived.For how on earth will Jagmohan Dalmiya find it in his heart to send a second-string team to the ICC Champions Trophy if this lot returns victorious? Go on Ganguly, for the sake of fans who want no more than a good game of cricket, give shrewd old Jaggu something to fret about.

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