All posts by h716a5.icu

Rain ruins second one-dayer

Ireland’s second ODI against Kenya was washed out in Belfast

Cricinfo staff25-Aug-2008 – no result
ScorecardIreland’s second ODI against Kenya was washed out in Belfast when rain had an early, and ultimately final, say with the home side two down after eight overs.The start was already delayed until midday through showers but Kenya eventually won the toss and sent Ireland in, a decision that paid off when Peter Ongondo struck with his first ball in the second over of the match, trapping William Porterfield with a full one. Thomas Odoyo then removed Gary Wilson in the next over, the batsman failing to get forward to a straight one.The home side were in early trouble, then, at 3 for 2 but Andre Botha and Paul Stirling had begun to rebuild, however doggedly, when the rains returned washing out play. The umpires eventually called the match off at 4.10pm.Ireland’s series lead is now an unassailable one, at 1-0, but Kenya have the chance to draw the series when the sides meet again on the same ground on Wednesday.

Mike McGrath drops Swansea manager update

Swansea City have been dealt a major blow in their bid to appoint Steve Cooper’s successor at the Liberty Stadium.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to a claim made by Mike McGrath, with The Telegraph journalist revealing in a post on Twitter that John Eustace, who was the leading candidate to take over from Cooper, has reluctantly turned the club’s approach down.

McGrath continues by stating that, despite agreements being made between Queens Park Rangers and Swansea, the 41-year-old will now be remaining as Mark Warburton’s number two at QPR, so Jason Levien and Steven Kaplan will have to turn their attention to other targets.

A report by Wales Online claimed that both Cameron Toshack and Michael Appleton could be options for the Swans owners, with both having previously been targeted by the Championship club prior to Cooper’s appointment.

Silver lining

While Eustace’s rejection may well have sent both Levien and Kaplan into crisis mode, as there is now just a little under two weeks ahead of the new Championship season kicking off, the fact that the QPR assistant will not be joining the club this summer presents Swansea with something of an opportunity.

Indeed, while the 41-year-old has impressed during his time at the west London club, Appleton has arguably proven with Lincoln City that he would be a better fit for the Swans.

Much like Cooper, the 45-year-old guided Lincoln to the play-off final with a rather unfancied group of players last season, demonstrating his ability to bring the best out of a squad that may not be blessed with the most talented footballers in their league.

Furthermore, the former Leicester City caretaker manager also clearly prides himself on the development of younger players, with his Imps team ranking as the third youngest side in League One last time out.

This is a very deliberate choice by Appleton, who has overseen a drop of seven years in the Lincoln squad’s average age since taking over at the LNER Stadium back in 2019, something that would appear to indicate the 45-year-old prioritises a club’s long term future rather than chasing immediate rewards.

Indeed, this is yet another comparison to Cooper, with it being reported that higher-ranking sides approach both Swansea and Lincoln regarding loan deals for their up and coming stars before offering them to other clubs, as a result of the two managers’ reputations for youth development.

As such, while missing out on Eustace will have frustrated Levien and Kaplan, if his rejection means that Swansea end up appointing Appleton, it would appear as if the QPR man’s decision could have brought with it a huge silver lining for the Welsh club.

In other news: Levien could land Swansea’s perfect Cooper replacement by appointing “exciting” 43 y/o

Sunderland: Black Cats eye Stephen O’Donnell swoop

Sunderland are interested in a swoop for Motherwell right-back Stephen O’Donnell, as reported by Football League World.

The Lowdown: Sunderland gearing up

Progressing towards what is a critical campaign for the Black Cats, boss Lee Johnson will be under no illusions that he has to find a way to lift Sunderland out of Sky Bet League One this time around.

Making moves from a recruitment standpoint, the North East giants have completed deals for four arrivals in the form of Alex Pritchard, Jacob Carney, Corry Evans and Callum Doyle [Transfermarkt].

Now, they look set for another transfer pursuit owing to recent developments.

The Latest: Sunderland interested in O’Donnell swoop

Looking to bring in a right-back, Sunderland are confident they can strike a deal for 29-year-old O’Donnell for less than £500,000 [Football League World].

He is contracted to the Fir Park side until 2023, and would be a considerable coup for Johnson’s promotion chasers should a deal come to fruition.

O’Donnell has been a regular for the Scotland international team, earning rave reviews for his man of the match performance at EURO 2020 against England at Wembley [Daily Record].

The Verdict: O’Donnell would be an astute signing for the Black Cats

Bringing experience and quality to the table, the Bellshill-born full-back would be an excellent piece of business for Sunderland.

In 2020/21, he impressed for the Steelmen, registering eight goal contributions in 41 fixtures; three goals and five assists [Transfermarkt].

Furthermore, he showed his defensive prowess across the year, successfully winning 2.2 aerial duels on average per game [WhoScored].

Once labelled as ‘exceptional’ by Scotland manager Steve Clarke, the Black Cats should look to sign him up as a matter of priority [The Scottish Sun].

In other news, Sunderland fans have slammed one of their players after a poor performance.

 

Digicel proposes compromise to contract row

The row between the West Indies Cricket Board and its sponsors, Digicel, took another twist on Thursday with a proposal from the company to settle its dispute with the board

Cricinfo staff11-Sep-2008
Digicel has upped the ante in the dispute with the WICB © Digicel
The row between the West Indies Cricket Board and its sponsors, Digicel, took another twist on Thursday with a proposal from the company to settle its dispute with the board.In August, Digicel filed an injunction in the High Court in London seeking to have the WICB withdraw all approval for the Stanford Super Series which, it claimed, encroached its “exclusive sponsorship rights”. The move came in the light of rumours that Stanford was close to signing Cable and Wireless (Digicel’s competitor and a former sponsor of the West Indies team) as a sponsor for the series.The court put the matter to arbitration, and the results of this are due in October. However, in a statement sent to Cricinfo, Digicel said it proposed a “compromise solution will involve the waiver of a considerable number of legal and commercial rights owned by Digicel by virtue of its sole and exclusive sponsorship agreement with the WICB”.The conditions of the offer are that the Stanford side in the 20/20 for 20 match against England on November 1 wear official West Indies kit with Digicel branding; that no telecommunications company be involved in the event; and that Digicel’s costs be paid for by the board.While this might appear one-sided, Digicel claims that in return it will be “foregoing a large number of valuable legal rights and entitlements including broadcast rights, exclusively branded pitch mats, sight screens, perimeter boards, promotional opportunities, advertising, content rights and various other avenues for commercial use that it currently owns by virtue of its sole and exclusive sponsorship agreement with the WICB”.The statement concludes: “Digicel would call upon both the WICB and Stanford to engage constructively on this matter and to put cricket in the West Indies first. Digicel’s compromise solution is a very credible alternative and provides something for every party concerned.”Insiders believe that the WICB might have little option but to agree to the bulk of the demands, because without the board’s backing, the series could be deemed unofficial which, given the precedent set with the ICL in India, would create numerous issues for the players involved.As far as the ECB are concerned, however, the matches were approved by the ICC back in June, and so they have no doubts about their status. An ECB spokesman told Cricinfo that the other details were solely an issue for the WICB.A source at Digicel said that it had notified both the WICB and Stanford organisers about the proposal and was waiting for a response.

Baby Blues aim for back to back

Dominic Thornely is in charge of a young New South Wales that will this season defend their first-class title without their top batsman and their leading bowler

Brydon Coverdale05-Oct-2008
Dominic Thornely will be one of few older, wiser heads in a youthful New South Wales squad © Getty Images
It’s only natural for the previous season’s champions to start the next SheffieldShield campaign as favourites. But what happens when that team loses itsleading run scorer and its top wicket taker? New South Wales are about tofind out as they aim to go back to back in 2008-09 with a side short on experiencebut long on talent.Last summer they relied heavily on Simon Katich, whose record tally of 1506Pura Cup runs was nearly three times greater than that of any of his team-mates.Doug Bollinger carried the attack with 45 wickets and headed the competitionlist despite missing four games. Both men are in India with the Test squad- along with another six Blues – and there is every chance Australian commitmentswill keep them away from the state scene for much of the season.In the absence of the usual on-field leaders, Katich and Brad Haddin, theacting captain is Dominic Thornely. An indication of the fresh group he willbe guiding came with the Blues’ announcement of their squad for the firstone-day match of the season: eight of the 12 men have played fewer than tenFR Cup games. It will be a similar story in the first-class competition.”We’ve addressed the fact that we’ve lost someone who’s made 1000 runs forus,” Thornely said of Katich’s impending absence. “We lost Phil Jaques lastyear, with every loss of a player there’s an opportunity for another.”It still may well be a case of the baby Blues go back to back. For us todo that these younger guys are going to have to step up. If we can get 20to 30% more from some of these guys that could be enough.”Among Thornely’s “baby Blues” are the opener Phillip Hughes, 19, who madea century in last season’s Pura Cup final, and the top-order batsman PeterForrest, 22, who like Hughes toured India with Australia A last month. Thereis also Steven Smith, 19, an allrounder who combines top-order batting andlegspin, and Moises Henriques, 21, who spent time with the Australia squadin Darwin this year.While the Sheffield Shield – the traditional name is back after a decadeas the Pura Cup – is the major prize, New South Wales are also desperateto improve their limited-overs efforts. Last season they finished on thebottom of the table as Tasmania claimed the FR Cup and shrinking the gulfbetween the Blues’ four-day and one-day form is one of Thornely’s goals.Consistent Victoria want to step upVictoria head into the domestic season with a strong record over the past couple of years but little to show for it. Last summer they reached the final in all three competitions but for the second year running emerged only with the Twenty20 title, having also lost the FR Cup decider in 2006-07.Replicating last season’s consistency will be a fraction harder with the potential for more Victorians to spend time in the Australia setup. Cameron White and Peter Siddle are in India with the Test squad and David Hussey is becoming a one-day regular.”All in all it was a very, very good season as opposed to a great season,” the coach Greg Shipperd told the . “Our challenge is to take that one step further, complicated perhaps by the fact that we will now be experiencing some Australian player loss from our squad.”Which is the other side of the coin but one which we are really happy to accept. It provides churn in your squad which gives opportunity to emerging young players as well.”Part of their one-day plan will include a heavy focus on spin. Three slowbowlers were named in their first FR Cup squad – Smith, Nathan Hauritz andSteve O’Keefe – and with Beau Casson also keen to push for further international opportunities, there could soon be a return to the days of spinners dominatingat the SCG. That’s without even considering Stuart MacGill, who is yetto announce whether he will be available for state selection having retiredfrom international cricket.”This year you’ll see a lot of spin bowling done by New South Wales,” Thornelysaid. “We’ve just played some practice games where I used four spin bowlers.Five spinners in a one-day match is not unrealistic this year. Spin bowlingis where it is at for us at the moment.”Thornely has filled in as the state’s captain before, although this seasonit will be almost a full-time role if Katich keeps making Test runs.He describes himself as the kind of leader who will freely allow his mento play their natural games. It is a method that looks brilliant when itworks but can also backfire spectacularly. In his first match asthe stand-in skipper, Thornely presided over New South Wales’ all-timelowest Pura Cup total of 53 against Tasmania.”I was told ten minutes before the match that I was captain, Simon [Katich]pulled out with a broken thumb,” Thornely said. “Our wicketkeeper was alsoin doubt with an injury and wasn’t even at the ground yet, so I was literallywalking out with a team sheet of ten players.”I looked at Simon after the innings and said ‘I think you can have the captaincyback’. But he predicted I’d get a hundred in the second innings and we’dgive them a challenge and that’s what happened. I look back on that gameand it gave me a lot of belief as a captain.”In that 2006-07 season, Tasmania went on to win the title. Thornely expectsthe major challengers this summer to be Victoria, who reached the finalsin all three formats last season. He also believes Queensland will bounceback following a rare bad year in 2007-08, when they finished last in thePura Cup. Both the Bushrangers and the Bulls have gainedimportant players during the off-season.The domestic summer kicks off on Wednesday with a one-daygame between Western Australia and New South Wales at the WACA. The SheffieldShield campaign begins on Friday when the Warriors host the Blues andTasmania travel to Queensland. Thornely knows that this season more thanany other, finding form quickly will be critical.”We play 75% of our season by Christmas,” he said. “We need to get on a rolland get into some good form. If we don’t hit the ground running then comeNovember-December, half our season is over and there’ll be some real catchingup to do.”

Newcastle transfer update on Tuanzebe

Newcastle United are reportedly set to lose out on the signing of Axel Tuanzebe to one of their rivals in the Premier League.

The Lowdown: Newcastle were favourites

The St. James’ Park faithful were reportedly in pole position to sign Tuanzebe not so long ago, with Steve Bruce being an admirer of the player who he has previously worked with.

People in the camp of the Manchester United central defender were thought to be ‘delighted’ with the North East club’s interest, although no deal has ever come into fruition.

The Latest: Villa set to sign Tuanzebe

As per The Athletic, Aston Villa are now set to sign Tuanzebe on a loan deal for the 2021/22 season, meaning that the Tyneside club are set to lose out on his signature.

It is reportedly ‘expected’ that he will now join Dean Smith’s team, who is keen to sign him as cover for both centre-back and right-back.

The Verdict: Shame

It would be a real shame for the Magpies to lose out on the signing of Tuanzebe, especially to one of their rivals in the top flight.

Described as ‘outstanding’ by Ole Gunnar Solskjaer after an impressive display in the UEFA Europa League against Granada back in April, he is capable of performing at the highest level, having also racked up a fair amount of experience in playing in the Premier League (Transfermarkt).

Nonetheless, his added versatility would have been very useful to have in Bruce’s squad, but it looks as if they are going to miss out on the chance to sign him.

In other news, find out who NUFC have now reportedly agreed a deal to sign here!

Mushtaq named as England spin coach

Mushtaq Ahmed, the former Pakistan and Sussex legspinner, has been appointed as the ECB’s spin-bowling coach

Cricinfo staff23-Oct-2008
Mushtaq Ahmed twirling away for Sussex © Getty Images
Mushtaq Ahmed, the former Pakistan and Sussex legspinner, has been appointed as the ECB’s spin-bowling coach.Mushtaq retired from first-class cricket this summer, and will work with spinners in England’s Test and one-day squads, in addition to the ECB’s development programmes. The ECB said that Mushtaq will be looking to sever his ties with the ICL as soon as possible.”We are very excited that a bowler of Mushtaq’s standing has decided to join our team of specialist coaches based at the performance centre at Loughborough,” David Parsons, the ECB performance director and former head spin coach, said. “He will have a role to play at all levels of the game. His primary task will be to mentor our leading spin bowlers in the Test, one-day and performance squads but we also believe he can help encourage youngsters at the grass roots of the game to take up and learn the art of spin bowling.”Hugh Morris, the ECB’s managing director, said: “It’s critical we nurture and develop the next generation of England spin bowlers using the expertise and knowledge of former players such as Mushtaq. Spin has been integral to the success of the world’s best cricket teams and we are keen to ensure that there is a constant flow of spin-bowling talent into the England set-up.”Mushtaq, 38, last played for Pakistan in 2003. Overlooked by his country, he carved out a very successful county career, and in 2003 he became the first bowler in five years to take 100 wickets in the English season. That was instrumental in guiding Sussex to the first Championship title in their history, a feat he and they repeated in 2006 and the following season. He has bowled over 26,000 overs in all competitions, taking 598 wickets. He ended his first-class career with over 1400 wickets, and is currently playing for the Lahore Badshahs in the ICL.

Newcastle transfer update on Longstaff

Newcastle United may now reportedly lose Sean Longstaff to a rival club in the Premier League.

The Lowdown: Davies swap?

It has previously been reported that Longstaff could be used in a potential swap deal to lure Tom Davies away from Everton to St. James’ Park.

However, whether that deal comes into fruition is another question, given that the new 2021/22 season kicks off on Friday night and the end of the summer transfer window is edging closer.

The Latest: Longstaff eyed

As per The Liverpool Echo, Rafa Benitez is considering a move to bring Longstaff to Goodison Park, as he has entered the final year of his current contract in the North East.

He is being discussed by the Toffees as a potential target in this window, and so the Tyneside club risk losing him before the deadline hits.

The Verdict: Keep

Steve Bruce needs as big of a squad as possible if the Magpies are going to kick on in the new campaign, and that would mean keeping hold of players like Longstaff.

Once called ‘faultless’ by Alan Shearer after an impressive performance against Manchester City back in 2019, Longstaff is a local lad, and one that the Toon Army would love to see thriving.

Of course he has had his dips in form like any young player, but it’s not hard to imagine the midfield maestro returning to his best when stadiums are packed full of passionate fans.

He does not take up much space on the wage bill either, as he currently earns just £22,500-per-week at NUFC, one of the lowest earners in the entire squad, and if they ever do consider selling him, it should not be to a fellow rival in the top flight.

In other news, find out what ‘great bit of business’ Newcastle have done here!

Spurs confirm Cirkin exit

Tottenham Hotspur have now confirmed another exit from N17 in a social media announcement, with youngster Dennis Cirkin completing a move to League One giants Sunderland.

The Lowdown: Cirkin refuses new deal…

The 19-year-old, who was allegedly offered a new deal at Spurs, turned down the opportunity to sign fresh terms – leading to The Black Cats taking a firm interest.

Football Insider broke news of Sunderland’s advances to sign the teenager from Tottenham and that was swiftly reiterated by other reliable sources, with journalist Charlie Eccleshare of The Athletic backing the move to go through (Twitter).

Cirkin, as per Football Insider, was reportedly having his Wearside medical on Tuesday after Spurs accepted a six-figure bid.

The Latest: Spurs confirm another departure…

Amid the plethora of outgoings at Tottenham, with Joe Hart, Juan Foyth, Erik Lamela, Toby Alderweireld, Danny Rose and Paulo Gazzaniga all having left the club permanently (Transfermarkt), Cirkin has now joined them.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-latest-gossip/” title=”Tottenham latest gossip!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

It has now been confirmed by the Lilywhites as they drop a social media announcement and send a farewell message to the defender.

“We have reached agreement with Sunderland AFC for the transfer of Dennis Cirkin,” Tottenham stated on Twitter.

“Good luck, @DCirkin3.”

The Verdict: Loss for Spurs…

Cirkin’s move to Sunderland will come as disappointing for a fair few Spurs supporters who wanted to see him grow as another one of Tottenham’s shining academy products.

Former Spurs boss Jose Mourinho was among the first to notice his skills upon arriving in north London, saying the youngster had ‘a lot of quality’ way back in November 2019.

Time will tell if Cirkin could turn out to be the one who got away – it is not yet clear whether there is a buy-back clause of some sort in the deal.

In other news: ‘Wow’, ‘Fantastic’…Sky Sports pundit blown away by ‘huge’ claim involving Spurs, find out more here.

Tendulkar shines on see-saw first day

Belligerent strokeplay, at over five an over, made way for a more measured approach as Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman steadily gnawed away at Australia in Nagpur

The Bulletin by Jamie Alter06-Nov-2008
Scorecard and ball-by-ball-details
How they were out

Sachin Tendulkar brought up his 40th Test hundred to lead India’s rally to 311 for 5 on the opening day © Getty Images
Almost everything Sachin Tendulkar did today – from opening his account with a brush off the pads for four, to punching gloves with VVS Laxman at lunch to strutting back after tea – pointed to a batsman full of intent. His efforts paid off, despite a run-out chance on 74 and drops on 85 and 98 off the persevering debutant Jason Krejza, as he scored his 40th Test hundred to lead India’s recovery, after a pre-lunch flurry of wickets, to 311 for 5 on the opening day in Nagpur.India lost debutant M Vijay, Rahul Dravid and Virender Sehwag in 29 deliveries towards the end of the first session before the two in-form veterans shored up the innings. For nearly three and a half hours, Tendulkar and Laxman batted gracefully for 146 runs, their stand the highlight of India’s day.Tendulkar looked at ease since replacing Dravid – out for a duck – driving straight and impregnable in defence. He was the early aggressor in the partnership with Laxman, unfurling a slog-sweep over midwicket and a lofted on-drive in one Krejza over to raise India’s 150. While the faster men were driven through cover, flicked to midwicket quite fluently or on-driven with laser-like precision, the spinners were tackled with excellent footwork.Laxman, not at his most silky and sublime, collected his runs slowly and mechanically. As in Delhi, where he stroked 259 unbeaten runs, he stood firm, as has become his trademark. Even when the ball stopped on him, Laxman relied on those supple wrists and worked Krejza over the infield. The only phase when he was troubled was during Brett Lee’s second spell, when the bowler obtained a bit of reverse-swing.The scoring rate dipped with each session, from five – after Sehwag had blazed away – to four and under, but the objective rarely wavered. The pair scurried hard singles and dispatched anything loose – of which there was plenty – and almost always picking their mark whenever they went aerial.Tendulkar slowed down as tea approached, perhaps mindful of his mistakes in Mohali and Delhi. His teatime 62 comprised eight fours, seven of which were muscularly hit on the leg side. He still outpaced Laxman on resumption, adding another 47 in the final session. A fierce sweep from outside the off stump and over wide mid-on took Tendulkar into the eighties and he should have stayed there. Tendulkar waltzed down to Krejza, didn’t get to the pitch of the ball, and Mitchell Johnson dropped a comfortable chance running back from mid-off. The next delivery, Laxman coolly went past fifty with a drive wide of sweeper-cover, but a loose shot against Krejza, making room to cut, was snapped up on the second attempt by Brad Haddin.Proximity to his century seemed to have fired up Tendulkar, who dashed out, very untypically, against Krejza on 98 and looked on as Lee spilled a running catch at mid-off. Having spent 11 deliveries on 99, Tendulkar raised his bat in the warm Nagpur air after raising his hundred – and tenth against Australia – with a spanking cut. He hardly played a shot thereafter and fell lbw to Johnson for 109 with 15 minutes to go.Smart StatsSachin Tendulkar’s 109 was his 91st score of fifty or above, the highest for any batsman. He overtook Allan Border, who made 27 centuries and 63 fifties. Tendulkar became the first batsman to reach 5000 runs in the first innings of Tests, and averages 72.65 for the same. His average in the fourth innings, however, is 33.60 in 55 matches.Tendulkar’s 40th Test century was also his tenth against Australia. Only Jack Hobbs, with 12 centuries in 41 Tests against Australia, has more.VVS Laxman, during his innings of 64, went past 1000 runs in 2008. It’s the most he’s scored in a calendar year, the previous highest being 984 runs in 15 Tests in 2002.Brett Lee averages 64.28 with the ball this series, which is his highest in the four-Test series he has played against India. He averaged 59.50 in the series against India in 2003-04 in Australia.Billy Bowden became the tenth umpire to stand in fifty Tests. Steve Bucknor heads the list with 124.Jason Krejza, who took 3 for 138, is just 12 runs shy of becoming the spinner to concede the most runs in an innings on debut for Australia. Shane Warne’s 1 for 150 against India in Sydney in 1992 is at the top of the list. A 98-run partnership between India’s new opening pair occupied much of the morning session before Australia fought back, led by Krejza’s double-strike. Sehwag took care of the new-ball threat from Johnson, driving and scooping him through backward of point, slashing him over third man, and whipping him delectably across the line. A genuine outside edge off Johnson, which bounced low in front of Matthew Hayden at first slip, when Vijay was on 11, was the nearest Australia came to a chance early on.Sehwag’s panache was complemented by Vijay’s solidity on perhaps the easiest track to make your debut as a batsman. Allowed to drive on the up mid-way through the first session, he also tucked the straighter deliveries for singles that kept the score ticking. Vijay was shaping well, and India had the ideal platform, when Shane Watson struck. Sehwag looked set for a hundred, hitting nine fours and a six in his 66, but couldn’t capitalise on his good start, and dragged a turning delivery from Krejza back onto his stumps shortly after Dravid fell.One down in the series, with a highly creditable draw in Delhi following a drubbing in Mohali, Australia were aiming to salvage their bruised pride. Evenly split in pace and spin, but mellowed by another under-performing display from Lee, Australia relied on Krejza to handle the bulk of the bowling. He came in under a degree of pressure and showed enough stomach for a fight after he was mauled in his first three overs. The Tendulkar drops would have hurt, but Laxman’s wicket was reward for an encouraging debut.Lee, steady of line, lacked in speed. Watson lacked variety, and though he mixed up his pace he remained innocuous after removing Vijay. Cameron White, employed only reluctantly, turned his legbreak painfully slowly and never threatened. Johnson obtained disconcerting lift but his tendency to pitch too full made it easy for the batsmen. Over the next four days, Australia will need to be far more productive in their attempt to avoid their first series loss since 2005.

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