Rangers: Mateo Cassierra not imminent

A big Glasgow Rangers twist has emerged over the Ibrox club’s pursuit of a striker heading into the summer transfer window… 

What’s the talk?

According to the Daily Record, ‘club sources’ have denied an imminent swoop for Mateo Cassierra is coming for Rangers.

The report claims that the £8m-rated gem will not be arriving at Ibrox any time soon as there is no deal in place for him to join, despite the player speaking about a potential move to Glasgow.

He was recently quoted as saying: “Personally, the priority is to be in Europe. I’ve been abroad for five years, in different countries and leagues. But as I say, we are in time to rest and now nothing can be ruled out”.

“There was also talk about Rangers. The coach (van Bronckhorst) knows me. There are possibilities.

“River is something that has been talked about a lot at the end of last week. But I don’t know anything, a week ago we finished and the possibilities have to be seen.”

Supporters will be gutted

Gers supporters will be gutted by this news as it does not bode well for the chances of the Premiership side landing the Colombian forward this summer.

Although they have not completely ruled out a future move for the attacker, the club sources have rejected the idea that he is an imminent target. This will give other teams, including River Plate, an opportunity to snap him up whilst the Light Blues decide what they want to do.

Fans will be frustrated if Rangers do miss out on a deal for the 25-year-old as his statistics from the 2021/22 campaign suggest that he would be a terrific addition to Gio van Bronckhorst’s squad.

In the Russian Premier Liga, Cassierra produced 14 goals and four assists in 22 matches for Sochi, averaging a superb SofaScore rating of 7.29.

His goal record immediately stands out but his creativity from a number nine position is also very impressive. He managed to create four ‘big chances’ and provided 1.4 key passes per game as he showed that he can excel as a playmaker whilst also being a predator in the opposition’s box.

This means that he would be a double threat at the top end of the pitch for Rangers with his ability to both score and create goals. Therefore, the fans will be gutted to learn that – despite his comments – the club are not closing in on the striker.

AND in other news, Big setback: Rangers dealt hammer blow that’ll leave van Bronckhorst fuming…

Man United must swoop for Jonathan David

Manchester United had their fans jumping for joy last summer when they announced that Cristiano Ronaldo would be making a return to Old Trafford.

Despite the 37-year-old finding the net 18 times in 30 Premier League appearances this season, he couldn’t carry his side to a top-four finish.

With 58 points on the board, the Red Devils finished sixth, having scored (and conceded) just 57 goals in 38 league games, a lower return than the likes of Leicester City and West Ham United.

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One other Portuguese figure who could be seen as a bright light in a dark season for the Manchester club is Bruno Fernandes.

No other outfield player at United ended up playing more minutes than the midfielder, who scored 10 goals and delivered six assists in 36 appearances.

To further highlight his importance to the team, none of his team-mates came close to equalling the number of shot-creating actions (145) that Fernandes made throughout the campaign.

Now that the season has mercifully drawn to a close, the focus for the club and their new manager Erik Ten Hag can move on to the summer transfer window.

To make the Red Devils a deadlier team in an attacking sense, one player with whom they have been linked and who could do just that, potentially forming a scary duo with Fernandes, is Jonathan David.

Imagine him and Bruno

In 179 appearances between his previous club Gent and his current side Lille, the £45m-rated striker has scored 69 goals and supplied 20 assists across all competitions.

With 38 league outings to his name in Ligue 1 this season, the 22-year-old has racked up the highest number of shots on target (30) and the joint-highest number of successful dribbles (34) at his club.

This shows just how dangerous he can be in an attacking sense and illustrates why he could be a deadly figure for United if he has Fernandes feeding him with plenty of chances to score.

Labelled a “ruthless” player by Mark-Anthony Kaye, David is exactly the sort of player that the Red Devils need in their team to make them a scary attacking force again.

With all that in mind, the prospect of having an attacking duo of Fernandes and David should be enough for Ten Hag to launch a move for the striker in the coming weeks and months.

In other news – Bid incoming: Sky Sports journalist drops MUFC transfer update, Ten Hag will be thrilled

Celtic: Hutton makes Carter-Vickers claim

Former Scotland defender Alan Hutton believes Celtic are in danger of missing out on the permanent capture of Cameron Carter-Vickers this summer. 

The lowdown: Deal on the table

Following the completion of a successful season-long loan spell at Celtic Park from Tottenham Hotspur, the Hoops are now faced with an initial £6million option to buy the 24-year-old centre-back.

However, amidst interest from the likes of Southampton, Fulham, West Ham, Crystal Palace, Wolves and Everton, the USA international was non-committal on where his future may lie when discussing a ‘special season’ in Glasgow.

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Now as the 2021/22 season prepares to draw to a close once and for all this weekend, one recognised pundit has delivered his own verdict on whether the deal will get done, seemingly going against previous reports that a deal is almost done.

The latest: Permanent switch a ‘big question mark’

Speaking to Football Insider, former Rangers man and regular BBC contributor Hutton suggested that Celtic face a battle to get bring Carter-Vickers to Parkhead permanently.

The 37-year-old said: “The big one for me is what happens with Carter-Vickers? That’s the big question mark.

“He’s been a rock at the back, he’s made Carl Starfelt a better player. If he goes, that’s an almighty gap that you are going to have to fill.

“That’s the biggest, interesting point for me with this team moving forward. The Carter-Vickers one is the big one.”

The verdict: Spot on

The eight-cap America international trends closely alongside star names such as Villarreal stalwart Raul Albiol, Wolves ace Max Kilman and Leicester City favourite Caglar Soyuncu when using the FBref player comparison tool, highlighting the powerful defender’s rise to prominence.

From a Celtic perspective, Carter-Vickers earned the sixth-highest average Sofascore rating with an impressive 7.33 in the Scottish Premiership, behind only Ryan Christie, David Turnbull, Jota, Matt O’Riley and Anthony Ralston.

Keeping a player of Carter-Vickers’ evident talent would be a huge feather in the cap of Celtic and indeed Ange Postecoglou, perhaps rubber-stamping the development and a sign of things to come at Parkhead under the Greek-Australian boss.

In other news: Celtic are now eyeing ‘very exciting’ youth international, read more here

Arsenal team news: Zinchenko injury latest

Journalist Connor Humm has been reacting to some Arsenal injury news that has now emerged involving Oleksandr Zinchenko.

The Lowdown: Calf injury

As per the official website of the Ukraine national team, Zinchenko has suffered a calf muscle injury picked up in training in North London, which will rule him out for two weeks while he receives treatment and recovers.

He will miss Ukraine’s upcoming UEFA Nations League fixtures and also the Emirates Stadium outfit’s trip to Brentford in the Premier League on Sunday lunchtime.

The Latest: Humm reacts

Taking to Twitter, Humm, Gunners fan and writer for Football365, gave his immediate reaction to the news of Zinchenko’s injury, claiming that it is a ‘blow for Arsenal’:

“Reports are suggesting that Oleksandr Zinchenko has picked up a fresh muscle injury and will be out recovering for two weeks leaving him out of the upcoming UEFA Nations League fixtures. A blow for Arsenal.”

The Verdict: Big blow

Losing Zinchenko to injury so close to the Brentford clash is a big blow for Mikel Arteta and his team.

He had just recovered from a knee problem that kept him out of two top-flight matches to feature in the 3-1 loss away at Manchester United last time out, and now he has suffered another setback so early on in his Gunners career.

They already have four other first-team squad players out injured at the moment, and with a period of nine fixtures coming up in October, Arsenal will need as many players available as possible with the hectic scheduling in the lead-up to the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

The summer of Kohli

Win or lose, hundreds or ducks, Virat Kohli will be the centrepiece of this Australia season. Before the summer of Kohli, here is a look at the making of Kohli

Sidharth Monga in Adelaide04-Dec-20181:17

Throwdowns and majestic pulls: Kohli hits the Adelaide nets

It is unlikely Virat Kohli will go for a pilgrimage to the WACA Stadium when India go to Perth for the second Test of this series. They will be playing at the new stadium instead. Chances are even more remote he remembers WACA Ground’s leaky basement gym that often doubled up as the press conference room. Or, actually, he probably does. We will come back to that.On a bleak day for India, on a proper Western Australian stinker of a day, Kohli revealed perhaps his truest self in a press conference under the dripping pipes in that gym back in 2011-12. Perth can do that to you. Sap you all over, rid you of all mental energy, leave you too exhausted to keep up a pretence.No video or transcription might be able to tell you this, but those present at the press conference detected a lump in his throat. This was a rookie under extreme pressure, part of a legendary but floundering batting line-up, with the leadership and pundits too scared to question the legends. Captain MS Dhoni didn’t want to drop one of the legends, but he also didn’t want to damage a young career. Amid calls to drop Kohli for Rohit Sharma, Dhoni persisted with Kohli, who scored 44 out of India’s 161 all out in the furnace.Kohli was sent out to the press conference, the statesmen missing in action again. “I don’t know why people were after me even after the first game,” he said. “I had scored two fifties before that in the match against West Indies [in Mumbai], and suddenly I was on the verge of being dropped after one match.”Scoring eight hundreds in one-day internationals can’t be a fluke. It’s international cricket as well. I don’t know why people have been questioning my technique or temperament so much. I have been playing at No. 3 in one-dayers, and I have not gone in to bat in very good situations in all of the 70 [odd] matches I have played. All of this is a learning curve for me. I am playing on difficult wickets, in Australia.”

“There has rarely ever been an Indian cricketer who loves the bull’s eye on his back this much. In fact he is among the few that don’t run away from it. You can question his decisions, but not the intent.”

This was raw emotion. Not corporate platitudes that he often speaks these days, which by the way might be necessary given the propensity of the media to stretch every word to its extreme limit for its newsworthiness. This was Kohli rallying against an unfair world, crying out for some patience, revealing a vulnerability. He had flipped the bird to the abusive SCG crowd in the Test before. A rookie was doing what the team’s elderly statesmen should have done for him: get the predators off his back.

****

Kohli will surely go to Adelaide Oval. He went to Adelaide Oval a week after that emotional press conference, and scored India’s only century of the tour, no thanks to Zaheer Khan, who slogged wildly first ball, leaving No. 10 Ishant Sharma to see Kohli through to the mark. Kohli went to Adelaide Oval again four years later, and scored twin centuries in an emotion-filled match. He will go back to Adelaide Oval this week with the current best batsman in the world.1:40

Virat Kohli’s evolution as a Test batsman in 2018

He will also go back as one of the most recognisable faces in world cricket, and in Australia too. Before the recent G20, the German chancellor Angela Merkel reportedly needed a cheat sheet on Australian prime minister Scott Morrison. No Australian needs a cheat sheet on Kohli. Through tabloids they know whether Kohli flew to Adelaide with the rest of the team or not, and if his wife is here or not. On more serious medium, Ryan Harris, Jason Gillespie, Ricky Ponting, John Buchanan, Brett Lee, every current Australian player or part of team management at every press conference, anybody with anything to do with any cricket has been asked about how to keep Kohli quiet in the last week or so.It is a minor miracle they haven’t tried to find out his spiritual guru or his beard trimmer or soy milk supplier just yet. Well if he gets going, it could be a long summer, so don’t say you weren’t warned.

****

Two days from this Adelaide Oval Test, India’s fast bowlers are putting the batsmen through their paces in the nets. This is a particularly intense session. The pitches are spicier than usual. Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and Ishant Sharma are all in rhythm. They are perhaps bowling big no-balls; it is hard to tell from behind the nets, but they are real fast.KL Rahul is struggling for timing, M Vijay has been hit on the helmet by Shami, Cheteshwar Pujara is repeatedly getting hit high on the bat. Bumrah bowls to Kohli, who has looked the most comfortable of the lot. The three are about an hour into this bowling session, but the intensity is up. Bumrah gets one to squeeze underneath Kohli’s bat. He is caught on the back foot to a ball that stays only a touch low.”This was the old ball, maybe that’s why it stayed low,” Bumrah tells Kohli.”Should I have been forward?” asks Kohli.”No, it just stayed low.””If you see anything like that, please point it out. Don’t just say it stayed low.”Kohli is aware of all the attention on him. Moments earlier the cameras all perked up when he walked in to the net. The intensity picked up everywhere. Kohli knows of the elevated status that comes with this attention. Perhaps he hasn’t always been, but now he seems conscious of that. He is telling bowlers to be honest to him in their feedback.

****

Many a journalist has made the mistake of judging a player’s character by his interactions with them. Yet, in Kohli’s case, his interactions are instructive. Kohli doesn’t cease being a competitor at press conferences, which by now should be a mundane activity for him. He speaks self-aggrandising PR, but it is easy to rile him up. He remembers who asked him tough questions when he lost, and gets back at them when he wins. It is like he can’t help himself get into a sledging contest even with the media.Imagine the man on the field. He must be a nightmare to compete against. He never forgets anything. He takes offence at the drop of a hat even if it doesn’t involve him. Joe Root will know that after Kohli’s response to the “bat drop”. He is the worst person to lose to. Which is why you can be under extra pressure when playing against him. Because it doesn’t end at losing. He will never be sheepish if you drop him. He will rub it in when he gets that hundred or that run-out or that win.Getty ImagesNobody in cricket today has as much bastard in him as Kohli. Root is embarrassed at celebrations. Kohli is never embarrassed at anything. He is a ruthless and remorseless competitor. He doesn’t regret making decisions. You can make bad selections – and he has made a few – but you can’t let it affect your performance on the field once you realise it.There has rarely ever been an Indian cricketer who loves the bull’s eye on his back this much. In fact he is among the few that don’t run away from it. You can question his decisions, but not the intent. He genuinely believes what he is doing is for the good of Indian cricket. With that righteousness comes anger at those who question him from the outside.Each one of his questionable decisions, meanwhile, has made the bull’s eye on his back brighter. By treating a legend of Indian cricket, Anil Kumble, the way he did, by dropping Ajinkya Rahane in the first Test in South Africa, by becoming the most openly powerful Indian captain, Kohli has to know he has made himself more than a few enemies. He would be extremely naïve to not know he gets what he wants because if or when India lose, he will be blamed. A sample of it was the convenient leak during the England series that Ravi Shastri, the coach who replaced Kumble, has been asked for explanation.This Australia tour and the World Cup next year remain his two biggest assignments. If India win neither this Test series against a severely depleted Australia nor the World Cup, leaks about Kohli will begin. Kohli still remains convinced about what he is doing. Convinced enough to keep taking that risk.

****

All this also means Kohli is spending a lot of mental energy on even mundane things. He, though, thrives on it. He loves being in that heightened state of mind. He lives every ball, be it while he is batting, at the non-striker’s end or in the field. Mental energy is, of course, finite, but he knows mental energy comes down to physical energy and fitness.This is where you see how Kohli recognises he was born with a god-given skill, a talent, and that doesn’t make him special. Anybody could have been born with that quick eye and the co-ordination to go with it. It is what you do with that skill that makes you. What difference you make. How much better you get than the last generation. For that he pushes himself to the extreme limits to stay fully fit to compete for longer than others.Getty ImagesAll his yo-yo tests and special diets came good in the monumental Edgbaston hundred. More than anything, that innings was a testament to his reserves. With the ball seaming and swinging so much, with so much history between him and James Anderson, with another hellish spell from Anderson to survive in which he had to face 43 balls for just six runs, Kohli had to be exhausted mentally, physically and emotionally by the time he started to take control of the innings with just the tail for company.

“To be so detached from the result after having been so intense with the process and the execution is probably Kohli’s biggest achievement.”

Everybody gets reprieves, everybody enjoys some luck, but the really good ones are fit enough, alert enough, remorseless enough to take advantage of it. Don’t let your mind wander and think if you really deserve those runs after the drop. Stay there, live every ball, and make up for the earlier struggles. Out of the 92 runs that Kohli scored with Nos 10 and 11, his partners scored only six. This period of play involved sharp singles to manipulate the strike. Often he pushed the fifth ball of the over straight to mid-off and mocked them by finishing the single. This was an innings of a supremely fit cricketer, who made the most of the luck he had.

****

There was a lot of analysis of Kohli’s luck during the England series. And he, as a batsman, had a fair amount of it; as a captain he lost five tosses. At one point, in the middle of the third Test, Anderson had drawn 53 false shots from Kohli without dismissing him, which is an incredible streak. To put it in perspective, that series produced a wicket for England every 10.41 times an Indian batsman was not in control. Then again, four years previously, Kohli was not in control only 54 times, but that was enough to dismiss him 10 times in that series.That series was one that left him at his lowest ebb. Such a series can make batsmen go crazy. They can make drastic technical changes and lose their own game. They can wallow in self-doubt. Kohli did nothing of that sort. He knew his game was good enough for flatter conditions, and he wasn’t due to face England-like conditions for the next three years. If his defensive poke to wide deliveries is his weakness, it also gives him the confidence to be able to cover-drive later, a shot that brings him tons of runs.When it came to the tougher conditions at the start of this year, Kohli still didn’t put away that shot. He found a way to score runs without dropping that defensive shot and the subsequent cover drives. He concentrated on making his strengths so strong that the bowlers were always under pressure. When you know the cost of missing your length is going to be huge, you are likelier to commit that mistake. There is also realisation in Kohli’s game of the part luck plays in sport. His last two England tours are examples.Athletes talk about making your own luck. It probably means you always be at your physical, mental and emotional best to capitalise on the luck when it does come your way. And don’t wallow when you are unlucky. Getting himself to a state where he is philosophical about failure must have been the toughest part for a man as intense as Kohli, but he seems to have mastered it now. To be so detached from the result after having been so intense with the process and the execution is probably Kohli’s biggest achievement. Not being so is not an option. Many a batsman has destroyed himself by fixating over the results. Kohli won’t.

****

Two days to go to one of his two most significant challenges as captain – after having lost series in South Africa and England – Kohli is a relaxed man. The focus of the world sits easy with him. He is spending more time talking to the bowlers than on his batting in the nets. There are so many things that can go wrong. He can run into wretched luck, his bowlers can return to old form in Australia, his batting partners can fail, and if any of that happens that philosophical outlook can change because the enemies are growing and the rope is shortening.His team selections, his power in the board, his field placements, they are all under the scanner. The Australian media is going to try to drive the screw in if India don’t win the first Test. Amid all this he has to maintain his batting form. As a colleague of his, Krunal Pandya, put it, he has to keep competing against law of averages.That brings us back to what Kohli said seven years ago in the leaky WACA Ground gym. Surely he remembers it? Surely, he knew something about the future?”This is not the end of the world, this is not the last series that is ever going to be played. I have still got to be positive. I have still got to keep working hard and not think about if I am going to get dropped or if someone else is going to play in my place. I really have no control over that. I can only go out and bat. That’s all I am going to do.”

The debate about Pujara's strike-rate

Cheteshwar Pujara’s strike rate has been a worry over the last 30 months, but much of it is to do with his inability to score against pace when playing overseas

S Rajesh27-Sep-2016One of the significant pluses for India in the Kanpur Test was the performance of Cheteshwar Pujara at No. 3. In both innings of the match, he made significant contributions, and more importantly, got his runs at an excellent tempo, scoring 140 off 261 balls, a strike rate of 53.6. Before the game, Pujara’s inability to increase his scoring rate after settling in had been an area of concern for the team management, and Virat Kohli admitted that he and Anil Kumble, the coach, had spoken to him about it. That aspect had been particularly glaring in the West Indies, where Pujara scored 62 runs off 226 balls (strike rate 27.4) and was dropped for the third Test.Since his comeback in August 2012, Pujara’s strike rate, coming into this New Zealand series, was 48.05. Among batsmen with 2000-plus runs during this period, only four have a lower strike rate, but his rate wasn’t that much slower than some of the other top batsmen during this period: Hashim Amla’s was 47.73, Kane Williamson’s 50.47, and AB de Villiers’ 51.24. Where Pujara had slipped up was in the last two-and-a-half years: since the start of 2014, his scoring had dropped to 42.39, about 20% lesser than his strike rate in the 2012-13 period. It was the lowest among Indian batsmen during this period, and third-lowest out of 47 batsmen who had scored 750-plus Test runs in this phase. Only Faf du Plessis (strike rate 38) and Kaushal Silva (40.88) had more sluggish scoring rates than Pujara.

Cheteshwar Pujara in Tests since Aug 2012
Period Tests Runs Average Strike rate 100s/ 50s
Aug 2012 to Dec 2013 14 1483 78.05 52.25 6/ 3
Jan 2014 to Aug 2016 18 892 30.75 42.39 1/ 3
Lowest strike rates in Tests – Jan 2014 to Sep 21, 2016 (Min 750 runs)
Player Tests Runs Average Strike rate
Faf du Plessis 20 1041 34.70 38.00
Kaushal Silva 26 1545 32.18 40.88
Cheteshwar Pujara 18 892 30.75 42.39
Hashim Amla 21 1514 50.46 43.43
Azhar Ali 18 1641 51.28 44.01
BJ Watling 23 1366 42.68 44.42
Dean Elgar 19 1053 37.60 44.65
Marlon Samuels 17 791 26.36 44.66

The aspect that had particularly worried Kohli and Kumble was Pujara’s tendency to get stuck after getting starts. As the table below shows, his strike rate since 2014 remained in the 40s even after the first 50 balls of his innings, whereas earlier he had shown the ability to shift gears and up his scoring rate into the 50s after settling in.

Pujara’s strike rates in different phases of his innings
Balls Faced SR Before 2014 SR Since 2014
<=50 49.87 42.34
51 to 100 51.90 41.77
101 to 150 57.74 46.56
151 to 200 66.67 60.94
>200 balls 47.87 55.06

Given these numbers in the 30 months prior to this series, Pujara’s comeback in Kanpur was encouraging, but not entirely surprising given how he has performed at home in the past. Since August 2012, Pujara has averaged 67.17 (strike rate 52.87) at home, and 35.92 (strike rate 42.52) in away Tests. The averages and strike rates resemble those before and since 2014, and that is because India’s schedules have been similarly lopsided: 14 out of his 18 Tests in the last 30 months have been away games. The only home series during this period was against South Africa: Pujara managed a strike rate of 48 in that series despite the pitches being particularly difficult for batting.Through the last 30 months, Pujara’s major problem has been his tendency to get bogged down against pace, an aspect that was not tested much in Kanpur. Even during the period when Pujara was struggling to score quickly, he still made his runs at a fair clip against spin: since the beginning of 2014 and before the Kanpur Test, his strike rate against spin was 52.29, but against pace it dropped to 38.14. In the Kanpur Test, he faced only 36 balls against pace and scored 12 (strike rate 33.33), while against spin he continued to get his runs comfortably, scoring 128 from 225 balls (strike rate 56.89). In the 2012-13 period, he was far more assertive against pace as well, though 12 of his 14 Tests during this period were in India.

Pujara v pace and spin between Jan 2014 and Aug 2016
Bowler type Runs Balls Dismissals Strike rate
Pace 561 1471 19 38.13
Spin 331 633 10 52.29
Pujara v pace and spin between Aug 2012 and Dec 2013
Bowler type Runs Balls Dismissals Strike rate
Pace 777 1434 8 54.18
Spin 706 1404 9 50.28

Admittedly, on the West Indies tour, Pujara completely went into his shell, against both pace and spin: he scored at a strike rate of 38 against spin, and 20 against pace. After those pedestrian numbers, it isn’t surprising that the team management discussed the issue with him. The Kanpur numbers are encouraging, but the real test for Pujara continues to be his numbers outside Asia. With India scheduled to play 12 more home Tests this season, that issue won’t come up any time soon, though.

More toil likely as England hunt 20 wickets

England’s Test attack from Antigua was given a day off on Sunday and the same quicks are likely to face more hard work in the second Test with them unable to find much movement

George Dobell in Grenada19-Apr-2015England’s bowlers could be forgiven for letting out a sigh of desperation when they arrived at the Grenada National Stadium on Monday.They will fear a repeat of Antigua. They will fear another flat track offering them little other than hours of toil. Little pace, little bounce, little movement. A tough week looms.Those England bowlers who took part in the first Test were given a day off on Sunday. In their absence, Liam Plunkett bowled with sharp pace in the nets – he clean-bowled Ian Bell at one stage – while Mark Wood continues to impress all who see him. With 16 more Tests to come over the next nine months or so, both are likely to win their chance sooner or later.It is unlikely to be here. This pitch may be a fraction quicker than Antigua, but it may still largely negate pace and, with Ben Stokes and Chris Jordan – who bowled the quickest delivery of the Antigua Test – already in the side, England have that base pretty much covered. However Plunkett, in particular, can expect to feature in the Ashes.While Bell suggested that England’s tactics in the remainder of the series would mirror those adopted in Asia, it seems unlikely they will field two specialist spinners. Instead, Moeen Ali is expected to come in to the side in place of the unfortunate James Tredwell, who picked up an arm injury towards the end of the first Test, with Joe Root used in support. The rest of the side is likely to remain unchanged.The lack of lateral movement is the most concerning aspect of England’s bowling performance in Antigua. While Jerome Taylor found extravagant swing and Jason Holder sharp seam, England’s seamers struggled to gain swing – conventional or reverse – and were reliant on cutters for several of their wickets.”If this pitch has the same characteristics, which I’m sure it will, we’re going to have come up with a lot of different ideas how to get those 20 wickets,” Bell said. “We’re going to have to change our plans. We’ll have to work out a formula in the next couple of days which helps us get 20 wickets.”There was actually quite a lot to admire about England’s performance in the first Test. The continued development of the young batsmen, the pace and consistency of the younger fast bowlers and the commitment in the field all promised better times ahead.But the problem for Peter Moores – and to a lesser extent Alastair Cook – is that they have little time. With Paul Downton sacked and the incoming chairman, Colin Graves, suggesting West Indies are a “mediocre” side against whom failure will be unacceptable, there is a sense of impatience for progress. As if there are those waiting for them to fail.In time, it may come to be that Graves’ comments – and his comments about Kevin Pietersen’s return, the future of domestic T20 cricket and four-day Tests – may come to reflect rather worse on Graves than anyone else. But for now they have just heaped pressure on Moores and co.”We’re not in control of those comments,” Bell said. “We know and respect this West Indies side. We knew the kind of attritional cricket we were going to be playing.”We didn’t turn up here expecting for them to roll over and this to be an easy series. You never expect that in any international cricket, let alone a Test team. I expected competition. To win this series we have to play very well.”The on-going speculation about the identity of the next director of England cricket is hardly helping, either. While there may well be a role for someone to plan overseas tours at age-group, Lions and England level, someone to negotiate central contracts and integrate the county and domestic programmes more successfully, there is little sense in adding another high-profile individual to the coaching or management unit. As Moores put it on Saturday: “When you coach, you watch a lot to say a little. You don’t want too many voices in the dressing room.”It probably didn’t help that Michael Vaughan was in the same hotel as the team last week. While Vaughan – who has recently called for Moores to be “removed” as coach – has a decent relationship with some of the younger players, some of the older ones are far less keen. It is understood his attempt to have a clear the air chat with Alastair Cook did not go well and his presence was interpreted, by some, as a constant reminder that the axe is hovering.With such turmoil in the background, England require stability and assurance from their senior players. And in Antigua Bell, playing his first Test as official vice-captain, answered the call with a century of high class.”I’ve been striving to be that player,” Bell said. “In a tough situation I want to get tough runs. I’ve always said that. In the second half of my career I’ve probably done that a lot more than I did at the start. It was nice to start the tour getting runs but in a tough situation it’s even more pleasing.”It’s nice to have the responsibility of vice-captaincy, officially as well. In the last 12 months of Test cricket I’ve tried to pass my experience on to young guys and be right there for Cookie when he needs it. It’s nice to get that responsibility confirmed.”So with change in the air, it is possible that Bell could be England’s Test captain by the end of the year?”I’ve not really thought about it,” he said. “For me it’s always been about performing as a batsman. It’s nice to be vice-captain, having good conversations about how we go forward. But for me it’s always been about scoring runs and trying to win games of cricket for England.”The last 12 months have been great in terms of preparation and practice. Our results, certainly in one-day cricket, haven’t been fantastic but the way we practice, talk in the nets and pass on information has been as good as I can ever remember in an England team.”All the indications are that what this England set-up requires more than anything is time. Whether they will be granted it remains to be seen.

Thirimanne century could prove career-defining

Sri Lanka’s selectors have persisted with Lahiru Thirimanne, and in his 62nd ODI, he underlined his top-order potential again, under the pressure of a chase in a final

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Mirpur08-Mar-2014When he looks back on his match-winning 101 in the Asia Cup final, the highlights reel in Lahiru Thirimanne’s head is unlikely to include the single that took him to 39. The shot Thirimanne played, moreover, was that banal middle-overs staple: the push, with the spin, for a single. That particular single, though, was significant. It nudged Thirimanne’s batting average from 29.9761904761905 to 30.An ODI average of 30 isn’t a massive deal, you might think, but it’s probably the equivalent of a Test average of 40. In most cases, the difference between averaging 29 and 30 in ODIs – and between 39 and 40 in Tests – is usually the difference between feeling like you still need to prove yourself and feeling secure about your place in the side.It’s slightly different for Sri Lankans, though. Throughout their history as a cricket team, their batsmen have been slow starters in ODIs. It took Sanath Jayasuriya till his 235th match for his average to stabilise itself above 30 – that is, for it to never dip below that mark again.It took 102 matches for Kumar Sangakkara, 149 for Mahela Jayawardene, 111 for Aravinda de Silva, 155 for Tillakaratne Dilshan and 86 for Arjuna Ranatunga. The quickest of Sri Lanka’s top seven ODI run-getters to achieve a stable 30-plus average was Marvan Atapattu, who got there in his 23rd match. He, of course, began his Test career with five ducks in his first six innings.Sri Lanka’s selectors have always given their talented batsmen a long run in the side, believing they have the game and the temperament to eventually come good. Time and again, they’ve been proved right. Sri Lanka’s current set of selectors, chaired by Jayasuriya, have given Thirimanne that sort of run in the side. The Asia Cup final was his 62nd ODI. It was the perfect stage to play what could prove a career-defining innings.Two things worked in Thirimanne’s favour during the first half of his innings. Early on, Pakistan’s attentions were mostly fixed on Kusal Perera, who was worrying them no end with his Jayasuriya-esque flicks and jabs, powered by an iron bottom-hand grip. This took some pressure off Thirimanne, and allowed him to remain inconspicuous and play at his own pace.Saeed Ajmal then came on, bowled a maiden to Kusal, and struck twice in his second over to dismiss Kusal and Sangakkara. His next over, to Mahela Jayawardene, was another maiden. When Misbah-ul-Haq took Ajmal out of the attack, he had bowled four overs, out of which Thirimanne had only faced two balls. The first of those had squirted off his inside-edge for four. Even during the opening game of the tournament, in which Thirimanne had scored a century, Ajmal had been the only Pakistan bowler to trouble him.None of this, of course, is to knock Thirimanne’s achievement. Sri Lanka were under tremendous pressure when they lost their second wicket. They still needed more than 200 to win, and their momentum had stalled to a considerable extent.Thirimanne began the process of regaining Sri Lanka’s momentum in Mohammad Talha’s first over. Talha started with a deep backward square leg and a square-ish fine leg. Third ball of the over, Thirimanne bisected them with his pull. Two balls later, when Talha drifted too straight, he sent fine leg running the other way, once again in vain, with a deft flick off his hips.Those two shots showcased Thirimanne’s timing and placement as well as his ability to keep his head about him under pressure and look for scoring opportunities. He has shown those qualities right through the Asia Cup, and given credence to the comparisons that are often drawn between him and Sangakkara. It helps that they share a tall stance and a cover drive on one knee with a full flourish.

All three of Thirimanne’s ODI hundreds have come when he’s batted in the top three; in those positions, he averages 49.08 in 14 innings. At No. 4 or lower, he averages 22.80 in 33 innings. Like Sangakkara, whose blossoming coincided with a move up the order – he had spent a lot of the early part of his career at No. 6 or 7 – Thirimanne will probably bat up the order in the long term

In this innings, on a slow pitch and against a group of fast bowlers who didn’t pitch it up all that often, Thirimanne didn’t get to play the cover drive that much. Instead, he exploited the V behind the wicket, and picked up a couple of boundaries with open-faced steers past the wicketkeeper that brought Ranatunga to mind.After he had moved into the 70s, Thirimanne picked up a cheeky boundary off Umar Gul with one of these late dabs. Next ball, he blocked solidly, back to the bowler. Gul raised his arm, as bowlers often do, as if to throw the ball at the stumps. Thirimanne said something. Gul, moving closer to the batsman, responded with an observation of his own. Thirimanne, like Ranatunga and Sangakkara, didn’t seem to mind a bit of chat.None of this affected Thirimanne’s batting. He flowed on, smoothly, content to stay within the confines imposed by the pitch and the lengths Pakistan bowled. It took until he had moved to 81 for someone to give him a wide half-volley, and he pounced on it gleefully.The next 15 runs took a while coming, as Jayawardene took centre-stage for a while before he and Ashan Priyanjan fell in quick succession. Thirimanne didn’t have too much of the strike in all that while. He had been on 85 off 85 balls at the end of the 33rd over. At the start of the 44th, he was on 99 off 105. When he finally flicked Junaid Khan to reach 100, he leaped and punched the air twice, once with helmet on, once with helmet off.Thirimanne’s century was his third in ODIs. All three of them have come when he’s batted in the top three; in those positions, he averages 49.08 in 14 innings. At No. 4 or lower, he averages 22.80 in 33 innings.Like Sangakkara, whose blossoming coincided with a move up the order – he had spent a lot of the early part of his career at No. 6 or 7 – Thirimanne will probably bat up the order in the long term. In the short term, though, with Dilshan set to return from injury, he gives Sri Lanka a bit of a headache. It isn’t one they’ll mind too much.

Andre Adams and the four-step run-up

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from Auckland v Kolkata Knight Riders at Newlands

Liam Brickhill at Newlands15-Oct-2012Adjustment of the day
Andre Adams is not the swiftest of bowlers, but does usually at least come off a run of a good 20 or so paces. Today, however, he trundled in from just four. The idea behind this, Adams explained after the match, was that Auckland had a couple of bowlers with long run-ups – Kyle Mills and Michael Bates foremost among them – and so he was trying to buy his captain Gareth Hopkins some time and ensure a healthy over rate by bustling through his overs. Adams still slung the down at a decent pace, with wicketkeeper Hopkins standing back during his four overs.Catch of the day
Martin Guptill might only have two toes on his left foot, but he’s got five fingers on each hand and he put them to superb effect to get rid of KKR captain Gautam Gambhir in the second over. Gambhir had had some luck when umpire Rod Tucker refused to uphold what appeared to be an adjacent lbw call off Michael Bates, but when a leading edge looped low towards extra cover four balls later Guptill swerved to his left and plucked the ball out of the air inches from the turf.All-round battle of the day

Azhar Mahmood and Jacques Kallis boast a wealth of experience in their combined 74 years-plus, but Kallis is thought of as the greatest allrounder of his generation while Mahmood hasn’t played an international since the 2007 World Cup. Nevertheless, it was Mahmood who got the better of their mini-battle at Newlands, the Pakistani finding the South African’s outside edge for a second ball duck. Mahmood then took 10 runs off the nine Kallis deliveries he faced in his match-winning fifty.Tangle of the day

Mahmood returned to bowl the penultimate over, conceding just eight runs despite Yusuf Pathan and Rajat Bhatia’s efforts to smash the living daylights out of the ball. Indeed, Bhatia got himself in such a tangle after charging at a misread slower ball that he ended up prostrate on the ground. The batsman, who’d come out to bat without spikes, saw fit to call for a new pair of boots with just nine legitimate deliveries remaining. Not that it made a great deal of difference, as neither he nor Pathan could find the boundary in the final over.Drop of the day
He bats, he bowls, but can he catch? Mahmood turned from hero to villain when, in the final over bowled by Bates, he set himself under a top-edged Pathan heave at deep square leg. The ball, quite possibly swirling around in the stiff south-easterly wind blowing across the ground ,bounced off his palms and Mahmood couldn’t get close to the rebound.Quick start of the day
Lou Vincent charged out of the blocks in the Aces’ chase, flapping the second ball he faced over mid-off for four and adding a clip to the midwicket boundary and a sky-scraping scoop over wide long-on as a whopping 17 runs flowed from the first over of the innings, bowled by Lakshmipathy Balaji. Shakib Al Hasan was given the same treatment, and the Aces had rocketed to 37 from 17 deliveries before Vincent tried one shot too many and top-edged a hoick off Sunil Narine. Vincent had set the tone for the Aces’ chase, however, and they cantered home with ease.

Dive Gambhir, dive

Gautam Gambhir has several strengths as a batsman but diving into his crease to try and protect his wicket isn’t one of them

Jamie Alter at the Feroz Shah Kotla11-Apr-2010″What we’ve got here is [a] failure to communicate.” The words immortalised by the sadistic, taciturn jailor in the classic were apt for the manner in which Gautam Gambhir and David Warner were dismissed. Warner’s run-out, three deliveries after he left Gambhir stranded, was down to poor calling but at least he put in a valiant dive. Gambhir turned around and barely made an attempt to get back, despite having clear view of the fielder’s bad throw to Kumar Sangakkara. It’s a weakness in Gambhir’s terrific game and one that’s becoming a recurring feature.This was Gambhir’s third successive run-out and the second one that proved a turning point in Delhi’s defeat. He had bolted like a runaway caboose, scoring 26 from 11 balls, without hitting one in the air. His 12th was short and wide and he placed the ball to Juan Theron at short third man but responded to Warner’s call. Then Warner stopped. Gambhir had no chance of getting back as Kumar Sangakkara collected a poor throw and flicked the ball back onto the stumps. He was furious with Warner for sending him back but he had made no effort to reach his crease.Gambhir does most things right when running between the wickets. He carries the bat in the correct hand for easy turning; he accelerates from the crease, gets low at the other end, and makes sure the bat crosses over. But while he is an aggressive runner, Gambhir rarely dives. He is among the better runners but unlike others – JP Duminy, AB de Villiers, MS Dhoni, for instance – he’s often unable to recover from a bad call because he’s not keen to dive.An emotional cricketer and one prone to getting carried away – just ask Shane Watson or Shahid Afridi – Gambhir is always up for a contest. That can translate into frenetic running, which can be both good and bad. Good when it puts pressure on fielders, bad when Gambhir’s natural ability doesn’t back that belligerence up.Gambhir has been run out seven times in ODIs, twice in Tests and once in a Twenty20 international. Perhaps the most glaring example of his poor running was in India’s defeat to Pakistan in Centurion during the ICC Champions Trophy. Chasing a stiff target, Gambhir had given India a rousing start but his first blunder, a lazy bit of running, swung the match Pakistan’s way. He was left stranded mid-pitch and gave up hope too early, giving Younis Khan plenty of time to take aim and throw down the stumps. Replays showed a dive might have saved his wicket. All the way back Gambhir kept admonishing himself.Playing for India is more important than the IPL, yet these two dismissals will irritate Gambhir. This aspect of his game is a chink in an otherwise solid wall, but one that’s costing his team. One upshot of playing continuously is that setbacks are quickly forgotten for there is always something around the corner – victory or defeat – to get exercised over. For Delhi’s sake, here’s hoping Gambhir puts in a valiant dive soon.

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