Buoyant Bangladesh ready for West Indies' pace challenge

Bangladesh’s captain Mehedi Hasan Miraz and coach Mizanur Rahman were wary of the threat posed by West Indies’ quicks, but backed the hosts’ top order to come good

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur10-Feb-2016

Bangladesh captain Mehedi Hasan Miraz has backed his side to come good against West Indies’ quicks•ICC

The day before the two sides first met this year, a member of Bangladesh’s coaching staff was looking at the West Indies pace bowlers quite intently during practice at the National Cricket Academy ground. Exactly a month later, on the eve of the Under-19 World Cup semi-final between the two teams, the focus still remains on pace bowling.West Indies’ new-ball attack has been one of the highlights of this tournament, particularly the sight of the beanpole Alzarri Joseph steaming in and consistently hitting high speeds. He has also generated movement to trouble the opposition. Joseph and Chemar Holder, the injured Obed McCoy’s replacement, put Pakistan under early pressure in the quarter-final, which West Indies won by five wickets.Apart from Joseph and Chemar, West Indies also have Keemo Paul, Odean Smith, Ryan John and Shamar Springer as pace options in their squad.Bangladesh crushed West Indies 3-0 last month, but they need to have a second look at their bowling attack and sharpen up during training sessions. Much of it has revolved around tackling the short balls, which have been regularly directed at the throat by the net bowlers.Bangladesh coach Mizanur Rahman was wary of the threat posed by Joseph, but believed that a solid top-order platform could help his side post a good total.”[Alzarri] Joseph is one of the best bowlers of this tournament,” Mizanur said. “But we have plan against all their bowlers. We hope the video session we had will work in our favour. We know him [Joseph] quite well having played against them in three matches before the U-19 World Cup. We are prepared to face him.””Their strength is the pace attack so if our top order does their job, it becomes easier for the middle and lower-order batsmen. If we can make around 230 to 250 or even more, it will be defendable.”West Indies captain Shimron Hetmyer, meanwhile, has drawn confidence from having the fastest bowler in the tournament, especially in conditions that offer little help to the quicks.”It is a good feeling to be in a team with express pacers in the last two years,” Hetmyer said. “I think we had one pacer in the last World Cup that really went all the way through the tournament, and there was [Kagiso] Rabada from South Africa who was the fastest bowler in the tournament.”This year being in the team with the fastest bowler is a big boost for us. Playing in the sub-continent, which people don’t really with pace pitches and so far the pacers have done well for us.”Joseph has turned heads back home, in the Caribbean, as well with veteran commentator and writer Tony Cozier earmarking him a special talent. Joseph hails from the All Saints Village in Antigua, and has been trained by former West Indies pacer Winston Benjamin in addition to taking tips from the legendary Andy Roberts.Alzarri Joseph has impressed in the Under-19 World Cup by moving the ball at speeds north of 140kph•International Cricket Council

Bangladesh captain Mehedi Hasan Miraz, however, has played down the pace threat, saying the hosts were more comfortable against pace, something that they thrived on while playing in South Africa last year.”We like playing fast bowlers,” Miraz said. “Playing against less pace, there’s a chance of mistiming the ball. We are always confident facing pace. We have done well in South Africa, and also against West Indies. We haven’t faced a really pacy bowling attack yet in this tournament, which has caused problems for our openers.”The second semi-final will also be Bangladesh’s first match against a Full Member since the tournament opener against South Africa on January 27. Miraz took confidence from Bangladesh’s hard-fought win against Nepal, and the manner in which his team bounced back against Sri Lanka in the Youth ODI series last year. Bangladesh rebounded from 2-0 down to seal that series 3-2.”We have the belief to turn around from any situation,” Miraz said.” We don’t think negatively. I enjoy playing in the situation that we faced in the last game [against Nepal]. We won three games on the bounce after losing the first two in Sri Lanka last year. Having taken that much pressure in those conditions, has only done good for our confidence.”West Indies coach Graeme West, too, was not short of confidence ahead of the big game. He has said that West Indies were encouraged by how the Sri Lankan seamers zipped the ball around to test India’s top order in the first semi-final on Tuesday.”We watched the game yesterday and we’re encouraged to see the ball get through,” West said. “The seamers both sides were effective in the first 10 overs. Anyone that would have watched the Pakistan game, will see where one of our strengths lies with the new ball attack. And we got to look to that to really make early inroads into the Bangladesh batting.”West also said that the next challenge for Joseph would be to continue bowling with control, instead of focusing too much on pace.”He’s been very successful and he’s bowled really well,” West said. “We need to make sure that he continues to perform at that level, not to get too carried away. If he starts looking at how fast he’s bowling as opposed to where he’s looking to land the ball, then he might lose some of his potential.”

Tottenham main contenders to sign Meret

Tottenham Hotspur are the main contenders to sign Napoli goalkeeper Alex Meret, according to Rai journalist Ciro Venerato.

The Lowdown: Spurs look for Lloris replacement…

Spurs are reliably believed to be on the look out for an heir to long-serving shot-stopper Hugo Lloris with the France international currently injured and suffering a decline in form this season.

Antonio Conte’s side are currently relying on Fraser Forster as their number one in Lloris’ absence, and as the 36-year-old’s contract runs down, Fabio Paratici and co are thinking about the future.

The Premier League top-four hopefuls have been linked with many names heading into the summer window and Meret is said to be one of them.

The Latest: Tottenham main contenders for Meret…

According to Venerato, speaking on live radio to ‘1 Football Club’ (via Calcio Napoli 24), Tottenham have ‘above all’ expressed their interest in signing the 25-year-old.

He explained:

“Napoli would like to continue with Meret, and in this sense we will have to sit down at the negotiating table and await developments.

“There are some Premier League clubs that have however registered an interest in the Frulian, Tottenham above all.”

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-latest-news-4/” title=”Tottenham latest news” poster=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/cropped-tottenham-fans.jpg” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Verdict: Get it done?

Meret’s current deal at Napoli expires in the summer of 2024, and if he doesn’t put pen to paper on fresh terms, he could represent both a quality and financially attainable target for Spurs.

The Italian, capped three times by his national team, has been a mainstay for the Serie A league leaders this season – playing more top flight minutes than anyone in Luciano Spalletti’s squad (WhoScored).

One admirer of the 6 foot 3 keeper in past seasons has been none other than Spurs boss Conte, with agent Federico Pastorello revealing back in 2017 that he was ‘really impressed’ with Meret after scouting him out.

Meret has also been revered by members of the press for his performances in between Napoli’s sticks, with reporter Roberto Rojas calling him a ‘stellar goalkeeper’.

Paratici and co will be watching his contract situation closely as a real candidate to succeed Lloris could soon become available.

Ganguly fires, ICC misfires

Cricinfo writers select their best and worst moments from 2006

20-Dec-2006

Martin Williamson


Bangladesh had a good year winning 12 of their 14 ODIs and giving Australia quite a scare
© AFP

Best: Bangladesh on the up
Bangladesh, so long the whipping boys of international cricket, have enjoyed handing out some drubbings of their own and ended the year flushed with success after 12 wins in 14 ODIs – their previous 129 ODIs had brought just 16 victories. While the opposition were not top class, Bangladesh more than underlined that they have opened a wide gap between themselves and the chasing pack. Although restricted to two Tests by the grossly imbalanced Future Tours Programme, they gave Australia some sleepless nights – and almost a follow-on – before the pressure got to them. Their aim in 2007 is to pick off the sides in eighth and ninth in the ODI rankings … England and Sri Lanka.Worst: Haves and have nots
Speaking of the gap between the best and the rest, 2006 was the year in which the ICC’s brave new (albeit under-funded) plan to allow the top six Associates kicked in. However, there were no surprises, although Kenya hinted at what we all suspected, namely they are the best of the rest, by drawing a series in Zimbabwe although they were trounced by Bangladesh. That aside, no upsets were threatened and some woefully one-sided games were also in evidence, none more than when Sri Lanka piled on 443 for 9. The biggest disappointments were the highly-funded Bermudans and the Scots, who were thrashed in Bangladesh in December. But the main problem was still that the big boys simply didn’t want to play with the minnows whose appeal to sponsors and TV companies was zero.

Sriram Veera


Sourav Ganguly: India’s highest run-scorer in the Test series against South Africa
© AFP

Best: Dada returns
It was all set up for a fall. The critics were chuckling quietly, “Ah … He’s going to get buried on the bouncy South African track.” Obituaries were dusted up and one more line, describing his latest debacle, was about to be added. He made them look sheepish with a gutsy 87 against Rest of South Africa. And by the end of the first Test, he had converted a few of the critics to his side. Ridicule had made way for respect. ‘Dada ki baat sunenge na?” he had cajoled us in an astounding advertisement that I can’t believe any other cricketer would have done. He impressed with his desire, if not with the scores, by playing every Ranji Trophy match and surprised some of us, with his show in South Africa. The redemption song is on. How long it will last is anybody’s guess but, briefly, at end of the year, when old dies for new, Sourav Ganguly gave us a lilting tune.Worst: Story of Sachin’s life?
A little story first. During the ball-by-ball commentary of the second Test
against South Africa in Durban, I had written this: “Two wickets down, in
comes Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar. Another semi-crisis to deal with. The story
of his life.” Almost immediately, two feed-backers pinged me with, “Story of
Sachin’s life you said? How many times did he rescue India out of crisis?
What a statement?”What a statement indeed, the worst of the year. But to me, it’s not a comment on the hero, more a reflection of the escapist-fantasy that we cling to. We don’t like to watch
our heroes turn into mortals. We like to see them riding off into the sunset. Some like Shane Warne do. Tendulkar can easily walk off now. He has runs, money and respect. To me it’s fascinating to watch how a master is prepared to swallow his ego and is willing to look ungainly, even scratch around, for his runs and the team. The injuries have taken its toll on the mindset, the free-flowing man is slowly turning into a thing of past and yes
it would be great if he returns to his pristine best. But till then, even if
it never comes, his monk-like efforts in Sydney, his fight back, albeit
brief, in the first innings at Durban are to be cherished. The horse can
wait.

Peter English


Ponting might have gotten away with two hundreds and an average of 88.50 in the Ashes but for Kasprowicz and MacGill Buchanan’s boot camp meant a long break from international cricket
© Getty Images

Best: Pidgeon II
Stuart Clark waited until he was 31 to make his mark on Australian cricket
with a Man-of-the-Series performance against South Africa. A useful fast
bowler for New South Wales, he quickly became a stand-out for Australia with
his nine wickets on debut at Cape Town. Twenty dismissals came in his first
series and his continued strong performances have shown there will be life
after Glenn McGrath.Worst: Boot camp busting
John Buchanan’s boot camp might have bonded Australia’s contract-holders
successfully, but it pushed Michael Kasprowicz to consider retirement.
Kasprowicz could cope with the various tasks, but he suffered a groin injury
that later flared into a painful back problem and he is still waiting to
return to domestic action. John Buchanan rated the camp as one of his
greatest achievements, but it has almost certainly led to the end of
Kasprowicz’s international career. Stuart MacGill, who suffered a knee
problem during the week, has also not appeared for Australia since the
pre-season activity.

Nishi Narayanan


And so it all came together
© Getty Images

Best: Hussey catches his destiny

If like the movies we could flashback a cricketer’s life in quick rewind to ‘where it all came together’, Michael Hussey’s catch to dismiss Ashwell Prince in the second match of the VB series this year, would be such a moment. Hussey ran in from mid-wicket to square leg with his left hand out. He stretched a little more than one’s imagination could and flung himself towards the ball. The scoreboard innocuously read Prince c Hussey b McGrath 19. Hussey had played 22 ODIs before the one at the Gabba and in three months into his Test career he had three hundreds and was already a ‘find of the year’. But the catch was the moment it all fit into place. No turning back from there. An ODI average of 77.11 and with four fifties and a hundred from six Ashes innings he is now on full fast-forward mode.Worst: Coaching Videos
One had to tune into this one – Greg Chappell coaching Sourav Ganguly on playing the short ball – a nicely packaged ‘unrehearsed’ video of the coach and batsman in the nets going over the processes of hooking and pulling. Then Sunil Gavaskar, a commentator on the channel which broadcast these exclusive videos, gave Rahul Dravid some batting tips and Allan Donald, also a commentator, had a friendly chat with Indian bowlers Sreesanth and VRV Singh. As televisions were switched on to watch the fourth day of the Durban Test, Sreesanth and VRV stood awkwardly by the camera while Donald advised Sreesanth not to lose his cool on the field. Painful to watch, it reminded one of a teacher reprimanding a student while the rest of the class listened in. More painful was Harsha Bhogle’s claim that the best reality tv is that which is spontaneous. There have been worse moments this year, but nothing so cringe-worthy.

Sambit Bal

Best: Return of the sporting ODI
South Africa’s chase of 434 at Johannesburg was breathlessly described by many, including Cricinfo, as the greatest one-day match ever. But I must admit that it made me queasy. It was, without doubt, the most incredible chase and a spectacle. But it was hardly a match. On that pitch and with those short boundaries, the bowlers didn’t have a chance.This year’s Champion’s Trophy somewhat restored my faith in one-day cricket. It wasn’t by design, but the pitches prepared by the Indian curators brought bowlers back in to the game. Mohali provided bounce, Jaipur seam, and Brabourne spin. Batsmen were forced to buckle down, apply themselves and choose the right balls to hit. Most matches were low scoring, but almost each of them was a contest. One-day cricket has suffered grievously because of misplaced notion that big runs equals big excitement; to see the balance redressed, that too in India where plus-300 scores are boringly routine, was refreshing.Worst: Viru walks on eggshellsI write this on the second of the Boxing day Test between India and South Africa and about an hour ago, Virender Sehwag has played the most horrendous of strokes to be out on zero. It was his first ball, wide, and on its way up when Sehwag flailed at it. It was not merely careless; it was the worst of Sehwag in what has been the worst year of his career.To watch a confident player like Sehwag to be reduced to a bundle of confusion has been one of the most distressing sights of 2006. To say bowlers have sorted him out is simplistic. Watch him bat in the first Test innings it’s easy to see that his batting has regressed; from a batsman who could play strokes all around the wicket, he now merely looks for space to free his arms to blast the ball square on the offside, which makes him one-fourth the player. Insouciance is a great virtue when married with common sense, Sehwag’s first-ball swish made him more like a fool on a death wish.

Paul Coupar


Brian Lara can make even the savage demolishers of the Aussies look weak
© Getty Images

Best: Aussies look mortal
Perhaps it was the tantalising mirage of the Aussies being made to look
mortal ahead of the Ashes. Perhaps it was because I was puffing on a gym
treadmill at the time and appreciated a distraction – any distraction. But
watching Lara’s front-foot pull for six, during the Champions Trophy clash at Mumbai, to a ball most would have nurdled through third man, was truly electric. More risky than Dravid, more inventive than Ponting, he remains thrilling to watch.Worst: December 16
Every serious Test nation will be playing, with Bangladesh hosting a major
series against Scotland. It’s far, too much cricket. It’s dulling
our appetite and the sharpness of our memories. It’s weakened competition and diluted fine performances. Cricket becomes a meaningless blur.

Anand Vasu

Best: Jubilation at Jo’burg


The win at the Wanderers may not keep the critics at bay for long but for a team often falling frustratingly short of what it’s capable of this was a situation where even Australia couldn’t have done better
© AFP

When former Indian cricketers are baying for blood, when newspapers and television channels are shrill in their calls for immediate and brutal reaction, when the batting has failed and when the decisions and comments of administrators are not always what they seem, the Indian cricket team must be the worst possible place to be. And it was exactly the situation when Rahul Dravid courageously chose to bat on a fast pitch with damp spots on it at the Wanderers. Then, batsmen applied themselves, fast bowlers breathed fire from a good line and length, fielders held every catch and snaffled out run outs from half chances. When India won for the first time on foreign soil, it was for many, a vindication of the faith that they had in this team. It was total cricket from a team that frustratingly, often falls well short of what it is capable of. It was one of those rare moments when you don’t think, “what would Australia have done in this situation?” for mighty as they are, even they could have done no better.Worst: Read me a riot
They say subjects get the kings they deserve. But sometimes you are left wondering if India’s cricketers get the fans they deserve – not quantity, but quality wise. One of the more distressing sights is watching Sachin Tendulkar fielding on the fence at an Indian ground and getting booed and barracked for not having made runs in a game. Cowards who yell anonymously from a group are one thing, but in Guwahati, when the appalling side of fan behaviour reached its crescendo. After no play was possible because heavy overnight rains had drenched the ground, even the most desperate attempts of the organisers failed. Angry fans rioted, destroying equipment, breaking down fences and walls, assaulting security personnel. Blood was shed and tear gas cannisters were fired. Riots and violence of this kind remind of all the things that are wrong in this world – communal violence, dictatorial oppression, that sort of thing. It’s the sort of thing I never expected to see at a cricket ground, and hope I never have to write about again.

Sam Collins

Best: Bell tolls
As the vultures hovered over Duncan Fletcher at Perth, Ian Bell’s treatment of Shane Warne in his spunky 87 drew attention to the many positive aspects of the coach’s reign. Bell, for so long the golden-child of English cricket, had been comprehensively worked over by Australia in 2005 and a spell on the sidelines followed. However, rather than join the lost generation of Ramprakash, Hick and Crawley he seized the second chance afforded him by Flintoff’s injury, and three hundreds against Pakistan signalled that in this England set-up players do not wither when dropped, they fight back.Worst: Captaincy conundrums


How well will Flintoff hold up in the Ashes post-mortem?
© Getty Images

Just when it seemed English cricket had finally emerged from the dark ages and embraced common sense, the mess following Michael Vaughan’s injury showed that madness can only be hidden, never dispelled. Flintoff’s premature appointment as captain for the summer followed his Mumbai heroics, and his subsequent injury made the whole affair farcical. Strauss then impressed in the role against Pakistan – but the selectors’ hands were tied: Flintoff would captain in Australia. All the while Vaughan was still the official captain. Confused? Cue a media frenzy when Vaughan returned to action with England 2-0 down, only for Fletcher to belatedly rule out his involvement; the same Fletcher who then shoddily threw Flintoff a hospital-pass by blaming selection muddles on his captain. The real pity is the effect on Flintoff. Clearly not fit, the beaming smile of 2005 is a distant memory and we can only hope he retains his love for the game in the wake of the inevitable Ashes post-mortem.

Steven Lynch


One that snaked through – Monty sends back a stunned Younis Khan
© Getty Images

Best: Monty python

It’s one thing for a spinner to grab the wicket of an out-of-form batsman,
or a wide-eyed rabbit. But the ball which announced Monty Panesar as a
bowling star of the first magnitude was to a batsman at the top of his
form, fresh from 173 in the first innings at Headingley. The recipient
was Younis Khan, half of Pakistan’s Two Ys batting pairing which
troubled England all summer. Panesar dragged Younis forward, beat his jabbed defensive push, and the ball snaked back from the rough outside
leg, just kissing the top of off stump and flicking the bail. It was a
great delivery – one that should have been played on a continuous loop
in a locked room to the England tour selectors before they made the
ruinous decision to leave Panesar out of the Brisbane and, especially,
Adelaide Tests against Australia.Worst: Adelaide atrocity
Actually I wouldn’t have minded Australia winning the Ashes, as long as it had been a decent series. And when England rolled past 500 in the
second Test at least it looked as if the series would be still alive
come Christmas. That predictable first-up defeat at Brisbane wouldn’t
have looked quite so bad if it had been followed by a strong draw – or
even a surprise victory – at Adelaide. But then came that peculiar
declaration-by-numbers, the expensive drop of Ponting … and the
strokeless collapse on the fifth day that gave Australia the chance of
victory, which they greedily guzzled. If Australia had won the Edgbaston
Test in 2005, and gone two up, it would have ruined the “Greatest Ever”
Ashes series: their victory here killed this one stone dead. There was
never any way back from 2-0.

Brydon Coverdale


Michael Hussey – Sir Don’s statistical twin (almost)
© Getty Images

Best: A champion arrives
Michael Hussey is not Don Bradman. Statistically, however, he is pretty
darn close. Few players have taken to Test cricket as quickly and
impressively as Hussey, who Australia have discovered can plug any hole
in the top six. Sadly, there is only one of him, because there could be
a few leaks soon if any more batsmen call it a day. After 14 Tests, he
averages 86.33 – Bradman averaged 94.45 at the same point in his career.
Hussey’s average will almost certainly decline but Australia’s No. 4
spot is definitely in safe hands. Suggestions have even been made that
Australia might not have lost the Ashes in 2005 had he played. That
might be drawing a long bow, but his class and composure has been
patently obvious in 2006.Worst: Losing a legend
Australian cricket fans considered losing the Ashes in 2005 a calamity.
They probably should be thankful, however, because it postponed for just
over a year the moment they would regard as an even bigger tragedy –
Shane Warne’s retirement. He would have quit had Australia retained the
Ashes last year but his total commitment to regaining the urn pushed him
on to 2006-07. Warne’s departure was a desperately sad moment for world
cricket because his complete mastery of legspin is as unlikely to be
replicated as a Jason Gillespie double-century. There have been plenty
of stars in world cricket in the past 20 years but few towering legends
of the game. Warne is unquestionably one of them.

Vaneisa Baksh

Best: Lara’s opera


Brian Lara was in his element at Multan
© AFP

If Danish Kaneria had been bowling badly, it would have dimmed the sparkle somewhat. He hadn’t been; and despite the two sixes Brian Lara had already taken off him, he couldn’t have been more shell-shocked than at the end of over number 83 in the second Test
at Multan. Stepping out, Lara dispatched the first ball, straight and true, with one bounce to the fence. He subsided for the next, but leant back to pull the short third ball outside leg stump clear over the mid-wicket boundary.The fourth met a dancer’s footwork, as Lara sashayed forward and lofted a powerful arc to long on. Like reaching a crescendo, the third six was the biggest, over the sight screen. Last ball was like waiting for the climax of a symphonic piece, and the full toss got a baton wave over mid-wicket. Three consecutive sixes and two fours, just two runs short of his record 28. Perhaps it was the second six, but the over had suddenly become musical, and Lara was composing an opera full of tragedy, drama, and enthralling conquest.Worst: Windies’ bumbling board
West Indies sank to the debacle between Allen Stanford and the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) over the clash between fixtures for his Super Star tournament (Nov 10-12) and the West Indies tour of Pakistan. Discussions began early in the year between the parties, but somewhere wires got crossed and what was represented as a hardline position from the Pakistan board turned out to be flexible, but only after the tournament had been called off by an irate Stanford. A possible five million US dollars to South Africa was lost in the rush, while the WICB claimed that Stanford had backed out of a promised US $2 million donation.The WICB President had refused to name the team for Pakistan on Brian Lara’s advice, he said, which made it impossible for Stanford to select a team. Michael Holding, incensed that Lara’s advice was the rationale offered by the WICB for not naming players, resigned from the Cricket Committee on the grounds that it had been sidestepped. He accused the WICB President of being economical with the truth after the Board issued a rebuttal, and with Clive Lloyd drawn in, things got even more unseemly.

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan


Sabina went bonkers and Dwayne Bravo’s celebration was the symbol of Windies’ one-day revival
© AFP

Best: Slow death at Sabina
This was the one-day version
of Steve Harmison’s short ball to Michael Kasprowicz at Edgbaston. Ten needed off the last five, Bravo to Yuvraj, and Sabina Park is going delirious. A top-edged four sends down shivers and a blistering cover-drive that follows induces a sense of utter hopelessness. In a couple of minutes, a cheering arena was turned into a morgue. Two off three was too easy. India were going 2-0 up in a five match series and Windies were all but buried.And then it arrived, ever so slowly. Rising from the adrenalin pool, Bravo resorted to guile when everyone expected force, delivering a quite audacious slower yorker. Yuvraj’s attempted sweep around the corner was complete as the ball passed him and before he realised, the stumps were rattled. To a man, Sabina went bonkers, electricity pierced the concrete, and the pillars quaked under the mountain of noise. It was also an inflexion point for the two teams – West Indies won 11 of their next 17 games; India lost 12 of their next 16.Worst: Runs and ruins
Strangely the Iqbal Stadium was full, on a the fifth day of a quite meaningless Test.
A grand total of 1702 runs were scored in five days and chances of a result were as remote as Shoaib Akhtar embracing Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Then Afridi entered and, after an innings lasting three balls, edged to the keeper. And then, in one mighty wave, Iqbal was empty. Barring two sessions on the third day, nobody needed have turned up for this batting orgy. Six centuries, five half-centuries, eight bowlers conceding more than 100, 200 fours, 27 sixes … On a tar road masquerading as a pitch, cricket wept, wailed and finally died.

Anil Nair

Best: Freddie at Alamo


Flintoff carried the torch for England at the Gabba till he was forced off the field with a sore ankle
© Getty Images

Andrew Flintoff in the first innings at the Gabba will remain a sight to cherish despite the ignominy of the Ashes surrender. As the other English bowlers reduced themselves to pie-chuckers, Flintoff, wearing his size like a cloak and chewing gum, ran in over, after desperate over, with the mercury rising and the humidity touching 88%. He was the only one with the pace, accuracy and menace to hurry the Australians on a belter. In just his second over he had Ponting hopping around with a steepler, and, even if momentarily, reliving the nightmare of Ashes 2005. Finally, as Flintoff hobbled off with a sore ankle and an air of the knacker’s yard about him, the enduring image was less the Charge of the Light Brigade than of Alamo – of martyrdom gilded and redeemed by the victories that preceded it.Worst: KP and IQ

Kevin Pietersen’s continuing tirade against alleged racism in the land of his birth is a blot on his otherwise remarkable story of courage and adaptability. South Africa does have a skewed quota system in cricket, official protestations notwithstanding, and Pietersen obviously was a victim of it. But there is the larger reality and his phenomenal success as an England player ought to have made Pietersen realise that what goes around comes around too. In the new South Africa, violent crime and rape is rampant but it is also a great experiment in multiculturalism, where the unity is willed, still not quite on strong foundations but not a facade either: the power is with the blacks, the money largely white and the balance between empowerment and exploitation is ever so steadily shifting towards the former. To call such historical redress racism is simply diabolical, but in this case it appears more a matter of a challenged IQ.

Will Luke

Best: KP takes on Warne
Some have numbed Shane Warne’s spitting legbreak but precious few have silenced his venomous tongue. Kevin Pietersen’s direct, planned attack on Warne has been this series’ mesmerising sideshow. He smashed him for six fours and a six – 59 out of his masterful 158 at Adelaide – leaving Warne bemused and becalmed. Warne got his revenge in the second innings, bowling him around his legs – but his and Australia’s euphoric celebration said plenty. Finally, an Englishman who could match Warne’s ability as a cricketer – and with verbals, too.Worst: Selection shocker
It was so depressingly inevitable. Wrongly chosen for the first Test, we hoped, a little naively, that Ashley Giles would be joined by Monty Panesar for the second at Adelaide. He wasn’t. Giles dropped Ricky Ponting on 35 (he made 142); scratched around at Duncan Fletcher’s precious No.8 position and bowled haplessly. Monty finally made his belated Ashes debut at Perth, took eight wickets and showed promising class and ability with the bat. Too late.

Jenny Thompson

Best: When Claire soared


An out-of-form Steve Harmison could not prevent the Aussies from regaining the Ashes before Christmas
© Getty Images

It was an innings fit to grace any stage, let alone the home of cricket. Claire Taylor’s silky 156 from 151 balls eclipsed Viv Richard’s record of fastest one-day hundred at Lord’s, and she was immediately rewarded with an honours board at the ground. But the true value of that innings – and indeed of both England and India’s immaculate conduct – will be measured when discussions are held as to whether to hold another women’s match there. Taylor couldn’t have done more to help the cause and hopefully the women will be back before long.Worst: Wide, wider, widest
From the sublime to the ridiculed… England took fewer than 16 months to lose the Ashes they’d taken 16 years to regain – and poor Steve Harmison’s first ball in the first Test at Brisbane set the tone. wide was so wide it flew to Andrew Flintoff at second slip and at that point the England captain must have thought the urn could easily slip from their grasp. So it proved, with an out-of-sorts Harmison typifying England’s woes. They did play well in parts, but not the vital ones, and Ponting had the Ashes all wrapped up for Christmas.

Sidharth Monga

Best: Uttar Pradesh find their Gary Pratt
Ali Hamid Zaidi had had nothing to do with Uttar Pradesh’s Ranji campaign till the final, where he fielded as a substitute. The whole innings went without him having to do anything significant. Until Bengal were nine down and needed 15 runs to gain the first innings lead that would, in all probability, decide the Ranji Trophy final. For three days and a bit, the game had meandered towards this climax. The lack of action and pace could have been a good excuse for missing the defining moment when it came your way. Not for Zaidi.Top-scorer Lakshmi Ratan Shukla swept Piyush Chawla, all fielders, except the slip, were at the boundary. The ball took the top-edge and flew towards square-leg. Zaidi ran in 15 yards from the boundary, knowing if he missed it could go for four (more than one-fourths of the required runs), dived and did not let the ball touch the ground. Nothing else mattered then; the whole team mobbed him. There was another innings to be played, but that could be negotiated with reasonable batting. The Ranji Trophy was won.Zaidi later said he hadn’t the time to think about the four runs he could have given away in going for the catch. This was the closest they had ever come to the title, and a miss could have cost them the Ranji Trophy. And he didn’t have time to think such thoughts. Ah, for such absence of cobwebs.Worst: I swear
Walking off after being bowled by Monty Panesar at the WACA, Justin Langer’s attention was attracted by somebody from the crowd. To his credit Langer didn’t say anything, didn’t scream, but his look said it all. A disrespectful word from who could be a loser but thinks he is a hero, hiding in the crowd, is the last thing you would want to hear when you are walking back.The year saw worse. After the South Africans last year, the Australian crowds reportedly racially abused the Sri Lankan players in this year’s VB series. And Australia is not the only place where spectators abuse players. And the abuse is not limited to only the opposition players, as Langer’s case showed. Aakash Chopra, playing a Duleep Trophy game, got his share of abuse from the crowd just because he was the most known face on the field.The ICC have done their bit to try and stop players swearing at each other, but a player would rather deal with a man-to-man swearathon than a faceless drunk, whose kids, ironically, perhaps look upto the abused party.

Charlie Austin

Best: Mahela’s rearguard


A series-draw in England turned Sri Lanka’s bad year into a new beginning under the leadership of Mahela Jayawardene
© AFP

During the first seven sessions of the first Test at Lord’s Sri Lanka were abject. Even diehard Sri Lanka fans agreed with Geoff Boycott: “My granny could provide better practice for the Pakistan series.” But during the next eight sessions the team salvaged their pride with one of the greatest rearguard’s in the game’s long history: Sri Lanka’s very own Dunkirk. At the centre was Mahela Jayawardene, a captain under the microscope and extreme pressure. His splendid 119, an innings of beautiful touch and unbending determination was the innings that turned a bad year into a landmark tour and a new beginning.Worst: A blot on the spirit

Call me old fashioned if you must, but I cherish cricket’s long-held commitment to sportsmanship. The “Spirit of the Game” is a woolly concept, but it enshrines values of great importance. Brendon McCullum’s run out of Murali during the first Test in Christchurch may have been lawfully correct, but it was wholly at odds with the spirit of the game.Kumar Sangakkara had just completed a magnificent century and Murali was overeager to congratulate him. Yes, he was foolish in the extreme to leave his crease before the ball was in McCullum’s gloves, but he was not attempting a run in the context his excitement in his close friend’s achievement was understandable. In the Champions Trophy, just a few weeks before, Sangakkara could have run out Nathan Astle, who was patting down the pitch, but he choose instead to give him a gentle warning.Even if McCullum’s natural instinct as a wicketkeeper was to break the stumps, Stephen Fleming, an international captain of high regard who has a responsibility to protect cricket’s ethics, could have called Murali back. It was an opportunity to do the right thing; to set an example for thousands of young cricketers around the world. Sadly, instead, the match was soured and cricket was hurt.

Jamie Alter

Best: Monty!


Monty Panesar: Comical spinner to bona fide match-winner
© Getty Images

The sight of a turbaned, Asian spin bowler bringing English crowds to their feet, waving flags, chanting his name, cheering his every move, was especially endearing. Monty Panesar, the first Sikh to play for England, shot up from comical spinner to cult hero to bona fide matchwinner – heck, he’s even had football players copying his enthusiastic, unabashed wicket-taking histrionics – and will prove an inspiration to many others like him. For an Asian to establish himself in England, where British Asians feel misrepresented, was something very, very special. England’s cricket make-up, seen for decades as institutionally racist, has hopefully woken up to an opportunity.Worst: Dope, undope

The lifting of the bans on Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif, they had tested positive for banned steroid nandrolone. How a three-member panel was allowed to decide the verdict for a matter as serious as doping, and for a national federation such as the Pakistan board, to tell an international federation what rules it is going to apply for the controversial case, was shocking and unacceptable. The PCB-appointed tribunal acquitted Akhtar and Asif with the reasoning that they had not been warned about dietary supplements blamed for their positive tests. The bottom line is that they tested . Enough said, case closed. International athletes must be aware of the risks involved and a lack of knowledge was no excuse.

Andrew Miller

Best: The M&H show

It looked like a vision of a glorious future when Steve Harmison and Monty Panesar combined their mercurial talents to deliver a remarkable innings-and-120-run victory against Pakistan at Old Trafford. England’s odd couple thrived on a trampoline pitch to share 19 wickets between them – 50 years to the week since Jim Laker had managed that number all by himself, on the same ground. Teasing tweakers and menacing lift. It had a nation in raptures, in anticipation of similar conditions Down Under. Oh well …


launches a scathing attack on England’s dismal one-day form
© The Mirror

Worst: Nightmare in pyjamas

Where do we start with this one? That dismal 5-1 drubbing against India? That dismal 5-0 drubbing against Sri Lanka? That dismal and hollow victory over a hopeless Irish team at Stormont? That dismal capitulation against Australia at Jaipur. Dismal, dismal, dismal. England couldn’t give a toss about one-day cricket this year. The Ashes (past and present) was all that mattered. Which is rather ironic, seeing as the disciplines and momentum that Australia carried over from their Champions Trophy triumph were precisely what seized that decisive final day at Adelaide.

Kanishkaa Balachandran


Rahul Dravid gave the cricket world a batting lesson at Sabina Park
© AFP

Best: The Wall stands

Rahul Dravid’s twin half centuries on a minefield of a pitch in Jamaica highlighted the gulf between the good and the great. Dravid’s impeccable technique and unfazed concentration combined to guide India to its Holy Grail – a Test series victory abroad against a credible opposition, which took 20 years of waiting. The innings was a throwback to an earlier era, as Dravid gritted it out on a two-paced pitch, cutting down on flamboyance and playing the ball on its merit. The fact that he faced more number of deliveries in his first-innings 81 than the West Indians did in their first-innings capitulation was an indication that it was one man against the rest.Worst: Mumbai mania

India’s hapless surrender for 100 in the final day of the final Test against England at Mumbai would rank high among the Test cricket’s meek capitulations. The injury-hit Johnny-Cash inspired England side led by Andrew Flintoff were treated like royalty, as the Indians gifted away wickets at a frenetic pace, courtesy some diabolical shot selection. Relative unknowns and newcomers in international cricket had their moments under the sun, as did a certain Monty Panesar, who was given a second chance in the deep after dropping a sitter just two balls before. India renounced their stranglehold in the series, settling for a 1-1 draw after 49 overs of madness. Gracious hosts? Well done India…

Jayaditya Gupta


‘Remember us?’ – Zaheer Khan and Sourav Ganguly were back at their best
© AFP

Best: Roaring back in style
This was the year of the fightback. It happened with players – Zaheer
Khan, Sourav Ganguly, Chamara Silva (whose match-winning century and
half-century in Wellington came after a pair in Christchurch) – who defied the odds,
conventional wisdom and the crushing weight of expectation to record personal landmarks. It happened with teams in a match situation; most famously, South Africa, who chased down Australia’s 434 at the Wanderers; Australia themselves, who fashioned a victory out of sheer self-belief at Adelaide; Pakistan, recovering from Irfan Pathan’s first-over hat-trick at Karachi. And in the context of a tradition: Australia again, for so emphatically winning back the Ashes.The Worst: India’s leviathan board

The BCCI, like Topsy, just grow’d. And grow’d. And somewhere along the
way the pounds, dollars, rupees and whatever other currency they were
raking in, stopped making sense. Full credit to all those manning the
bean counters but the list of things left undone is far too long:
Rotting stadiums, a shoddily-run domestic structure, an overpowering
stench of ad-hocism…and, above all, the belief that big bucks alone
can change everything. It’s a monopolist leviathan thriving in a free-market
economy. Not much room for cricket there.

Dan Brigham


THAT shot again – Pietersen reverse-sweeps Muralitharan for a six
© Getty Images

Best: KP goes gonzo

The crowd’s gasp was as loud as it was revealing. Pietersen had just fallen
after a breathtaking 142, and the crowd knew that some of the greatest, most
creative hitting ever seen in a Test arena was at an end. Once regarded with
suspicion by the English for his South African-ness and his love of
celebrity, this magical innings famous for the left-handed sweep for six
over point off Muralitharan changed all that.Worst: Flights of madness

England’s preparations for retaining the Ashes were bad enough. Then someone
took the ridiculous decision to fly the team home from India following their
inept Champions Trophy showing rather than heading straight to Australia to
prepare for the Ashes. There was everyone thinking this was the most
important series since, well, Ashes 2005, and yet England were flying
half-way around the world to spend a couple days at home before again flying
half-way around the world. Was it vindicated? Was it hell?

Neil Manthorp


‘That will cost you five bucks…sorry…runs gentlemen’ – Darrell Hair at The Oval
© Getty Images

Best: Mick takes the mickey
Mick Lewis (10-0-113-0): “It’s not like I bowled a heap of pies. I actually
bowled quite well. It was just one of those freaky games.
I wouldn’t have
bowled 10 overs if I was bowling a heap of crap. I’m not a selector, but
they’re in the job for a reason, they’re smart and I’m sure they don’t just
look at one game and say ‘He’s not up to it’.” The game needs its comedians
and delusionists.Worst: Hair’s Ovalgate

The moment Darrell Hair’s superiority complex and ‘sense of theatre’
over-ruled common sense and persuaded him to signal five penalty runs
against Pakistan at the Oval. If only he had considered the consequences –
or, at the very least, caught Inzamam with a pen knife and a bottle top in
his pocket.

Andrew McGlashan

Best: Shaggy! You beauty
Every dog has its day and for Shaun ‘Shaggy’ Udal it couldn’t have come much sweeter than the third Test against India at Mumbai. It was his last chance to make a mark in international cricket after being overlooked for the first two Tests following a poor tour of Pakistan. Shortly after lunch on the final day, Sachin Tendulkar propped forward and an inside edge popped to short leg and an hour later he’d help to wrap up a famous England victory. One to tell the grand kids about.Worst: Harmy the scatter-gun
There has been plenty to bemoan about England’s one-day cricket over the last 12 months, but Harmison’s scatter-gun spells are up there with the worst moments – and they have infected his Test form. His mauling at the hands of Sanath Jayasuriya and Upul Tharanga at Headingley was the most damaging to his figures (0 for 97), but for his mental state his performance against Australia at the Champions Trophy had longer side-effects. It is time for him to leave the white ball behind.

Osman Samiuddin


Mohammad Asif goes one step above cricket’s pop idol
© Getty Images

Best: Asif the snake

There existed few reasons for cheer during the summer tour to England. Through the series their batsmen battered Pakistan’s bowlers. Kevin Pietersen wasn’t the most successful but he went about it with a more brutal relish than any. He is, as Australia found out, a batsman designed to dominate. But where McGrath and Warne failed, Mohammad Asif prospered. In four matches after his belated return, Asif tormented Pietersen. Twice, he fell first ball and every other time cricket’s pop idol was taunted, teased, set up and chicken-danced at before being sent back. Nobody has done it to him before or since. It was but an isolated symbol of resistance for Pakistan’s bowling, but what a symbol.Worst: Pakistan’s Jonty? You wish

Even by Pakistan’s standards, this was a particularly shambolic fielding year. And slap, bang in the middle of it was Imran Farhat, the man Jonty Rhodes had tipped as the best catcher during a futile two-week stint as fielding consultant. The first thing Farhat did after Rhodes’s tips was to drop three catches during the Lord’s Test. The last thing he did before it was to drop chances in Sri Lanka. At slip, at point, at crucial stages, at irrelevant junctures, anywhere, anytime, Farhat spent the year shelling chance after chance, easy or difficult. At one point, it seemed he had dropped more catches than he had scored runs and if there was a record kept of these things, Pakistan would have had another record-breaker in their ranks. Jonty what were you thinking?

Edward Craig


That just a dream – Jubilation at the Wanderers
© Getty Images

Best: Wanderers’ wonder

South Africa and Australia’s record-breaking ODI
at Johannesburg. It was gruesome, dirty, unfair cricket but completely absorbing. This was not the greatest game ever, not even close, but it was as exciting a spectacle as the sport can produce – the noise of the crowd, the buzz in the press box, the look of shock on people’s faces as they left the ground. And the world champions lost. Brilliant.Worst: Good tournament, wrong name

The Champions Trophy – not because it was a superfluous tournament, an ICC cash cow clogging up the international fixture list – but because it wasn’t the World Cup. This is the format and time-scale the World Cup should be played over. I’d even argue that these are the type of wickets the World Cup should be played on. Low-scoring ODIs are, on balance, more exciting than run-fests – a Johannesburg-type match every game (which is what the ICC want) would be very dull.

John Stern


Andrew Flintoff: inspired by Johnny Cash at Mumbai
© Getty Images

Best : Freddie fires in the ring

We know now that this Flintoff-fuelled comeback victory was not a turning
point in England’s mixed post-Ashes fortunes but a joyous blip in a
miserable year. Inspired by their larger-than-life stand-in captain and his choice in
music (Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire) England drew the three-match rubber by
bowling India out for 100 on the final day. It was a day to be remembered
for Monty holding a steepler to dismiss Dhoni two balls after he’d
completely missed a similar chance and for the never-to-be-repeated
scorecard entry: Tendulkar c Bell b Udal.Worst: Curioser and curioser

The departure of Marcus Trescothick from the England team (twice in eight
months) has been a desperately sad affair. Sad for him and his family, sad
for team-mates and supporters who harboured hopes of retaining the Ashes.
But also sad because it has shown the ECB in its worst obfuscatory light.Privacy is one thing but to stage-manage a TV interview in which
Trescothick claimed he had a virus was an insult to people’s intelligence.
To think that a month off to miss the Champions Trophy would see him right
for the biggest tour of his career when he had been having treatment for
his “stress-related illness” for most of the year was naïve not to say
unprofessional.

George Binoy


Sreesanth does his thing
© Getty Images

Best: Pump up the volume

It’s the second innings of the Johannesburg Test between South Africa and India. Andre Nel steams in to bowl his first ball at Sreesanth. He lets loose a bouncer and spouts his usual dose of verbal diarrhoea at Sreesanth who had hurried out of the way. We didn’t have a clue to the scenes that would follow for Sreesanth’s body language indicated nothing. Nel runs in to bowl his second ball. This time it isn’t a bouncer, Sreesanth backs away again but flat-bats an astonishing six over long-off, an ungainly slog. His riposte doesn’t end there for as he reaches the bowler’s end he does something that is best viewed and not described. I hope more batsmen give as good as they get from Nel.Worst: Robbed at Fatullah

Not many will remember that 2006 was also the year that Bangladesh nearly derailed the Australian juggernaut. And it wasn’t just a sliver of a chance. Bangladesh piled up 427 in the first innings and then secured a lead of 158. At one stage during the run-chase, Australia needed 76 with four wickets in hand. They were close to suffering the most humiliating defeat in history. And that prospect of seeing Goliath felled by David’s little brother was mouth-watering. For who doesn’t love supporting the underdog? Beating Australia in a one-day at Cardiff was surreal enough, but a Test win would have been … But Ricky Ponting played spoilsport to millions of hopefuls like myself and scored a matchwinning hundred under circumstances where the humiliation of defeat weighed more heavily than the task at hand. Glorious uncertainty of sport? Bah humbug.

Tait's steep learning curve

Shaun Tait’s impressive debut, and Ricky Ponting discovers his bowling skills

On the ball with S Rajesh and Arun Gopalakrishnan25-Aug-2005Shaun Tait came into an Australian side, which was without Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie, and by close of play he had done enough to justify his selection, ending with impressive figures of 2 for 62 from 14 overs. Tait’s first spell in Test cricket was hardly impressive – on a pitch lacking in pace, he bowled back of a length or short far too often, and rarely looked threatening. After the tea break, though, he altered his length, bowling up to the bat and getting appreciable movement, and while he went for more runs, he also bowled more wicket-taking deliveries (five out of 41 before tea; 10 out of 47 after the interval).The other bowling card that was a success – far more unexpectedly – for Australia was the captain himself. Before tea, England were rattling along at 4.5 runs per over, and of the 134 runs, 46 came through cover and midwicket, and only one through third man – a clear indication that the batsmen were hardly ever troubled and completely on top. Then came Tait’s wicket, after which Ricky Ponting brought himself on and did an excellent job of bottling an end up. He bowled six overs, and never once strayed more leg side than off stump, in the process getting the key wicket of Michael Vaughan. Don’t be surprised if Ponting’s seen offering a few bowling tips to Jason Gillespie in the nets tomorrow morning.

Everton could sign their next Richarlison with January move

If it wasn't for a ten-point deduction, Sean Dyche's Everton would be flying high in the Premier League at this moment in time.

The Toffees would be competing with the likes of Manchester United and Newcastle United higher up the division than looking over their shoulders at the bottom three in the top flight if the points deduction never happened, winning four of their last five matches with four consecutive clean sheets tallied up along the way.

However, as much as Dyche's men are defensively solid, the Blues do arguably lack firepower going forward with striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin only helping himself to three goals this season in the league.

January could come at the best possible time therefore to recruit a new exciting forward player, with rumours indicating that the buoyed-on Blues are interested in former Sheffield United man Iliman Ndiaye who could fill the boots of Richarlison finally.

Everton transfer latest – interest in Ndiaye

TEAMtalk are reporting, via journalist Alan Nixon, that the Merseyside outfit are interested in bringing Ndiaye to Goodison Park this January, Dyche wanting positive reinforcements up top.

The deal could well only be a loan switch however, Ndiaye's current club Marseille wanting the Senegal international to get back to his explosive Sheffield United best after an underwhelming stay in France to date before returning back to Ligue 1 revitalised.

Everton could well be the next destination that ends up re-energising the faltering forward, the 23-year-old attacker previously vital to the Blades as a creative force.

The Blues could do with a vibrant attacker coming in and shaking things up, lacking a second exciting striker option in their ranks ever since former Everton great Richarlison upped and left for Tottenham.

How Ndiaye compares to Richarlison

Ndiaye could come in and play a similar starring role for the club that the Brazilian forward provided for Dyche, a skilful and exuberant attacker who also has the goals to back up the audacious flicks.

Last season under recently sacked Paul Heckingbottom at Bramall Lane, Ndiaye was paramount to the Blades winning automatic promotion from the Championship – scoring 14 goals and assisting a further 11, switching between playing as an out-and-out centre forward, competently playing down the channels or filling in as an attacking midfielder. That's certainly similar to Richarlison.

This blistering form saw former Blades striker Brian Deane wax lyrical about the Senegalese forward to the Sheffield Star, stating that the thrilling attacker is "worth the entrance fee alone."

Richarlison similarly was vital last season to the Toffees in their escape from relegation with electric performances, netting four less than his counterpart with ten goals but proving to be equally critical for his side.

Richarlison-celebrates-for-Everton

The 26-year-old was also subject to glowing praise, heralded as "world-class" by former Tottenham goalkeeper Paul Robinson when speaking to Football Insider in the direct aftermath of his move to north London.

Ndiaye was also rewarded with a major move, although his time with Marseille has been anything but smooth sailing.

Sheffield United's former number 29 has found the adjustment to French football tricky, only managing one strike so far donning his new Marseille colours.

Ndiaye could seek some comfort relocating to England in January in a bid to recapture his form, the Toffees desperate to land the flashy forward even with his former relegation-threatened employers also reportedly sniffing around to clinch a South Yorkshire homecoming.

The out-of-sorts 23-year-old would also offer Dyche another presence who can potentially play down the flanks, Ndiaye pushing the likes of Jack Harrison and Dwight McNeil potentially to new heights by offering friendly competition.

It has all the makings of being a fascinating transfer saga, Everton leading the race so far for the hot property.

Leeds: Bielsa signing has seen his value skyrocket by 1160%

Leeds United's start to the Championship season, when taken in isolation, marks a torrid start towards earning their goal of an instant Premier League return.

They have won just once in five attempts, and the summer window just gone saw them lose plenty of their star men, including Tyler Adams, Luis Sinisterra and Rodrigo.

However, when delving deeper, it is worth noting that not only have the Whites actually played well in those fixtures, but they also recruited shrewdly in the market to plug those holes created. Amidst all the turmoil, Daniel Farke has actually come out the other side relatively unscathed and is now surely ready to truly kickstart their league campaign.

He has a wealth of talent at his fingertips, both young and old, and should the German find the perfect blend whilst mixing around his starting side, it could prove devastating for the rest of the division.

Leeds United manager Daniel Farke.

It is likely that the former will uphold his side though, with the likes of Archie Gray, Wilfried Gnonto, Crysenco Summerville and Jamie Shackleton all growing into mainstays despite their inexperience.

A truly bright future is on the horizon once again at Elland Road, with this newfound hope sure to spur on a year of excitement rather than the gloomy period they endured in the English top flight.

Who are Leeds United's best young players?

With such a starring cast of thrilling youngsters, it marks a very difficult task to choose just one as the outstanding player.

Wilfried Gnonto was the recipient of plenty of interest over the summer, with a £25m bid having even been turned away such was his value to the club. Meanwhile, Gray has been ever-present in the midfield, with the 17-year-old general providing the foundation for Summerville to have enjoyed a frightening start to the new term.

Even Shackleton, who was perhaps a forgotten man after his quiet loan spell last season, has announced himself as a creative utility man capable of deputising in a number of roles.

However, perhaps one of their brightest talents is one which has already performed in the Premier League, and should he be given a chance, would surely be able to lead them back to that level. Joe Gelhardt is the young finisher Farke is craving.

Having joined under Marcelo Bielsa's leadership, the 21-year-old marksman has remained throughout numerous different managers now, having featured for most as a clinical youngster with an exciting future.

The forward was instrumental during the 2021/22 campaign where they narrowly avoided the drop, as his two goals and four assists in the league game at crucial moments to earn them survival.

Then, having been sent out on loan the year following as his chances dwindled, he scored three and assisted three across just 16 Championship starts with Sunderland.

Such persistent proficiency was always bound to draw praise, with journalist Phil Hay even branding him a "goal machine".

This kind of acknowledgement from such a well-respected writer should go a long way towards painting the picture of Gelhardt's talent, which has been well-documented given his meteoric rise to the top of the game.

How much was Joe Gelhardt worth at Wigan Athletic?

However, the Liverpool-born finisher was not a true product of the Whites' infamous academy, with Thorp Arch not quite able to take the plaudits for his production.

It was instead Wigan Athletic who handed the youngster the platform to shine, as his five goals in as many U18s games earned him 21 first-team appearances before his eventual sale.

joe-gelhardt-championship-leeds-united

To emphasise just how far Gelhardt has come, it is worth outlining that Football Transfers valued Leeds' number 30 at just €70k (£60k) in 2019, the year before he moved. Unsurprisingly, his exposure and instant adaptation to top-level football with the Yorkshire outfit has seen that figure skyrocket.

How much did Leeds United sign Joe Gelhardt for?

As the Latics were plagued by crippling financial issues, the likes of which saw them earn points deductions that would send them spiralling out of the Championship, Leeds were one of the beneficiaries who swooped in to acquire their talent for a cut price.

Soccer Football – Championship – Hull City v Wigan Athletic – KCOM Stadium, Hull, Britain – September 14, 2019 Wigan Athletic’s Joe Gelhardt celebrates scoring their second goal Action Images/Ed Sykes EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or “live” services. Online in-match use limited to 75 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications. Please contact your account representative for

It was impossible for a club in administration to turn down the £1m that Bielsa had offered, and so the young striker moved in the hope that the fee he attained would aid his former employers in their survival bid.

Although the DW Stadium outfit have bounced between the second tier and League One for the past few years, at the very least Shaun Maloney seems set to offer some stability to an institution that has been sorely lacking it in recent memory.

What is Joe Gelhardt's market value now?

To gauge the growth of Gelhardt, it is worth viewing the change in his value, which can be affected by a number of different factors.

His age, the level which he has and currently plays at, nationality and skill level all come into play, but given how lowly Football Transfers once valued him, it is certain that a profit can be guaranteed.

2023

€14.7m (£12.6m)

58% increase

2022

€9.8m (£8.4m)

65% increase

2021

€4.9m (£4.2m)

136% increase

2020

€1m (£860k)

N/A

That is certainly the case when viewing Football Transfer's expected Transfer Value (xTV) for the starlet, which seeks to estimate an accurate fee that might be paid in the current market for a player's services.

The €14.7m (£12.6m) figure they have handed him is a fair representation of his current level and the potential he holds to star in the near future.

In total, across a senior career that has largely spanned across the two valuations mentioned, the 5 foot 9 poacher has seen an 1160% increase in value. Bielsa certainly worked wonders with this deal.

Why is Joe Gelhardt worth that much?

To outline why Gelhardt has seen his valuation soar in such a manner is just to hear the glowing commendation sent his way by former employers and current ones.

Paul Cook, who managed over him at Wigan, was one of the first to issue such glowing praise: "He's got that unique talent to find space in a telephone box. He's such a natural, good footballer. To get a goal like that in front of his own fans was a special moment.

"A lot of young footballers coming into the game are not very nice people. We're just lucky to have a boy with his humility playing for us – the game is easy for him. He'll be starting soon if he carries on like that. He's a young boy that needs minding though. It's a very special goal from a very special player."

Given his growth since then, which is well laid out by these aforementioned shifts in valuation, it remains to be seen just how high Gelhardt could go under Leeds' new leadership.

West Ham Could Sign Their Own Odegaard In ‘Ridiculous’ Star

West Ham United are beginning to spend the £105m that was raised via the sale of homegrown hero Declan Rice as David Moyes looks to strengthen his squad.

Edson Alvarez has already arrived in a £35.4m deal, while Moyes is eyeing up a move for Man United striker Antony Martial in a bid to improve his attacking options.

The Scot could even turn to Serie A before the end of the transfer window.

Who do West Ham want to sign?

According to reports in Italy, West Ham are keen on making a move for Lazar Samardzic before the window slams shut in just under two weeks.

Read the latest West Ham transfer news HERE…

Inter Milan are also keen on the Serbian starlet, as per the Calciomercato, and a move looked set to be completed, however, some extra demands were added at the 11th hour of negotiations and the move has stalled.

This could allow Moyes to swoop in and secure his signature in the coming days, beating the Italian giants to the youngster and it would represent a major statement of intent from the club.

Football Transfers currently value the player at £10m, making this move a potential bargain for the Londoners.

Who is Lazar Samardzic?

Although perhaps not as well known on these shores, the 21-year-old has been drawing plenty of praise during his spell at Udinese.

Journalist Bence Bocsak lauded him in April, saying: “7 out of Lazar Samardžić‘s last 10 goals were scored from outside the box.

“Blessed with an abundance of energy, excellent technique and great vision, he’s got the hallmarks of a top midfielder."

Further acclaim was given by Sacha Pisani, who said Samardzic had “ridiculous skill” and it appears, on the surface anyway, that he’d be an ideal signing for West Ham.

Indeed, the 6-foot livewire is also statistically similar to Arsenal talisman Martin Odegaard and judging by his recent form for the Gunners, turning them from European hopefuls to title challengers, it isn’t a bad comparison to have.

Martin Odegaard

According to FBref, the Norwegian gem is the sixth-most similar player to Samardzic across Europe’s top leagues, suggesting he’d be an incredible addition to the West Ham side.

Last season saw the duo register similar statistics with regard to shots per 90 (2.44 to 2.68), pass success rate (80.1% to 80.3%), goal-creating actions per 90 (both 0.49) and tackles (33 to 36).

WhoScored also suggests that Samardzic and Odegaard excel at key passes and dribbling, as both pose a key threat from the midfield and aim to get forward as often as possible.

The Serbia international did register nine goal contributions last term, which was some way down on Odegaard’s total of 23 and suggests he still has work to do in order to become one of the very best, but it's a promising start nonetheless.

If given the freedom of the West Ham midfield, he could thrive in a similar vein to the Norwegian superstar and register double digits for goal contributions in the Premier League.

With Inter still in the hunt, Moyes will need to act swiftly to bring this deal over the line.

Breaks in play stopped batsmen from finding rhythm – Bangar

Rumesh Ratnayake, Sri Lanka’s bowling coach, has termed Suranga Lakmal’s spell of 6-6-0-3 as among the best he has seen “in a long time”. Lakmal’s relentless probing on a green Eden Gardens pitch and under overcast skies left India struggling at 17 for 3 at the end of a first day during which only 11.5 overs were bowled.”I would say it is one of the finest I have seen in a long time,” Ratnayake said. “I am not sure if it’s the best spell I have seen but one of the finest I have seen for a long, long time. Saying that, the wicket was very receptive, it was very helpful, and it’s going to be a big challenge [for Sri Lanka’s batsmen later on].”We were sort of expecting, looking at the wicket, we knew that it was going to seam. By saying that, the job isn’t finished. It’s only started, it’s just started.”Ratnayake admitted it was a good toss for Sri Lanka to have won, but he expected conditions to remain helpful to fast bowlers for a while longer.”Yeah, certainly a good toss to win, but I personally feel that it may last about one-and-a-half days or so, maybe more. We can’t play God here and say it will last for two-three days but I would say it will last at least for two days. But since it’s a new wicket, I believe it might be an extra day or two because there is a certain amount of grass. The surface is grassy.”Before they went out to bowl, Ratnayake said he stressed that the fast bowlers pitch the ball up.”As much as we push the batsmen back, it is very important that we keep it up because, as you may have seen, the movement or the vulnerability was more as the bowler pitched it up and also within the wicket. Our tactics on a normal wicket would be different, our tactics in this game are different. So it’s just keeping the ball up.”It was also important for the fast bowlers to make the batsmen play as much as possible; while Lakmal did this, his new-ball partner Lahiru Gamage struggled with his line, bowling too far outside off stump, though Ratnayake suggested he got better as his spell wore on.”Did you see the difference after the [stoppage due to bad light]?,” he said. “It was a matter of him getting his rhythm right and more importantly the timing also right.”So he was not having that right and when you get your rhythm and timing right, you get the place where you want to hit it in a much easier way for the body. As much as you need timing in batting, you need timing in bowling as well. If you rush through the delivery, the chances of you hitting the right place is not as great as when your timing is right.”India’s batting coach Sanjay Bangar, meanwhile, said his batsmen were tested not just by the conditions but also by the fact that there were so many interruptions in play. With the floodlights turned on right through, he felt it resembled a day-night Test.”The conditions were pretty tough for batting, and what didn’t really help us was that we didn’t get an extended passage of play, wherein you had 15-20 overs bowled at a batsman in a particular fashion,” Bangar said. “So that didn’t allow the batsmen to get into any sort of a rhythm.”It didn’t seem to be a day Test match. It was more like a day-night Test match and at times when you play in such circumstances, playing with the red ball becomes pretty tough because it’s more difficult to pick the red ball.”Given how much help there was for the quicks, there was a case for India to pick three fast bowlers and just the one spinner to enable them to play an extra batsman. India, however, picked three fast bowlers and two spinners.”This team management has believed in going in with five batsmen and the quality of the allrounders that we have – Ashwin, Jadeja, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and also Wriddhiman Saha – we think that that gives a lot of depth in the lower order and it gives us a lot of bowling options as well to pick up 20 wickets in a Test match. That has really worked well for us,” Bangar said. “If you look at the last two-and-a-half seasons, we’ve won nearly 20 Test matches. So that’s mainly due to the team composition that we have opted to play.”The spinners, Bangar felt, would come into the game as it progressed, particularly if the pitch dried out and the dents caused by the ball’s impact on a damp surface hardened.”I think we’ve got all bases covered,” he said. “As the game progresses into the fourth and fifth days, you’ll also find that because of the dampness, there would be dents on the wickets. As the game progresses, there will be variable bounce which might come into play. So both the spinners are really vital to us and we’ve got all bases covered – we’ve got the swing and seam and the pace we require. We’ve got a variety of bowlers and we’ve got all bases covered.”Before that, however, India’s batsmen will need to put up some sort of total on the board.”Yes, you’ll have to grind out quite a bit because there are going to be a lot of balls which are going to beat the outside edge as well as the inside edge of the bat,” Bangar said. “We need to respect the conditions as a batsman and think about the next ball. If you start thinking or worrying about the amount of times you’re getting beaten, it plays on your mind.”The best mindset is to forget the previous ball and accept that you’re going to get beaten on a number of occasions. Probably, on such a wicket, you might not play really, really beautiful shots, but you’ll have to grind it out and take runs. So most of the runs might not be beautiful or elegant but those are equally important runs.”

USMNT captain Tyler Adams reflects on 'hostile' press conference at 2022 FIFA World Cup in buildup to USA vs Iran

USMNT captain Tyler Adams recalled the "hostile" press conference before their match against Iran at the 2022 World Cup in a new Netflix documentary.

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Adams reflects on "hostile" press conferenceUSMNT captain mispronounced Iran as "eye-ran"Featured on new Netflix documentaryWHAT HAPPENED?

In the recent Netflix documentary Adams reflected on the incident where he incorrectly pronounced the country's name as "eye-ran", causing a controversy prior to the match. Reports even surfaced labeling it as "discrimination".

AdvertisementGettyWHAT ADAMS SAID

Recalling the incident, Adams said: “As soon as I walked into that press conference, you could just tell immediately how hostile it was about to be.” However, the 24-year-old recognized the situation and understood where the journalist was coming from, mentioning how "super important" it was for him to be educated on the manner prior.

"When he asked me that, it wasn’t him attacking me, me attacking him, or going at him in any sense. We knew we were going to deal with a lot of things that had nothing to do with our performance.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

The USA went on to win the match in the group stage against the Middle-Eastern side, with Christian Pulisic netting the winner in the 38th minute in a 1-0 victory. Although no true incidents followed or even proceeded the match, the two nation's history in politics caused a stir in the buildup. Adams did go on to apologize for his mispronunciation, however.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR ADAMS AND USMNT

The USMNT captain is still sidelined due to injury, but is on his way back, with a return to action on the cards in the coming months. He has yet to play a Premier League match for Bournemouth since signing there in the summer.

Gregg Berhalter and co. are back on January 20 when they host Slovenia in an international friendly.

Norwell makes in-roads before Cosgrove resists

Leicestershire 90 for 4 (Cosgrove 38*, Norwell 2-16) v Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire’s seamers made early inroads after the visitors chose to bowl first in bowler-friendly conditions on the opening day of their Specsavers County Championship match against Leicestershire at the Fischer County Ground.Rain meant no play was possible during the morning session, but umpires Jeff Evans and Nigel Cowley decided play could start immediately following lunch, with 72 overs left to be bowled.As it turned out only 26.3 overs were possible before the rain returned to end play.With the ball swinging in the cloudy and slightly humid conditions, as well as seaming off the green-tinged pitch, batting was a far from straightforward proposition, as Liam Norwell demonstrated in sending both Leicestershire openers back to the pavilion with just 20 runs on the board.First to go was Harry Dearden, the 20-year-old left-hander edging a delivery which left him low to second slip, where Chris Dent held a good low catch, and Michael Carberry quickly followed, edging an in-swinger onto his pad, the ball looping gently to Kieran Noema-Barnett at gully.Foxes’ captain Mark Cosgrove and Colin Ackermann added 33 for the third wicket before Ackermann tried to force an in-swinging delivery from left-arm seamer Matt Taylor through the off side, and succeeded only in edging a low catch to wicket-keeper Gareth Roderick.Ned Eckersley hit one beautifully timed cover drive before he too edged a low catch to Roderick off Josh Shaw, but Cosgrove looked in good touch in going to 38 before the rain set in again.”The pitch is a tad slow, but it nipped around quite a bit to begin with and we did quite nicely,” said Norwell. “Getting the openers early was important, and then Matt Taylor and Josh Shaw bowled really nicely. It was swinging nicely too, and it’s always frustrating to come off when conditions are in your favour like that, but we haven’t bowled many overs and we’ll all be fresh tomorrow.”Cosgrove added: “It was always going to be tough batting first in those conditions, but I think it will move around all game so if we can up to 250 or even 300, we’ll be in a good spot.”We want to play on result pitches, and this looks like one. If we have a good morning tomorrow it could really set the game up.”

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