Spurs: Gold drops Johnson transfer claim

Alasdair Gold has dropped an update on reported Tottenham Hotspur transfer target Brennan Johnson.

What’s the talk?

In a recent video posted on his YouTube channel, the football.london journalist revealed that Antonio Conte and Fabio Paratici have now added the Nottingham Forest attacking midfielder to their shortlist of transfer targets, with the Championship play-off finalists expected to demand a figure in the region of £20m in order to part with the 21-year-old this summer.

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Regarding Spurs’ interest in the playmaker, Gold said: “I know Spurs really like Brennan Johnson who plays for Forest, he is a talent. But I think there will be a queue of people for him… It’ll be interesting to see where he goes.”

The next Dele

Considering just how talented a prospect Johnson evidently is, it is easy to see why Conte and Paratici would be keen on a deal to bring the forward to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the summer transfer window.

Indeed, over his 48 Championship appearances this season, the £13.5m-rated attacker has been in breathtaking form for the Reds, scoring 18 goals, registering ten assists and creating 15 big chances for his teammates, in addition to taking an average of 1.9 shots, making 1.3 key passes and completing 1.2 dribbles per game.

These returns have seen the £2.5k-per-week Wales international who Sabri Lamouchi dubbed “unbelievable” average a quite spectacular SofaScore match rating of 7.10, ranking him as Forest’s fourth-best outfielder in the second tier – playing a key role in the Garibaldi’s run to the play-off final.

Furthermore, considering his age, position and extremely impressive showing in the Championship this term, there are quite clear comparisons that can be drawn between the Forest starlet and another of Tottenham’s former recruits from the lower leagues of English football – Dele Alli.

Indeed, in the season prior to the 26-year-old’s £5m move from MK Dons back in 2015, the attacking midfielder was in similarly exceptional form, scoring 16 goals and providing 11 assists over his 44 appearances in all competitions in 2014/15.

As such, should Conte be able to convince Johnson of a move to north London this summer, he could well have unearthed Tottenham’s next Dele, as the 21-year-old Forest sensation is undoubtedly a player who could go on to replicate the incredible impact the former England international had during his first few seasons with Spurs.

AND in other news: “I’m told…”: Alasdair Gold drops big Spurs transfer twist, supporters will be gutted

Romero loving life at Tottenham

Reliable reporter Alasdair Gold has shared ‘more positive Spurs news’ for Tottenham supporters involving defender Cristian Romero.

The Lowdown: What a week for Spurs fans

The Lilywhites could only watch on in hope on Monday evening as Arsenal travelled to the North East to take on Newcastle, and the Magpies did Antonio Conte a favour with a dominant and deserved 2-0 win.

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In the space of a week, the Lilywhites have thrashed their rivals, gained pole position in the race for top four and there are even talks of a £100m transfer kitty for Fabio Paratici to utilise this summer.

Now, in yet another good update in a week full of bright spots for the N17 faithful, Gold has revealed Romero’s delight over his debut campaign at the club.

The Latest: Romero loving life

Sharing an ‘interesting’ interview with the tough-tackling Argentine for Football.London, Gold told his Twitter followers ‘more positive Spurs news’, revealing Romero is ‘very settled’ in the capital and loves playing for Conte in particular.

“I’m very happy to be here,” Romero told Gold, specifically lauding the “tactical” work and “effort” levels put in since Conte’s arrival.

The defender revealed his delight about the club and city along with excitement for the future, saying: “We’re at a club with amazing players and a great coach who pushes you to improve and grow, so that’s my daily goal – to get the best out of the opportunities I have and to keep improving and getting better.”

The Verdict: Better and better…

As far as weeks go, this one has been pretty special for Spurs fans, with the only remaining objective to beat an already relegated Norwich City and secure that coveted Champions League place.

Romero, who Jamie Carragher gushed over on Sky Sports’ Monday Night Football this week, has been called ‘phenomenal’ and a ‘top top defender’ by Italian football experts, so the news he is happy and settled in north London can only mean good things for the club.

With Conte reportedly plotting to sign a new central defender as one of six new signings this summer, the prospect of playing with the former Serie A defender of the year is sure to attract a high-level player, particularly if a Champions League spot is secured too.

Life is just getting better and better for Tottenham at the moment.

In other news… one insider claims Tottenham have a sparkling young winger on their radar this summer!

Graham Smyth drops Leeds contract claim

Leeds United striker Rodrigo is unlikely to get a contract extension because of his fitness issues, according to reliable journalist Graham Smyth.

The Lowdown: Rodrigo hits form for Leeds

The Spaniard has had a hit-and-miss spell with the Whites, arriving as the club’s most expensive signing in history back in 2020 but not always matching the hype.

Rodrigo had made an excellent start to this campaign, however, scoring four goals in five Premier League appearances and playing with great confidence under Jesse Marsch before the shoulder injury.

Even towards the end of last season, former Whites forward Noel Whelan praised the player’s improvement under the American boss, and there does appears to be a really strong relationship between the pair.

The 31-year-old’s current Leeds deal expires in the summer of 2024 though, meaning time is ticking on his long-term future at Elland Road, with next summer the time for the club to cash in if a new deal is not signed.

The Latest: New deal unlikely

Writing in a Q&A for The Yorkshire Evening Post, Smyth claimed that a new contract for Rodrigo is unlikely, despite his upturn in fortunes:

“Rodrigo will be 33 by the time his contract runs out at Elland Road. Given his issues with niggles and the fact that his first two seasons were so difficult and inconsistent, I would be surprised if there was talk of a new deal any time soon.

“He looks after himself as a model pro by all accounts but the intensity of Premier League football under Marcelo Bielsa and then Jesse Marsch will take a toll. He would be an expensive one to do, as well, and the wage bill at Leeds has already undergone a serious uplift in recent times.”

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The Verdict: Right decision by Orta and Radz

While Rodrigo is flying at the moment, looking every bit the record-breaking player Leeds signed two years ago and topping their goal charts, it doesn’t make sense to extend his stay at the club.

As Smyth alludes to, he will be 33 by the time his deal runs out, and with the Spain international dogged by injuries during his time with the Whites, picking up knee, groin, heel and now shoulder problems, it would be a risky decision.

It makes complete sense for Leeds to simply enjoy these last couple of seasons of Rodrigo, labelled by , during which time he will hopefully grow his legend and match the expectations of him when he arrived.

Dhananjaya de Silva is cooler than you

The score was 93 for 4, then 130 for 6. You’d call most centuries from that situation gritty, or tenacious, but not a century from this dude

Andrew Fidel Fernando at the P Sara Oval24-Aug-2019So you think you have style. People compliment you on your outfits. You’re at a high-end hairdresser a couple of times a month. In between the visits, there is never a strand out of place. When you go out, you order the classiest drinks – spirits, neat. Your vehicle is the envy of your peer group, washed, waxed, vacuumed, scratch-free: immaculate. At weddings, you’re cutting up the dance floor, admirers staring from all corners of the room, the bride and groom feeling thoroughly outshone. It’s understandable. You are convinced you are smooth in civilian life. You think you’re the shit. I hate to be the one to break this to you, but you’re no Dhananjaya de Silva. Next to him on a cricket field, you’re trash.The P Sara Oval is among the most testing venues on the planet, for batsmen. There’s a bit of pace, a bit of bounce, a bit of seam and swing, a bit of spin, and a lot of wickets. It’s been 16 years since the last drawn Test at this venue. De Silva arrived into a 93 for 4 situation, which quickly deteriorated into a 130 for 6 situation. A century from a No. 6, from here, would generally have to be gritty, and if you’re batting with the tail, farming the strike, and pushing the score out to much further than it should have got, your innings has got to be tenacious, right?But you’d never use these adjectives for this de Silva innings. You’d never use them for any de Silva innings. He slinks down the pitch, long-sleeved, limbs relaxed, a stream meandering in paddies. He strokes a lofted four over cover, raps gloves, goes back, slouches into his stance. Against the quicks, in this innings, he was majestically languid. They kept trying to bounce him. He kept hooking them casually for six.There is no more casually graceful player right now, because every act, even the mistakes, are imbued with an air of indifference. So he nailed that shot but it went straight to the fielder. No big deal. There’s another ball coming. So he dropped an offbreak short and the batsman bashed it for four. Relax. It’s just cricket. Nobody died. This is merely superficial, of course, because deep down, he genuinely cares. He was yanked up and down the order like a marionette for years – a process that sent his batting average into a nosedive. In the meantime, he improved his bowling to such an extent that he began being picked primarily for his offspin in limited-overs cricket.Dhananjaya de Silva runs one through point•Getty ImagesIn the field, Sri Lanka have no one else of his quality – a player who can be reliably deployed almost anywhere. He rides the boundary like an Old West outlaw passing on a mustang through the middle of a dusty town. When he is in the slips, it is less a cordon, more a Sunday afternoon hangout sesh in a coconut grove. He leaps, catlike, to make another a spectacular save at point, and when teammates rush up, he holds out his palm out for only lowest of low-fives. It’s cool, fellas. Just a saved four. Don’t lose your minds.Then he’s called up by the captain to send a few overs down. There are spinners who wear sunglasses when in action. Sometimes they even look suave. De Silva doesn’t need the shades. His action isn’t classical, but like with everything he does, it seems entirely effortless. You know in your mind that he’s participating in an elite sport, and in some spells, like the one in Port Elizabeth in February, making vital contributions to an eventual victory.You understand that to get to this level, there must have been sweat and sacrifice. But aesthetically, de Silva has his feet up, in a hammock. Later in the day, Tom Latham produced a hundred that was objectively more impressive, because unlike de Silva he had not been dropped in single figures, and there were far fewer edges for four behind the wicket, but Latham is basically the anti-de Silva – he always looks like he’s hard at work.Occasionally de Silva held the pose after a cover drive, but where this, for other batsmen, is their most visually pleasing state, de Silva is just as nonchalantly glorious when in actual motion. Like he is made of liquid rather than flesh and bone.Maybe you are an important person. Maybe you fight for human rights, help protect the environment, drive your nation’s economy, make decisions in parliament, pass judgement in court. De Silva is only a cricketer, but he would look way cooler than you doing any of that.

The league of global T20 brands

The presence of established IPL franchises and other international businesses in South Africa’s new T20 league shows what the future of the format could look like

Firdose Moonda25-Jun-2017Knight Riders are not a team; they are a brand. The competitions they play in are not matches or tournaments; they are products. Their function is not to only to provide entertainment, it is also to add value.This is new-age sports speak and plenty of it was heard at South Africa’s T20 Global League launch last Monday. If the average fan had been present – they weren’t, because the event was held in London and was by invitation only – they would have been forgiven for wondering what the hell any of it meant.Simply put, it is what sport is becoming. In some codes, it is what sport has already become. Cricket has been late to the evolutionary process that has taken what started as a recreational pastime and turned it into a corporate entity. Football is perhaps the best example of what the new model looks like: a monetised global club game.Take Manchester City as an example. After being bought by UAE royalty, beefing up their squad with big names like Yaya Touré and Sergio Aguero and winning the English premiership, they created an opportunity for their owners to expand the brand. City Football Group is now a triad that includes teams in Melbourne and New York, who have a common identity and share common resources, which can also include personnel.

Cricket has been late to the evolutionary process that has taken what started as a recreational pastime and turned it into a corporate entity

Knight Riders are a perfect comparison. They are the best-performing team, financially speaking, in the IPL and recorded a profit of US$2.14 million in the 2014-15 season. Around the same time, they expanded into the Caribbean Premier League, with the purchase of the Trinidad and Tobago franchise, which they renamed Trinbago Knight Riders. Now they also have a presence in South Africa with Cape Town Knight Riders, and they plan on following a City-style model of sharing expertise across their different teams.”What we have tried to do in building our business and our brand in IPL and CPL and now the Global League is to have some level of commonality between teams – whether it’s at the player level or at support-staff level,” Venky Mysore, Knight Riders’ CEO, said. “We had a support staff which works with us in KKR as well as in TKR and I am hoping that will be the case with the Global League as well. Jacques Kallis is the favourite son of South Africa and Cape Town and is our head coach at KKR and works with us at TKR as well, and I certainly expect he will work with us in CTKR as well. We have been able to achieve that to some extent. The assistant coach and analyst, they are all common but players – we will have to wait and see how it plays out.”With each league having its own draft and its own auctions, a brand like Knights Riders needs to “see if some of the stars align”, as Mysore put it, to be able to have similar squads, although they haven’t exactly managed it yet. “The reality of it is that Brendon McCullum is our marquee player for TKR and he played against us for Gujarat and smashed us all over the place in the IPL. And that’s okay, It’s just the way the leagues are set up. Each player is extremely professional to do the best they can for their respective teams. I don’t know whether the alignment will ever be possible as a practical matter. You just have to go with what you can. What we do have, which we control a little bit, is to make sure the culture across our teams is reasonably common.”Kagiso Rabada, GMR’s man in Delhi and Jo’burg. Brand continuity across tournaments and countries benefits from common personnel•BCCIGMR Sports, owners of the Delhi Daredevils, who have bought the Johannesburg franchise of the T20 Global League, have similar ambitions and can see the value in keeping the playing personnel consistent across the various teams. “The idea is to keep as much continuity as we can because it helps create the brand. But we will provide for the coaches to see the talent and work with them throughout the year,” Hemant Dua, CEO of GMR, said. “The IPL provided a very small platform where you couldn’t really go out and build from, so if coaches work with Kagiso [Rabada] in Delhi and also in Johannesburg, they get to know him better and he gets to know them better. That’s the direction we want to head in. That will work great for us.”The only way the idea of common squads will work, especially for the likes of Knight Riders and GMR Sports, who are IPL owners at the outset, is if Indian players will also be allowed to play in other leagues. Currently the BCCI does not make its male players available for anything other than the IPL, but in time, Dua can see that changing.”The more these leagues mushroom and become successful, the more cricket will eventually head in one direction. People will get wiser and there will be more free flotation of people around the world and then that will help us build on a core that can play in different formats around the world for us.””They’re trying to create brands, just like Coca-Cola started in America, Gucci in Italy, Yves St Laurent in France – now they are everywhere, they are synonymous globally with certain products,” says sports economist Stefan Szymanski, who has consulted with the ICC, among other sports organisations. “One day, they would like a common brand in every country, even if the players, coaches, etc are different. This would then give them leverage in selling sponsorship and broadcast rights. It would also help them to standardise the product globally so that its appeal can be widened.”

The only way the idea of common squads will really work, especially for the likes of Knight Riders and GMR Sports, who are IPL owners at the outset, is if Indian players will also be allowed to play in other leagues

While Knight Riders and GMR both bought into South Africa’s league because they have already seen how owning a T20 franchise in a big league can work, the PSL investors, Lahore Qalandars and Peshawar Zalmi, want to create greater awareness of their own brands. Neither of the PSL’s owners were asked about the possibility of Pakistani talent having more playing opportunities in South Africa because of this league, but it seems a given.CSA and the PCB have had a good relationship in the recent past – Pakistan filled a small gap in South Africa’s calendar in 2013, when India dramatically shortened their tour – and CSA CEO Haroon Lorgat is keen on building on that. He spoke about a passion for cricket development that was “particular to the Pakistan owners”, who, he said, are “doing some phenomenal development in their respective franchises in Pakistan” and who have “committed to bringing a lot of that to South Africa”. Javed Afridi of the Peshawar franchise, who has also started the Zalmi Foundation, has already committed to assisting with projects for children in Benoni, where they have bought the franchise.The other two foreign buyers in South Africa’s league are from Dubai and Hong Kong, and they also saw the business opportunity. Ajay Sethi, from the UAE’s Channel 2, is hopeful of broadcast opportunities, while Sushil Kumar, from City Sports in Hong Kong, who own a T20 Blitz team, City Kaitak, is after increased cricketing profile. Collectively, the six foreign parties own three-quarters of the South African league and have probably contributed most of its money.Exactly how much these international investors have put in is not known because CSA has said the bidding amounts are confidential, even as an overall figure. The reported that City Sports will spend US$100 million over ten years. That is around 1.3 billion South African Rand and it is unlikely any local companies would have been able to come close to that.The future: expect more of the same group of top T20 players to turn up in more T20 leagues across the world•AFPOnly two South African businesses bought teams – in Pretoria and Stellenbosch – and CSA would not comment on how many South African companies expressed interest or put in bids. ESPNcricinfo has learned that CSA approached businessman Johann Rupert, the fourth richest person in Africa, according to magazine, owner of a Swiss-based luxury goods company, founder of the Laureus Foundation and developer of the Leopard Creek Golf Club, to invest in the Global T20 league but Rupert declined. All attempts to reach him for comment were unsuccessful.The end result is that the South African T20 Global League has more of a flavour of the latter part of its name than the former, and that sets it apart from other tournaments of a similar nature. It is impossible to ignore the obvious – that there is a strong Asian connection – an indication of where cricket’s financial muscle is now being flexed. But there is also a strong connection to teams that already exist, which could be a sign of things to come.It’s not impossible to see a future where the same ten or so brands have teams in all the different leagues around the world and those teams have largely similar looks, feels and faces. In business terms, it’s a way of establishing multinational corporations in cricket, and Lorgat does not see that as a bad thing.”If you think of the globe as being a single village today, the different cultures one would have experienced in the past, a lot of that has changed,” Lorgat said. “You find uniformity more now. It looks like a single village. So I think that’s become more of a reality. You look at global corporate companies, they’ve got a single culture. They build their brand. They’ve got synergies between different continents, different offices. So I don’t think it’s different to any of the global corporates in the world. We’re in a very singular kind of village now.””All this is everything that traditionalists despise about the T20,” Szymanski says. “But then, the whole issue is whether cricket should appeal to a narrow purist market or a larger but less particular body of consumers.”

Raina's one-handed stunner at slip

Plays of the day from the IPL match between Kolkata Knight Riders and Gujarat Lions at Eden Gardens

Deivarayan Muthu08-May-2016Raina’s one-handed stunnerStunning catches at boundary edges have become frequent in the IPL. Andre Russell-Piyush Chawla and Shane Watson- David Wiese had combined for hokey-pokey grabs this season. Stunning slip catches, however, are not as regular. Suresh Raina claimed one on Sunday night.Dwayne Smith banged a short ball into the ribs of Suryakumar Yadav. The batsman arched his back to ramp the ball over Raina at slip. Cramped for room, he gloved it in the air instead. Raina flew to his left, stretched his right hand out, and plucked a one-handed catch as he tumbled onto the ground. He landed near wicketkeeper Dinesh Karthik’s feet.Kaushik gets stunnedLeft-arm chinaman bowler Shivil Kaushik came into the action early – in the third over – when he awkwardly slid to his right at third man to intercept an open-faced dab from Suryakumar Yadav. The next over, Robin Uthappa picked one off his pads behind square. Kaushik moved to his left from fine leg and got his body behind the ball. But it bounced off a practice pitch, brushed Kaushik’s fingers, and trickled away for four. He had a puzzled expression on his face, while Dhawal Kulkarni, the bowler, had his hands on his mouth in disbelief.Shakib’s twin scoopsShakib Al Hasan, wearing multi-coloured boots, added more flash to the proceedings with scoops off contrasting balls in the penultimate over of Kolkata Knight Riders’ innings.The first came off a slow, 89 kph bouncer off Praveen Kumar. Shakib walked across off, waited for the ball to arrive, leaped, and used his upper-body power to shovel-scoop the ball over his shoulder, to the fine-leg boundary. Three balls later, Praveen bowled a 127 kph full toss. Shakib stepped across again and scooped it over the keeper for another four. Praveen was ready to rip his hair out.The nick that wasn’tBrendon McCullum’s cavalier approach is exemplified by his down-the-track bash. He stepped out to the third ball he faced, lost his shape, and swung wildly at a good-length delivery from Russell. Wicketkeeper Uthappa belted out a caught-behind appeal instantaneously. Seconds later, the bowler went up and Morne Morkel ran towards the keeper from short fine leg. Umpire Rod Tucker shook his head and shot down the appeal, even as ultra edge picked up a spike. McCullum made 29, which included three fours and two sixes, before toe-ending Piyush Chawla to long-on in the eighth over.

Trott's success tops Lions report

Two four-days game in tough conditions tested England Lions. The play-off for an opening berth remained unsettled while Mark Wood emerged from the fast bowling attack

Ivo Tennant in Bloemfontein22-Jan-2015It is axiomatic that the most heartening aspect of England Lions’ two first-class matches on their short tour of South Africa has been Jonathan Trott’s return to international cricket following his stress-related illness. In terms of making an unbeaten double century at Paarl and then a half century at Bloemfontein it has been statistically successful, but then no-one doubted he could still score runs. More significantly, he has enjoyed his cricket and, insofar as anyone can pass judgement on a private matter, has appeared healthy and happy.Nor has he evaded his responsibilities as captain. He is sufficiently media savvy to have perfected the politician’s art of tossing a question back at his interlocutor, but has done so with humour. One question from this correspondent about whether he would like to follow Kevin Pietersen in coming up with an autobiography of his own was met with: “Would you like to write it?” Another, seemingly straightforward inquiry, was met with: “Is that a statement or a question?” In the mind’s eye, Harold Wilson is sucking on his pipe to bide time and clear his thoughts.One or two people came up to Trott and told him they knew his father or a friend of a friend of a friend, or some such connection, and he was invariably polite in response. This, after all, is his homeland. He knows the people, the pitches, even the opposition. Vincent Barnes, his old coach from his teenage years in the Cape and now looking after South Africa A, rather gave the game away when he said Trott had told him he was ready to return to international cricket.Quite when that will be is unknown. Sam Robson is the England opener-in-possession, but he did not excel on the trip in front of Andy Flower and Graham Thorpe. Adam Lyth made 65 in Bloemfontein while wickets were falling around him, but otherwise 7 and 37, and Alex Lees 53 runs in three innings. So Trott could yet be the preferred choice as Alastair Cook’s partner in the Caribbean. As for James Vince, the most successful batsman after Trott through innings of 78 at Paarl and an unbeaten 152 under some pressure at Bloemfontein, and whose cover drive is wonderfully alluring, he is not an opener. He will, though, be given the captaincy in the forthcoming one-day internationals.It would have been ideal for the Lions if they had played in more temperate conditions in Cape Town rather than commute to Paarl (temperatures in the high 30s and 42 degrees on the last day) and then have to leave their Newlands hotel the following morning at 4.30 am to fly to Bloemfontein, where they had to field in the mid to high 30s. It was a chance to give Paarl some much-wanted top-level cricket, but on such a short trip playing in Cape Town would have made sense. There would probably have been more spectators as well.Mick Newell has been in Bloemfontein in his capacity as an England selector, reminiscing about Pietersen when he was Nottinghamshire’s second XI coach: “A quite shy young lad who I thought was going to become an outstanding performer.” More significantly, he talked of the feedback that would be given to each county club at the end of this tour, emphasising that there is no pressure from the selectors in terms of which Lions players should be chosen for which format. “We don’t interfere with the way the clubs pick their teams.”As to the bowlers, the England hierarchy would have learnt little that they did not already know about Liam Plunkett, who took seven wickets. Much the same could probably be said of Boyd Rankin. Mark Wood is the emerging talent, singled out by Temba Bavuma, a century maker in Bloemfontein. He has a short, springy run-up, strong shoulders, and in addition looks as though he will soon be regarded as an allrounder rather than, at present, as a bowler who can bat.As for South Africa A, Theunis de Bruyn, who made an unbeaten 202 in Paarl and 161 in Bloemfontein, is clearly a Test cricketer of the near future. Newell rated Chris Morris, who is accurate and lively, but who is now 27. Rory Kleinveldt, his new ball partner, was the pick of the attack, but will be 32 in March. He is to join Northamptonshire this season.”They wanted me last year, but I had tendonitis in my knee,” he said. “I am absolutely a better bowler now than when I played for Hampshire in 2008, when I had to have a hernia operation. I understand the game better and it will be a challenge for me to adapt to bowling different lengths in England. I shall have at least two months with Northamptonshire as an overseas player, but am nationally contracted so may be required to go back home. Which of the members of their team do I know? Richard Levi. I’m not too familiar with the rest.”

Hughes dismissed by Guptill again

Plays of the Day from the Group A match between Australia and New Zealand at Edgbaston

Nagraj Gollapudi at Edgbaston12-Jun-2013The mistake
“Yes. No. Yes. Okay.” Perhaps that’s how Matthew Wade and Phil Hughes communicated with each other as they decided to take a cheeky single in the fourth over of the match. Facing a short delivery from Mitchell McClenaghan, Wade played with soft hands and rushed for a tight single. Hughes was uncertain from the beginning. He started, but then stopped mid-stride. He then saw Wade running towards the non-striker’s end. Though he tried to run hard, Hughes’ failure to dive robbed him of an extra yard as Martin Guptill, who had run in swiftly from short cover, threw himself forward to hit the stumps and complete a brilliant run-out.The plan
How often does a captain place a silly point for an offspinner, in addition a slip and a leg slip, in a Powerplay? It resembled a placement common in Test matches when Brendon McCullum walked up to field at silly point and encircle the new batsman Mitchell Marsh. The plan was to add pressure and tempt Marsh to go hard at the offbreaks of Kane Williamson. Marsh did exactly that and even though he did not get out, McCullum had sown doubt in the batsman’s mind and tried to cut his areas of scoring. Soon after, Marsh fell top-edging a pull to the wicketkeeper.The not so bold step
McCullum has a penchant for taking brave calls and remains one of the few aggressive captains in the game, but even by his standards the decision to bowl Williamson in the penultimate over of Australia’s innings was taking it too far. Ultimately the move proved to be disastrous. Bowling his tenth over, Williamson erred in his length. In his previous nine overs, he had restricted the scoring rate by bowling gentle offbreaks on a tidy line and length. In his final over, however, Williamson faltered. His flat and short balls allowed Glenn Maxwell to charge, pull, and reverse sweep with freedom. It was the most expensive over of the match, costing 18 runs, which was what Australia had managed in the previous four overs.

Haryana: The 'simple boys with self-belief'

It has been many years since Haryana produced a player who gets the kind of attention that makes selectors bolt upright. Any performance that gets them into their first Ranji final since 1991, though, might just do it

Sharda Ugra08-Jan-2012In a season of tackling hairpin bends and skimming cliff edges of elimination, Haryana find themselves on solid ground and in their very element. Their first Ranji Trophy semi-final in 20 years will be only their third game at home this season – at the Bansi Lal Cricket Stadium in Lahli, outside Rohtak. It is a venue that coach Ashwini Kumar believes has played its part in altering his team’s fortunes – despite last season’s quarter-final loss to Tamil Nadu.In the semi-final, Haryana will meet a team whose success last season unlocked belief and confidence among the lower orders of Indian first-class cricket. Rajasthan arrive in Rohtak as defending champions, their surge out of the Plate League causing a stirring among the Ranji small fry. This season Haryana have produced the early aftershock. Their victory over Karnataka in a low-scoring game lasting only three days in Bangalore was the only outright result in the quarter-finals.Ashwini, whose tenure as Haryana coach since 2000 was briefly interrupted before he returned in 2009, said his team is only now hitting its full stride. “Struggle has been our habit this year,” he told ESPNcricinfo, “We’ve had so many ups and downs and still the team has managed to get past everything.” Whether it was injuries to key players, playing four of their six league matches away from home or heading into their final league game against Gujarat with relegation looming.Haryana’s batsmen crossed 300 in each of their first five league matches, but they took the first-innings lead in only two. The team followed on against Madhya Pradesh in Rohtak, and went into their last league game with the big drop looming.Their batsmen produced 207 in their first innings against Gujarat. Yet thanks to their bowlers, only a seventh-wicket partnership took Gujarat past the Haryana total. From this situation Haryana produced a big victory and gave their season the gear it will require to keep going. In their second innings, Haryana declared at 321 for 5, with middle-order batsman Priyank Tehlan 15 short of his maiden first-class century in only his sixth game. “We could have batted for another five or ten overs but we needed overs to get them out,” Anirudh Chaudhry, the Haryana Cricket Association secretary, said. Six wickets went to the spin team of captain Amit Mishra and debutant offspinner Jayant Yadav, who was picked over legspinner Yuzvendra Chahal.

“Rajasthan has won the Ranji Trophy. Our boys saw how Jharkhand won the 50-over title last year and Bengal the Twenty20 title. We had qualified for the knockouts in all three. The players now believe that it doesn’t matter if you come from a small state, if you do well, you can represent India.”Haryana coach Ashwini Kumar

Haryana has had a rash of rookies this season. The five debuts in their opening match against Delhi came from injuries to key players even though there was a worry of opening the Ranji season with “half the team made of up new players,” according to Chaudhry. Medium-pacer Sanjay Budhwar was recovering from a surgery, Mohit Sharma had a hand injury, Mishra a shin problem and halfway through the season, Joginder Sharma had an accident.Chaudhry said Haryana had been “fired up” fighting for promotion to the knock-outs. “These are simple boys with self-belief.” The victory over Karnataka, which Chaudhry followed on live streaming, was the team’s giant stride after three years of quarter-final defeats. “Karnataka was a very good team. They are an old association, they have a history. The country’s leading wicket-taker is president. They have a wealth of experience to consult.”It took a “bowling spell of his life” from Harshal Patel, the Gujarat fast bowler signed on as a professional, to break open Karnataka’s batting which set up the eventual victory. After his parents’ migration to New Jersey, Harshal stayed on in India for cricket and it is a decision he may never regret.Ashwini counts seven debutants for Haryana this season, with Chaudhry pointing out that along with that, there are two players playing their first full Ranji season. The average age of the 17 players who have turned out for Haryana in 2011-12 is just over 23.The sudden mushrooming of twenty-somethings has come, Ashwini said, due to a combination of factors, one of which he believes is the HCA’s fully-equipped cricket facility at Lahli. “It is our own stadium. We are able to hold off-season camps and have good practice facilities. We can train our coaches here. It is convenient for kids to get here for long periods of training. We can have trials.”Compared to 150 players who would turn up for open trials in a city, Lalhi’s trials pull in 350 from towns and villages, Chaudhry said, their bats “wrapped in gunny bags.”The other reason for the surge in Haryana’s overall fortunes and aspirations in the Ranji Trophy is “a big difference in the thinking of the players over the last decade,” Ashwini said. This comes from the success of their peers from other states. “Rajasthan has won the Ranji Trophy. Our boys saw how Jharkhand won the 50-over title last year and Bengal the Twenty20 title. We had qualified for the knockouts in all three. The players now believe that it doesn’t matter if you come from a small state, if you do well, you can represent India.”It has been many years since Haryana produced a player who gets the kind of attention that makes selectors bolt upright in their seats. Any performance that gets them into their first Ranji final since 1991, though, might just do it.

Deccan benefit as Smith and Vaas prove their point

Dwayne Smith hadn’t played the last game and Chaminda Vaas hadn’t played at all this season but Deccan dropped Herschelle Gibbs, off colour after starting the tournament in a fury, and Ryan Harris, and reaped the benefits of their bold gamble

Sriram Veera in Kimberley11-May-2009Deccan Chargers made two changes for this game and it changed their fortunes. Dwayne Smith hadn’t played the last game and Chaminda Vaas hadn’t played at all this season but Deccan bit the bullet and dropped Herschelle Gibbs, off colour after starting the tournament in a fury, and Ryan Harris, and reaped the benefits of their bold gamble.Smith, with 214 runs at 30.57 and a strike rate of 164.61 this IPL, has shown the world and the WICB selectors what he can do. Actually, everyone knows what he can do; it’s what he does in the middle – or not – that has thrilled and infuriated Caribbean fans. After a immensely promising debut, where he smashed a Test hundred against South Africa in South Africa, he has slowly let himself go the way of Ricardo Powell.His script was simple: Flashy big hits, a thrilling six and an adrenalin-fuelled dismissal. Far too often he would get cleaned up by the full delivery or hole out to mid-on or mid-off, trying to force the length ball over the infield; no wonder he was nicknamed “Tarzan” in the Caribbean. Worse, he seemed to repeat his mistakes, unable to check the bat swing that starts slightly too early. Today, he played himself in, playing with soft hands and, importantly, showing immense wisdom in shot selection.It was much later that he unfurled his trademark swings over midwicket and long-on to push Hyderabad to a defendable total. It was an innings that highlighted his steady improvement from those early days. Through this tournament, he has spoken about his commitment and desire to get a call back to the West Indies team and has, importantly, admitted his mistakes in the past. If the first step towards solving a problem is admitting you have one, Smith has taken some giant strides.After the match, he revealed his gameplan. “All I wanted to do was keep playing straight, get singles and get to the end to have a blast.” It’s too early to say whether Smith Version 2 has arrived but it’s very possibly in the beta stage. Asked about the fact that he seems to have got bit more methodical in his hitting, he pointed to his Sussex stint last year as the turning point – where, he said, his county coaches helped out with his mental transformation.If Smith’s is a story of a man trying to forget his past, Vaas is a man desperate to show he doesn’t belong in the past. This IPL was threatening to go the same way as his international limited-overs career has been unravelling. The Sri Lankan think-tank wants to look beyond Vaas and build for the future but the man refuses to fade away.Today, he got his first game in the IPL and he delivered. First ball. He trapped Smith with a delivery shaping in and, though it might have hit the batsman high, Vaas cashed in on his appeal. What a pressure-relieving moment it must have been, even for such an experienced campaigner. A little later, after a series of deliveries that strangled Lee Carseldine, he had him stumped by an alert Gilchrist. Swapnil Asnodkar tried to go after him but never found the ball in the slot.Typical Vaas. He might have lost pace but his skills have actually improved with age. The inswing has got better, he learned reverse swing and mastered the variations of pace beautifully. Today, he deployed his repertoire to almost kill the chase even before the Powerplays ended. Smith and Vaas have created more selection headaches for Gilchrist – but he’s unlikely to reach for the aspirin.

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