Aston Villa: Frank McAvennie makes Calvin Bassey claim

Pundit Frank McAvennie has been reacting to Aston Villa’s reported interest in Rangers defender Calvin Bassey, as per Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Villa closing in?

Steven Gerrard and NSWE have been extremely busy over recent weeks, getting a number of deals in place ahead of the summer transfer window.

Villa have secured permanent deals for Philippe Coutinho and Boubacar Kamara and have also reached an agreement for centre-back Diego Carlos.

It looks as if another defender could be on the way, with The Times suggesting that Villa are also closing in on a move for Rangers colossus Bassey, who played under the 42-year-old at Ibrox.

The Latest: McAvennie slams Bassey

Scottish pundit McAvennie was talking to Football Insider regarding a potential reunion between Gerrard and Bassey.

He didn’t seem too impressed, though, believing that the 22-year-old isn’t good enough for the Premier League and would get ‘ripped apart’ by the likes of former Villa star Jack Grealish.

McAvennie said:

“Can he go in and play in the Premier League right now? No.

“I don’t think he is good enough for the Premier League. If Gerrard is buying him, it’s because he has done a job in Scotland.

“England is a whole different game. He’s muscle-bound but if he comes up against someone like Jack Grealish he will get ripped apart.

“I’m sorry to say Bassey but that’s the truth. Another year up with Rangers and maybe he might be ready.

“At this moment in time, the brutal truth is he’s good enough.”

The Verdict: Get it done

Bassey starred in both the Europa League final and Scottish Cup final this month and appears to have outgrown the Scottish Premiership, picking up Rangers’ Young Player of the Season award.

The Nigerian was a regular at Ibrox in the 2021/22 season, lining out as a centre-back and left-back and duly providing Gerrard with cover in two important areas.

His impressive displays over recent months seem to suggest that he is ready for the next step in his career, and that could well be at Villa Park, possibly alongside Carlos.

In other news: Villa may now move for another Rangers star after Bassey; Gerrard loves him – transfer insider. 

Liverpool: Kenny reacts to Tchouamini links

Former Premier League goalkeeper Paddy Kenny believes Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp is lining up ‘incredible’ AS Monaco midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni as a replacement for Jordan Henderson. 

The lowdown: Reds interested

Liverpool have been long since credited with an interest in the 22-year-old phenomenon and it appears that the speculation is ramping up as the summer window fast approaches.

There is likely to be fierce competition for the Frenchman’s signature as Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain compete for the capture.

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However, as Jurgen Klopp keeps one eye on the future whilst taking care of the here and now, Tchouameni has been earmarked to fill sizeable boots at Anfield…

The latest: Henderson replacement…

Speaking to Football Insider, ex-Leeds United stopper Kenny suggested that the French youngster could succeed captain Henderson in the Liverpool ranks after their own sources confirmed interest from Merseyside earlier this week.

The 43-year-old says Klopp is personally a huge fan of the ‘incredible’ talent.

“He’s already made 130-odd appearances at the top level so that’s incredible.

“Liverpool need to start thinking about this and for me, he fits the profile of a Henderson replacement. He’s been a brilliant servant for Liverpool but he can’t play forever. We have already seen him drop out of the starting XI a few times for big games this season.

“It’s only natural to look for a replacement and if you are going to spend £50million then this is your guy. If you are spending that much, Klopp clearly rates him. He will have big shoes to fill but someone has to do it.”

The verdict: Next-generation needed

Whilst there can be no undermining the success that the current crop of Liverpool stars have enjoyed, Klopp and new sporting director Julian Ward must have what happens next in mind.

Regular midfield trio Thiago, Henderson and Fabinho are all over 28 and at present are backed up by a 36-year-old James Milner and often injury-prone duo Naby Keita and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.

Adding the powerful French youngster to the likes of Harvey Elliott, Curtis Jones and Fabio Carvalho would give the ranks a whole new complexion moving forward as the Reds attempt to topple Manchester City going forward.

Holding a likeness to Thiago as well as Real Madrid stalwart Casemiro and Arsenal ace Thomas Partey when using the FBref player comparison tool, Tchouameni – who captained France at the Under 18 level – looks to be ideally suited to strengthen the Liverpool midfield department.

In other news, French outlet drops Liverpool claim involving ‘unstoppable’ superstar. Read more here.

The case for a bigger, better Women's T20 Challenge next year

With close to 30,000 people attending the four games in Jaipur, we wonder what a few sensible tweaks can do for the women’s game in India

Annesha Ghosh in Jaipur13-May-2019She has only ever played T20 cricket internationally, and has a batting average of 4.75 there from nine innings. But two-two-two-four off the last four balls from Amelia Kerr in the Women’s T20 Challenge final to clinch victory for Supernovas, and Radha Yadav is a star in the making now. Exactly what a platform like a kind-of-IPL is meant to do for women’s cricket in India.All told, it was a success. Four matches. Largely with good turnouts (13,000-odd were at the final). Three of the four games were played under lights, there was some excellent action and close finishes, Velocity choosing to play for qualification to the final instead of going for a win against Supernovas perhaps the only negative.Lots to celebrate then, but there are a couple of things to think about for the organisers and powers that be.Let there be light, as much as possibleIndia haven’t played a day-night or night-only home international fixture since March 2016. The first non-day match they played, at home or away, since that World T20 game in Mohali was at the 2018 World T20, in the semi-final, which they lost to England. Failing to account for the dew factor and the lack of an idea of the intricacies of fielding under lights – apart from other things – abetted their loss.ALSO READ: A high-quality advertisement for women’s cricket in IndiaAt the Women’s T20 Challenge, nearly a dozen catches were shelled – by Indian and overseas players, young and experienced. The swirling ball against the backdrop of the night sky posed all three teams a challenge. At the T20 World Cup next year, in Australia, two of India’s four league-stage games will begin at 7pm local time, the remaining two at 2pm. The 2021 ODI World Cup, too, will have a sprinkling of day-night and night games.With two world tournaments in the next two years, there is a case for the BCCI to consider hosting a few games under lights during the home series against South Africa later this year, and ensure a few night fixtures across all domestic tournaments, including the age-group competitions, in the upcoming season.”Playing under lights is actually challenging because the whole atmosphere changes, the way the wind blows, with the light and the way the ball travels on the field,” said India and Velocity batsman Veda Krishnamurthy, who took most catches (and, more importantly, dropped none) in the tournament. “So, at least if we start playing T20s in the evening [that will help] and also help bring in more crowd.”Around 13,000 people turned up for the final•BCCIThere’s no blockbuster without the publicityA standalone identity, in a non-metro city, held on the sidelines of the men’s IPL were all vital when it came to testing the waters for a possible women’s IPL, or a short three-team event to start with. If the response to the four-match competition – on social media and at the ground – is anything to go by, the Women’s T20 Challenge was more than a sleeper hit.Scheduling the final on the weekend, with a 7.30pm start, allowed appreciable prime-time viewership, the high-quality cricket in the final-ball thriller only bolstering the case for women’s cricket in India to have a bigger, a more expanded T20 league of its own.As crowd turnout goes, the attendance at Sawai Mansingh Stadium grew with each night fixture – from roughly 4,000 in the opening match to 7,000-plus in the second, to over 13,000 for the final. Even the only match with a 3.30pm start, in the sweltering Jaipur heat, had nearly 3,500 people in attendance at the stadium.Be informed, these are numbers for a tournament that didn’t even have much advertisement around the stadium premises. Locals – cab drivers, store owners, hotel owners, children and women – who came to watch the matches said that TV commercials, though sporadic, carried by the host broadcaster during the closing stages of the IPL’s league phase played a part in piquing their interest.Stick to the non-metrosImagine, then, what Women’s T20 Challenge signage at the airport (which had many Rajasthan Royals hoardings well after the team had been eliminated), the railway station, and in the immediate vicinity of the stadium could have done. No reason, then, for the BCCI to doubt the cricket-watching appetite – for women’s games – among Indians, right?”Smaller cities could work, because of the curiosity factor…,” Mithali Raj, who also called for an expanded competition, said. “We could add one or two more teams, but [making] it a double-leg [competition], where we could play each team twice, will make it more interesting because any team can beat any team in the league. That gives every player and team a few more games.”Back in the day, to promote the sport under WCAI [the now-defunct Women’s Cricket Association of India], we tried to play at smaller places where a lot of people came to watch maybe because of the curiosity factor, but we used to attract a lot of people. So that isn’t a bad idea.”Worth thinking about.

In praise of Paddy and Goel paaji

Padmakar Shivalkar and Rajinder Goel, who are honoured by the BCCI this week, were so much more than hard-luck stories

V Ramnarayan08-Mar-2017Between Vinoo Mankad and Ravindra Jadeja, India has produced a long line of left-arm spinners who have played Test cricket, but also perhaps an equal number of classy exponents of the craft never to have represented the country.Among the specialist left-arm spinners I have watched or played with and against, the likes of Mumtaz Hussain, Rajinder Singh Hans, Suresh Shastri, B Vijayakrishna, S Vasudevan and Sunil Subramaniam might have fared well internationally had they been selected. Then there were Rajinder Goel and Padmakar Shivalkar, who with their considerable longevity in domestic cricket and innumerable match-winning exploits were in a different league altogether. They would be certainties in any all-time India XI made up of those who missed out during their playing careers.To begin with, Goel and Shivalkar emerged as talented young bowlers at a time when India had a surfeit of quality spinners at the first-class level. Even before the famous quartet became a part of the team, India often fielded three or four spinners, including allrounders, in the playing XI. Around the time Goel made his first-class debut for Patiala, Subhash Gupte, Ghulam Ahmed, Salim Durani, Vinoo Mankad, Chandu Borde, AG Kripal Singh, VV Kumar and Bapu Nadkarni were doing duty for India. For a long while, both Goel and Shivalkar were even overshadowed in their state and zonal teams by the presence of great Test bowlers of similar specialisation.Between them the two stalwart spinners of contrasting styles but comparable mastery over their art took more than 1300 first-class wickets with miserly economy. Goel yielded just 18.58 runs per wicket and Shivalkar just under 20. Why couldn’t they break into the Indian team despite such sterling figures? Quite simply because the man who kept them out, Bishan Bedi, took 1560 first-class wickets, including his 266 Test victims. He was a class act, widely regarded as the best in the business internationally in his time.Goel gets Gundappa Viswanath in the Duleep Trophy final of 1975•Rajinder GoelIt is often said that Goel and Shivalkar were unlucky to have been born when they were, with the world-class Bedi shutting them out permanently from the Indian dressing room – except once, when Goel got close, warming the reserve bench. There are ardent supporters who dismiss the bad-luck theory with scorn, saying the selectors ought to have played Goel and Shivalkar regardless of the Bedi factor, at least in a stop-gap, horses-for-courses capacity occasionally. Did India not go into Test matches with two offspinners in the playing XI, they argue. Erapalli Prasanna and Srinivas Venkataraghavan both always figured in the Test squad of 14 throughout their careers, if you exclude Prasanna’s largely self-imposed exile between 1962 and 1967, and Venkat’s omission for the 1967-68 tour of Australia and New Zealand.Goel, who debuted in his teens in the late 1950s, was something of a late bloomer, to go by his early performances in the Ranji Trophy. When he moved to Delhi, he and the young Bedi often bowled in tandem, Bedi setting hard-to-match bowling records at first-class level just as he did in Test cricket. Goel was rarely far behind, though, and the two, along with offspinner DS Saxena, ran through most opposition line-ups, especially within the North Zone, which included Services and Railways, both Central Zone teams later.If Bedi’s action was described as poetry in motion, Goel’s bore the economy of movement and precision of a master craftsman at work. He began to express himself uninhibitedly in the 1970s, once he moved from the Delhi Ranji side to Haryana. With 637 Ranji Trophy wickets, and 750 first-class wickets overall, he set a well nigh unattainable goal for any bowler after him. He never led Haryana to the Ranji Trophy title, but did bring them close to the final stages of the tournament on a few occasions.Goel was a menace to opposing batsmen in the Duleep Trophy as well, his 7 for 98 and 5 for 36 in a losing cause against South Zone in the 1975 December final was perhaps his finest display in the tournament. In a match dominated by two century-makers, Brijesh Patel of South Zone and Surinder Amarnath of North, the slow bowlers, captain Venkataraghavan, Bhagwath Chandrasekhar and Prasanna, bowled South to a 37-run victory. Sitting in the stands, I enjoyed the rare opportunity of watching Goel’s metronomic accuracy and ability to extract purchase from the wicket with a slightly roundarm style. He was quicker through the air and a delightful contrast to the flight and guile of his fellow left-armer and captain Bedi, who claimed six wickets in the match. Watching Goel demand the utmost respect from batsman after batsman on that sporting Chepauk pitch led you to wonder how devastating he could have been on drying or soft wickets – perhaps as deadly as Derek Underwood if not more so.Shivalkar played in a big match, against international stars, before he broke into the Bombay side•Nitin MajumdarShivalkar’s was an even more poignant story – if we believe that distinguished cricket careers must receive the ultimate stamp of approval of Test-match appearances – considering his fairy-tale beginning in first-class cricket.He found a place in the Cricket Club of India President’s XI in a match at the Brabourne Stadium in March-April 1962 (when he was barely 22) against an International XI led by Richie Benaud on a world tour. The wicket was a batsman’s paradise, the outfield fast as greased lightning, and the visitors’ batting line-up formidable and world-class. The tourists made 518 batting first, but the CCI XI, whose attack included opening bowlers Rajinder Pal and GS Ramchand, as well as spinners Gupte, Sharad Diwadkar, and Shivalkar, the debutant, withstood the onslaught bravely, especially Gupte (4 for 161) and Shivalkar (5 for 129).In the first innings, Australia’s boy wonder Ian Craig put on 208 for the first wicket with Bob Simpson, and Tom Graveney made 95. Shivalkar took the wickets of Craig, Everton Weekes, Raman Subba Row and Benaud. In the second innings he took 2 for 44, bowling Weekes and getting Graveney caught and bowled.Imagine Shivalkar’s frame of mind as he went home after that match. Wouldn’t he have nursed dreams of playing for India after dismissing so many top-class batsmen? Unfortunately he had to wait for many years to break into the Bombay XI even, thanks to the presence in that side of left-arm allrounder Bapu Nadkarni, who continued to serve India well until as late as 1968, along with fellow left-armer Bedi, who was already on the verge of greatness and firmly entrenched in the India XI by then. Shivalkar toured Australia later in 1962 with a CCI side, with some success.Goel was a senior colleague of mine in the State Bank of India team. I had the privilege of sharing the attack with him and legspinner VV Kumar, another fine bowler, in the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup. Those were the only games in which I was able to watch Goel’s bowling from close quarters.There was much to learn from his focus and control. He was gentle in his ways, had a soft corner for the underdog, and took a keen interest in the careers of younger cricketers like me. He was one of few players I knew who could look beyond their own fortunes to empathise with others. Other State Bank colleagues and I, and fellow inmates of a conditioning camp at Chepauk, struck up a warm, comfortable friendship, with Goel , as we all called him. I remember he never pulled rank on us, though he was eminently qualified to do so.Shivalkar with Prasanna, another of the top-flight spinners who could have been said to have kept him out of the India side•AFPSome years later I visited him in the Chepauk dressing room when he was representing Haryana in a Ranji Trophy match. He had already broken VV Kumar’s record for most wickets in the tournament, perhaps even gone past 500 – I don’t quite remember. When I asked him if he would retire at the end of the season, he quickly replied in the affirmative.” youngsters help .” When I warned him to beware of S Venkataraghavan, still fit and rapidly closing in on his tally of Ranji Trophy wickets, a new look of determination came into his face. He quickly changed his mind about retirement, and the rest is history.Like Goel, Shivalkar was probably past his best when I first met him on a cricket field, but he was still a potent force with his deceptive flight and loop. The first occasion was a historic Ranji Trophy quarter-final match between Hyderabad and Bombay during the 1975-76 season. Batting first, Bombay were all out for 222 on the first day and we took a first-innings lead of 60-odd runs. Shivalkar sent down a marathon 50 overs for figures of 2 for 77. It was a slow surface and he had apparently lost some of his sting of yore, but he was still a slippery customer, with beautiful flight that left the batsman constantly guessing whether to go forward or back.Bombay captain Ashok Mankad and debutant Rahul Mankad counterattacked adventurously, and they declared the second innings with just over three hours of play left. We were bundled out for 146 and Bombay went on to achieve yet another Ranji win, beating Bengal and Bihar in their next two matches. Though legspinner Rakesh Tandon was the wrecker-in-chief in the last innings, taking six wickets, it was Shivalkar (4 for 39) who wove a web of controlled deceit around Hyderabad’s timid batsmen.A year later I met Paddy again at Delhi’s Feroz Shah Kotla, when he bowled brilliantly on a good batting strip to claim ten wickets in the match as Bombay beat Rest of India by an innings in the Irani Trophy. He was at his skilful best.Goel bloomed when he moved to the Haryana side in the 1970s•Rajinder GoelI remember some other Ranji Trophy matches memorable for Shivalkar’s exploits, though I did not witness them firsthand. The first was a semi-final at the Brabourne Stadium that Bombay won by a big margin against Mysore. Shivalkar’s figures in the match were 8 for 19 and 5 for 31. Mysore’s famed batting line-up, which included GR Viswanath and Brijesh Patel, folded for 90 and 111. He followed up with ten wickets in the final, in which Bombay beat Bengal by another big margin.In yet another famous final, the very next season, Paddy had the incredible figures of 8 for 16 and 5 for 18, as Tamil Nadu crashed to defeat in two days and one ball, after their spinners, Venkat and VV Kumar, bundled Bombay out for 151 on the opening day on a wicket tailormade for them. The story of this match tends to be retold every time the act of underpreparing wickets backfires on the host team, as in the recent India-Australia Pune Test match.Goel is a tiny man, while Shivalkar is taller, Both are wiry and weighed next to nothing during their playing careers. Goel’s brisk walk to his delivery stride, his streamlined finish facilitated by his boyish frame and excellent use of the crease, tended to produce a tantalising drift towards the leg stump, after which the ball would land just short of the batsman’s reach – and spit fire on helpful surfaces. Shivalkar had a straighter, more leisurely run-up to the wicket, and a classic high-arm action. Quite possibly the best attribute of their cricket was their utter dependability. With them in the side, their captains only had to worry about their supporting bowlers.Both were tireless, with their smooth actions demanding the minimum of effort – or so it seemed. Yet it was their unstinting work in the nets that made their seeming effortlessness in match situations possible.If a comparison must be made between them, it must be to state that there was hardly anything to differentiate them, except the possibility that with his flight and subtle variations, Shivalkar posed a more attractive proposition on good wickets, with Goel perhaps more destructive on crumbling surfaces. Those who know of his parallel career on stage will, of course, tell you that Shivalkar is the better singer of the two.

Rahane fifty counters South Africa

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Dec-2015Kyle Abbott found early success as he had M Vijay caught at second slip. However, replays showed he had overstepped•BCCIShikhar Dhawan and Vijay started cautiously before Vijay edged to slip for the second time in his tentative innings•BCCIKyle Abbott then brought one back in to disturb Cheteshwar Pujara’s stumps•BCCIKohli and Ajinkya Rahane revived India with a solid 70-run stand before Kohli was done in by a freak dismissal, with the ball hitting Temba Bavuma at short leg and popping up to give Dane Vilas a catch•BCCISouth Africa finished the second session by removing Wriddhiman Saha, leaving the hosts at 139 for 6 at the tea break•BCCIRavindra Jadeja then pitched in with 24…•BCCI… but Rahane was the main man, his maiden half-century at home guiding India to 231 for 7 before bad light curbed the day•Associated Press

Sarfraz stands tall amid Pakistan ruins

Pakistan’s marks out of ten after their 2-0 defeat in the Tests against Sri Lanka

Umar Farooq19-Aug-2014

9

Sarfraz Ahmed (265 runs at 88.33, strike rate 74.22)
A near perfect series for the wicketkeeper-batsman with three fifties and a hundred, especially as each of those innings was played under immense pressure. A collection of 265 at 88.33 highlighted Sarfraz’s importance to Pakistan, even though his efforts went in vain in both Tests. One of the few positives Pakistan can take away from the 2-0 series defeat.

8

Wahab Riaz (6 wickets at 27.33, strike rate 45.0)
Wavered a bit, but ultimately justified his inclusion in Pakistan’s pace attack for the second Test. Wahab defied all odds on a slow pitch by producing some stunning spells, particularly against Kumar Sangakkara, in the first innings at the SSC. Failed to find a place in the XI at Galle, but with six wickets at 27.33 in the second Test, he is likely to be an automatic starter for Pakistan’s future fixtures.Junaid Khan (9 wickets at 27.33, strike rate 45.3)
A key member of Pakistan’s seam arsenal, Junaid won many sessions for his team but a blow to his head from a bouncer cut him from bowling in the second innings at the SSC. Had he been fit, it is very likely Pakistan could have knocked at least 70-80 runs off Sri Lanka’s total. With nine scalps at 27.33, Junaid ended as Pakistan’s leading wicket-taker.

6

Younis Khan (211 runs at 52.75)
Showed his class with a crafty 177 at Galle in the first innings, but withdrew into his shell after that, scoring just 34 in three innings. Became the first Pakistan player to complete 100 catches in Tests, but Younis’ overall contribution with the bat left a lot to be desired.Saeed Ajmal (9 wickets at 40.11)
The backbone of the Pakistan team in recent years, Ajmal finished with a modest nine wickets at 40.11. Claimed a five-wicket haul in the first Test, but hardly caused any discomfort to the batsmen as he conceded 166 runs, allowing Sri Lanka to take a first-innings lead even though Pakistan had made 451. Was decent at the SSC, though he was mainly in the headlines for having been reported by the umpires for a suspect bowling action.This was probably Misbah-ul-Haq’s worst series both as captain and player•AFP

5

Asad Shafiq (157 runs at 39.25)
A promising young batsman, but Shafiq’s batting completely lacked responsibility. Shared two important stands with Sarfaraz at the SSC, but exploded during his hasty attempts to convert his starts to gold.

4

Azhar Ali (113 runs at 28.25)
Cameos of 30, 41, 32 and 10 were not what Pakistan expected of their No.3. Azhar often started well, but lost his way by choosing bad shots. Was less than focused with the bat, but outstanding with his reflexes in the field at silly point and short leg.

3

Misbah-ul-Haq (67 runs at 16.75)
Probably the worst series Misbah has had as both a captain and a player. Pakistan have not won even a single series under his captaincy since 2012. A poor return of 67 at 16.75, coupled with a series whitewash, is likely to smudge his CV.

2

Abdur Rehman (4 wickets at 68.25)
Though arguably Pakistan’s unluckiest bowler, Rehman, playing his first Test series in almost eight months, looked rusty and was completely out of rhythm.Ahmed Shehzad (86 runs at 21.50)
Young and aggressive, but overconfident and naughty with the bat. Only managed to score 86 at 21.50 as an opener and will no doubt need more time to adapt to the demands of Test cricket.

1

Khurram Manzoor (39 runs at 9.75)
Was on a streak of nine consecutive matches as opener heading into the SSC Test, but his impact was almost non-existent. A tally of just 39 from four innings suggests it could be a while yet before Manzoor plays his next series.Mohammad Talha (2 wickets at 58.00)
Has the necessary ingredients to become a top fast bowler, but his inexperience and lack of control showed that he is not yet ready for top-flight cricket. Talha’s line and length was all over the place in Galle, and he was subsequently dropped for the second Test.

It's all about wickets

From Madan, India The end of an era is near

Cricinfo25-Feb-2013Madan, India
The end of an era is near. Warne bid adieu after whitewashing England, Kumble walked off in less triumphant fashion and only Murali soldiers on, moving further adrift of his one-time rival spin exponents with every passing tournament. Warne and Murali’s precocious talent was anything but un-noticed and juicy anecdotes of their heroics will be recounted for years to come; here is a small but hopefully significant effort to ensure the third musketeer’s legend does not fade away in a hurry. And Murali fans may please forgive me if I made it sound like he has already retired; it is purely unintentional and I look forward to much more from the wonderful Murali-Mendis combine!Going through the slew of glowing tributes that have been paid to the great man in the last 24 hours or more, one aspect of Kumble-appreciation remains unchanged: harping on his inability to turn the ball big invariably manifests itself, sometimes as criticism, mostly as some kind of dubious strength. It is suggested that his not being able to turn the ball big made him work harder on his accuracy and so on and so forth. All true but that is to miss the point.Kumble’s very style of bowling revolves around NOT turning the ball big; it is not highly relevant whether it was motivated by a relative inability or was by design. I have not played cricket at any serious competitive level but through years of watching the game intently – and also watching the master in action through the years – I have stumbled upon what I think is a good example to demonstrate not only the effectiveness of Kumble’s style but also how incredibly difficult it is to emulate it.Hold the ball seam-up and aim to hit the middle stump off a full length at moderate pace. Two, repeat One. Three, get the ball to bounce a few centimeters closer to the offside than where it pitched previously. Four, now repeat One through to Three with leg-breaks! As hard as turning the ball a long way is, it is even harder to achieve pinpoint precision and near-absolute control over how you want to bowl the ball. This is exactly what Kumble achieved and repeated over 18 years and over long spells, relentlessly building pressure on those at the receiving end.For, while Kumble knew exactly what he wanted to do, the batsman would have no way of reading his mind. He might be able to pick him off the hand and spot the googly before it was bowled, but how would he be able to foresee extremely subtle variations in line, length and pace? Combine this with fastish pace and the ability to generate disconcerting bounce almost at will, seemingly like a fast bowler bending his back and it is easy to see what a hard time batsmen must have had at the crease when facing Kumble.This is why, for all the video-analysis that batsmen must surely have done to deconstruct Kumble and for all the fool-proof theories that were thought up time and again to counter Kumble – the most popular being to play him like a medium-pacer – he was as effective and successful as he had always been right up to the India-Australia series played in Australia earlier this year. And that’s not all. He combined an indefatigable body with a brilliant cricketing brain and used his lethal accuracy to work batsmen into an inextricable position which would seal their doom before long.The flipper would trap them plumb when they launched into an extravagant sweep and a startlingly slow, flighted one would catch them groping from too far back inside the crease. To this fan of chess, Kumble’s bowling was the closest you could get to a marriage of chess and cricket. Ironically, it was his fast-bowling contemporary and towering legend Glenn McGrath who came closest to emulating Kumble’s approach, although in his own inimitable way. This unfortunately feeds the cliche but it is also interesting to note the similarity in the approach of two of the most effective bowlers of their time.Before I conclude my humble tribute, perhaps the greatest testimonial one can offer to Kumble’s achievements is the way the masses, as opposed to the purists, viewed him. The masses did not fail to perceive the ‘lack’ of spectacular turn in his bowling but on the other hand, they, unlike purists, were obsessed with results rather than aesthetics. Therefore, Kumble’s effectiveness was not lost on them, which was largely glossed over by purists until his 24 wicket haul in Australia in 2003-04 forced them to sit up and take notice.Much like the hope of a Sachin special would be expressed when India faced a daunting target, the hope that Kumble would run through the opposition would be expressed when India had to defend a low total on a crumbling wicket. Long before Kumble’s indispensability to the Indian cricket team was recognized by experts as equal to or more than Sachin’s, the Indian cricket-loving public had already understood how crucial he was to the team’s fortunes though they may not have spelt it out in write-ups with copious words.Like the man himself has put it so eloquently, it’s all about wickets at the end of the day and in the wicket-taking sweepstakes, Kumble towers over all but two bowlers in the history of Test cricket.

Old guard takes charge to herald new era

England’s performance bore no resemblance to the fatigued 10-wicket loss in the World Cup quarter-final three months ago

Andrew McGlashan at The Oval28-Jun-2011The thunderstorm which held up play for three hours at The Oval wouldn’t have looked out of place in Colombo, but England’s performance bore no resemblance to the fatigued 10-wicket loss in the World Cup quarter-final three months ago. It was vibrant, energetic, confident and aggressive. Yet this isn’t actually a new era of one-day cricket for England because there are a few too many familiar faces on show for that to be true.Even though only five of this side played in Colombo in March, there haven’t been wholesale changes by the selectors. James Anderson, reigniting his one-day career with 4 for 18 which were his best figures since November 2009 against South Africa, and Jade Dernbach were both in the squad, while Stuart Broad and Kevin Pietersen would have played except for injury. Really, the only significant changes have been at the top of the order with Craig Kieswetter back and Alastair Cook as the new captain along with Samit Patel’s recall. He was tellingly pushed aside by Tim Bresnan who had been back in squad for a single day.Adding further weight to the theory that, rather than this being a new-look team, it’s more the older version with a bit of touching-up was the performance of Anderson. It’s a well-known story that, moments after England secured the Ashes in Sydney back in January, he curled up in the dressing room and fell into a deep sleep. Despite a three-week break at home he was never the same during the rest of the winter and cut a forlorn figure in the closing days of the World Cup. Although his Test place was never in danger there was talk that it may have brought down the curtain on his one-day career.He couldn’t have asked for a better haul of wickets as he removed Sri Lanka’s senior trio, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara. They were ideal conditions for Anderson with a heavy atmosphere conducive to swing but he made them count. “For two days it was lovely sunshine, then today it rained again,” Dilshan said wryly. “It was helpful for the bowlers.””It was a frustrating winter in the one-day form for the team and me personally,” Anderson admitted. “I felt like I didn’t perform to the standards I set myself. I was very disappointed and just glad to keep my place in the squad and get a place in the XI. Happily the wickets came for me but I thought we bowled brilliantly as a unit. Whatever it was during the winter I put it behind me at start of the season with Lancashire and then in the Test series. I’ve worked really hard, there are a lot of improvements I have to make on my one-day game and I’ve started on those things.”Anderson, though, didn’t quite get everything he wished for. “He fully deserves his four wickets and was begging me for one more over to get his fifth,” Cook said. “It was an outstanding performance up front but especially from Jimmy. To get their dangermen out early got us well ahead of the game.”Cook’s satisfaction will come from the victory rather than his personal achievement. All that can be said about his 5 off three balls was that strike-rate wasn’t an issue. Being caught down the leg side – even though bowlers will disagree – was unlucky. “That’s the game, I shouldn’t have edged it so fine,” he said.However, Cook will be very keen for this series not to be dominated by whether he makes runs or not, and for that to be the case he needs England to win. “It doesn’t get much better than that, to win by such a big margin in a shorter game like that was a fantastic effort from the lads,” he said. “But let’s not get too carried with how the team did or how I did. It’s just a good start. We’ve got to keep our feet on the floor.”There was a hint of irony that at 32-overs per side the contest was actually closer to the Twenty20 version that England made such a hash of on Saturday (there were even six Powerplay overs left) than the full one-day international they were due to play. When play resumed at 5pm after the thunderstorms England were left with 25 overs to build a total and the way they did it was far more encouraging than what was on display in Bristol.A pitch with more pace enabled Kieswetter to hit through the line, Pietersen was sparky before pulling a long hop to midwicket and Eoin Morgan added the gloss as he so often does. Then, just as it appeared another England one-day innings would fizzle out, the fit-again Bresnan hit 23 off 14 balls as 210 turned into 230.In his second coming as an international cricketer Kieswetter has promised a tighter technique and more selectiveness, but without losing any of the natural flair that attracted the selectors. An innings of 61 off 56 balls suggests he has found a good balance.”He can hit the ball really hard and showed it here, that’s why he’s in the side and it’s great for him to get back to scoring runs straight away,” Cook said. “He’s worked really hard, let’s not get carried away with one innings but good things come when you put the hours in. That’s why you do it.”That praise of Kieswetter was the second time Cook mentioned not getting carried away. He isn’t the first England one-day captain to start, or resume, the job with victory. Paul Collingwood did it in 2007, Kevin Pietersen in 2008 and Andrew Strauss in 2009. None of those reigns ended happily. Cook knows he will have his fair share of tough days in the job and far tougher questions to answer.

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.

Soft-spoken Towhid Hridoy has 'no regrets' after missing century on ODI debut

Towhid Hridoy’s dream run of 2023 continued into his ODI debut in Sylhet. His 92 in the first ODI against Ireland is a Bangladeshi debutant’s highest score in this format. There was an air of inevitability about his innings, firstly complementing in the 135-run stand with Shakib Al Hasan, and then cutting loose in the 80-run quickfire stand with his idol Mushfiqur Rahim.The soft-spoken Hridoy said that he wanted to maintain his aggressive intent, a mantra he developed since the disastrous BPL campaign from 2022. Hridoy said that he tried to learn from Shakib during their partnership, but his main focus was on himself.”I wanted to have the right intent,” Hridoy said after the game. “I didn’t try to bat to get settled at the crease. I tried to play each ball to its merit. It was a great feeling batting with Shakib . He is such an experienced batter. I was learning constantly from him. I really enjoyed it. He was giving me advice at times. When I thought I needed to something, I asked him. He was encouraging me, telling to bat as deep as possible.”Hridoy said that it was a great moment from him to bat with Mushfiqur in the latter part of the Bangladesh innings, since it was a moment from the wicketkeeper-batter’s career, 16 years ago, that inspired Hridoy in the first place.”In 2007 when Mushfiq won us the game against India in the World Cup, he took a stump from that game. When I saw that stump in person during a programme in Bogra, I was really inspired by it. I was very little. I dreamed from that day that I want to play for the national team. Today he said some inspiring words, like he wants me to serve Bangladesh cricket for a long time,” said Hridoy.He said that there’s no regret about not reaching the three-figure mark, when he could have been the first from Bangladesh to do so on ODI debut. “I give all praise to Allah. I could have been out early. I am happy with what I got. I always thank Allah. I got what I was in my Rizq (provision). Hopefully I will do better next time. I have no regrets. I hope those making their debuts later, hope they can do even better,” he said.Hridoy is one of the rare products of the BPL, a tournament that is known for organizing and administrative faults. He made 403 runs in this season’s BPL, batting in an aggressive way that no one expected him to. His batting was on the reasons Sylhet Strikers reached the tournament final this year.It was also Hridoy’s failure in the 2022 BPL that motivated him. Hridoy was on strike in the last ball of last year’s BPL final. He was having a woeful time with the bat, scoring runs at 97.84 strike-rate, averaging only 17. Against Comilla Victorians’ Shohidul Islam, Hridoy hit a half-volley to cover, just running a single as Fortune Barishal fell short by one run.”[My aggressive intent and fearless batting] started after playing badly in the 2022 BPL. I thought I should change myself since that tournament. I tried everything including changing my mentality. As much as possible. It was a bad season for me. I tried to get as far away from it.”I was in the HP (high performance) camp and played domestic cricket in the last 12 months. I spoke to [Khaled Mahmud] Sujon sir regularly. He knew me from my childhood. Shohel Islam sir was always there for me. I have spent the most time talking to him,” he said.Hridoy has had more heartbreak in his life. When he was only 12 years old, a man swindled him of a lot of money when he had come to Dhaka for the first time. It turned out that the academy he had intended to join didn’t exist at all. He nearly gave up the game before Mahmud, the former national captain and current BCB director, kept him in the straight and narrow to continue playing in the age-group levels.”I lost a lot when I went to that academy. I didn’t want to continue playing cricket. My father never supported me to play cricket. My parents don’t understand the game but whenever I used to be adamant with my mother, she would relent.”Around that time when I wanted to stop playing, Sujon sir really supported me. This is from my U16 days. He always gave me opportunities from playing in the Dhaka First Division league,” he said.Hridoy said that his parents were delighted with his inclusion in the Bangladesh team, particularly his mother who would often go around his father’s back to help Hridoy pursue his dream. “My parents are very happy, especially my mother. She always supported me. I was always pressured about my studies, but I didn’t really pursue it. I was focused on my cricket,” he said.

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