Desfalcado e com deficiências, Corinthians pode comemorar empate

MatériaMais Notícias

O Corinthians viajou para Manaus sabendo que iria enfrentar o Vasco com muitos desfalques e com um time alternativo. Por ser começo de campeonato, um empate fora de casa, nessas circunstâncias, não é um mau negócio, ainda mais quando a equipe poderia ter voltado para casa sem nada. Problemas com marcação nas laterais e a velha dificuldade para criar chances de gol são motivos suficientes para comemorar o ponto conquistado.

Sem entrosamento e mais ansioso do que o normal, o Timão demorou para “entrar” no jogo e deu chances para os cariocas chegarem no ataque com certo perigo, especialmente pelas pontas, que não tinham a marcação reforçada, deixando Michel Macedo e Carlos Augusto expostos no “um contra um”.

No entanto, como tem sido praxe nesta temporada, mesmo jogando mal e com muita dificuldade de chegar ao ataque, Mateus Vital fez grande jogada individual para abri o placar na Arena da Amazônia. Foi o momento em que o jogo parecia ficar ao gosto corintiano, porém o entrosamento defensivo não é o mesmo dos titulares e a confusão logo tomou conta do aparente controle.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasBrasileirãoNinguém feliz: Vasco e Corinthians ficam no empate em ManausBrasileirão04/05/2019CorinthiansSem rodeios, Carille trata ‘problemas’ no Corinthians com sinceridadeCorinthians03/05/2019

O Vasco percebeu que o adversário sentiu o momento de desequilíbrio e explorou as laterais do time paulista, que já mostravam problemas. Foi pelo lado esquerdo, em cima do jovem Carlos Augusto, que Rossi levou vantagem e sofreu pênalti, que Maxi López converteu para empatar. Esse duelo permaneceu até o momento em que o vascaíno foi substituído.

Após o empate, o Corinthians ainda tentou dar mais volume ao quase abandonado ataque, mas Jadson e André Luis não conseguiam estar na mesma boa toada de Mateus Vital, enquanto Vagner Love parecia brigar sozinho com a bem postada zaga carioca. Os problemas que assolam os titulares se repetiram com os “reservas” e o setor ofensivo sofreu demais em sua função.

No segundo tempo, principalmente nos primeiro minutos, o Vasco tentou pressionar a defesa corintiana para alcançar o gol da virada e criou chances para tal, porém não conseguiu ter a eficiência necessária. Sorte do Corinthians, que vendo a dificuldade nos dois setores, passou a tentar fazer o que melhor faz: controlar o jogo e até atingiu esse objetivo com toque de bola.

Evidente que Fábio Carille foi até Manaus para ganhar os três pontos, apesar de levar a campo um time alternativo, mas não irá reclamar do empate que trará na bagagem para São Paulo. A atuação não foi a ideal, como o próprio comandante tem analisado, porém diante do momento de adversidades com desfalques e desgaste, está de bom tamanho.

England forced to grind as Australia chip away

Capacity crowds have been drawn to the Investec Ashes all summer in anticipation of another high-octane series, but England are juddering to their destination as if Australia have slipped petrol into their diesel engine.

The Report by David Hopps23-Aug-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsKevin Pietersen struggled to flourish on a slow wicket but made a valuable half-century•Getty Images

Capacity crowds have been drawn to the Investec Ashes all summer in anticipation of another high-octane series, but sometimes things do not work out that way. Instead, England are juddering to their final destination as if Australia have slipped petrol into their diesel engine.When England are under pressure, they commit themselves zealously to pre-programmed, conservative, risk-free cricket. There will be a computer programme somewhere suggesting that the careworn approach they displayed on the third day of the Oval Test has improved their victory chances by 5.62% and their chances of avoiding defeat by rather more.Their give-’em-nothing approach probably possessed unabashed cricketing logic and provided further proof of their tough mental state. They were 3-0 up in the series and were determined not to grant Australia a consolation victory with the return series already looming. Faster scoring, according to Joe Root, young in years but old in brain, was “not viable”. The result was drab fare for all but the most obsessive Test cricket watcher.Excited England pre-match talk of an unprecedented 4-0 Ashes victory was quietened on the first day by a lost toss and Shane Watson’s domineering century for Australia. What has followed has been prosaic in the extreme: attritional batting, laggardly attitudes which might usefully waste a bit of time along the way, and a general tedium as England have made grim, and probably successful, progress towards passing the follow-on figure of 293.They scored at only 2.19 runs per over on the third day, making 215 in 98 overs, while losing only three wickets on a ponderous but reliable Oval surface, one on which Australia proceeded at 3.81 runs per over while making 492. But Australia had to make the running and that meant taking wickets. They failed in their prime task.Australia’s attack was disciplined but – as England emphasised, hour after long hour – resistible: Nathan Lyon, barely seen until mid-afternoon, got the occasional ball to turn and bounce sharply and, if Ryan Harris ever opts for body art, a huge bull nose ring would be perfect; for his unyielding approach alone, he deserves to be named as Australia’s man of the series. But England’s obduracy triumphed and it arose not from conditions but largely from their choice to put an unwillingness to yield above loftier ambitions.Perhaps the presence of a debutant allrounder, Chris Woakes, at No. 6, was enough to curb England’s ambitions. As it was, Woakes, although only 15 not out at the close, launched his Test career with a ringing square drive against Mitchell Starc and generally looked more comfortable than most. If he has a Test future it may be as a batting allrounder.Even the umpires caught the slow rhythms. Aleem Dar thought for an age before giving out Jonathan Trott to Australia’s first delivery with the second new ball, ten minutes before tea. Trott, who had reached 40 with great deliberation, while bearing the demeanour of a cabinet minister who had just approached the despatch box to announce the banning of Fun, reviewed Starc’s lbw decision but the call was a good one. Australia had stifled his leg-side strength to good effect.Alastair Cook’s unproductive Ashes continued when he became the only England batsman to fall on the third morning. Cook’s exceptional record – 766 runs in seven innings – was the bedrock of England’s first series win in Australia for 24 years three years ago, and he has another series victory to bring contentment here, but he has found little personal glory in his first home series as an Ashes captain.When Harris enticed him to push woodenly at a wide one, and offer a simple catch to the wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, it left him with 243 runs at an average of 27 and the prospect of one more innings, at best, to remedy matters.As for Haddin, he is only two dismissals short of Rod Marsh’s all-time record of 28 dismissals in a Test series, achieved against England in 1982-83, which is not the sort of statistic you expect to find when a side is 3-0 down.Cook has three half-centuries in the series, but his batting for the most part has been characterised by stilted defence. His 28 came from 88 balls, with only 11 added from his overnight total, his pleasure drawn from a solitary square drive against Harris and the only half-century stand that his new opening alliance with Root has brought all summer.He also survived an Australia review, on 25, when Harris exposed his summer-long tendency to fall too far over to the off side. But it is doubtful whether he was overly concerned. Predictably, replays showed the ball pitching well outside leg stump, continuing the trend in a series in which the DRS success rate of both sides now lies under 25%.Root did at least find some benefit. Remove his herculean 180 in the second Test at Lord’s and all he had to show for his first series as an opener was six scores under 20, but he survived an awkward examination from Starc in particular and by the time he unpacked his first third-man glide of the morning he looked in better order. His half-century was neatly packed away by lunch.James Faulkner, like Woakes, is a one-day allrounder on Test debut, and his introduction after lunch encouraged Root’s most enterprising moments as he twice preyed on width to drive to the boundary. But expectations that Root could inject some life into the day were dashed by Lyon, who had him caught at short fine-leg from a top-edged sweep.Kevin Pietersen was awarded a miniature silver bat at lunchtime as recognition of becoming England’s highest runscorer in international cricket, but it brought no air of celebration. His fifty took three hours, his second slowest in Tests for England, and came up with a bottom-edged pull against Faulkner as he was through a pull shot far too early. Ironic cheers rang out from a crowd which had soaked up its punishment patiently.He has rarely made such ugly runs and did not make another run after his half-century, poking a full-length ball from Starc to first slip. There had not been a strut in sight. There was, though, a prolonged exchange with Michael Clarke after he was sledged for the way he apparently mothers Ian Bell through an innings when they are together at the crease.Pietersen had most difficulties of all against Lyon, who found turn from around the wicket and enough harum-scarum moments against bat and pad to keep the short leg, Steve Smith, in perpetual hope that a deflection might fall within his range. His impatience was apparent when he gambled on a risky single to mid-on and was spared by David Warner’s inaccurate shy. Lyon caused occasional alarms, but he could not cause mayhem.Were it not for forecasts of heavy rain, spinners could be expected to have a sizeable say on the last two days. Instead, with storms forecast for Saturday, there was a sense of a series meandering to a climax, a series which has sporadically brought great entertainment, but which has been of inconsistent quality.Roy Hodgson, the England football manager, was in the crowd and, in his terminology, he must have felt that the third day remained goalless, with only a couple of shots on target.

Compton ton gives England Ashes boost

Nick Compton produced the perfect response to his critics with a century for Somerset on the opening day of their Championship match against Durham

06-Jun-2013
ScorecardNick Compton found some much-needed form with his second Championship hundred of the season•Getty Images

Nick Compton produced the perfect response to his critics with a century for Somerset on the opening day of their Championship match against Durham. Instructed by the England coach, Andy Flower, to go away and get back into some form on the county circuit, the 29-year-old opener hit 139 not out, including 15 fours and a six, to lead his side to a total of 336 for 5 in perfect batting conditions and enhance his claims to a place in the Ashes.Marcus Trescothick and Arul Suppiah both contributed 36, while Dean Elgar (33) and James Hildreth (32) also got out when apparently well set. Graham Onions was the pick of the Durham attack with two for 43 off 18 overs.But it was Compton’s day. After a sketchy start that saw him score only 23 from 87 balls before lunch, he blossomed in the afternoon session to reach a four-hour hundred off 203 balls. He was given one life on 53 when Paul Collingwood dropped a sharp catch at slip off the bowling of young offspinner Ryan Buckley.By then the shackles seemed to have been removed. Compton brought up his half-century off 129 balls with a four and a straight six off successive balls from Buckley and began to look as though he was enjoying his batting again. The second fifty was far more fluent, occupying 74 deliveries. A misfield by Mark Stoneman at mid-off brought Compton his 12th four and the coveted three figures, greeted with a hug from partner Hildreth and warm applause from Somerset supporters.They had good cause to be grateful as none of the other top order batsmen could match Compton’s powers of concentration. Trescothick had breezed to 36 when driving at a very wide ball from Onions and edging a catch to second slip.It was 82 for 1 at lunch and 50 more had been added when the accurate Onions struck again, bowling Suppiah middle and leg stump. Tea was taken at 212 for 3 and straight after the interval Elgar had a wild slog at Will Smith to surrender his wicket, also clean bowled. When Hildreth also moved sweetly into the thirties only to fall lbw playing a across a full ball from Buckley, Somerset were in danger of failing to capitalise on what seemed almost ideal batting conditions.Alex Barrow looked confident enough in moving to 25 before falling victim to the second new ball as his stumps were rearranged by Mark Wood to make it 307 for 5. Peter Trego kept Compton company until the close, but Durham could feel they had stuck to their task well in the soaring temperatures.

قائمة الاتحاد السكندري لمباراة البنك الأهلي في الدوري

أعلن الجهاز الفني لنادي الاتحاد السكندري بقيادة الصربي زوران مانولوفيتش قائمة فريقه لمباراة البنك الأهلي، ضمن منافسات بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

الاتحاد يواجه البنك الأهلي، على استاد الإسكندرية، اليوم الجمعة، في إطار منافسات الجولة 31 من عمر المسابقة المحلية.

طالع أيضًا | لجنة الحكام توضح لـ بطولات سبب تعطل الفار في مباراة الزمالك والاتحاد

وضم زوران إلى قائمة الاتحاد السكندري لمباراة البنك الأهلي محمود علاء في الدفاع، ومابولولو في خط الهجوم. قائمة الاتحاد السكندري لمباراة البنك الأهلي في الدوري

حراسة المرمى: المهدي سليمان، صبحي سليمان، عمرو خليل.

خط الدفاع: خالد صبحي، مصطفى إبراهيم، محمود علاء، صبري رحيل، هشام صلاح، السيد سالم.

خط الوسط: محمود عبد العزيز، خالد الغندور، ناصر ناصر، إبراهيم حسن، إسلام عبد النعيم، محمد محمود عمار حمدي، محمد فارس، أحمد عادل ميسي، أحمد حامدين.

خط الهجوم: عبد الغني محمد، أوستن أموتو، مابولولو.

'Excited to be back for IPL' – Ponting

Mumbai Indians captain Ricky Ponting has said he is excited to be back for the IPL after a gap of five years and that with his retirement from international cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Mar-2013Mumbai Indians captain Ricky Ponting has said he is excited to be back for the IPL after a gap of five years. His retirement from international cricket, he said, has allowed him to focus on domestic leagues such as the IPL and the ones that follow.”I am very excited to be back in IPL,” Ponting said. “The way things have worked out – with my retirement from international cricket and finishing off the domestic season for Tasmania and playing well – they have given me the opportunity to be back here.”The reason I did not come back for IPL 2 and 3 was because I had too much international cricket on at that time. And now that I don’t have international cricket, the opportunities for me to play in these domestic tournaments are really opening up.”After the IPL ends in May, Ponting will head to England for two months to play for Surrey and then to the West Indies for nearly five weeks to play in the Caribbean Premier League which begins on July 29.Ponting said his experience of leading Australia will play a crucial role in captaining Mumbai that already has some big names, such as Sachin Tendulkar and Harbhajan Singh, with whom he has had “great battles” over the years.”I have got a really good idea of what makes good teams successful,” Ponting said. “And they are all the things I will be bringing to the table in Mumbai. To think that I will be playing alongside Sachin Tendulkar and Harbhajan Singh, some of the guys I have had great battles over the years, and some of the young local Indian talent I have come across in the last couple of days is great.”With Mumbai now, we have John Wright, a successful ex-India coach, and Anil Kumble, a successful Indian captain and a very very good Indian player and leader. Obviously me coming into the set-up, we have put together a really strong leadership group.”Mumbai finished third in the points table last season and lost to Chennai Super Kings in the elimination final by 38 runs. The closest they came to winning the title was in 2010 when they lost to Super Kings again in the final.”Mumbai Indians have a pretty proud tradition in IPL of finishing up the top and being in the semi-finals,” Ponting said. “We obviously haven’t won the tournament yet but hopefully this year is our year.”

Melbourne Stars open their account with impressive bowling display

Annabel Sutherland made a half-century before all the bowlers played their part

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-2021Annabel Sutherland’s half-century coupled with the key wicket of Alyssa Healy helped Melbourne Stars secure their first victory of the season against a Sydney Sixers side who chased poorly.Sutherland’s 57 off 50 balls laid the platform for Stars before Maia Bouchier provided late impetus with three boundaries off the last five balls she faced in a partnership of 51 with Kim Garth.Former Ireland allrounder Garth then struck in her first over to have Shafali Verma caught behind and Sixers’ chase never really got off the ground. Attempting to cut loose, Healy found deep midwicket against Sutherland in the sixth over.Ashleigh Gardner struggled for her usual tempo and was then well caught at point and the asking rate kept escalating before Tess Flintoff struck in consecutive deliveries.Ellyse Perry, who top-scored with 40 off 43 balls in a new role at No. 4, did not find the boundary between the 12th and 19th over by which time it was too late for Sixers.Stars had started positively in the powerplay before Gardner struck with her first delivery to remove Elyse Villani. Meg Lanning edged a drive against Stella Campbell and when Gardner also ended Sutherland’s solid innings, Stars were in danger of losing their way.They did not bring up their hundred until the first ball of the 17th over but Bouchier, the English overseas player, and Garth kept their cool to amass 40 from the last four overs which would prove game changing.

Burns, Townsend fight for Queensland

Wade Townsend and Joe Burns put up fighting half-centuries for Queensland afte South Australia put up 402 at the Adelaide Oval

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Oct-2012
ScorecardCallum Ferguson carried on from the first day to bring up his highest first-class score•Getty Images

Queensland’s Wade Townsend and Joe Burns scored half-centuries and shared an unbeaten 80-run fourth-wicket stand to end the second day 267 runs behind South Australia in Adelaide. Queensland were jolted at the start of their innings when they lost their opener Alex Kemp in the sixth over. They were in a tricky situation early in the third session at 3 for 55 after Dan Christian struck in quick succession to remove Usman Khawaja, who scored 19, and Peter Forrest.Further damage in the day was prevented, as Burns and Townsend put up a fight in the last session. Burns was the more aggressive of the two and hit eight boundaries in his half-century. Townsend, who was dropped in the slips earlier in the day, remained unbeaten on 50 off 132 balls.Queensland had a tough session in the morning. After keeping a tab on the scoring rate on the first day, Queensland bowlers were unable to control the flow of runs as Callum Ferguson brought up his highest first-class score of 164 and shared an attacking 162-run sixth-wicket stand with wicketkeeper Tim Ludeman, who scored 78. Both batsmen were out early in the second session and the tail helped South Australia past 400 and declared immediately after the fall of the ninth wicket. Ben Cutting was the most successful bowler for Queensland with 3 for 73.

Cutting added to 'A' tour injury list

Ben Cutting, the Queensland fast bowler, has become the third paceman to withdraw from Australia A’s tour of England due to injury

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Jul-2012Ben Cutting, the Queensland fast bowler, has become the third paceman to withdraw from Australia A’s tour of England due to injury, flying home following the conclusion of the tourists’ opening match against Derbyshire.Cutting, 25, had not been selected in the XI for the match, and was diagnosed with a back problem that necessitated his return home.In departing early from the tour, Cutting joined Pat Cummins and James Pattinson as fast bowlers unable to gain valuable experience in English climes on the tour due to injury.Cummins did not make the start of the tour, picking up a side strain during the preceding ODI tour by the senior team and heading home to Sydney.Pattinson played in the final two matches of that series before complaining of an abdominal strain and being sent home as Australia A prepared for their tour with a training camp in Southampton.Alister McDermott and Nathan Coulter-Nile were called into the squad in place of Cummins and Pattinson, and Cutting’s injury has enhanced their chances of taking part in the next match of the tour, against Durham from Wednesday.

Lancashire announce record loss

Lancashire, the reigning county champions, lost almost £4 million in 2011, reflecting the ongoing costs of redeveloping Old Trafford. The club’s annual report included a loss of £1.8m in “accelerated depreciation” to account for assets demolished as part of the rebuilding, and more than half a million in legal fees in challenging a judicial review.The figure of £3.96m sets a new record deficit by a first-class English county, beating by some distance the £2.1m losses recorded by Lancashire and Warwickshire last year. However, Lancashire said the The Point, the eye-catching but controversial conference centre opened in 2010, had started to drive revenue, with operating profit increasing by more than £700,000 on the forecast, after the “exceptional costs” were accounted for.The development work, which will see £40m spent on upgrades, also encompasses new grandstands, player and media facilities being grafted on to Old Trafford, as well as work on a new pavilion, scheduled to open ahead of the 2013 season, when Lancashire are due to host Test cricket again for the first time since 2009.Lee Morgan, Lancashire’s finance and operations director, said: “The nature of this result is a continuing reflection of the difficulties faced with building a new stadium on an existing site. However, despite the difficulties faced we are still very much on course to achieve our goals and ultimately return to a vibrant and profitable cricket club and start to fulfil the potential that all at the club believe we are capable of.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus