Durham off the mark in rain-affected contest against Worcestershire

Durham have secured their first win in the Royal London Cup for 2018 defeating Worcestershire by nine runs

ECB Reporters Network25-May-2018
ScorecardDurham have secured their first win in the Royal London One-Day Cup in the 2018 campaign, defeating the Worcestershire Rapids by nine runs via the Duckworth/Lewis method.Michael Richardson scored a half-century to guide his team to a total of 209 after losing the toss, while Gareth Harte also impressed with 48. Charlie Morris claimed figures of 4 for 33 to give the visitors hope of earning their third win on the bounce in the competition.However, a clatter of early wickets put the home side in command as Chris Rushworth, Matt Dixon and Nathan Rimmington struck, handing Tom Latham’s men the narrow victoryDurham were inserted by the visitors and were immediately pegged back in the first over as Josh Tongue removed Graham Clark lbw for four. Richardson and Cameron Steel dug in to see off the opening burst and put on 50 for the second wicket before Steel was caught on the fence by Ross Whiteley off the bowling of Ed Barnard.Latham made a brisk 21 off just 19 deliveries, only to be dismissed by a straight delivery from Patrick Brown. Morris put the home side on the back foot with further inroads, removing Will Smith and Stuart Poynter in the space of three balls. Harte, making his List A debut, battled well with Richardson to guide Durham out of trouble.Richardson seem well placed on 64 to kick on towards three figures, but he was caught on the boundary by Whiteley off the spin of Brett D’Oliveira. Ryan Pringle then followed from his first ball to leave Durham 147 for 7.Fortunately for Durham, the tail wagged as Rimmington and Rushworth provided valuable runs down the order. Although the end was to come abruptly as Morris returned to the attack to wrap up the innings, claiming career-best figures of 4 for 33.Worcestershire’s reply began poorly as Daryl Mitchell edged a Rushworth delivery behind to Poynter in the first over. Travis Head and Tom Fell departed in quick succession as Durham continued their surge into the middle order. D’Oliveira scored three boundaries on the spin to stem the tide, but the Rapids then lost Joe Clarke for 17 when he was removed by Rimmington.Cox scored his first boundary by edging the ball over the top of the slips. However, he quickly found his stride, finding his rhythm at the crease, blasting Harte over extra over for a six.Due to the fall of early wickets, the Rapids had to bat with aggression to reach the Duckworth/Lewis target of 92 in the 15th over. Even their onslaught against Harte was not good enough, falling just short before the rain came and ended the contest.

The song remains the same

Australia’s spearhead is sending them down as quick as he ever did; only now he’s learned to do it without going full throttle

Peter English18-Nov-2008
Lee’s big hands and long fingers are equally adept at bowling at 155kph and playing the guitar © AFP
At the end of each day’s play Brett Lee sings and writes music in his hotel room. For a couple of hours he forgets about cricket and thinks like a performer. “It’s a great outlet for me,” he says.Before being introduced to bands, Lee hated music, but it slowly started to own him. Now it’s part of every night, and he is passing on his tips to Mitchell Johnson and Shane Watson, who practise on the acoustic guitars that tour with the team.Lee has big hands with thick, long fingers that are ideal for plucking at a bass. He won that role in the band Six and Out, which was formed with a group of New South Wales cricketers, and quickly became addicted. His fingers look too chunky for the piano, which he plays too – but not on tour.The end-of-day writing is part fun, part business. Lee has already had a hit song in India with “You’re the One For Me”, an English-Hindi love ditty (look it up on Youtube, and you won’t call it a song or ballad either). And he has suffered for his new art. At the Allan Border Medal in 2007 he was interviewed after the film clip was shown. He said: “It was something I always wanted to do.” Everybody in the auditorium, apart from Lee but including his wife Liz, laughed. He knows it sounds naff, but he believes in what he’s doing, loves the music, is concerned about letting down his “brand awareness”, and realises the commercial aspect could be huge.He says the original song was written in “26 minutes to be exact”. “Who would have thought, eh?” On the India tour in October he was working on more, including crafting songs for the soundtrack of , a Bollywood movie that was filmed during the 2007-08 Australia-India series. Lee has an acting part, but wants a greater role.”We’re in the process of getting that across the line,” he says. “There is so much to do – ways to promote it, royalties, who owns the song. You don’t just write a song.” If his music gets in a Bollywood film he says it will open up an audience of three billion people. The singing starts to sound less silly.Lee is resting the day before Australia’s second Test, sitting in the swankiest hotel in the northern Indian city of Chandigarh. It’s an outpost on the cricket circuit, and not somewhere mainstream musicians would end up. While the current series retains his focus, he is happy to peek towards a contest still almost a year away.”It’s hard not to,” he says of the Ashes. “We’ve got the old cliché, concentrate on the job at hand right now. We’ve got the series here in India, which is pretty much the equivalent to the Ashes. But I’d be lying if I didn’t say playing against the Poms is where it’s at.”Outside the hotel, horses still pull carts and pedal rickshaws bump along the pot-holed streets. Flat roads do exist in India – on cricket grounds – and it’s where Lee, the form bowler of the past year, has spluttered. In the drawn opening Test, Lee’s first in India, he learned how hard things can be for a skiddy, shorter fast bowler – he’s 1.87m – against batsmen who show such strength at home.During the second fixture in Mohali, Lee was involved in unfamiliar ways. On the second day he split the webbing between two fingers on his right hand while fielding, requiring two stitches, and on the fourth morning, when India were building towards a lead of 516, he wasn’t used before lunch.Michael Hussey, who is too casual to be a part-timer, and the debutant Peter Siddle were preferred, along with Mitchell Johnson and Cameron White. The arrival of Hussey sparked a rare moment of anger in Lee, who clashed with Ricky Ponting and demanded a bowl. He lost.In Australian country music there’s a joke that if a song is played backwards the man gets his wife, job and dog back. Lee was not contemplating changing off-field genres, but he just wanted his old responsibilities. By the end of the match, which Australia lost by 320 runs, he had four wickets for the series at 59.25, and had dropped from being the attack leader to disgruntled fielder, strumming the pain in his fingers. Team-mates defended his right to stay in the side after 70 Tests and 293 wickets – the fourth most in Australian history.” I understood that when I was playing with Glenn and Jason Gillespie, it’s almost like you have to earn your stripes. I was biding my time. With Glenn and Shane gone, I have to do a lot more bowling for the team, and I enjoy that extra responsibility” Lee on his transformationLee’s situation didn’t improve during the rest of the series and by the final match, with Australia heading to a 2-0 defeat in Nagpur, he had a stomach bug that limited his effectiveness again. The upshot was eight wickets at 61.62, and a desperate desire for a bouncy pitch at the Gabba in the first Test against New Zealand on Thursday.A year before, Lee was about to start the first Australian summer since Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne retired, and there were doubts over his ability to lead the attack. As a support bowler he carried immense value, but could he cope when the new-look attack was his? For nine Tests, Australia barely missed McGrath as Lee steamed and swung, bounded and blasted. The boy with the movie-star smile had become a truly A-list bowler.Sixteen wickets and a Man-of-the-Series performance against Sri Lanka were followed by 24 victims against India and the Allan Border Medal for Australia’s most valuable player. “People always ask what I’ve done differently, have I changed my action or my run-up?” he says. “The way I look at it, it’s opportunity. Now I’m the strike bowler for the Australian team, take the new ball, get the choice of ends, something that I’ve always wanted as a kid.”I understood that when I was playing with Glenn and Jason Gillespie, it’s almost like you have to earn your stripes. I was biding my time. I knew at some stage it would happen. With Glenn and Shane gone, I have to do a lot more bowling for the team, and I enjoy that extra responsibility.”When Australia beat West Indies 2-0 in the Caribbean in June, Lee had 58 Test wickets at 21.55 since the SCG farewell of the champions at the end of the 2006-07 Ashes. McGrath or Warne would have been happy with a return like that. It was almost as spectacular as his Test entry in 1999.”To average 17 with 42 wickets in seven matches is unheard of,” he says. “You take it while you can. Then I hurt my elbow and had some problems with my lower back. The doctor said I’d never be able to bowl again. My arm was pinned because it had completely snapped in half.”His first series back was in England in 2001 and while the speed returned, he couldn’t regain the magic. “Two thousand one was hard for me,” he says, “I didn’t take a lot of wickets.” He stayed in and around the team for the next couple of years until undergoing ankle surgery in 2004. On regaining fitness he couldn’t get a spot in the XI, and spent five Test series as 12th man behind McGrath, Gillespie and Michael Kasprowicz.”It’s probably the hardest thing I’ve ever been through,” he says. “Eighteen months away from the team was not a feeling I liked. That was a really tough period. Why am I doing all the hard work? I can’t get a game. Looking back, it makes you a stronger person and you definitely want it more.”The wait finally ended on July 21, 2005 at Lord’s. He’d been told he was playing in the series that would reinvigorate the game in two countries and lost Australia the urn for the first time in 16 years. Despite carrying a desperate desire to avenge the defeat, Lee loves talking about that contest.”Two thousand five was a lot of fun, even at Edgbaston, where we lost by two runs,” he says. “It’s probably my favourite game of cricket – even though we lost. Just because of what we had to go through, the way that we fought back.” He can now laugh with Kasprowicz, who was given out caught behind, about the failed last-wicket chase.

“I love the way the stumps fly. I love seeing a batsman a bit apprehensive, or seeing the gloveman behind the stumps taking the ball high” © Getty Images
“The cricket was great, but the relationships we built with the players, particularly Freddie Flintoff, was… that moment… for him to come down and shake hands [at the end of the Edgbaston Test], and the photo that came out of it, that to me is the spirit of cricket.” Thinking back creates such excitement that his thoughts bounce back and forth.”It would be easy to say my favourite moment was when Australia won the World Cup or something else, but that was one of my favourite games,” he says. “I might sound like a massive suckhole, but it was done in the right way. It was fierce out there, it was full-on. Every person was going at each other out there, but after the game we appreciated the hard work that had happened.”The brutal, gripping spell to Kevin Pietersen at The Oval, when confirmation of the urn’s departure was about to occur, is not one of Lee’s fondest occasions. He appreciates that it was exciting “seeing him jump around” and “when he pulls one and it goes 15 rows back”, but it was nothing compared to Edgbaston.Taking back the Ashes with a 5-0 win in 2006-07 did not ease the previous defeat. “The way I look at it, yeah we play the Ashes every two years,” he says. “But the Ashes I look at is playing England in England. That’s my Ashes: 2001, 2005, 2009. It was great winning the Ashes back a couple of years ago, but playing them on home soil is where the Ashes is at.”It’s the hype, the media interest, them saying Australia haven’t got the right side or England aren’t going to be good enough. As players we love all that. Then you get out, play the first game at Lord’s and you can hear a pin drop. It’s so different.” He’s told the first Test of 2009 will be at Cardiff. “No worries.”Lee is wearing a Monte Carlo Sailing Club t-shirt that looks like part of his body. A gold bracelet hangs slightly more loosely from his right wrist. He’s so fit that it’s a bit intimidating sitting opposite him: biceps like steel, smooth arms and those big, guitar-playing fingers that tap occasionally as he speaks. Lee turned 32 during the fourth Test against India, and his body will determine whether he can maintain his speed until the 2011 World Cup, an event he wants to be part of. Torn ankle ligaments prevented him from taking part in the 2007 victory. Overtaking Dennis Lillee’s mark of 355 wickets, the only record worth knowing for a bowler when Lee was growing up, is another aim.”The reason I’m in the team is to bowl fast,” he says. “As the years go on usually the pace comes down slightly. But as each year has gone on I’ve got faster and faster. I know that will stop at some stage. I train on the principle of an Olympic sprinter. Most sprinters don’t reach their peak till their mid-30s. If they can do it, with the right training and the structure we have here, with the fitness trainer and the physio, and I can get my body in the right shape, there’s no reason why I can’t get quicker. I want to bowl faster and faster.”Through the pain of injuries, the ankle that has been operated on four times, the heat and the training, he thinks of one thing. “What keeps me going, the reason I’ve never even thought of being a spinner, is I love the way the stumps fly,” he says. “I love seeing a batsman a bit apprehensive, or seeing the gloveman behind the stumps taking the ball high.”There are no plans to downgrade into a medium-pacer to extend his career, but he has learned to vary the speeds of his spells instead of operating at full capacity every ball. “I used to try to blast the batsman out all day, which doesn’t work,” he says. “You’ve got to build your patience up.”At 100% effort he used to be able to deliver at 155kph, although his record is 160.8kph in front of the generous speed cameras in New Zealand. “If you’re bowling at the maximum every ball, physically, no matter how fit you are, your body can’t hack it,” he says. “So I had to work out: how can I bowl 155ks but not at 100%”If you’re bowling at the maximum every ball, physically, no matter how fit you are, your body can’t hack it. So I had to work out: how can I bowl 155ks but not at 100%”On the need to get the best out of his body”I had to get stronger and fitter and more efficient through the crease. Now I’m bowling at 85-90% to get those 155ks, or 150ks at 80%, so when I want to bowl that quick yorker at 155, I know I’ve got that in the tank.” He mentions Stuart Karppinen, Australia’s fitness trainer, and the physio Alex Kountouris, but not Troy Cooley, the bowling coach. Cooley, the reverse-swing hero of England’s sweet success in 2005, was unable to keep up with – or pass on – the tricks of India’s fast men.Another factor contributing to Lee’s downturn was the split in August with Liz, his wife of two years. The pair has a one-year-old boy, Preston, and Lee says there’s no easy way to be on tour while children are at home.”Obviously what I’ve been going through recently, with the marriage break-up and stuff, and with Preston, it’s obviously terrible,” he says. “It’s really hard and you miss him when you’re on tour, but you’ve got to somehow keep in contact and speak to him every day.”He says Adam Gilchrist and Warne could have continued playing for another three or four years, but they wanted to spend time with their families. He knows one day in the next four seasons it will happen to him too.There is a music studio at the bottom of Lee’s Sydney home, with egg cartons on the walls for sound-proofing, his instruments and a computer for recording. It’s also the place where he keeps his special cricket memorabilia. The main item is the image of 2005. A disbelieving Lee, crouched down in shock at getting so close to victory at Edgbaston, stares into the eyes of Flintoff, who is shaking hands with his right and caringly touching the batsman’s shoulder with his left.”I put it up before I came away to India,” he says. “I don’t want to hang shirts in my house – I want to keep it private – yet I still want a little room, which is locked off, that I can go to, to appreciate stuff and the friendships that I’ve made through cricket.”The photo is signed by Flintoff with the message: “Any danger of you getting out. Well batted. Looking forward to the next battle.” Lee is too.

New Zealand lose perfect home record

Stats highlights from the second Test between New Zealand and India, which ended in a high-scoring draw in Napier

S Rajesh30-Mar-2009Gautam Gambhir’s 643-minute innings is the seventh-longest by an Indian batsman•Associated Press India batted 180 overs in their second innings, which is the eighth-highest number of deliveries they’ve batted in the second try. The first six of those instances had all been before 1980, which indicates how the nature of the game has changed. The last time they batted more overs was also against New Zealand, in 1999 in Mohali, when they scored 505 for 3 in their second innings after being bundled out for 83 in their first. Surprisingly, seven of the top nine such efforts have happened overseas. It’s also the second-highest number of overs they’ve played when following on – the only occasion they batted longer was at Leeds in 1967 against England, when they faced 209.2 overs to score 510 in a match they ultimately lost by six wickets. Of the 30 games when India have been asked to follow on, they’ve saved eight, lost 21 and won one.India managed to draw a Test after conceding a lead of over 200 in the first innings for the tenth time. Overall, such a feat has been achieved on 78 occasions. For New Zealand, it was the first instance of not winning a Test after enforcing the follow-on at home. Before this match, they had a perfect 7-0 record in games in which the opposition followed on. Overall, of the 14 occasions they’ve asked teams to follow on, New Zealand have won ten and drawn four. Gautam Gambhir’s 436-ball 137 was easily the slowest of his 15 fifty-plus scores in Tests. His innings spanned 643 minutes, which is the seventh-longest by an Indian. (Click here for the entire list of longest Test innings in terms of minutes.) Gambhir’s knock is the slowest by an Indian, in terms of balls faced, for an innings of less than 150. His strike rate of 31.42 is still better than Sanjay Manjrekar’s strike rate of 24.64, when he scored 104 off 422 balls against Zimbabwe in Harare in 1992. There were 12 scores of 50 or more in this Test, which equals the record in New Zealand for most number of 50-plus scores in a match. The only previous occasion when this happened in New Zealand was also in a Test against India, in 1999 in Hamilton. This is the ninth drawn game among the last 25 when captains have enforced the follow-on. Eight of those games involved Zimbabwe or Bangladesh, all of which the minnows lost. Exclude them from the equation, and there have been nine draws out of the last 17 Tests which have involved the follow-on. VVS Laxman’s unbeaten 124 contained 25 fours, which is the highest by any batsman in an innings of 125 or less. Extend the filter to 150 runs, and still only six batsmen rank above him. Laxman’s century was also his first in New Zealand, and his second against them in six Tests.

Man Utd gem could be “the world’s best”, but he’s becoming the new Mainoo

Manchester United are a club who have been known to develop numerous world-class talents over the years, many of which have had a huge impact on the first-team.

The Red Devils have their wonderful academy setup to thank for their success, which produced the Class of 92’ – arguably the most iconic group of academy graduates in football history.

The group racked up over 3000 combined appearances for the club, helping Sir Alex Ferguson make the club the most successful side in Premier League history.

However, in 2025, Ruben Amorim is the manager tasked with developing the prospects who emerge out of the youth system and restoring the glory days at Old Trafford.

He currently has numerous top-level talents within his ranks, but it appears as though he’s massively mismanaging one player, which could lead to an extremely unpopular departure.

The decline of Kobbie Mainoo at Man Utd

Back in the 2023/24 campaign, United appeared to have unearthed yet another top-level talent from their academy in the form of central midfielder Kobbie Mainoo.

At the tender age of just 18, he burst onto the scene and racked up 32 first-team appearances and scored on five separate occasions, with many of which coming in key moments.

The teenager’s most important goal no doubt came in the FA Cup final against rivals Manchester City, subsequently helping Erik ten Hag claim his second trophy with the Red Devils.

However, in the last 12 months, Mainoo has endured a steep decline in minutes under Amorim’s guidance, with the 40-year-old evidently not seeing him as part of his plans.

The Englishman has only made 39 appearances since his arrival last November, but only six of which have come from a starting position – with the rest being off the substitutes bench.

In 2025/26 alone, the now 20-year-old has continued to struggle further, subsequently making 10 league appearances, but none of which have been from the start.

He’s only racked up a total of 183 minutes of league action, which works out to just 18.3 minutes of football every time he’s brought off the bench to make an impact.

As a result, the midfielder has been strongly touted with a winter move to join Napoli, which could lead to an unpopular move away from his boyhood club in the months ahead.

The United star who could become the next Mainoo

Ahead of the new year, Amorim could face numerous selection issues as numerous members of his first-team squad look set to join up with their nations ahead of the African Cup of Nations.

Bryan Mbeumo, Amad Diallo and Noussair Mazraoui look all set to feature for their respective countries at the tournament, which could leave the Red Devils short in numerous key areas.

The forward department could become somewhat depleted, given that the former duo of the trio have often operated alongside one another in the Premier League this campaign.

Dipping into the transfer market could well prove to be an option for the manager, but that would involve splashing the cash after already spending £200m in the summer window.

As a result, the academy could once again provide a reliable source of talent, with Chido Obi one player who deserves an opportunity to thrive in the senior ranks.

The Dane joined the club from Arsenal in the summer of 2024, originally linking up with the youth squad, subsequently scoring just 17 times in 21 games across various levels.

His subsequent form led to a senior call-up under Amorim last season, with the 18-year-old making eight first-team appearances, but was unable to find the back of the net.

Obi, who’s been tipped to be “one of the world’s best” by Leny Yoro, has since dropped back into the U21 ranks this campaign, making 13 appearances to date, and scoring five times whilst laying on two assists for his teammates.

Benjamin Sesko and Joshua Zirkzee are the two senior centre-forward options currently available, but the duo have only scored a combined two goals in the Premier League this season.

Games played

8

Games started

3

Goals scored

3

Mins per goal

100

Shots on target

2.2

Dribbles completed

68%

Touches in opposition box

6.6

Fouls won

1.7

Such a lack of quality should open the door for the youngster to stake his claim for a regular starting position once again, but it appears as though Amorim isn’t keen on the centre-forward.

It could lead to yet another Mainoo situation unfolding ahead of the supporters’ very eyes, which could result in the Red Devils losing yet another one of their most promising talents.

His goalscoring record at youth level is evidence of the quality he possesses in the final third, but it’s crucial the manager backs Obi to provide the goods at Old Trafford.

Mainoo is an example of the quality of player available when putting faith into the club’s academy, but ultimately, Amorim is showcasing his ignorance, given the lack of minutes.

As a result, Mainoo could well depart the club, with Obi too potentially getting frustrated with his lack of first-team action if the manager continues to look past each of the talents.

Upgrade on Sesko: Man Utd pursuing "one of Europe's most in-form STs"

Manchester United’s need for a new centre-forward continues, even after the signing of Benjamin Sesko.

ByRobbie Walls 3 days ago

Revealed: The bizarre record Marcus Rashford could break in upcoming England friendlies against Brazil and Belgium

Marcus Rashford finds himself on the brink of a bizarre record if he is used as a substitute by Gareth Southgate against Brazil & Belgium.

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England to face Brazil & Belgium in two friendlies Rashford in line to match Jermain Defoe's record England striker raring to make a mark with the Three Lions Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

As England gear up for crucial friendlies against Brazil and Belgium as part of their Euro 2024 preparations, Rashford stands on the cusp of an unusual milestone. But to get into the record books, he must not start but come off the bench in both games.

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Rashford is poised to equal a record currently held by former striker Jermain Defoe. The ex-England striker holds the distinction of the most substitute appearances for England, having come off the bench 35 times in 57 caps. Rashford's anticipated appearances would see him match this record, having made 33 substitute appearances so far for his country.

DID YOU KNOW?

Among the top 10 players with the most substitute appearances for England, current midfielder Jordan Henderson ranks alongside Rashford. Henderson has made 26 appearances off the bench in 81 games, showcasing the depth of talent in Southgate's squad. Other notable names on the list include Emile Heskey, Phil Neville, Kieron Dyer, Owen Hargreaves, Joe Cole, James Milner, and Peter Crouch.

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Rashford's journey with the England national team began in 2016 when he made his debut as a teenager. Since then, the 26-year-old has cemented his place as a crucial player in the squad, contributing 17 goals to date, including two memorable strikes during the Qatar 2022 World Cup. As the team prepares for challenging encounters against top-tier opponents, Rashford's impact off the bench could prove pivotal in shaping England's fortunes on the international stage.

Yolani Fourie, Moseline Daniels in South Africa women's World T20 squad

They replaced Raisibe Ntozakhe, who has been suspended for an illegal bowling action, and Saarah Smith, who sustained an injury during practice

Liam Brickhill02-Nov-2018Cricket South Africa has announced two changes to the squad for the Women’s World T20, which begins on November 9. While one of the changes – the naming of a replacement for offspinner Raisibe Ntozakhe – was expected, the other comes after a surprise injury to one of the team’s rookie members.Ntozakhe was suspended for an illegal bowling action in October and was replaced by Yolani Fourie, another offspinner from Gauteng, while she works on remodelling her bowling action. Left-arm medium pacer Moseline Daniels was also called up after Saarah Smith sustained a proximal phalanx basal fracture on her pinky finger during a practice session on Saturday. The injury will take four to six weeks to resolve.”It’s very unfortunate,” said coach Hilton Moreeng of Smith’s injury. “We feel her pain as one of our squad members who worked extremely hard through the winter to find herself in her very first World Cup. To end it so prematurely for her it’s very disappointing and we wish her a speedy recovery and we know that she will make a good come back. She’s got a strong head on her shoulders.”Going forward now, after a discussion with the rest of the selectors, the players coming in are both suitable replacements, players who have both been to World Cups before so we will have that experience to fall back on and we know that they will be able to add value to the team from game one.”South Africa will play in Group A in St Lucia against defending champions West Indies, England, Sri Lanka and World Cup Qualifier winners Bangladesh, with their opening game against Sri Lanka on 12 November. In two unofficial warm-up games so far, they have lost to England by 17 runs and India, narrowly, by three runs.South Africa squad: Dané van Niekerk (captain), Chloe Tryon, Lizelle Lee, Suné Luus, Shabnim Ismail, Masabata Klaas, Mignon du Preez, Marizanne Kapp, Laura Wolvaardt, Zintle Mali, Robyn Searle, Tumi Sekhukhune, Trisha Chetty (wk), Yolani Fourie, Moseline Daniels

VIDEO: 'My guy' – Notorious tough guy Roy Keane shows his soft side as he helps wheelchair-bound Ian Wright after knee operation

Roy Keane showed off his soft side by assisting old foe Ian Wright who is wheelchair-bound after knee surgery.

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Keane assisted wheelchair-bound Wright Ex-Arsenal star underwent knee surgeryThe duo appeared in latest episode of Stick to FootballFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Wright appeared in a studio in a wheelchair post knee replacement surgery, to feature in the latest episode of Stick to Football along with Roy Keane and Gary Neville. As the former Gunners star was entering the room, Keane assisted his old foe by pushing his wheelchair. The ex-Manchester United captain was also seen hugging the 60-year-old and sharing a light moment with him.

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@wrightyofficial

my guy man 🥹❤️ first day back after my knee op 💪🏾 @Jill Scott @Gary Neville @The Overlap

♬ Count On Me – Bruno Mars

Getty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

While the duo were fierce rivals during their playing days, they now share a close bond and frequently appear for punditry on ITV. Wright, however, did call out Keane's comments on Arsenal defenders after the Gunners' Premier League clash against Manchester City last month.

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

The Gunners are set to lock horns with an in-form Liverpool side in a mega Premier League encounter on Sunday at Emirates Stadium. While Mikel Arteta's side are plagued with injuries and suspensions, Arne Slot's men are on an eight-match winning streak.

Somerset finally win – and that spells the end for Warwickshire

Lewis Goldsworthy’s maiden List A hundred brings light to dismal campaign

ECB Reporters Network23-Aug-2022Somerset 266 for 5 (Goldsworthy 111, Rew 96) beat Warwickshire 252 (Rhodes 92, Brookes 51) by 14 runsSomerset collected their first Royal London Cup win at the eighth and last attempt and dragged Warwickshire out of the competition in the process with a 14-run victory at Edgbaston.Lewis Goldsworthy’s maiden List A century (111, 116 balls) and Jack Brooks’ excellent bowling (four for 38) underpinned a win which brought some belated light to a leaden campaign.Somerset owed their total to a third-wicket stand of 198 in 35 overs between Goldsworthy and James Rew (96, 120). Olly Hannon-Dalby and Liam Norwell took two wickets apiece but George Garrett impressed most, conceding 37 from his ten overs.Warwickshire knew that reaching 267 would take them through to the knockout phase but their depleted batting order, without the injured Krunal Pandya and Michael Burgess, fell just short on 252 all out. Captain Will Rhodes (92, 103) and Ethan Brookes (51, 57) added 104 in 18 overs for the fifth wicket but there were no contributions of substance either side of their stand.After choosing to bat, Somerset soon lost former Warwickshire opener Andy Umeed, bowled by Norwell who also had Steven Davies superbly caught low at slip by Rob Yates. With three vital championship games to come in September, the Bears will be encouraged to see Norwell starting to regain full fitness and menace.Related

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Tom Alsop leads Sussex record rampage to home semi

Hampshire's sixteenth win in seventeen brings home semifinal

Rew and Goldsworthy rebuilt, slowly at first, then more fluently, reaching their half-centuries from 77 and 71 balls respectively. The latter struck 12 fours in a polished innings before falling lbw to Yates.Eighteen-year-old Rew was a boundary short of his second List A ton when he sliced Hannon-Dalby to short third man. George Bartlett’s tidy unbeaten 29 (21 balls) lifted Somerset to a competitive score.Yates (four fours and a six in 25) gave Warwickshire’s reply a brisk start until he was brilliantly caught at extra cover by Bartlett off Kasey Aldridge. A string of batters then also picked out fielders. Bartlett pounced again at extra when Dom Sibley (23, 36 balls) lifted a drive at Brooks and Goldsworthy added wickets to his earlier runs as Hamza Shaikh swept to deep mid-wicket and Matt Lamb cut to point.That was 95 for four but as Rhodes and Brookes’ enterprising batting righted the ship and got the crowd involved. Brookes twice located the Hollies Stand on his way to a 53-ball half-century before edging Brooks to wicketkeeper Davies.Brooks’ then pinned Kai Smith lbw with a yorker to send Warwickshire into the last five overs needing another 42. Denied the required boundaries by disciplined, full-length bowling, they entered the final over requiring 21. That was well beyond the tail and they accompany their opponents out of the tournament.

Topsy-turvy at the Wanderers

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Jan-2016Stiaan van Zyl had to fend off a few short deliveries early on•AFPBen Stokes broke the opening stand when he struck in his first over•Getty ImagesHe thought he had another wicket but his call to review an lbw shout against Hashim Amla did not pay off, but it was mighty close•Getty ImagesMoeen Ali did what England’s quicks couldn’t and broke the second-wicket stand by removing Dean Elgar•Getty ImagesSteven Finn produced a magnificent spell which included the wicket of Hashim Amla•Getty ImagesFaf du Plessis lazily flicked a catch to deep square leg•AFPJonny Bairstow, who had an excellent day, did superbly well to gather the throw to complete Temba Bavuma’s run out•Getty Images

Erling Haaland told ‘10 years is a very long time’ after signing decade-long contract with Man City as club legend casts doubt on ‘world’s No.1 striker’ seeing out deal

Questions have been asked of whether Erling Haaland will honour his contract at Manchester City, with it pointed out that “10 years is a long time”.

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Norwegian tied to deal through to 2034Could break countless records in that timeLa Liga transfer talk seemingly never far awayFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Premier League champions City have moved to tie their prolific Norwegian striker down to a deal that is due to run until the summer of 2034. Haaland is considered to be a key part of present and future plans at the Etihad Stadium.

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It is easy to see why City would want such terms in place, with the 24-year-old frontman hitting 118 goals through 136 appearances. Haaland has collected major honours at home and abroad, but has also generated plenty of transfer talk when it comes to supposed interest from Real Madrid and Barcelona.

WHAT RICHARD DUNNE SAID

Quizzed on whether Haaland will see out a decade-long deal in Manchester, former City captain Richard Dunne – speaking in association with – told GOAL: “It’s unheard of, a contract that length. It’s exceptional that he’s got something like that.

“I suppose the couple of seasons that he’s had have proven what he can do. It’s a case of can he do it for that length of time? I’m sure he can, but things change an awful lot in football and 10 years is a very long time.

“If he’s still there, brilliant. At the moment he’s the No.1 striker in world football. If City can keep him, that’s amazing. But also for the Premier League, to have him for that amount of time. Whether he actually goes and sees that deal out remains to be seen.”

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If Haaland were to hang around at City, then he will likely rewrite the history books. Pressed on the possibility of every record being broken if 10 more years are spent at the Etihad, Dunne added: “You would imagine. On paper, yeah. Given what he’s done so far, yes. But, he still has to score nearly 30 goals every season. It’s still a huge ask and an incredible achievement what he’s doing at the moment.

“It looks like he’s the one that would break [Alan] Shearer’s record and set records that would never be beaten again. To keep that consistency over a period of time isn’t the easiest. We have seen it this season, where he has probably not got the goals that he expected. Man City haven’t had the season that they would’ve expected.

“It will happen over the course of the next 10 years and might not happen again. It’s hard but any man playing football at the moment that you thought had a chance of breaking all the records, he is certainly the one. Given the amount of time that he is hopefully going to be there, he’s got a real opportunity to do it.”

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