Portrait of the workman as artist

To one teenager at least, Fraser made relentless application and sweaty doggedness glamorous. Almost

Andrew Miller11-May-2009The summer of 1989 was a desperate time for an impressionable 11-year-old to get hooked on cricket. Four thumping Test defeats, 29 players, a raft of rebel-tour defectors, and Gooch lbw b Alderman 0. Try picking the positives out of that.And yet there was one. A lone pillar of rectitude in a ransacked temple. His shoulders were perpetually stooped but his spirit was never broken, and while the charlatans and showponies were being ruthlessly disembowelled by Allan Border’s freakishly focused Australians, Angus Fraser just ran in and bowled, and ran in and bowled, and ran in and bowled.I had hit upon my hero largely by accident. I had been struggling, as a patriotic Scotsman born in Germany and raised in Dorset, to justify on the one hand my loathing of the England rugby team and on the other my adoration of all things leather and willow. Fraser, born near Wigan and based in Middlesex, but blatantly as Scottish as they came, was all the evidence an 11-year-old needed to have his cake and eat it.But as soon as I saw him bowl, I realised the connection went deeper than any spurious claims to shared ancestry. In Fraser I recognised an anti-athlete at the peak of his powers, a sportsman to inspire the fat, the slow, the red-faced, and the sweaty. I was all of these and more. I loved cricket but was exquisitely hopeless at it.Fraser taught me that there was another way. Line and length, rhythm and control. Parsimony over panache. Every spare moment was spent in the nets, lumbering in, reaching high, competing for the first time with my flash athletic peers who had all the pace but none of the guile. When I was picked as first change for the junior third XI, it was the proudest day of my life.As the summer wore on and England’s poundings continued to mount, Fraser’s pyrrhic successes became the only thing worth clinging to. Take the fifth Test at Trent Bridge. I surveyed it from afar, having been whisked away on a family holiday to Yugoslavia, but a sneaked glimpse at a rare copy of the told me all I needed to know. Australia had amassed 602 for 6 declared, but Fraser had put his peers to shame with 52.3 overs, 18 maidens, 2 for 108. It was genius repackaged as futility.But then suddenly Fraser’s wickets started coming as well and my hero worship went into overdrive. Five for 28 in 20 overs at Sabina Park, as West Indies were sensationally toppled on home turf; eight in the match against India at Lord’s, when Gooch scored 333; and another five-for in the very next Test at Old Trafford. When my parents caught me bouncing on the sofa in glee after India had been skittled for 432 (Fraser 5 for 124), they realised it was time to bite the bullet and indulge my odd obsession.And so off we went to the Oval to watch my very first Test. It was an abominable day’s play, dominated by a tedious Ravi Shastri century, but at the close, I finally met my man. In fact I almost missed him. I’d been immersed in autograph-hunting behind the pavilion, ticking off the names like a trainee anorak, but my mother spotted Fraser’s loping figure plodding into the distance, and bang, I was off – hurtling down the Harleyford Road to intercept him as he fled. I don’t recall speaking as I thrust my bat under his nose. Adrenaline could carry me only so far.

While the charlatans and showponies were being ruthlessly disembowelled by Allan Border’s freakishly focused Australians, Angus Fraser just ran in and bowled, and ran in and bowled, and ran in and bowled

But no sooner had I met him than he was gone. A mystery hip condition, brought on by yet more Ashes futility, left his career hanging by a thread. For two seasons I searched for him in the county scorecards, but under ARC Fraser I found only an imposter with a handful of expensive appearances to his name. “Why aren’t you playing, Angus? We need you,” I shocked myself by shouting when I bumped into him again at the Oval in 1991. “I want to play,” came the plaintive response.But he couldn’t, and didn’t, and I had no choice but to move on. Mike Atherton became my new favourite player (no other bowler cut the mustard), and I took pleasure in England’s rare moments of success. But I still checked the Middlesex card every week, hoping that the big man would return.And then suddenly it happened. A spell of 7 for 40 against Leicestershire in 1993, and the cry went up from the shires that Fraser had got his “snap” back. Two games later he – and I – were back at the Oval for the sixth Test against Australia. But how would I respond? I was now 15 with my first vaguely teenage pretensions – clearly too grown-up for such childish obsessions.Like hell I was. Eight match-winning wickets later I was smugly reminding anyone I’d ever met that Fraser was the greatest medium-fast seam bowler that had ever walked the earth.And I was still doing it five years later as Fraser routed the West Indians in the third Test in Trinidad. Did he lose a certain something after his injury? Maybe. But in an era of slim pickings for players and fans alike, he still cared more passionately than any other English bowler of his generation. His main failing was that he was a sweaty knacker who looked defeated after a single delivery. But as the man himself has been known to grumble, “Bowling is bloody hard work.” It was never in Fraser’s nature to try and pretend otherwise.

خماسيات فليك عرض مستمر.. فيديو | برشلونة يكتسح ريال بيتيس ويتأهل لربع نهائي كأس ملك إسبانيا

تأهل برشلونة إلى دور الثمانية من بطولة كأس ملك إسبانيا، بعد الفوز بخماسية مقابل هدف على حساب ريال بيتيس، ضمن منافسات دور الـ16.

المباراة جمعت بين الفريقين على ملعب لويس كومبانيس، ولكن البداية كانت كتالونية بامتياز، في ظل النشوة التي يعيشها الفريق منذ الفوز بالسوبر الإسباني على حساب ريال مدريد يوم الأحد الماضي.

طالع أيضًا.. الفرق المتأهلة إلى دور الـ8 من كأس ملك إسبانيا (محدث باستمرار)

برشلونة تمكن من التسجيل مبكرًا عن طريق جافي، في الدقيقة 3 من داخل منطقة الجزاء، وظل النادي الكتالوني في الضغط لتسجيل الثاني.

جاء الهدف الثاني بعد إهدار العديد من الفرص، في الدقيقة 27 بعد تمريرة رائعة من لامين يامال، وأطلقها جوليس كوندي بصاروخية في شباك ريال بيتيس.

انتهى الشوط الأول بعد سيل من الفرص، وابداعات النادي الكتالوني، بعدما ألغى الحكم هدفاً لـ لامين يامال.

بدأ الشوط الثاني بنفس المستوى الذي أنهى به البلوجرانا شوط المباراة الأول، وسجل لامين يامال هدفًا في الدقيقة 57، ولكن الحكم ألغاه بداعي التسلل أيضًا.

وفي الدقيقة 58، نثر لامين يامال سحره، وانطلق من منطقة جزاء فريقه إلى مرمى الخصم، ليمر من لاعبي ريال بيتيس، وعندما سدد تدخل عليه لاعب النادي الأندلسي بقوة ليعطي الحكم إتاحة الفرصة للبلوجرانا ويستغل رافينها الوضع ويسجل الثالث.

أجرى فليك العديد من التغييرات، وأراح نجومه، ودخل فيران توريس، الذي لم ينتظر طويلًا حتى يضع بصمته، وبتمريرة من داني أولمو، يطلق تسديدة في شباك الضيوف معلنًا عن الرابع في الدقيقة 67.

ظن البعض أن الحفلة قد توقفت هنا، ولكن عزف لامين يامال استمر، وبعد تمريرة ممتازة من فيرمين لوبيز، سجل الإسباني المغربي هدفه الثاني، والخامس لفريقه عند الدقيقة 75.

وخرج لامين يامال بعد الهدف، وسط تحية كبيرة من جماهير البلوجرانا، الذين ظلوا يحتفلون بالإشارة للخماسية التي تكررت في أقل من 4 أيام، أمام ريال مدريد وبيتيس.

وفي الدقيقة 85، سجل فيتور روكي لاعب برشلونة السابق، هدف حفظ ماء الوجه لـ ريال بيتيس، من ركلة جزاء.

بهذه النتيجة يتأهل برشلونة إلى دور الثمانية من بطولة كأس ملك إسبانيا، في انتظار منافسه بذلك الدور الذي كان آخر محطاته في الموسم الماضي.

القرعة ستقام يوم الاثنين المقبل، في انتظار منافس برشلونة، صاحب الرقم القياسي في الفوز بالبطولة برصيد 31 لقبًا. أهداف مباراة برشلونة وريال بيتيس في كأس ملك إسبانيا

Leeds eyeing January transfer to sign striker Moore as loan update shared

Leeds United appear to want to sign a new attacker this month and are seemingly eyeing up a loan move for an international forward.

Leeds transfer news

The 49ers Enterprises, Nick Hammond and Gretar Steinsson could be active in Yorkshire during the January transfer window, looking to bolster Daniel Farke’s squad for the second half of the Championship campaign. However, the manager has played down a frantic winter window, but said the club “won’t fall asleep” over possible moves.

“I expect a much more quiet and calm January to the last transfer period for example. We wish for a quiet January, but won’t fall asleep and when there are decisions to make, we will also make decisions and you never know what happens. I have been working too long in this business not to rule anything out.”

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ByLuke Randall Feb 1, 2024

A new left-back could be of interest to the Whites, and reports have claimed that Leeds have already held talks over a move to sign Hellas Verona full-back Josh Doig. Spezia goalkeeper Bartomej Dragowski is another rumoured target for the Whites, whereas those at Elland Road appear ready to make a move for Hammarby defender Nathaniel Adjei. However, additions in the final third could also be made to rival the likes of Joel Piroe, Georginio Rutter and Patrick Bamford, with an update emerging in the last 48 hours.

Leeds linked with Kieffer Moore

According to The Sun, Bournemouth are open to letting Kieffer Moore leave the club this month, with a number of Championship clubs linked, including Leeds. They say that the Wales international's £40,000-a-week wage could result in a loan exit, with the Whites, Birmingham City, Cardiff City, Ipswich Town, Middlesbrough, Sunderland and West Brom all named as possible destinations.

A new centre-forward arriving at Leeds could surprise some, especially with the likes of Piroe, Rutter, Bamford and Mateo Joseph all available to Farke.

However, Moore has plenty of Championship experience and helped the Cherries to promotion in 2021/22, so could be open to helping Leeds target an immediate Premier League return. The 31-year-old was previously praised by former Cherries boss Scott Parker, who called the 31-year-old a striker who is “horrible to play against”.

“I think Kieffer is probably a little bit of a throwback in that sense. He’s probably a modern day nine in his stature and his profile, he’s mobile, you can get things into him and he can bring players into play. But certainly, he is horrible to play against.”

Parker also added:

“He makes it uncomfortable for you. He can threaten you in behind, in terms of because of his mobileness and he can then come into feet and hold the ball up, make it stick and bring in other players into play as well. So he’s an all round nine.”

Moore is an out-and-out striker, so Leeds could be better off targeting a creative attacking midfielder to supply Piroe and Rutter, with the likes of Crysencio Summerville and Dan James continuing out wide.

Leeds’ 8/10 hero caused "havoc" alongside Rutter vs Swansea

Leeds United continue to make up ground in their hunt for automatic promotion and are now seven points behind second-place Ipswich Town following a 3-1 victory over Swansea City.

Whilst league leaders Leicester City dropped two points against Sheffield Wednesday, the Whites avoided a slip-up on Wednesday night, although they did initially fall behind.

A Jamie Patterson deft lob caught Daniel Farke's men cold inside the first minute, but once Joel Piroe instantly levelled against his former club, Leeds began to find their groove as goals from Georginio Rutter and Daniel James handed them the initiative in the contest.

The German tactician cooked up a storm at Elland Road as the Whites blew Swansea away with a 2.33 xG and eight shots on target, compared to the visitor's 0.34 xG and two shots on target.

Rutter played a pivotal role in that threat as the Frenchman wreaked havoc in the final third.

Georginio Rutter's performance against Swansea

Rutter has been in phenomenal form this term and he continued in that vain against the Swans by supplying a goal and an assist.

The goal he scored – Leeds' second on the night – personified his class, as he delightfully controlled a sumptuous Ethan Ampadu pass before racing through on goal and calmly slotting the ball past Carl Rushworth.

glen-kamara-rutter-leeds-opinion

He then turned into a creator for the third to grab his seventh assist of the campaign. After the ball dropped his way following a crunching tackle from Sam Byram, he threaded an inch-perfect pass into James, who clinically fired a rocket into the roof of the net.

Although the chance creation machine caused real problems for the visitors, having completed five of his eight attempted dribbles, he also set the tempo through his ferocious pressing and aggression in the tackle by winning eight of his 13 ground duels; the most of any player on the pitch.

The 21-year-old arguably put in one of his best performances for the club since arriving in January, but that still wasn't enough to outshine the irrepressible Crysencio Summerville.

Crysencio Summerville's performance in numbers

Summerville has been tearing through defences at will all season long and the plaudits have continued to drop for the Dutch dynamo.

Dubbed a "real talent" by writer Beren Cross, the 22-year-old has become the fulcrum of the Whites's attack this term by cutting in from the left flank and wreaking havoc with his devastating dribbling and sublime end product.

rutter-summerville-leeds-opinion

With seven goals and six assists already this season, including the sublime assist for Piroe's opener, Summerville is the difference-maker that every promotion-chasing team needs.

And he certainly showcased his ability to make a difference against Swansea with the Dutchman described by journalist Phil Hay as "causing a fair amount of havoc", implying how much the Welsh side struggled to live with him.

Assists

1

Acc passes

20/23 (87%)

Key passes

4

Big chances created

1

Dribble attempts (succ.)

8 (5)

Ground duels (won)

13 (7)

All stats via Sofascore

The above table, in particular, demonstrates how much of a menace he was and Swansea – like several teams this season – struggled to cope with his searing pace, directness and agility.

In what was an excellent performance from Summerville, he was awarded an 8/10 match rating by Yorkshire Post's Graham Smyth, matching Rutter in that regard, while showing he was the real hero against the Swans.

Chelsea’s 131-touch gem dominated Blackburn alongside Sterling

Chelsea booked their place in the Carabao Cup quarter-finals after beating Blackburn Rovers 2-0 at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday night.

Mauricio Pochettino made four changes to the side that lost against Brentford and in a season that has been plagued with injuries and the Argentine would have been delighted to see one of his stars return to the starting lineup and open the scoring as Benoit Badiashile sent the Blues on their way to the last eight.

He wasn't the only player to return to the first eleven as Reece James gave a good account of himself on his return from injury, with the pair coming off unscathed in the 61st minute, just after Raheem Sterling put the icing on the cake with a curled effort into the top right corner.

Raheem Sterling's stats vs Blackburn

Described as "clinical" by journalist Ben Jacobs for his well-taken finish against the Championship side, Sterling showed shades of being back to his best.

The Englishman terrorised the visitors with his electric pace and explosive ball-carrying, fashioning space for his team while wreaking havoc in the Rover's defence.

Touches

60

Accurate Passes

26/32 (81%)

Key Passes

2

Dribble Success

5/9

Possession Lost

16x

Duels Won

8/17

Stats via Sofascore.

Sterling's strongest asset is his fleet-footed dribbling and he showcased that to devastating effect on Wednesday night, recording the most completed dribbles out of anyone on the pitch (5), as per Sofascore.

The 28-year-old's approach play was exceptional, expertly fashioning space to create a chance and complimenting that positive play by supplying the end product to match.

He was a constant thorn in the Rovers back line, making two key passes, creating one big chance and successfully completing 81% of his passes.

Perhaps more impressively, Sterling's hard work to press and win possession back for his team didn't go unnoticed, throwing himself into challenges and making two tackles while winning eight of his 17 attempted ground duels.

The former Manchester City man set the benchmark for a positive Chelsea performance on the night but midfield maestro, Enzo Fernandez, somehow managed to eclipse his impact with an outstanding display.

Enzo Fernandez stats vs Blackburn

When the Blues captured Fernandez for a British record £106.8m from Benfica in the January transfer window, many anticipated him to transform the midfield and lead their charge up the Premier League table.

Unfortunately, the Argentine has been a central figure in a woefully underperforming side over the last ten months, typifying the club's struggles in piecing together a squad capable of challenging.

On Wednesday night, however, the 22-year-old rose to the occasion and showed his truly world-class talents.

Touches

131

Accurate Passes

102/110 (93%)

Key Passes

7

Duels Won

11/13

Times Fouled

5

Tackles Won

6

Stats via Sofascore.

A midfield metronome, who likes to control the tempo of a football match with his exceptional passing range, Fernandez was central to everything positive that Chelsea did, with journalist Nizaar Kinsella describing his performance as "ridiculously dominant".

That evaluation couldn't be closer to the truth as the World Cup winner recorded a Sofacore match rating of 9.0 – the best of any player for either side – made an astonishing 131 touches and completed 93% of his incredible 110 passes, as well as seven key passes.

If Fernandez was exquisite in possession, his desire to ferociously press and win the ball back was absolutely phenomenal, rarely giving the visitors a moment's peace in the engine room.

He came out on top in a whopping 11 of his 13 ground duels and made the most tackles in the match (6), putting in the sort of defensive performance that brought his South American roots to light.

When in this sort of form, Fernandez is a joy to watch and if he can translate that level of performance to the Premier League, the critics will soon realise why Chelsea shelled out a triple figure sum to lure him to Stamford Bridge.

'I don't know the Quincy you describe' – Memphis Depay insists ex-Ajax star Promes 'remains my friend' after six-year prison sentence for cocaine smuggling, despite advice from Netherlands boss Ronald Koeman

Memphis Depay insisted that he "remains friends" with Quincy Promes even after the ex-Ajax star was convicted of cocaine smuggling.

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Promes convicted of cocaine smugglingDepay shares a close bond with PromesKoeman advised Depay to refrain from commenting on PromesWHAT HAPPENED?

In the tumultuous world of professional football, relationships often transcend the boundaries of the game itself. Such is the case with Depay, who has publicly affirmed his friendship with Promes despite the latter being convicted by an Amsterdam court for his alleged involvement in smuggling over 1,350 kilograms of cocaine. The severity of the charges has led to Dutch authorities seeking his extradition from the United Arab Emirates, where he has reportedly been apprehended.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Amid these legal proceedings, Depay, a fellow footballer and friend of Promes, found himself embroiled in controversy after sharing photos of their past holiday together on Instagram. Despite facing criticism for his actions, Depay defended his decision and instead emphasised his loyalty to his friend.

WHAT DEPAY SAID

Speaking to reporters, Depay said: "We are football players and we post a lot of content. At least I do. It was just a photo on holiday, I didn't see the harm in it. I understand that the outside world views this differently and I take responsibility for that. I have friends, when you go out to eat together you don't know exactly what they do and don't do. Or that you agree with everything someone does. You don't know the Quincy Promes I know. I don't know the Quincy Promes that you know or describe.”

When told that the facts were clear concerning Promes, Memphis replied: “I don't know. I don't know that Quincy. But I don't come from an easy background. Once people have read my book, they will understand that. I have a brother who was incarcerated for ten years. Quincy is a famous person, but my brother is not. But I never get questions about my brother. I'm also friends with Dani Alves and Benjamin Mendy. I've never had any questions about that before.”

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DEPAY TO DISCUSS THE ISSUE WITH KOEMAN

However, not everyone shares Depay's perspective on the matter. National team coach Ronald Koeman cautioned against commenting on Promes' situation, advising Depay to exercise restraint on social media. "You can sometimes make it easier for yourself by not doing those kinds of things. They are friends and it is conceivable that he would do it, but it is of course a delicate matter."

Depay mentioned that he would take up the issue with Koeman and clear the air.

“I'm going to talk to the coach about it," he said. "We remain friends and I won't drop friends, but that doesn't mean you support someone in everything. That post was not to provoke and show 'Look: I'm here with Quincy'. I was on vacation and I went to dinner with friends. Pogba was also sitting next to me. We had a good time. That's kind of the life I'm in.

"I think it is quite logical that everyone has an opinion. And that it is logical for the trainer to answer a question when he receives it. And that he gives his opinion about it. I haven't discussed that with him personally yet. The trainer and I have a great relationship, which also extends off the field. Of course, I played for him at Barcelona. An opinion is always welcome, especially when he says it. We can talk about it privately, and that is what we will do.”

Boston Celtics roasted by Alex Morgan for embarrassing USWNT kit gaffe after sharing picture of Jrue Holiday – husband of World Cup winner Lauren Holiday

United States Women's National Team star Alex Morgan let rip at the Boston Celtics for an embarrassing mistake on social media.

Boston Celtics guilty of embarrassing mistakeFace backlash on social mediaMorgan joins in with blunt replyWHAT HAPPENED?

The Boston Celtics came under fire for a social media post showing guard Jrue Holiday arriving for their home game against the Philadelphia 76ers in a United States kit wearing the No. 12. Holiday was clearly paying tribute to his wife Lauren, who enjoyed a stellar career winning the World Cup, two Olympic gold medals and the NWSL, and wore the No. 12 for the USWNT. However, the Celtics blundered in spectacular fashion, posting the photo with the caption "Reppin' @USMNT tonight."

AdvertisementWHAT ALEX MORGAN SAID

The post was swiftly met be a fierce backlash by supporters. Morgan also waded in with a terse response to the Celtics. "Let me help you with this – @USWNT," she posted.

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The mix-up is all the more embarrassing given the USWNT's incredible success. The Stars and Stripes have been crowned world champions four times, while the USMNT are yet to win a World Cup and have not been past the quarter-finals in over 90 years. The Celtics' post also serves to illustrate the lack of recognition for female athletes, no matter how successful they may have been during their career.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR THE USWNT

The USWNT are due to return to action in April in the SheBelieves Cup. Twila Kilgore's side will face Japan on April 3 at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.

Coetzer reflects on spin lesson offered by Pakistan

When the team sheets were submitted at the toss of the series opener between Scotland and Pakistan at the Grange, four spinners under the age of 25 were in the starting XIs. By the end of the match, one pair played to their age and inexperience, while the other looked like grizzled veterans worthy of their country’s No. 1 ranking.Reading the raw numbers on the scorecard made the difference more stark. Pakistan’s duo of Mohammad Nawaz and Shadab Khan combined for figures of 3 for 47 in eight overs. Scotland’s tag-team of Mark Watt and debutant Hamza Tahir were more than twice as expensive in the same number of overs, not to mention wicketless. It was a harsh lesson, but one that Scotland captain Kyle Coetzer hoped his young slow bowling group would be able to learn from, going forward after a 48-run defeat.”The pace and the lengths which they bowled were of a higher quality than ours,” Coetzer told ESPNcricinfo afterwards. “They were top of the bails, pulled the length back and slid the ball in towards the batter – and only their variation was to change up and try to spin it, as opposed to ours. We were just slightly full today and we got ourselves into that one-step zone where they didn’t really have to come chasing it.”We’ve come off the back of our one-day game where lengths are maybe slightly different too, but that’s no excuse. We’ve got to try to find our lengths and find them quicker. You play against an opposition like this, they’re going to hurt you if you don’t get it right. The quality of Sarfraz Ahmed and Shoaib Malik, they were so dangerous if you didn’t get it in the right place.”The Pakistan captain entered the contest starved of form on their tour of Ireland and the UK, having scored just 88 runs in eight innings. He more than doubled that in the space of only 49 balls at the Grange. Even after 15 overs, he had played a smooth but relatively sedate knock by T20 standards, reaching 41 off 32 balls.But Sarfraz and Malik meted out harsh punishment to the left-arm spinner Tahir in the 16th over, battering him for 20 runs to spark an 80-run surge over the final five overs. Sarfraz faced 17 balls out of the 30 that remained, but scored at a strike rate of nearly 300. The only two dot balls in the final quarter of the innings were by Shoaib: first in the 17th off Mark Watt and then when he drove to long-off to give Alasdair Evans his third wicket. Otherwise, Sarfraz was unstoppable, and finished with a spectacular flourish off Safyaan Sharif with four, four, six, four at the end of the innings to take Pakistan past 200.”He used the pace when he first came in, tried to get to ball down to third man a few times and then he looked to hit the ball hard through the field. And he took on extra cover really well and hit a couple of gaps that are very hard to block,” Coetzer said of the knock by Sarfraz. “When we started to try to take the pace off the ball with Richie [Berrington] or bowl some slower balls, he was hitting us through the leg side but he was picking the gaps all the time – between the fielders or over them.”A little bit like Jonny Bairstow the other day. Sometimes when they’re playing that well you’re almost hoping that they’re going to mis-hit one when they’re trying to hit one over the fielders. Let’s be honest, that’s the case a lot of the times. You want to get people hitting to where your fielders are, or over them, and if they don’t manage to clear them, then they’re out. But he was able to pick the gaps between them today. It was a fine knock and showed how you can actually pace an innings in T20 cricket. Because towards the end in the last over he took down Safyaan, who is a fine death bowler.”Scotland maintained the scoring rate early in the chase and were actually in a better position than Pakistan had been at the end of the Powerplay, but the wheels came off with the introduction of Shadab in the eighth over. The legspinner struck off his very first ball, piercing Berrington’s forward prod with a googly before winning the key showdown with Calum MacLeod in the 12th over to trap him leg before. By the end of his spell, Scotland needed 108 off 36 balls, and only a brief flurry by Michael Leask made the final margin look closer than the truth.Coming less than 48 hours after the euphoric high of Sunday’s win over England, Coetzer said the thing that pleased him most about the loss was how disappointed his team-mates were in the dressing room afterwards. In a 13-month span when they have beaten Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and England, the expectations have shifted dramatically. No longer are they just happy to share the same field as the top sides in the world. They expect to stand toe-to-toe with them too, and they’ve got one more chance to show it with a quick turnaround for a rematch on Wednesday.”I think they believe we’ve let ourselves down today,” Coetzer said. “The standards bar has been raised continuously over the last year or so. Yes, we’re playing the No. 1 team in T20 cricket, but we still believe that we’re capable of more and can challenge them more.”

South Australia in command after Tasmania collapse

Tasmania lost 6 for 17 in 11 overs to give South Australia a shot at a comeback in Hobart

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Mar-2018

Daniel Worrall celebrates a wicket•Getty Images

ScorecardA huge batting collapse by Tasmania gave South Australia the chance to pull off a stunning comeback in their Sheffield Shield clash in Hobart.The Tigers began their second innings 166 runs in front after bowling out the Redbacks for 227 early on day three. Tom Rogers picked up the last wicket to finish with four for the innings.Tasmania cruised to 1 for 83 with Jordan Silk making a swift half-century. They looked poised to take the game beyond the Redbacks reach but they lost 6 for 17 in 11 frantic overs. Joe Mennie removed Silk before Daniel Worrall and Nick Winter ripped through the middle order. A late fightback from Simon Milenko pushed the lead to 331. Worrall finished with 4 for 17.The Redbacks moved to 1 for 49 at stumps, having only lost debutant Conor McInerney.

Daren and Sherwin come home

The Gangas have wanted to visit the land of their ancestors for years, and now they finally have, as a family

Nagraj Gollapudi19-Oct-2009″Amitabh Bachchan, Jeetendra, Dharmendra, Shashi Kapoor…” Daren Ganga reels off the names, in that lovely Trinidad accent, of actors from Indian movies he and his family used to watch every Sunday afternoon when he was young. His father, Bahadur “Ramesh” Ganga, mother Seerajie “Jenno” Ganga, and younger brother Sherwin pitch in with their favourites.For now, the Gangas’ own story sounds a bit like a Bollywood script: an East Indian family returning to the land of their ancestors to take in some real Indian life as opposed to the reel version they were brought up on. Daren and Sherwin are part of the Trinidad & Tobago side participating in the Champions League Twenty20, while their parents are visiting India for the first time, primarily to support their boys but also to obtain a better understanding of where they came from.Ramesh, retired now, was a teacher, and his gentility is apparent in his sons, who are well groomed, disciplined and clear-headed.Daren readily agreed to assemble his family, at a half-hour’s notice, and he leads his folks into the hotel foyer at the appointed time. Sherwin is expected shortly as he has just returned from training. The Gangas are all smartly, and simply, dressed. The parents sit side by side on a sofa, Daren to their left, fiddling with his BlackBerry as he gives studious answers without ever seeming disinterested. He is clean-shaven, wearing an ironed purple t-shirt, hair Brylcreemed. Not for him and Sherwin the usual player attire of shorts and singlets.An articulate speaker, Daren, who is T&T’s captain, is studying law externally, since playing cricket doesn’t allow him the time to be resident at a university (that includes Cambridge, which at one point was reportedly interested in having him).The talk is still on Bollywood. “We grew up in a rural community and on a Sunday there would always be an Indian movie at mid-day and that was a natural thing to do, to look forward to watch the movies,” he says. His early concepts of India naturally involved images from those movies. “A favourite was policemen with moustaches. And when they shoot in that dramatic style, it would be fun. At one point we did think it was real,” Daren says as Jenno laughs.The real India has proved rather different. On a shopping trip a few days ago, as the family walked with their hands full of purchases, a group of “men dressed in “, pounced from nowhere. “They were like… all hands all over and loud in your face and demanding,” Sherwin exclaims. Daren points out that even if the crime rate in Trinidad is among the worst in the world, the locals are never intimidating.They’re quick to allow that it’s all part of experiencing the culture of the country – one that their ancestors left in the late 1880s when they went to the Caribbean as indentured labourers. “Knowing that they came from here, we feel a little nostalgic and we feel nice, and we would like to see how India is, compared to Trinidad,” Ramesh says.The most important common ground, of course, is the love for cricket, which is as much enjoyed and talked about in India as it is in Trinidad. “We were born into cricket,” Sherwin says. Every man in the family has played cricket at some level. Ramesh was part of the Apollo XI in the village of Barrackpore, a team Jenno and her friend would go to watch since her brother was part of the team. His three sons did better: Sheldon, the oldest, played club cricket, while Daren and Sherwin have played first-class and international cricket.”When I was seven or eight the entire family, including our uncles and their families, would drive from Barrackpore to Queens Park Oval to watch international cricket,” Daren recalls. “We would start at three in the morning and the drive was an hour-and-a half.” Jenno played her part, waking up before everyone else to make and and “wrap everything up neatly so that each one could have his own”. Ramesh would make sure the beers were nicely chilled in an ice box. Then they would line up to get tickets for the bleachers.Once they were at the ground, allegiance would be split depending on who West Indies were playing. Sherwin likes Australia, Daren prefers the “natural talent of the subcontinent, compared to the mechanical skills” of the other sides. For the parents it has always been West Indies, even against India.There are nine East Indians in the T&T squad touring India, including Daren and Sherwin, but it is the Gangas who seem most excited to be returning to what Sherwin refers to as the “motherland”. For Daren, who is on his second visit to India (he toured with the 2002-03 West Indies side), coming to India has always been an act of finding himself. “We studied history in school and understood exactly how East Indians came to the Caribbean, how they settled and developed their own culture and history. Culturally we are still strong with regards to what our great grandfathers brought with them.”Sherwin (centre), thinks of India as the motherland•AFPOn his first visit to India he could see the various things the cultures had in common. “It was rewarding and fulfilling to see the beginning of where my culture originated from. It was good to make that link between who I was as a person, who I am as a person, and linking it back to India, where my ancestors started. So there was a sense of fulfillment, sense of belonging, coming back,” Daren says.As if to prove their essential Indianness, as their sons began to grow up, the senior Gangas picked the professions each of the three would pursue. “We wanted an engineer, a lawyer a doctor,” Ramesh says. Those wishes have nearly all been fulfilled: Sheldon is a mechanical engineer, Daren is soon to be a lawyer, and Sherwin has a management degree. “Our daughter-in-law [Sheldon’s wife] is a doctor, so we have no complaints,” Jenno adds with a laugh.Daren believes a good upbringing and parental support have helped the brothers think beyond cricket. He recently started the Daren Ganga Foundation to help underprivileged kids and youth back home in Trindad.”Culturally, if you look at the East Indians, you would quickly associate [with them] humility and wanting to give back and hospitality – things that are part of us, the way I was brought up,” he explains. “My foundation is an attempt to ensure that kids and young people don’t have to endure the same challenges that I went through, and go on to achieve their full potential.”His parents have paid a visit to the Satya Sai Baba (a mystic whose followers include the likes of Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin Tendulkar and Rohan Kanhai), and plan to go up north to visit the Taj Mahal, and also the sacred river they share their family name with. “The Hindus hold the Ganges in high regard and we would like to experience that,” Ramesh says.For now they are happy to be in the thick of one of India’s most popular festivals, one that is celebrated with as much vigour and excitement in T&T. “Happy Diwali”, Jenno and Ramesh wish with large smiles as they leave to visit an Indian family. It has been a good homecoming for the Gangas.

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