Chahal breaks the 100 kph-mark

Plays of the day from the second ODI between Zimbabwe and India in Harare

Alagappan Muthu13-Jun-2016The wrong exit
Hamilton Masakadza is an imposing presence. He drove Dhawal Kulkarni through the covers without even batting an eyelid, but had to be rather watchful against Barinder Sran, for the left-arm quick was swinging the ball into him as adeptly as he was angling it towards the slips. Unsure of what he was facing, Masakadza was looking for an escape when a full and wide delivery arrived in the fifth over. He went after it with a fierce front-foot slap, could only manage a thick outside edge, and third man took the catch. Masakadza had taken the wrong exit.The usher
Vusi Sibanda was playing a sparkling innings. For nearly all of the hour and a half he spent at the crease, he knew which ball to hit and hit them sweetly, and which to defend and defended solidly. So it was no surprise that when he was two short of fifty and left-arm spinner Axar Patel pitched it short, the batsman leapt back and pulled over midwicket for a four. Interim coach Makhaya Ntini, sitting by the boundary, was up on his feet waving a towel like it was the chequered flag ushering the winning driver to the finish line in Formula One. Perhaps Sibanda mistook it as a signal to return to the dressing room. Little else could explain the poor swipe to long-on that led to his wicket two overs later.The variation
It took Yuzvendra Chahal only two years to become a household name in the IPL. But he has played only 20 first-class matches in over six years. This is because he plays for the same state as Amit Mishra, who may well be the best of India’s currently active legspinners. The plus side of that situation is young Chahal had a good role model and he borrowed a variation from Mishra’s arsenal on Monday. In his second over, after he had overstepped the previous ball, he made sure the free-hit amounted to only one run by bowling a seam-up delivery at 109 kph.The reprieve
Karun Nair, on debut as opener, had fallen to a short ball that held on the pitch and messed with his timing on Saturday. He was given another chance by the team management and it seemed he had wasted this one too when in the fifth over of another small chase, he wafted at a short and wide delivery and was caught behind this time. Nair was slowly trudging towards the pavilion, practicing a drive with a straighter bat, when the umpires asked him to hang around while they checked for the no-ball. And sure enough, Tendai Chatara’s front foot had strayed an inch too far. A relieved Nair belted the free-hit delivery down the ground.

Rangers make move to keep £21,000-a-week Ibrox star; they’ve had a reply

Rangers have made a move to retain the services of one of their top attacking players and they have already had a reply, according to a recent report.

Rangers in takeover talks

There has not been much to shout about for the Gers this season, as they are 13 points behind arch-rivals Celtic and have just been knocked out of the Scottish Cup by Queen’s Park. All that Philippe Clement and Rangers have left to focus on is the Europa League, as they find out their last 16 opponents on Friday.

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However, off the pitch, things could soon look a lot better, as according to The Daily Record, the 49ers Group are in talks over a possible investment in Rangers. It is reported that top-level discussions began at the turn of the year and now those talks have entered an advanced stage. Leeds United chairman Paraag Marathe is a key man behind the investment and there is believed to be another American business mogul involved, with summer spending plans already being made.

It is unclear how much of the club they would be looking to acquire as the deal is rather complicated due to the shareholders already involved in the club. However, if a deal can go through, it would mean Rangers head into the summer with a rather large cash injection.

Rangers make move to keep £21,000-a-week Ibrox star

Before the takeover is even completed, the Gers are already looking to secure the future of one of their key players, as according to Pro Sport relayed by the Daily Record, Rangers have offered Ianis Hagi a new contract, but the Romanian midfielder has turned the offer down.

Hagi’s current deal at Ibrox is set to expire at the end of the season, but Rangers do have the option to extend that by 12 months. However, they are not willing to trigger that option unless Hagi is willing to reduce his terms. The playmaker has revealed that he is open to hearing what the club want to offer for a new longer-term deal, but whatever was on the table has now been turned away by the player.

The 26-year-old, who earns £21,000 a week at Ibrox, looked set to leave the club last summer, as Clement was happy to let him go. However, Hagi wanted to remain at Rangers, and has recently become an important player for the club once again.

Apps

118

Goals

19

Assists

28

He has started 16 of the 20 games he has played this season, scoring four goals and recording seven assists along the way. Despite his ability to be a threat in front of goal, unless he agrees to a wage cut, his time at the club could be coming to an end, which may disappoint some supporters, who at times have been big fans of his.

A 13-year old debutant and two teenage centurions

The laundry list of records broken during the Quadrangular series between India, South Africa, Ireland and Zimbabwe

Annesha Ghosh21-May-201716 Successive victories for India between February 2016 and May 2017, equalling the second longest winning streak in women’s ODIs. In this period, opener Deepti Sharma was Player of the Match on five occasions.188 Deepti’s score against Ireland. It is the highest by an Indian and second-highest in women’s ODIs, after Belinda Clark’s unbeaten 229 against Denmark in 1997. Deepti, 19, became the tenth youngest centurion, surpassing Charlotte Edwards’ unbeaten 173 to claim the second spot on the list of highest individual scores in ODIs. She also bettered Jaya Sharma’s 138 not out against Pakistan in 2005 as the highest score by an Indian.6 Consecutive half-centuries for Mithali Raj. She equalled the record for the most back-to-back fifties by Australia’s Ellyse Perry and Lindsay Reeler and England’s Edwards, with her 79-ball 62 against South Africa in the final on Sunday.27 Fours hit by Deepti in a single innings – a world record. She took over from New Zealand’s Rachel Priest (23 fours). Deepti’s 188 was also the highest score among maiden centuries in women’s ODIs.File photo: The 18-year old Laura Wolvaardt hit 149 and took South Africa to 337, their highest total in ODIs•Getty Images320 Runs put on by Deepti and Punam Raut in partnership against Ireland. It was the highest in women’s ODIs for any wicket and only the second 300-run stand across formats.13 years 360 days Louise Little’s age when she became the youngest player – male or female – born this millennium to feature in an ODI. Little is the third youngest debutant for Ireland and fifth youngest to play women’s ODIs.50 Fifty-plus scores for Raj in ODIs. She became only the second woman, after Edwards, to achieve the feat. While Edwards got to the milestone in 160 innings, Raj took 157.100 ODIs as captain – Raj became only the third player to do so after Edwards (117) and Clark (101).181 Wickets for Jhulan Goswami – the most by anyone in women’s ODIs. She trapped South Africa’s Raisibe Ntozakhe on May 9 to surpass Australia’s Cathryn Fitzpatrick.249 India’s largest margin of victory, in terms of runs, in ODIs, registered on May 15 against Ireland. Their previous best was the 207-run win over Pakistan in the Asia Cup in 2008.53 Catches for Goswami – the most by a non-wicketkeeper in women’s ODIs. She moved past Edwards and Lydia Greenway’s tally when she helped dismiss Sune Luus in the final against South Africa on Sunday.Deepti Sharma, in making 188 off 160 balls, hit the most fours by a batsman in an innings in Women’s ODIs•Associated Press89 Catches for South Africa’s Trisha Chetty, equalling the record for a wicketkeeper in women’s ODIs. In her 88th innings behind the stumps, she caught Ireland’s Jennifer Gray to draw level with former New Zealand wicketkeeper Rebecca Rolls, who needed 101 innings to set the mark.100 ODI wickets for fast bowler Shabnim Ismail – the second among South Africans, after Dane van Niekerk, and the second-fastest after Australia’s Fitzpatrick to reach the milestone. She bowled India’s Sushma Verma on May 17 to earn her 100th scalp and became the 17th player in women’s ODIs to bag as many wickets.337 South Africa’s highest total, against Ireland, was piloted by 18-year old Laura Wolvaardt’s run-a-ball 149 on May 11. South Africa’s bowling attack stifled the opposition to 159, completing a 178-run win – their fourth-largest margin of victory in terms of runs. A game later, South Africa recorded their second-highest total, 323, against the same opponents.358 India’s highest total and the tenth-highest in women’s ODIs. India became the sixth team to reach the 350-run mark.

Man City now entering race to sign new "phenomenon" who could replace KDB

Turning their attention towards the summer, Manchester City have now reportedly joined the race to sign a bargain World Cup winner who could replace Kevin de Bruyne.

Man City transfer news

The Blues weren’t afraid to splash the cash during the January transfer window, welcoming as many as five fresh faces in Omar Marmoush, Vitor Reis, Abdukodir Khusanov, Juma Bah and Nico Gonzalez. And they’ll likely approach without fear once again in the summer transfer window as they look to rebuild a side which has been a shadow of its historic best.

Even with victory in their grasp against Real Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League tie, it was Ederson’s turn to endure an out-of-character moment by sending his pass straight back towards the La Liga giants, who instantly profited to level things up before Jude Bellingham netted a late winner. Within the space of 12 minutes, City had gone from leading to taking a 3-2 defeat to the Bernabeu.

With plenty of work to do, Pep Guardiola and those above him at The Etihad look destined to endure a busy summer transfer window which could yet end in the arrival of a World Cup winner.

According to reports in Spain, Manchester City are now entering the race to sign Paulo Dybala, who has a release clause as cheap as €12m (£10m) this summer. The Argentine attacking midfielder, at that price, would be an undeniable bargain and could yet see the Cityzens replace De Bruyne in intelligent fashion.

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As things stand, the Belgian is set to bow out as a free agent at The Etihad at the end of the season, bringing to an end an iconic tenure at the Manchester club. Leaving a gaping hole in the middle of the park, Dybala could quickly emerge to ease any of Manchester City’s concerns.

"Phenomenon" Dybala would be surprising option

If De Bruyne really is to bow out of Manchester City at 33 years old, then Dybala would be a surprising option for the Citizens to turn to. At 31 years old, the Argentine wouldn’t solve Guardiola’s problem for long and instead add another ageing midfielder to a side full of stars at the back end of their peaks.

Paulo Dybala for AS Roma.

Even if Dybala is yet to show signs of following in the footsteps of the likes of Ilkay Gundogan, who has struggled this season, City wouldn’t have the chance to enjoy the peak of his powers for long enough to make any deal worthwhile this summer. Instead, they should set their sights on rising stars such as Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz.

The AS Roma man could still have a decision to make this summer, however, and could yet bow out as a hero at his own club in the coming months. Once described as a “phenomenon” by Roma legend Francesco Totti, Dybala certainly has plenty of fans in Italy.

Kohli, Dhawan's home struggles, and Pujara's prolific run

Stats highlights from the first day’s play of the second Test between India and New Zealand in Kolkata

Bharath Seervi30-Sep-20165 Scores of 50 or more by Cheteshwar Pujara in first-class matches in September 2016, in six innings. He had made 166, 31 and 256* in the Duleep Trophy and 62 and 78 in the first Test of this series before making another fifty in this Test. Before this, he had made just one 50-plus score in ten first-class innings.86.55 Ajinkya Rahane’s average in the second Test of a series, the best for any batsman to have played 10 or more innings. He has made four centuries and four half-centuries in the 11 innings in second Tests of a series. Click here for his scores in second Tests of a series. 1999 The previous instance when three or more wickets fell in the first session of a Test at Eden Gardens. Pakistan had lost six wickets against India in February 1999. Since then India’s first innings against New Zealand, in which three wickets fell in the morning, was the first such in 10 Tests there. However, India did not lose any wicket in the second session and then lost four wickets after tea. 141 Runs added by Pujara and Rahane for the fourth-wicket, most by any pair for that wicket at Eden Gardens. The previous highest was 140 runs between Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman in 2011-12. 3/35 Matt Henry’s figures, as at the end of the first day. are his second-best in Tests so far. His best is 4 for 93 at Lord’s in 2015. This was only his second haul of more than three wickets in nine Test innings.7 Number of times Pujara has failed to score a century after reaching 50 in his last eight fifty-plus innings. The century came in the Colombo Test. Incidentally, he had converted six of his first nine fifties into centuries.87 Runs scored by Virat Kohli in his last six Test innings, since his double-century in Antigua. He made 44, 3 and 4 in three innings in West Indies, and 9, 18 and 9 in the three innings of this series so far.31.53 Kohli’s average in Tests in India since March 2013 when he last scored a century on home soil – second-worst among the seven India players to play 10 or more innings in this period. Only R Ashwin averages (31.30) lower than Kohli. Kohli has scored three fifties in the 16 innings. Interestingly, he had an average of 56.54 in his first 13 home innings which included three centuries and four fifties. 23 Shikhar Dhawan’s average in home Tests since his 187 on debut in Mohali in March 2013. He hasn’t made a single fifty-plus score in 10 innings since then and his highest score has been 45 not out. His average is the lowest among all India players to play 10 or more innings in this period and second-lowest among 22 openers who have played 10 or more innings in their home country since March 2013. 12 Wickets for Jeetan Patel in Tests in India, including the two he took on the first day in Kolkata. This is his most against a Test team in any away country. He has played four Tests in India.

Arsenal join race to sign £30m Brazil striker with initial talks held

Arsenal have now joined the race to sign a Brazil striker, who could be available for quite a realistic transfer fee in this inflated market, as manager Mikel Arteta and interim sporting director Jason Ayto continue their pursuit of a capable number nine.

Arsenal scouring January market for new striker

Last week, Arteta confirmed to the media that Arsenal are indeed actively looking for a striker, following Gabriel Jesus’ season-ending ACL injury.

Arsenal ready to table £59 million offer for "crazy" Serie A superstar

“What he brings to the pitch is phenomenal.”

By
Barney Lane

Jan 20, 2025

Jesus is expected to be out for as long as nine months after he ruptured his ACL in their FA Cup defeat to Manchester United, while Arteta is also minus Bukayo Saka’s crucial goals and assists until March.

Arsenal’s next five Premier League games

Date

Wolves (away)

January 25

Man City (home)

February 2

Leicester City (away)

February 15

West Ham (home)

February 22

Nottingham Forest (away)

February 26

These blows have left Arteta with gaping holes up front that need to be shored up, prompting reports that Arsenal have shortlisted many high-profile strikers for potential transfers before deadline day on February 3.

Arsenal are reportedly very keen on Juventus star Dusan Vlahovic, with some reports suggesting that they’ve already had a loan bid rejected. Meanwhile, it is believed by other media sources that RB Leipzig’s Benjamin Sesko is a top target for Arteta and Sporting Lisbon sensation Viktor Gyokeres remains on Arsenal’s radar.

That being said, all three of the aforementioned centre-forwards would likely come at a premium, as Leipzig, Sporting and Juve certainly won’t be keen on losing their chief goalscorers midway through 2024/2025.

There are cheaper alternatives, though, like Marseille’s Elye Wahi – who could leave the Ligue 1 side for as little as £25 million.

Wahi hasn’t exactly been a dream signing for Roberto De Zerbi across the channel, but he did score 19 goals in 33 French top-flight matches for Montpellier during his best season in 2022/2023.

Alongside the Frenchman, another striker who could leave for a fairly decent transfer fee is Botafogo’s Igor Jesus.

Arsenal join race to sign Igor Jesus with informal talks held

As per Diario AS reporter Eduardo Burgos, Arsenal have held “informal” talks over signing Jesus from Botafogo after joining the race for his signature.

The 23-year-old earned his first caps for Brazil at the back end of last year, joining Botafogo last year off the back of some prolific seasons in the UAE League with Shabab Al-Ahli.

Jesus bagged 34 goals and 16 assists over 66 appearances for the Arab outfit, since going on to become one of Botafogo’s star attackers. The South American averages more shots at goal per 90 than any other player in their squad (WhoScored), registering five goals and three assists in the Brazilian top flight so far this term.

As well as this, it is believed his price tag stands at around £30 million.

Lewis' spectacular century, and high totals after early wickets

Stats highlights from Evin Lewis’ 130-ball 176, and West Indies’ superb recovery after being 33 for 3 at The Oval

S Rajesh27-Sep-2017Coming into The Oval ODI, West Indies’ openers averaged 23.59 runs per dismissal in the period since the 2015 World Cup. That average was the worst among all teams in these two-and-a-half years – it was lower than the UAE (25.36), Papua New Guinea (25.58), and Hong Kong (27.00), among other teams. In one magnificent innings, Evin Lewis has lifted that average by almost two-and-a-half runs, to 26.04.Since the 2015 World Cup, there have only been two hundreds by West Indies’ openers, and Lewis has contributed both – he had also scored 148 versus Sri Lanka in Bulawayo last year. While he averages 36.50 since the World Cup, the other West Indies openers collectively average 22.49.

Evin Lewis v the other WI openers since the 2015 World Cup

Batsman Inngs Runs Ave SR 100sEvin Lewis 17 584 36.50 93.44 2The rest 47 1057 22.49 74.91 0Lewis’ unbeaten 176 is the fourth-highest ODI score for West Indies, next only to Chris Gayle’s 215, and Viv Richards’ 189 not out and 181. It wasn’t just the runs he scored, though; it was also the manner in which he lifted West Indies from a tricky 33 for 3. He played within himself till he reached his century, which still came off 94 balls but contained no six. Thereafter, he exploded, with 76 off the next 36 balls, including seven sixes and four fours.

How Lewis paced his innings

Period Runs Dots 4s 6sFirst 94 balls 100 40 13 0Last 36 balls 76 10 4 7Among the England bowlers, the only one who went at under seven an over against him was Chris Woakes, who conceded 25 from 28. Adil Rashid leaked 40 from 26.

Lewis v England’s main bowlers

Bowler Runs Balls SR 4s 6s AU Rashid 40 26 153.85 5 1MM Ali 36 24 150.00 3 2JT Ball 38 29 131.03 3 1LE Plunkett 29 23 126.09 1 2CR Woakes 28 25 112.00 4 1Lewis two hundreds in ODIs have yielded 324 runs; the only batsman with more runs from his first two ODI centuries is MS Dhoni, whose first two tons fetched 331 runs (148 and 183*). The problem for Lewis in his ODI career is his lack of consistency. His two hundreds have been big ones and fetched him 324 runs, but his other 18 innings have yielded only 326.When he does get going, though, the results are spectacular. His runs at The Oval, and the partnerships with the two Jasons – Mohammed and Holder – ensured West Indies scored 323 runs after the fall of the third wicket, the third-highest in any ODI. Of the top seven such totals, four have come in 2017.

Most runs scored after the fall of the third wicket

Match RunsAus v SL, Sydney, 2006 358Ind v Eng, Cuttack, 2017 356WI v Eng, The Oval, 2017 323NZ v Aus, Hamilton, 2007 312NZ v SL, Dunedin, 2015 300Ind v Eng, Pune, 2017 300Eng v WI, Bristol, 2017 295NZ v Zim, Bulawayo, 2011 287There were century stands for the fourth and fifth wickets, the first time West Indies have ever achieved this in ODIs, and only the ninth such instance among all teams. The net result of all that heavy hitting was a grand total of 356, West Indies’ fourth highest in ODIs.

Kohli transformed since failure in England

Virat Kohli has said he was “thankful” for India’s tour of England in 2014, when he totalled 135 runs in five Tests, because it has led to his becoming a “really improved cricketer”

Alagappan Muthu in Rajkot08-Nov-2016Virat Kohli has said he was “thankful” for India’s tour of England in 2014, when he totalled 134 runs in five Tests, because it has led to his becoming a “really improved cricketer”.”I can put it very simply as that was a phase I didn’t perform very well and it happened to be England,” Kohli said on the eve the first Test of the home series against England in Rajkot. “Could have been any other country in the world.”I just take it as a setback in my career and not motivate myself in a way that I have to prove people wrong or have to do something special against a particular opposition. For me, I’m playing a cricket ball, be it any game, any opposition, anywhere in the world. Those things do not change for me so I don’t put those things in my head”Kohli had seemed an anxious batsman in conditions that assisted sideways movement, and against bowlers capable of troubling him over after over. To complicate matters, a strength that had made him so dominant in one-day cricket became a weakness – his tendency to hit the ball with hard hands. Over 10 innings, never did he last more than 75 balls at the crease.Upon his return home, Kohli concentrated on managing this weakness. He had a few sessions with Sachin Tendulkar at the Wankhede Stadium to assess flaws in his game. After the Australia tour later that year, he narrowed his stance considerably. The wider stance served him well in Australia, but the new one helped him stay more upright when facing the ball, and better balanced to press forward or push back. Couple that with better judgement outside his off stump, and the result was Kohli’s averaging 54.80 in 31 innings since August 2014. He has been able to convert seven out of ten fifty-plus scores into hundreds, including two double-hundreds.This has, in turn, given Kohli the confidence to look back on a tough stage of his career as just that and not think himself weak against a particular opposition.While Kohli has not often faced conditions where the ball jags around as much as it does in England, those statistics indicate he has not only been careful to start well – avoiding playing away from his body – but also trust in his ability once he got set. The cover drive is a richly productive stroke for him and Kohli has not abandoned it because it could get him out; during the 200 in Antigua, he understood the pitch was good enough to hit through the line and began doing so quite early.Kohli’s skill and quickness in addressing an issue – whether it was gaining strength to hit sixes in limited-overs cricket or pacing himself to bat long in Tests – has made him a fierce adversary. He expects the same from his team-mates as well.”On the field, the one thing that we always maintain is the intensity has to be high all the time because you want to make the opposition feel as if you can’t afford to make a mistake rather than giving them an opportunity to get into the game,” he said. “Those are the things we focus on, pretty small targets. We don’t focus on things too far into the future.”India face England after whitewashing New Zealand 3-0 and reclaiming the No. 1 ranking in Tests. They allowed Kane Williamson only one score of fifty or more. They robbed Ross Taylor of confidence. They had the resources to exploit a turning track in Kanpur, a seaming track in Kolkata, and a basic subcontinent track in Indore. India coach Anil Kumble was particularly pleased that barring one innings, his bowlers have been able to take 20 wickets in every Test since the Caribbean tour. While that was praise of the players’ ability, Kohli spoke about the mind-set the team has adopted.”The mind set is not to compete anymore, we want to win series, win Test matches, and for that we need to be at our A-game all the time,” he said. “And even keep improving on your A-game as well. The guys are ready for the challenge. I think these kind of matches and series are something you play for, against top sides, it tests your character, it tests your skill and you come out as a better cricketer regardless of the result.”This team has bought into the idea that a collective team performance is far better than an individual standing out and team not winning. That’s one thing that’s really been pleasing as captain in this particular team. Everyone is really selfless, they play for the side, they play for what the team demands in different situations and that’s the best quality of the side.”

'A whole nation went up in arms about someone not walking'

In the second of a five-part series in conjunction with BT Sport, we look at how the media’s Ashes coverage creates an extra obstacle that England must surmount if they are to defend the urn

Sponsored by BT Sport10-Nov-2017If the stature of a sporting event can be measured by the level of media scrutiny it attracts, then England’s rookie Ashes tourists are in for a treat at the Gabba later this month, when the build-up to the 2017-18 Ashes will truly get underway.”Before a normal Test match, you’d probably have 20 media outlets on the outfield; before the Ashes you can’t see a blade of grass,” says Graeme Swann, who made two Ashes tours of Australia in 2010-11 and 2013-14, and will be back out there this winter as a BT Sport pundit. “It’s huge and if you’ve never played before it’s quite the eye-opener. You realise how big it is when you’ve got Japanese news crews there. You think: ‘This is amazing, I’m going to be big in Tokyo at last!’ But you can only be big in Tokyo if you win.”If the Barmy Army are England’s unofficial 12th man on Ashes tours, then it could be argued that Australia’s press corps perform a similar role for the hosts. They can be partisan, relentless, amusing and exhausting, endlessly probing for weaknesses in the touring party, and merciless when they find any. And given the circumstances of England’s latest visit – with Ben Stokes absent following his headline-dominating exploits on the home front – it seems only a matter of time before the paper pressure gets ramped up a notch.And if any organisation can be relied upon to light the blue touchpaper, it is Brisbane’s Courier Mail, who did just that at the same stage of the tour four years ago, ahead of what would prove to be England’s traumatically comprehensive – and agenda-setting – defeat in the first Test at the Gabba.The paper’s target of choice was England’s Stuart Broad, who had infuriated their editors by refusing to walk for what had been, admittedly, a fairly blatant edge to slip during England’s hard-fought 14-run win in the first Test of the 2013 series at Trent Bridge.And so, five months later, Broad was greeted in Queensland by newspaper headlines that refused even to name the “27-year-old English medium pacer”. The campaign was gleefully seized upon by the Gabba’s famously partisan crowds although Broad, true to his reputation as a scrapper, duly responded with six wickets on the opening day of the series, and marched into that evening’s press conference with a copy of the paper under his arm.Alastair Cook faces the media as England arrive for the Ashes•Getty Images”That still makes me giggle,” says Swann, his team-mate on that trip. “A whole nation went up in arms about someone not walking, and this from a nation whose catchphrase when I first went to play cricket there was ‘you only walk if you miss the bus, mate’.”The only people who weren’t up in arms about that were the Australian cricket team,” Swann added. “The press would have you believe we were at each other’s throats, but not a sausage [from them]. As for refusing to print Broad’s name, we didn’t know about that until Broady went to the press conference with the paper.””What the Aussies are going to do this time round, I’ve got absolutely no idea,” says Kevin Pietersen, another of Broad’s team-mates on that ill-fated 2013-14 tour. “I know there will be a couple of front pagers in Brisbane, but they’re going to have to play well and have to do something pretty special to unite that team and get it back together, because Stokes was the core in that dressing room.”Pietersen’s A-lister lifestyle meant he often acted as a lightning rod for media coverage during his England days, and as a consequence, he found that the column inches that he generated tended to be rather more intrusive than those of his team-mates.”How quickly would a positive newspaper fail?” Pietersen says. “I mean, it would fail that quickly that you wouldn’t even be able to type up your second edition.”I had a few real bad personal experiences in Australia in front page and back page of newspapers, but that’s part and parcel of playing in an Ashes series. You can take it one of two ways. You can hate it, fear it, be scared of it, run away from it, or you can take it on, accept it, understand it. Just don’t challenge it.”As far as Swann is concerned, however, no amount of newsprint should ever be able to unsettle a player’s equilibrium.Shane Warne poses with the urn after victory in 2006-07•Getty Images”The England changing-room bans newspapers anyway,” he says. “It’s not helpful, you’re going to read a lot of stuff that’s just made up. The players will find it easy to ignore that – it’s the cameras that are hard to avoid – every time you turn the news on, every time you walk out of a hotel or leave the airport. You feel famous for a while. It’s great!”That said, England’s arrival for this series was arguably rather low-key compared to previous tours, not least because the reporters at Perth Airport struggled to recognise many of the less familiar names in the tour party, such as Dawid Malan, James Vince and Craig Overton.But the pressure has since been building throughout the early weeks of the tour, with injuries and form issues adding to the media frenzy as England work their way through their warm-up matches.”In a player’s mind, those three warm-up matches feel like Test matches because of the exposure around them,” says Michael Vaughan, England’s Ashes-winning captain in 2005, and now a BT Sport commentator. “Those little moments of a player walking off with a niggle, or one spell of bowling that pushes you into contention. They can be draining for a player, because in terms of media focus, there’s almost more focus on those three games than the Test match.””It’s not a battle you can win, so there’s no reason to try,” says ESPN’s Mark Butcher, a two-times Ashes tourist in 1998-99 and 2002-03. “But, in cricket matters, you have to be on the front foot. Don’t give an inch in the press, and don’t go out of your way to play the game they are playing, which is to get a rise, get a reaction, turn you confrontational. You can’t win.”The only way that you can win, in fact, is to win on the field, something that Butcher remains fondly, if fleetingly, from his roles in England’s victories in the Boxing Day Test at Melbourne in 1998-99, and at Sydney four years later.Joe Root gets himself on the other side of the cameras for once•Getty Images”The best thing is the day after, flicking through the pages of the newspapers, and seeing their incredibly loyal journalists squirming around, trying not to give England any credit for the win. It’s a good word, isn’t it, ‘loyal’? I was trying to be safe!”And you’ll feel vindicated because, invariably, the team will have been slagged off for anything and everything. It’s a bit of a fingers up to say we’re not quite as bad as you think we are.”That said, Butcher concedes that the stakes have been raised in the 20-odd years since his first Ashes tour, largely due to the improvement in England’s fortunes. Notwithstanding their 5-0 defeats in 2006-07 and 2013-14, England have won five of the last seven series dating back to 2005, and as a consequence, there’s an edge to the media coverage that didn’t exist when every series was a thrashing.”Things have been ramped up to almost twice the fever pitch it was back then,” Butcher says. “Let’s face it, their press, our press, our players and their players, no-one believed we were going to beat them. There was no jeopardy there, but now neither side is a dominant force, both have frailties, both have areas that they’d prefer to be stronger.”The one thing that Australia has as an advantage is that they are at home, and they will use that to their advantage in ways that they didn’t need to 20 years ago. Back then, they had Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath. The volume and psychological games were lower than now.”BT Sport is the only place in the UK to watch the Ashes live. Click here for more details

'I wasn't even dressed before lunch'

David Warner zoomed to a record hundred before lunch, but folks on Twitter had enough time to react

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jan-2017It was memorable start to 2017 for David Warner, who raced to a hundred off 78 balls in a memorable start to 2017. It made him only the fifth – the first since 1976 – to hit a hundred before lunch on the opening day of a Test, and the first before lunch on any day of a Test in Australia.

No wonder most on Twitter were awestruck.

It also earned high praise from a decorated Paralympian.

At the other end, Matt Renshaw, his opening partner, had scored 21 off 80 balls.

For some, it also brought back memories of Virender Sehwag, another modern-day Test opener.

Warner himself had no clue about his feat.

There were some other records that he broke too.

Fortunately for Pakistan, Warner did not convert it to a triple.

What had you done before lunch today?

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