'Every player wants to win the Ballon d'Or!' – Lamine Yamal admits he's 'hoping' to get 2025 Golden Ball nod after outstanding year with Barcelona

Barcelona and Spain sensation Lamine Yamal has admitted he is "hoping" to win the Ballon d'Or at the 2025 ceremony later this month. The 18-year-old has been nominated for the prestigious award alongside Barcelona team-mates Pedri, Robert Lewandowski, and Raphinha.

  • Yamal wants to win the Ballon d'Or
  • One of four Barca players nominated
  • Bright start made to new season
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    After a stellar campaign with Barcelona in 2024-25, in which he scored 18 goals and provided 25 assists in 55 matches across all competitions, Yamal is off to a fine start in the new season, as he has already racked up five goal contributions in the Blaugrana's first three La Liga matches. 

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    While away on international duty with Spain, Yamal admitted that he dreams of winning the Ballon d'Or and expressed his delight over his nomination for the Golden Ball this year. The 2025 Ballon d'Or ceremony is scheduled to take place at the Theatre du Chatelet in Paris on September 22. 

  • WHAT YAMAL SAID

    Speaking to , the teenage attacker said: "As a team, winning the Champions League with Barça would be incredible, and individually, every player wants to win the Ballon d’Or, and anyone who tells you otherwise is lying. Being there at 18 is something to be valued, and I hope it happens."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR YAMAL?

    Yamal will be next seen in action for the Spain national team this Thursday as they take on Bulgaria in a World Cup qualifier. Their second qualifying game of the September international break is against Turkey on Sunday.

Man City's Gianluigi Donnarumma reveals true feelings on Luis Enrique after being pushed out of PSG

Gianluigi Donnarumma has opened up on former manager Luis Enrique after being forced out of Paris Saint-Germain before joining Manchester City.

  • Donnarumma moved to City on deadline day
  • Enrique spoke publicly against the Italian
  • City shot-stopper spoke while away on international duty
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Speaking to the media at a press conference while away with the Italy national team, Donnarumma covered a variety of subjects, as reported by . A major talking point was when the 26-year-old was asked about his relationship with PSG manager Luis Enrique, who caused controversy when replacing his Champions League-winning goalkeeper with Lucas Chevalier over the summer, forcing Donnarumma out of the door and to the Premier League.

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    Luis Enrique stuck by his decision to leave Donnarumma out of the squad for the UEFA Super Cup against Tottenham Hotspur last month, saying he was "100% responsible" for the decision and he needed a "different type of goalkeeper". Despite playing a leading role as PSG became European champions for the first time in their history just months prior, Donnarumma was faced with the exit door and ultimately completed a deadline day move to Manchester City for £26 million ($35m).

  • WHAT DONNARUMMA SAID

    Donnarumma said: "I have always had a great relationship with the coach. He was direct with me, from the first days of retreat. Disappointed I don't know, everyone makes their own choices. The coach has the power to decide, but having the support of everyone – especially my teammates – made me understand what I had given to PSG and I think this is the most important thing. Because beyond football what remains is this, knowing the affection of the whole environment, of my teammates, made me proud of what I left behind."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR DONNARUMMA?

    Donnarumma will no doubt be a key talking point over the international break as his Italy side face Estonia and Israel in World Cup qualification. We will, soon enough, get to see Donnarumma make his Premier League debut for City – potentially against Manchester United, with whom he has also been linked this summer – and it will be intriguing viewing to see how he adapts to his new surroundings, following what was no doubt a turbulent summer on a personal level.

Barcelona to ask La Liga to start next season with three straight away games as Hansi Flick's men decide date of long-awaited Camp Nou return

Barcelona will reportedly ask La Liga to start the next season with three straight away games as they prepare for a long-awaited Camp Nou return.

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  • Barcelona playing home games at Montjuic
  • Camp Nou is undergoing a massive renovation
  • Will be thrown open in September
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to after a prolonged stay at the Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys on Montjuic, the Catalan giants are keen to return to their spiritual home by mid-September. Hence, they are going to formally request La Liga to schedule their first three matches of the upcoming season away from home, so that they can ramp up their efforts for a partial return to the iconic Camp Nou stadium.

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    Although the club are targeting the fourth round of fixtures for their return, the stadium will not be fully completed at that point. Instead, Barcelona will resume playing at Camp Nou in a transitional phase, welcoming around 60,000 spectators – a little over half the venue’s future full capacity of 105,000.

    The structure will still be missing critical components, such as the third tier, and only minimal essential services will be available during this period. Fans will have to prepare for potential inconveniences: if it rains, everyone – including those in the presidential suite – will be exposed, as the full roofing will not be in place. Furthermore, many of the food and hospitality services will not be operational, and attendees will use temporary access routes.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Barcelona will maintain the digital ticketing model currently used at Montjuic for the transitional period at Camp Nou. The club will offer a digital season pass, valid only for the 2025–26 campaign, which will not be linked to a fixed seat but instead to a designated seating zone. In a shift from traditional season ticket systems, fans will be required to confirm their attendance ahead of each match. This approach, designed for flexibility amid the ongoing renovations, allows the club to manage attendance and stadium logistics more effectively during the partial reopening.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    In recent weeks, the club has laid down a temporary turf at Camp Nou – not intended for long-term use, but to support the ground's substructure and improve drainage. The permanent pitch is expected to be installed at the end of June, with an estimated rooting period of six weeks. If all goes as planned, this will allow the playing surface to be ready by mid-August.

    Barcelona could use the annual Joan Gamper Trophy fixture as a test event to welcome fans back to the stadium. However, the decision is still pending. Should the pitch be deemed unfit for competitive action in August, the event might be postponed until after the league season starts – or, alternatively, it could be hosted abroad. Switzerland, the birthplace of the club’s founder Hans Gamper, has been mentioned as a potential venue.

VIDEO: Ugly scenes as Chelsea & Real Betis fans involved in violent clashes ahead of Conference League final in Wroclaw – with police resorting to using pepper spray

Chelsea and Real Betis fans have clashed ahead of the Conference League final on Wednesday, with Polish police intervening with tear gas.

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  • Polish police break up Chelsea and Betis fans
  • Tear gas used
  • Fans threw chairs at each other
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Supporters of the two sides have been filmed in violent clashes ahead of the Conference League final in Wroclaw. Polish police were forced to intervene as chairs and other objects were thrown outside bars. There are said to have been scuffles prior to the police's involvement, given the increased presence of the authorities on the ground due to the game. They eventually resorted to using pepper spray.

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  • WHAT POLICE SAID

    A statement from the Provincial Police Headquarters in the city read: "The uniformed officers reacted immediately after the incident, which resulted in no further escalation of the conflict or negative behavior.

    "The fans scattered in different directions and currently the police officers of the criminal division are conducting activities aimed at identifying them.

    "The number of preventive and operational police forces and their saturation is so large in places where residents and sports fans gather or move around that everyone can feel safe. 

    "Please immediately notify the nearby Police or City Guard patrol of any incident, or call the emergency number 112. We are at your disposal and our priority is to ensure safety – says Senior Warrant Officer Łukasz Dutkowiak.

    "Foot patrols, monitoring from drones and helicopters, intensified activities on the streets and in key locations – the office enumerates and adds: – Firefighters from the Municipal Headquarters of the State Fire Service in Wrocław and rescuers are also ready to respond immediately, especially in the area of the stadium and all fan zones."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Chelsea and Betis face off on Wednesday. The Blues finished fourth in the Premier League, while Betis finished sixth in La Liga.

'I enjoy my life!' – Lamine Yamal defends lifestyle choices amid criticism and legal action over 18th birthday party after signing Barcelona contract

Barcelona star Lamine Yamal has hit out at the backlash over his birthday party, insisting he’s focused on football and free to 'enjoy' his life.

  • Birthday bash triggers legal complaint in Spain
  • Yamal draws line between work and life
  • Barca teen remains unfazed by outside noise
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Yamal has publicly defended himself for the first time since controversy erupted over his 18th birthday party, which reportedly featured entertainers with dwarfism and has since triggered a government-led investigation. The Barca forward, who recently signed a new long-term deal with the club and was handed the iconic No.10 shirt, addressed the backlash head-on during a press conference, drawing a firm line between his personal and professional life.

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    WHAT YAMAL SAID

    During the press conference Yamal made a clear distinction between his personal and professional life, saying: "Ultimately, I work for Barca, I play for Barca, but when I'm away from the Ciudad Deportiva, I enjoy my life, and that's it."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The Spanish Ministry of Social Rights has requested an investigation into the event following a formal complaint made by the Association for People with Achondroplasia and Other Skeletal Dysplasias (ADEE). The complaint centres on the alleged hiring of people with dwarfism for entertainment purposes during Yamal's party in Olivella, a town west of Barcelona. A video circulating on social media appeared to show performers arriving at the venue, sparking backlash and legal scrutiny.

    While Yamal has not commented on the specifics of the legal complaint, he made a strong statement regarding the scrutiny he faces. The young forward, who is no stranger to media attention, chose to deliver his response in Spanish to ensure clarity, despite the question being posed in Catalan. This move was widely interpreted as a sign of his growing maturity and awareness of his public image. He also publicly stated he feels no pressure wearing the legendary number and is "indifferent" to both criticism and praise from outside his inner circle.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR YAMAL?

    Yamal appears unfazed by the storm around him as he prepares for the 2025-26 campaign under head coach Hansi Flick and his focus will remain on how he performs on the pitch. His words suggest he won’t let public noise derail his development, and for now, he seems determined to keep living life on his terms.

Kulkarni ton, Tiwari four-for take India past USA and enter Super Six unbeaten

Australia also enter Super Six with an all-win record after beating Sri Lanka by six wickets

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jan-2024Arshin Kulkarni’s 108 off 118 balls, Musheer Khan’s 76-ball 73, and Naman Tiwari’s frugal spell of 4 for 20 led India to a big 201-run win over USA in the Under-19 World Cup on Sunday. The win meant they kept their unblemished record intact going into the Super Six of the tournament.India piled up 326 for 5 in their 50 overs with Kulkarni and Musheer doing the bulk of the scoring. In reply, medium pacer Tiwari picked up 4 for 20 in nine overs as USA were kept to 125 for 8 in Bloemfontein.After India were sent in to bat, Adarsh Singh struck three fours in the first over, but the USA bowlers kept both him and Kulkarni in check for a while. India could only manage 40 after ten overs, which led to Adarsh getting a bit desperate and chipping Ateendra Subramanian, the medium pacer, to mid-off when on 25.Kulkarni and Musheer, however, dug in to add 155 runs off 142 balls for the second wicket. Both the batters took their time in settling in before opening up. Kulkarni had a lucky escape when he was dropped on 16 at mid-off and made sure to cash in. He hacked quick bowler Aarin Nadkarni for six over deep midwicket and clobbered Rishi Ramesh, the legspinner, around the same region before reaching his half-century off 70 balls.Naman Tiwari rattled the USA batters with his pace•ICC via Getty Images

Musheer continued from where he had left off against Ireland. He got going with a cover drive off Nadkarni and then hit Utkarsh Srivastava across the line for six. It took him 56 balls to reach his half-century and with both batters now set, they got the boundaries away more frequently.Musheer fell to Ramesh, but Kulkarni reached the three-figure mark with a four past fine leg off 110 balls. Captain Uday Saharan struck a 27-ball 35 to keep the momentum going, but he and Kulkarni fell in the space of six balls as USA looked for a way back. India, however, were 259 for 4 in the 44th over at that stage, and Priyanshu Moliya (27* off 19 balls), Sachin Dhas (20 off 16) and Aravelly Avanish (12* off seven) played important cameos to take India past the 325-run mark.USA were never really in the chase. They lost openers Prannav Chettipalayam and Bhavya Mehta in the first two overs. Tiwari then removed Ramesh for 8 as USA slipped to 12 for 3 after 7.5 overs. Siddarth Kappa and Srivastava stayed firm for a bit, adding 43 runs off 93 balls for the fourth wicket, before offspinner Moliya got into the act, sending back Kappa for 18.Tiwari then added to his wicket tally as he removed Srivastava and Manav Nayak in successive overs to have USA at 79 for 6, which soon became 90 for 7 after 30 overs. Amogh Arepally (27* off 71) and Nadkarni (20 off 44) added 31 off 78 balls for the eighth wicket, which delayed the inevitable and ensured India couldn’t bowl the opposition out.India headed into the Super Sixes topping their group and will face New Zealand on Tuesday.Callum Vidler picked 3 for 28 from his nine overs•ICC/Getty Images

Hicks and Vidler ensure Australia enter Super Six with all-win record

Callum Vidler and Ryan Hicks starred with ball and bat respectively to help Australia beat Sri Lanka and go into the Super Six of the Under-19 World Cup undefeated, with a healthy net run-rate of 2.6.Quick bowler Vidler started the match by nicking Pulindu Perera off in the first over. Sineth Jayawardena, who had won the toss and batted, moved Sri Lanka forward with a 47-run stand with Supun Waduge, but Vidler and Tom Campbell, the offspinner, removed them in successive overs to rebuild the pressure.Dinura Kalupahana, top-scoring with 64 with nine fours and three sixes, stitched two 40-plus stands in the middle overs with Ravishan de Silva and Rusanda Gamage. But medium pacer Harjas Singh and offspinner Raf MacMilllan cut short the promising partnerships before Vidler’s return took out Kalupahana and left Sri Lanka stuttering at 166 for 6 as the final powerplay got underway.Campbell and his new-ball partner Mahli Beardman took out the tail as Sri Lanka were all out seven balls short of their 50 overs.Harry Dixon’s flier, comprising three fours and a six off his first 13 balls, allowed Australia to cruise through a 71-run opening stand with Sam Konstas. Left-arm spinner Vishwa Lahiru, the pick of Sri Lanka’s bowlers, dismissed Dixon and Hugh Weibgen in consecutive overs and with legspinner Malsha Tharupathi getting Konstas, Australia were wobbling for a bit.Hicks ensured it was just that by accumulating a slow but steady 49-run stand with Harjas before joining forces with Campbell. The two shared eight boundaries in their partnership and did not allow the asking rate to rise over five at any point. Their unbeaten 82-run stand took Australia home with seven balls to spare.

How to spend a billion

A few suggestions about how the BCCI can spend its money

Ashok Malik03-Apr-2006Indian cricket is a funny animal. It has the instincts of a business enterprise when it comes to maximising revenue. In terms of the way it is run and what it offers its stakeholders, however, it is about as professional and efficient as a government hospital in a district town. In the long run, this mismatch is not sustainable.This season, a collection of overwhelming sponsorship deals has made the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) richer than any cricket body anywhere and ever. So now what will the board do with its fat bank balance?It has committed itself to enhancing prize money in domestic competitions, paying higher fees to international and first-class players, and introducing a pension fund. Beyond these baubles, it has no spending plan. Here are four suggestions for it to ponder.


Corporates could be roped in to help finance stadiums, as has happened in Delhi and Mohali
© Getty Images

Greenfield stadia
India is currently in the middle of a wrenching debate on the state of its airports. Private airlines are adding more and more flights, but the airports remain stuck in the 1970s, seeing the passenger as an inconvenient interruption and clean toilets as a luxury.The crisis with India’s cricket stadia is very similar. For the ordinary ticket-buying spectator, the experience of watching a match is, frankly, hellish. A modern stadium with turnstiles, numbered seats, polite ushers and stewards, appropriate necessities in terms of toilets and food access is a dream.The problem is many of the stadia – Kanpur and Indore are random examples – are owned by the government and leased out to the local cricket authority, the BCCI’s state-level affiliate, on sufferance, almost as an act of patronage. A stadium that the BCCI – or its constituent state unit – doesn’t own becomes, in effect, an orphan. The BCCI needs to deploy some of its money into a seed capital fund to buy off existing stadia from the government and take charge of its own properties. That aside, in smaller cities or suburban centres at the periphery of big cities, it could go straight to the real estate market and build model greenfield stadia.As the examples of Mohali and Delhi – where the Ferozshah Kotla is finally beginning to resemble the showpiece stadium it should be – bear out, local corporate houses will gladly share the BCCI’s burden. Selling off boxes and getting particular gates or stands named for or otherwise sponsored by big business is hardly rocket science.Cricket, in any case, is an overheated market, with too much money chasing too few worthwhile investment options. Why not divert some of the attention towards infrastructure? Each stadium can be defined as a separate profit centre, building into itself facilities that will be used to generate revenue in fallow months.As the planet’s most passionate cricket country, India should have the world’s best stadia. That is the bottomline. The BCCI has the money; it has to find the will to deliver.Spreading the gospel
The Maharajkumar of Vizianagram, India’s most undeserving Test captain, had some rare moments of insight. One of his inspired suggestions was that India should look for fast bowlers not in big cities but in smaller towns, even rural settings, such as, for instance, the agricultural belts of the old Punjab.In a sense, the emergence of Munaf Patel validates this idea. India’s newest fast bowling hope comes from rural Bharuch, a rain-deprived, hope-scarce region in Gujarat.Cricket today is more than just a sport in India. It may be an indulgence for the elite. For the broader middle and lower middle classes, however, it is an aspirational vehicle, a route to social mobility, replacing, for example, hockey as the game to play and follow in rural Punjab.There is untapped potential and latent energy that needs a channel. India’s engagement with cricket needs to be deepened and institutionalised. Again Punjab and its district cricket network may be instructive.In essence, the BCCI needs to put in place a proper outfield, quality nets, and a set of trained – perhaps BCCI-accredited – and salaried coaches to be available round the year in each district HQ. In bigger districts, which have more than one large town, there could be two or three such arrangements.Given that India has about 600 districts, we are not talking very large numbers. A pyramid structure – with genuine talent scouts rather than former cricketers sent out on desultory junkets – will need to link these grassroots units and monitor their progress and needs. These district-level BCCI bridgeheads can become the pivot around which to build a strong schools cricket programme. This process will throw up new talent; it will also expand the social base of Indian cricket and help the BCCI “give back” to the society it feeds on. To use a fashionable expression, it is part of the board’s corporate social responsibility.It would be easy for the BCCI to pretend that such an evangelical mission lies in the domain of the state associations and that it has no role to play. This is nonsense. Each district has to be integrated into an all-India matrix. Visiting faculty – say, specialist fitness trainers or spin bowlers – will need to drop in on districts regularly. This will require centralised coordination.When the BCCI gets down to hiring its professional managers and paying them corporate-level salaries (all of which it says it will do once Tata Consultancy Services has drawn up a blueprint for it), it should set aside money and human resources for a centrally managed (or at least supervised) districts cricket programme.


India’s injuries could be treated at home if a sports medicine centre was established
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Cricket pharma
Every time an Indian cricketer has a semi-serious injury, he is flown off to Britain or Australia or South Africa for treatment. This has become a regular feature, endearing the BCCI to its travel agents but leaving ordinary cricket fans wondering why – in this age of “medial tourism”, when the world comes to India for treatment – sports medicine is deemed so inadequate here.The BCCI needs to invest in a flagship, national-level sports medicine centre, which will have a permanent nucleus of expert staff as well as educational facilities for sports trainers and physiotherapists. It can run courses – say four times a year – for physios and those responsible for a cricket team’s fitness and well-being. It can invite specialists from other countries. It can undertake research on how to nurture, say, fast bowlers in Indian conditions, given the quantum of cricket being played these days.This idea is not new. It is understood that Andrew Leipus had proposed something similar to Jagmohan Dalmiya when he was the BCCI’s president. Hopefully the sports medicine centre will find a new patron.That heritage thing
Indian cricket, it is often lamented, has no sense of history. Other than a few mad buffs, scarcely anybody attempts to link India’s ascension to cricket power and the prodigious heritage that the sport is blessed with. Certainly, the BCCI couldn’t care less.In the 18th century America’s founding fathers saw their nation as an inheritor to the civilisational legacy of the Western world. They built cities and institutions, invented mythologies, and created literature to sustain that continuity.As cricket’s new torchbearer, India must be similarly alive to its obligations. The BCCI needs to build an Indian Cricket Museum – actually it could do with four such museums, given the geographical spread of India, but even one will do for a start. The museum has to be conceived with sensitivity and enlightenment. It must have a curator who is knowledgeable about cricket’s past – not an unctuous BCCI hanger-on. It must record the history of cricket in India – its sporting and social aspects, its role in shaping this country, and India’s greater role in reshaping a leisurely English pastime. The museum will need a corpus to acquire artifacts and memorabilia, buy them where necessary. It would help if the curator were alive to alternative fund-raising methods and not wholly dependent on grants from the BCCI.As it grows, the museum can become India’s – and the BCCI’s – statement that it does not see cricket as just a money-making racket and a proxy for nationalism. Like the other suggestions in this article, it perhaps calls for a new cricket sensibility.Is the BCCI up to it?

A match-winner in his own right

A timeline on the career of Dilip Sardesai

Cricinfo staff02-Jul-2007


Sardesai is best remembered for his meaty contributions in the 1971 series in the West Indies
© Cricinfo

August 8, 1940: Born in Margao, India.November 1960: Scored 87 in his first-class debut in Pune for Indian Universities against the visiting Pakistanis.January 1961 : Notched up his maiden first-class century, in only his second match, at Bangalore for Indian Board President’s XI against Pakistan.February 1961: Selected to represent Bombay in a Ranji Trophy game against Delhi. It was a quiet debut, he scored 21.December 1961: Made his Test debut against Ted Dexter’s England side at Kanpur and was out hit wicket for 28.1964: Scored an impressive 449 runs, including five fifties, in a five-Test home series against MJK Smith’s England side.1965: Scored 200 not out, his first Test century, and helped India stave off defeat after they followed on against New Zealand at the Brabourne stadium in Bombay. Amassed 360 runs at an average of 120 in the three-Test series.1967: Dropped from national squad after averaging just 10 through the year.1969: Recalled for the first Test against Australia at Bombay. He was discarded after he failed in both the innings.1970: Awarded the prestigious Arjuna award for his exploits on the cricket field.February 1971 to April 1971: High point of his career as he made a fairytale comeback and scored a colossal 642 runs, including three centuries, to help India win their first Test and series against the West Indies. His 212 in the first Test, a record for an Indian on foreign soil at that time, set the tone for the series as it enabled India to enforce the follow-on against West Indies for the first time. In the next Test, his century in the first innings led India to the famous victory at Port of Spain. He also played a vital role in the fourth Test at Barbados; stroking a superb 150 after coming in at 64 for 4 (soon to become 70 for 6) in reply to West Indies’ mammoth 501.August 1971: Played two crucial innings of 54 and 40 at The Oval to help India win a historic first Test series against England in England.1972: Played the last of his 30 Tests, at the Feroz Shah Kotla, against England. He scored 2001 runs at the Test level at an average of nearly 40.1973: Retired from first-class cricket. Between 1961-1973, he appeared for Bombay in 10 Ranji Trophy finals, emerging victorious on each occasion.

Living the Sky life

Jenny Thompson spends a day in the commentary box with the Sky team

Jenny Thompson08-Jun-2006


Nasser Hussain and Michael Holding in full flow
© BSkyB Broadcasting

It’s 10.28am. I’m in the deceptively small Sky commentary box at Trent Bridge. Fewer than 30 cubic metres are stuffed with seven Test legends, three production crew – and me. I am one privileged sardine.Questions come thick and fast. “Vandort’s the tall one, isn’t he?” “What does Kapugedara do?” “How do you pronounce Jayawardene?” They all help each other out, with Barney Francis, the cucumber-cool producer, verifying matters calmly. And you do need to be calm around here.Notes are shuffled, throats cleared and last-minute facts are shouted out by Rich, the stats guru who sits with the commentary team on the front row, just off camera. His information supplements the fruit-machine, a glittery screen offering all manner of facts and figures and just one of eight shiny monitors. At the back sit Francis and the graphics operator, Steve, who records where every single ball ends up throughout the day. No wonder he’s hoping for a three-day Test.It’s time to go to air. “Good luck, everyone,” says Francis. The opening music kicks in and then there’s silence; a rare hush amid a bustling hive of work. Pre-recorded packages are played out, including Nasser Hussain’s dart against the spin machine Merlyn. Gamely he came out of retirement for the feature – and now he prepares himself for the inevitable onslaught from his colleagues. “Go on, let’s have a joke, how not to play spin.”They may have 34,746 Test runs, 632 wickets and 592 Test caps between them, but nobody is beyond a bit of ribbing. Hussain is usually the target. “As a player he was so heart on his sleeve,” explains Francis. “Because he so easily gives it away, they know that and just rib him.” But the man who captained England for five years takes it well – and gives it back, too, with punch and panache.”It’s a long day and they have to concentrate,” says Francis. “Even when they’re mucking about. The way they get through it is to rib each other all the time.” You can say that again. As David Gower says, “It’s the old’uns versus the young’uns, Ian and myself versus Nasser and Mike.” Just like a Test dressing room, then – and just think what a Test line-up they’d make. “There’s a lot of cross-generational banter as well as pure dressing-room banter,” Gower continues. “It helps pass the time of day, really.”Do you play tricks on each other? “No, that’s more Jonathan Agnew’s line,” says Gower. So, instead you just settle for stitching each other up when live? “Yes, that will do,” he laughs. Hussain goes on to demonstrate, with an on-air dig at Lloyd. “What’s going on with your tie today, David?” Lloyd fingers the lurid Donald Duck number and asks: “What’s wrong with my tie?!” He grins.It’s hard not to be happy around here. With such good banter it’s easy to forget you’re there to do a job, as Francis explains. “It’s a very fun place to work. It’s very easy to get caught up in that.” Yet he doesn’t, and neither does anyone else – it’s a slick operation. The second it’s time to go live, each person clicks into gear, a seamless shift, as if getting ready to face a delivery. There are similarities to playing, says Gower. “It’s a performance of sorts. You have days when things click into place and happen.”But nothing will quite match up to the buzz, or the gut-wrench, of being out in the middle.
“Playing is more emotional. There’s not really an equivalent of getting a hundred or of getting a duck. If I get my first word wrong at 10.30 you don’t have to wait till the next morning to come back.”


David Lloyd … in one of his more demure ties
© BSkyB Broadcasting

It’s a great life, is this – and I have the proof: if you can tell a tree’s age by its rings, you can tell who’s been commentating for Sky the longest by how deep their tan is, and I put this to a very brown Botham. In a Benaud-esque touch, he can’t remember the last winter he saw. He pauses to think and at last says: “It was playing football” – which means that he’s since missed out on more than two decades of British winters. Way to go.The newest boy Atherton is commensurately the palest, but there’s a reason for that, Botham suggests: “Atherton’s anaemic!” Ah yes, it’s a constant, brilliant banter-fest all right, and there are all the nicknames under the sun. Some are self-explanatory or familiar – Bumble, Nass (or Nasty), Ath and the Cake (Beef-Cake, geddit). Then there’s Lubo, for Gower. Why? “I went to a restaurant in Adelaide 237 years ago,” he begins, then tails off. “It’s a long story!” Mikey Holding is too cool for a nickname – Whispering Death is a bit of a mouthful here, Death would be plain wrong.But of course the commentators are just one part of the story, the royal icing on a very rich cake. A constant reminder of this is the information which burbles through a mic from the director Mark Lynch who is in a far-off truck, busily controlling his troops in mystical terminology: “Standby 8. Roll B. Wipe B.”Francis and his gang are in constant communication with Lynch and the other crew dotted around the ground, from trucks to cameramen to floor managers. As Lloyd says, “Everybody’s very conscious that we want to make it work. It’s fascinating – there are teams everywhere. You just want it to work.” And work it does, all right.

Sangakkara rues his lack of preparation

Kumar Sangakkara rues his lack of preparation that partly led to his hamstring injury thus keeping him out of the first Test against Australia in Brisbane

Sa'adi Thawfeeq12-Nov-2007


That’s where the problem lies… Sangakkara opts to blame no one but himself
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There is nothing more frustrating for a cricketer than to sit out a match through injury knowing fully well that he should have been out there in the middle helping his team beat the opposition. When the opponent you are playing against happens to be the best team in the world, the frustration can become two-fold.For Kumar Sangakkara, the Sri Lankan vice-captain and their leading batsman, the past 14 days have been full of disappointment and exasperation. Bad luck arrives in many ways and for Sangakkara, one of the fittest players in the team, it came in the most unexpected manner.Against Cricket Australia Chairman’s XI, in Sri Lanka’s opening match of their tour of Australia, Sangakkara had to wait for three-and-a-half hours before going out to bat. He had faced only three deliveries before disaster struck.”We had a great opening stand in that game [Jayasuriya and Atapattu put on 195]. I was sitting around doing a few stretches while waiting to go into bat. It was a cold day and I should have probably paid a little more attention to warming my muscles up before I went in,” Sangakkara said.”It [hamstring] went off on the third ball I faced. As soon as it happened, I knew I had pulled something. I felt a completely new sensation which I had never felt before. I hoped it was nothing serious.”I wanted to make use of a runner and keep batting, but Tommy [Simsek, the physio] was smart enough to realise that I had to come off the field quickly enough. It stopped the bleeding and the injury to the muscle and at that point I was pretty lucky to have Tommy around with his experience knowing exactly what to do. I walked away to the dressing room angry and disappointed that it had happened,” he said.Sangakkara blamed the injury partly to his negligence and to the fact that he had to wait for a long time before going out to bat. “It was an unusually cold day in Adelaide. We had a fantastic start and I can’t remember in the last two years when I had my pads on for so long waiting to go
into bat. It was also a practice game. Sometimes when you are in that situation you can forget to pay attention to some of the other details that are important. Usually I have a routine that I follow with my stretching.

We had a fantastic start and I can’t remember in the last two years when I had my pads on for so long waiting to go
into bat. It was also a practice game. Sometimes when you are in that situation you can forget to pay attention to some of the other details that are important

“Fitness is something that I take a lot of pride with. I’ve been working very hard on it, in my weight training, my running and my conditioning. You can have all of those perfectly planned but a little slip-up somewhere can be costly.”When you don’t get injured for some time you kind of feel invincible. When you start thinking like that, you think your body is fine. Suddenly you get one [injury], you feel really bad. Tommy said that it has made me come crashing down to earth. From now on, I know I’ve got to pay a little more attention to making sure my muscles are warm when I go out to bat,” he said.In his 67-Test careers, it is only the first time that Sangakkara has missed a Test due to such injury. “I looked to this tour [of Australia] for a long time. Australia is a place I love to come to and play cricket. To sit out and watch the other guys get on the field and be involved in the competition, I feel a bit jealous.”Cricketers have to sit out at certain periods of their career. I had to do that through injury this time. But I have an opportunity to contribute by having a chat and encouraging our players from outside making sure that everything is taken care of off the field. I am still involved in it but I rather be out on the field.”Good news being that Sangakkara is making good progress and is hopeful he will be fit enough to be selected for the second Test starting at Hobart from November 16.”The key was the first 24 hours after injury. I had ice on every two hours on the affected area to curtail the bleeding into the muscle. I didn’t get any sleep that night icing the area for a minimum of 20 minutes every two hours. I did it throughout the night till about seven in the morning. That’s what set about the foundation for a good recovery.”I am back to about 70 percent speed-wise. I’ve been batting for three days with absolutely no pain or any other sensations. It is just a case of making sure that I am 100 percent with running between wickets to stand a chance of playing because the pressure of running against the ball and the fielders is when you put extra stress. That’s when a recurrence of a hamstring injury can take place. I’ve got to make sure that there is no chance of that happening because we’ve got Test cricket coming up a week after we get back to Sri Lanka.”Asked how the team took up his loss, Sangakkara said: “There was a lot of support from the team. They were very disappointed for me and it was nice to have all the guys coming and saying ‘well, hard luck we would love to have you, take care of yourself’. The other thing is that it presented a nice opportunity for someone to go and play a Test match for the country. It is good to see that we have the strength to refill the position. No player is indispensable and that is something I believe in very strongly.”

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