Jayawardene masterclass defies England

Sri Lanka dug themselves a hole in Galle but had their captain to thank for digging them out of it again

Andrew McGlashan in Galle26-Mar-2012Sri Lanka have been playing one-day cricket for the last three months and it showed on the opening day in Galle. With one notable exception. Mahela Jayawardene has the ability to make batting effortless even when others around him are digging a hole and he single-handedly defied the England attack to ensure Sri Lanka had enough runs on the board to be firmly in the contest.To say that Jayawardene has jumped at the chance to captain Sri Lanka again, after replacing Tillakaratne Dilshan, is stretching his enthusiasm for the job. “It’s a new challenge for me and I’m enjoying it at the moment,” he said the day before the Test started. The captaincy, though, does appear to inspire his batting as he averages more than 70 as as leader – not that his overall mark of 51.14 is shabby. Perhaps the more remarkable statistic is his 13 hundreds from 29 Tests as captain, a phenomenal conversion rate of nearly one every other match.And this one, his 30th overall and seventh against England, can go down as one of his best partly because, unlike many of his team-mates, he has seamlessly switched from one-day cricket to Test mode. He was at the crease in the third over after James Anderson struck twice in two balls and set the tone by calmly playing out the hat-trick delivery. There is not much that gets Jayawardene flustered. His first scoring shot was a cut behind point and three deliveries later he whipped another boundary off his pads to send ominous warnings to England.”Everyone is very aware what a special innings it was,” Graham Ford, the Sri Lanka coach, said. “It’s very tough to go in in that situation on a pitch that doesn’t look to be that easy to score freely on. When you are under pressure you need to absorb and it was a fine example of that. Gradually he fought into the innings then put the pressure back on the opposition.”Not that Jayawardene entirely shelved one-day mode. His play of Graeme Swann showed all the hallmarks of the limited-overs game as he milked the offspinner, having greeted him third ball with a slog-sweep for six, to the extent that he took 59 runs off the 68 balls Swann delivered to him.”He’s been around the game for such a long time and everyone knows what a great cricketing brain he’s got,” Ford said. “That was a decision to try and disrupt things, he was battling like crazy to get us out of a hole and one of the ways to do that was to disrupt the bowlers and he’s a good enough player to carry it out.”The importance of his wicket was shown when Andrew Strauss used up England’s final review – the first having been wasted in the opening over the match – for an lbw shout by Swann during the first session. It was perhaps worth a gamble with two in the bank, but England were desperate to remove Jayawardene.He was dropped on 90, when he chipped a slower ball back at Anderson, and next ball swung a good-length delivery over midwicket. Yet even that was grace mixed with power. The innings, already a gem, became a masterclass as he farmed the strike with the lower-order for company. The eighth and ninth wickets have so far added 100 runs with Rangana Herath and Chanaka Welegedera contributing 15 between them.”It’s one of the better Test innings I’ve seen, considering no one else got much above 20,” Anderson said. “He had the knack of knowing when to go for a big shot and when to grind it out a bit.”Last year when Australia played at Galle the pitch received an ICC warning for excessive early turn. Yet Jayawardene still managed to score 105 in the second innings. By comparison, this first-day pitch will have felt like a featherbed. That’s not the reality, however. This surface is far better than the one produced last August – Galle could not afford another dodgy strip – but there was still enough turn to suggest spin will play a key role as the match develops.One delivery, in particular, from Swann leapt from a good length and took Jayawardene’s glove only to loop just out of the fingertips of a diving Anderson running back at slip. It was the exception rather the norm but, as often in Sri Lanka, batting last won’t be easy. Yet the ease with which Jayawardene batted as shadows lengthened also showed that all is required is a bit of application.It should come as no surprise that Jayawardene has made runs at Galle. When he collected a boundary off Monty Panesar to move to 69 he reached 2000 runs on the ground and became the first batsman to cross that landmark at two venues, the other being the SSC in Colombo. After being reminded of what Jayawardene can produce England will be grateful that the second Test is at least being staged at the P Sara Oval where he averages a positively human 41.Edited by David Hopps

Grace Harris replaces injured Darcie Brown for Bangladesh ODIs

Grace Harris has replaced Darcie Brown in Australia’s ODI squad for their tour of Bangladesh.Brown was ruled out because of a navicular stress injury in her left foot. A Cricket Australia statement said that an exact timeframe for Brown’s return will be determined in due course.Harris had previously been selected only for the T20Is but will now leave sooner. Her WPL stint with UP Warriorz has already ended after they failed to qualify for the playoffs. Australia have not brought in a replacement for Brown in the T20I squad.Related

  • Jonassen omitted for Bangladesh tour, Vlaeminck recalled

  • Harris doesn't want to be the big dog, just the best she can be

In another update, allrounder Heather Graham, who was a stand-by for the series, is now unavailable following an illness.Jess Jonassen had been omitted from Australia’s squad, which was announced last month, and Tayla Vlaeminck had earned a recall.Australia will play three ODIs and as many T20Is in their first ever tour of Bangladesh, starting March 21. The ODIs will be part of the Women’s Championship.Australia are currently at the top of the table with ten wins in 15 games and Bangladesh are placed seventh with four wins from 15 games.

Updated Australia squad for Bangladesh tour

Alyssa Healy (capt), Ash Gardner, Kim Garth, Grace Harris, Alana King, Phoebe Litchfield, Tahlia McGrath, Sophie Molineux, Beth Mooney, Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham, Tayla Vlaeminck

Big-bang Babar quietly takes Hong Kong forward

The Hong Kong captain was always a hard hitter of the ball, but now he has extended that aggression to the rest of his game, and infected his team-mates

Peter Della Penna12-Mar-2018In Chinese culture, perhaps there are fewer symbols that are more well-known to outsiders than the yin and the yang. It represents the balance between opposite forces to keep things in harmony.Babar Hayat, the 26-year-old Hong Kong captain, is an embodiment of such duelling dualities. “I’m a quiet person,” he says in matter-of-fact manner during a sit-down interview with ESPNcricinfo ahead of the World Cup Qualifiers in Zimbabwe.That’s putting it mildly. Despite his imposing physical presence and reputation as one of the biggest hitters on the Associate scene, it takes some effort to coax words out of Hayat. Yet, his resume speaks for itself.Leading scorer in the most recent edition of the ICC Intercontinental Cup. Three centuries in his first six first-class matches. Third overall in runs in the WCL Championship. Hitting 16 off the final over to beat Afghanistan in a T20I for the first time, at the 2015 World T20 Qualifier in Ireland, and sending Hong Kong to the World T20 in India.Those are heady accomplishments for someone who never really had any ambition to become a professional cricketer, let alone captain his adopted homeland when he first arrived on Hong Kong shores as a 15-year-old. The transformation from a once timid boy to a quiet yet confident man – especially with a bat in hand – was made possible through hard work, grit and perseverance over the last 11 years.”When I started playing cricket, nobody knew me. I didn’t have any fame,” Hayat says of the path that led him to where he is today. Growing up in Attock, Pakistan, he played tape-ball cricket regularly, but when his father, a banker who had been living on and off in Hong Kong for 45 years, took the family to the island for good, Hayat had never played with a seasoned leather ball.Hayat didn’t know any English, or Cantonese either, when he found himself in Kowloon as a teenager. He was shy to begin with, and the language barrier made his transition to a new homeland more challenging. Enrolling at the Islamic Kasim Tuet Memorial College for his high school years in Hong Kong gave him a small buffer, allowing him to interact with students who might know Urdu, and also provided him a gateway into a whole new cricket community.

“It’s a culture within our dressing room where people tend to gravitate toward the best player, and that’s why we looked at Babar as being one of those characters”Simon Cook, Hong Kong head coach

“It was the first or second week of school and he was playing tape-ball cricket,” Aizaz Khan, a former high school classmate of Hayat’s and long-time Hong Kong team-mate, says of their first interaction, just a few weeks after Hayat had arrived in Hong Kong.”We had a big ground and I saw him smacking some big sixes. He looked very good and played some big shots and I was thinking whether I can get him to play in the Under-17 club team of ours since I was the captain.”I spoke to his cousin, who was in the same school, and asked, ‘Can you get Babar to play for us?’ Babar was new and didn’t really know anybody there. The first game he went there, he scored 40-plus and hit some huge sixes. The coach got him to play in the Sunday senior league. Since then, Babar’s been scoring runs everywhere.”Though he had only newly begun playing with a hard ball, it didn’t take long for Hayat to make his presence felt in Hong Kong’s domestic scene. In his second season playing in the Sunday premier division, he was named Player of the Year while representing Vagabonds CC. In demand, he was recruited to join the prestigious Kowloon CC for his third season, but Hayat says that despite the glamour, his still limited English language skills left him feeling uncomfortable in his surroundings, prompting a move to Little Sai Wan CC, where he got to work with former Hong Kong captain Munir Dar.”They had a good structure while building up youngsters, Little Sai Wan,” Hayat says. “They always wanted young guys to come up, and gave chances. When we played club cricket in Hong Kong, we played four to five U-16 guys in the team in the high-standard premier league. When they grew up, after three or four years, they’d get better.”Those opportunities as a teenager helped put him on the Hong Kong selection radar for junior teams. But he could not go to the 2010 U-19 World Cup in New Zealand – having migrating in 2007, he was just short of the required four years of residency to qualify for his new home. He did, however, make his senior team debut a year later as a 19-year-old, opening the batting while surrounded by 15,000 screaming Nepal fans at the 2011 Asian Cricket Council Twenty20 Cup in Kathmandu.”That was my first tour and I was shocked when I saw all the people around,” Hayat says.Babar Hayat poses with fans for photos while playing for Kowloon Cantons in a Hong Kong Blitz match•Getty Images”It was really tough for me to play for Hong Kong. Every time when I would go to bat, I was feeling nervous. You can say I was not a proper cricketer. They just sent me as a floater, and I’d open with Irfan Ahmed. That was not a great tour for me. I did not perform for my first three or four tours.”Part of the lack of confidence was the way in which his raw skillset, honed by tennis-ball bashing, was exposed against higher-class bowling.”When I first saw him in the national set-up, he was a player who could control a game but didn’t have the skills to do that, to bat for long periods of time,” says Simon Cook, Hong Kong head coach, who first came across Hayat on the club scene in his previous position as head coach at Hong Kong Cricket Club. “He didn’t have the technique.”Though his defence in particular was unrefined, Hayat’s mental toughness began to emerge as a dependable trait. It first showed up at the 2013 World T20 Qualifier in the UAE during a knockout match against Papua New Guinea. Having lost a final-ball heartbreaker to Nepal in the previous playoff match, Hong Kong had a second crack at clinching a maiden berth at a major ICC global tournament a day later. However, they needed to do it without captain Jamie Atkinson, who was injured in the loss to Nepal. The task became even more difficult when they collapsed to 19 for 4 inside the first four overs after choosing to bat.Hayat started to rebuild the innings, first with his Little Sai Wan club team-mate Dar in a 35-run stand. A match-defining 62-run partnership with future New Zealand international Mark Chapman followed, and Hayat’s 48 off 47 balls carried Hong Kong out of trouble and to an eventual 29-run win.Two summers later, at the next World T20 qualifier, in Ireland, Hayat would conjure up an even greater escape against Afghanistan, a team they had not beaten in six previous attempts in T20 cricket. Though Hong Kong had plenty of wickets in hand, the run rate started to climb in the final overs of chasing a target of 162.

“I didn’t want to bat. My legs were gone, my hamstrings were tired, my body was sore. I didn’t want to play the next game because I was so tired”Hayat on struggling with his fitness

“We controlled for quite a lot of the game and then suddenly it started to get a bit dicey,” said Cook, who was then an assistant coach on the Hong Kong staff. “He was batting in the middle order, and coming into the final over I was actually very confident. I said to Charlie Burke, who was head coach, ‘As long as Babar is still there when we’re facing the last over, we’ll still win this.'”As was the case in Abu Dhabi, Chapman and Hayat steered Hong Kong through a big chunk of the chase against Afghanistan with a 48-run stand, but Chapman fell caught on the boundary on the first ball of the final over, bowled by Mohammad Nabi, leaving 16 off five balls to win. Hayat came on strike for the second ball and clubbed a four and six to make it six off three balls.A wide and a three followed, putting Hayat’s fresh partner, Tanwir Afzal, on strike with two needed off two. A calamitous dropped return chance that ended in a run-out by Nabi allowed Hayat to get back on strike for the final ball, with his old high-school friend Aizaz at the non-striker’s end. Despite being known as Hong Kong’s biggest basher, Hayat instead showed maturity and clear-headed thinking given the situation.”When I went in and spoke to him, he wasn’t nervous or feeling the pressure,” Aizaz said. “He just said he’s not gonna go for a big hit, that he’d hit it along the ground, get one first and try to get the second, and that’s what happened. Nabi tried to bowl a quicker one and Babar just played it to long-off, toward extra cover, enough so we could get the second run.”Early in 2016, Hong Kong headed to the Asia Cup T20 Qualifier for some crucial preparation ahead of the World T20. Hayat produced the highest score by an Associate player in T20I cricket, making 122 off 60 balls against Oman in a match more infamously remembered for Chapman being mankaded at a key moment in a five-run loss for Hong Kong. However, those involved on the Hong Kong side felt the bigger culprit for the loss was ironically Hayat – his poor fitness, to be precise, in the heat and humidity of Fatullah.Babar blasts off during the World Cup Qualifiers•IDI/Getty Images”I was totally gone,” Hayat said. “I didn’t want to bat. My legs were gone, my hamstrings were tired, my body was sore. I didn’t want to play the next game because I was so tired. I didn’t want to mention it to the coaches because they knew my fitness wasn’t good because I was cramping.””He ended up on the losing side because he was over 100 kilos in weight and he wasn’t able to sustain his innings over 20 overs,” Cook said. “At that point, [122] was the third highest T20I score in any nation. So he had a fantastic innings, but his physical condition ended up costing us the game effectively. And it was that innings that cost him from being able to perform in the World T20 because he was so physically exhausted still, three weeks after that innings.”At the opening round of the World T20 in India, Hayat turned in scores of 9, 0 and 15 as Hong Kong went winless. The spillover fitness issues from the Asia Cup hundred against Oman opened his eyes, and prompted the coaching staff to sit him down for a frank discussion.”It was after those two back-to-back tournaments that we sat down outlining plans for the next four-year cycle,” Cook said. “I sat down with Babar at that point in player reviews and said to him: your weight is an issue. That was the time we were just converting to full-time contracts. The skinfolds, yo-yo tests, 20-metre sprints – the players were starting to become more accountable. It was no longer such a club-cricket environment of pitch up, play and go home. We had quite a harsh conversation. He took it on board and really rose to the challenge.”The combination of a full-time contract, working with the Hong Kong Institute of Sport and their dieticians – he went from just over 100 kilos to 89 or 88 kilos prior to the 2016 WCL round five against Ireland and Scotland.”

“Whenever we’d see Babar at the gym, we’d all want to work hard and get fit”Team-mate Aizaz Khan

Aizaz witnessed first-hand the work that Hayat put into shedding the weight. Hayat would often recruit him and one or two others for late-night runs above and beyond the afternoon training routine for squad players.”Those two or three months, whenever we’d see Babar at the gym, we’d all want to work hard and get fit,” Aizaz says.As his waistline got slimmer, Hayat’s run-scoring column got fatter. Early in 2017, he made 173 against Netherlands in their Intercontinental Cup clash, then scored two half-centuries in the one-dayers that followed. At the end of the year, he batted the better part of two days to score an unbeaten 214 against PNG.”Between where he was in 2014 to where he is now, there’s a number of differences. One, he’s technically much, much better,” Cook said. “In 2014, he wasn’t particularly fit. He couldn’t bat for 50 overs potentially. His physical condition is much better and his technical ability to bat for long periods of time has allowed his free-scoring intent to now flourish.”He can keep all the good balls out and continues to score very freely off the balls that are into his strength areas. A key area of development going forward is just giving him the ability to bat for long and not feel like he has to try to take scoring options because it’s a matter of time before he gets out.”The mental fortitude Hayat has demonstrated, whether at the crease in key moments during crunch games or in waging a weight-loss battle in the gym, is something he has worked hard at spreading to the rest of his team-mates. It’s a trait that helped them in a hard-fought win over Afghanistan in Zimbabwe, their first ODI victory over a Full Member.If Hong Kong make it through to the Super Sixes, there will be an uphill battle: they will need three wins and some help on tiebreakers to reach the World Cup. An equally daunting challenge may await them in the consolation bracket should they end up there, needing to secure two wins to keep ODI status, and essentially the funding that will keep players like Hayat on full-time professional contracts. Whatever the challenge, the Hong Kong squad will look for Hayat’s bat to set the tone.”What you see is what you get with Babar,” Cook said. “He’s not one to stand up and give big Churchillian speeches and all of that sort of stuff. He’s very much ‘lead by example’ and the guys do follow him. It’s a culture within our dressing room where people tend to gravitate toward the best player and that’s why we looked at Babar as being one of those characters. We did feel he had the potential to really become a dominant force in Associate cricket and fortunately that has come true.”

Em busca de redenção com a torcida, São Paulo tem escrita em jogo contra a Ferroviária no Paulistão

MatériaMais Notícias

Se a estreia do São Paulo contra o Ituano desagradou, o Tricolor pode apostar no bom retrospecto contra a Ferroviária para conseguir a primeira vitória do Campeonato Paulista 2023. As equipes se enfrentam nesta quinta-feira (19), na Arena Fonte Luminosa. Ou seja, também é o primeiro jogo fora de casa no ano.

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O empate por 0 a 0 com a equipe de Itu, em partida disputada no estádio do Morumbi, desagradou os 45 mil torcedores são-paulinos presentes. Ao término do confronto, o elenco de Rogério Ceni deixou o gramado sob vaias. Agora, contra o time de Araraquara, existe a chance de buscar uma certa ‘redenção’.

ATUAÇÕES: Ataque do São Paulo é pouco eficiente em empate na estreia; veja as notas

Veja tabela do Campeonato Paulista e simule os próximos jogos

Veja as movimentações do São Paulo no mercado da bola

De acordo com levantamentos do historiador Michael Serra, o Tricolor paulista não é derrotado pelo clube desde 1995. Nesta ocasião, encarou a Ferroviária na Fonte Luminosa, também pelo Paulista, e perdeu por 1 a 0. Desde então, foram sete jogos realizados, com quatro empates e três vitórias. O jogo mais recente aconteceu em 2021, pelas quartas de finais do Paulista, e foi um resultado importantíssimo para o clube do Morumbi.

Na época, o São Paulo encarou a Ferroviária em casa. Venceu por 4 a 2, com gols deGabriel Sara, Liziero, Igor Vinicius e Pablo. Graças ao resultado, a partida – que foi válida pelas quartas de finais do estadual – classificou o Tricolor para a semifinal da competição.

Mais tarde, o São Paulo se tornaria campeão paulista e romperia um jejum de títulos que era mantido desde 2012. Dos marcadores deste confronto, Liziero e Igor Vinícius ainda fazem parte do plantel.

Em um retrospecto geral, o São Paulo também conta com um saldo positivo contra o adversário. Ainda segundo os dados do historiador Michael Serra, dos 78 encontros na história, o Tricolor venceu 39, empatou 21 e foi derrotado em 18. Na Fonte Luminosa, palco da partida desta quinta-feira (18), foram 38 jogos. Destes, 15 vitórias, 11 empates e 12 derrotas.

O duelo desta quinta-feira (19) será o primeiro da sequência de dois jogos longe do Morumbi que o Tricolor terá. Logo no domingo (22), encontra o Palmeiras no Allianz Parque, em jogo válido pelo primeiro clássico do ano. O confronto com a Ferroviária será às 19h30.

Relembre os encontros do São Paulo com a Ferroviária desde 1995

08/06/1995 – Ferroviária 1 x 0 São Paulo
16/07/1995 – Ferroviária 0 x 0 São Paulo
14/03/1996 – Ferroviária 1 x 1 São Paulo
15/05/1996 – São Paulo 2 x 0 Ferroviária
25/02/2018 – São Paulo 0 x 0 Ferroviária
09/03/2019 – São Paulo 1 x 1 Ferroviária
29/01/2021 – Ferroviária 1 x 2 São Paulo
14/05/2021 – São Paulo 4 x 2 Ferroviária

Scenarios – Can RCB still make it to the IPL 2024 playoffs?

It’s not impossible, though rather improbable. Here’s a look at how things might go

S Rajesh24-Apr-2024How can RCB make the top four?
For a moment, however unlikely it might seem, let’s assume that RCB win each of their remaining six matches, starting with the one against Sunrisers Hyderabad on Thursday. They will then finish on 14 points. Then, if other results go their way, they could finish in the top four without going into an NRR scenario.The best-case scenario for RCB will be if the top two or three teams run away with plenty of wins, leaving the rest of the teams fighting for the crumbs. Given the current IPL 2024 standings, it’s most likely that those teams will be Rajasthan Royals, Kolkata Knight Riders and Sunrisers.If we assume that Royals will win four of their remaining six, and KKR and Sunrisers five of their remaining seven, then they will finish on 22, 20 and 20 points respectively. In that case, it is possible that RCB, with 14 points, will finish fourth with the other teams on 12 or fewer points.Can RCB even make it to No. 3?
Since you – RCB fan – are being rather greedy, let’s see.Let’s assume Sunrisers and KKR both suffer a sudden, and acute, slump in form and finish on 12 points – so just one win in the remaining seven matches. Let’s also assume that one of the other teams, say Lucknow Super Giants, strike a purple patch and win five of their last six. Then LSG will get to 20, and finish in the top two along with Royals. RCB will then finish third on 14 points, with six teams tied on 12. That scenario is also possible if one of KKR and Sunrisers finish in the top two.So RCB can make it – mathematically – even if they lose to Sunrisers
Yes. With 12 points – the maximum they can get then – they will still be in contention. In a bizarre points-distribution scenario, it’s possible for eight teams to finish on 12 points, fighting for two spots.However, for any of these scenarios to work for RCB, they will have to start winning, and keep winning, ideally by sizeable margins.

Abel Ferreira valoriza elenco do Palmeiras e volta a falar em 'um ou dois reforços': 'Hoje todos somos 11'

MatériaMais Notícias

O 11º título do Palmeiras no Brasileirão pode ter nome e sobrenome: Abel Ferreira. Há exatos dois anos, o treinador português chegava ao Brasil e agora ergueu a taça que faltava sustentando o lema “todos somos um”. Ao falar em entrevista coletiva sobre as projeções de quando desembarcou no país, fez questão de relembrar as promessas que foram cumpridas.

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>Maior campeão do Brasil! Relembre todos os títulos nacionais do Palmeiras

– Meus valores enquanto homem eu não altero em função daquilo que ganho ou dos títulos. Não é isso que me guia. Quando cheguei não prometi títulos. Prometo trabalho qualificado, dedicação e fazer tudo com os recursos que tenho. Minha missão é valorizar o clube e os jogadores. Acho que quando falamos em sucesso, não podemos apenas falar em títulos. Fizemos uma mudança e hoje é uma equipe que tem presente e futuro. Isso é fruto do trabalho de muita gente. Todos somos um e hoje todos somos 11 – disse Abel.

> Clique e simule todos os resultados da reta final do Brasileirão!

Ainda em coletiva, um dos treinadores mais vitoriosos da Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras, com seis títulos na bagagem, tentou ser cauteloso ao citar o assunto “reforços”. Abel voltou a falar que não pretende fazer nenhuma grande mudança na equipe para a temporada de 2023.

Campeões da Libertadores duas vezes consecutivas (2020-2021), da Copa do Brasil (2022), do Paulistão (2022), da Recopa (2022) e agora do Brasileirão sob o comando do português, os jogadores do Verdão foram valorizados pelo treinador.

– Nunca vou virar as costas para esses jogadores. Enquanto me mostrarem rendimento, é com eles que conto. Se houverem saídas ou vendas, aí as reposições terão que ser feitas. Penso em apenas um ou dois reforços, uma ou duas mexidas para que consiga suprir alguma saída que houver. Como por exemplo a do Scarpa. Enfim… Na minha ideia, não estou esperando mexer no elenco. Esses jogadores mostraram, não só a mim, que têm vontade e ambição. Quando olho para a equipe, as mudanças serão sempre em caso de vendas. Se não houverem vendas, não terão mexidas – concluiu.

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الهلال يستهدف ضم نجم بارز في الدوري الإنجليزي.. وناديه يطلب 150 مليون إسترليني

اقترب أحد المهاجمين البارزين في الدوري الإنجليزي من حسم مستقبله خلال فترة الانتقالات الصيفية الجارية، وسط ترقب من عدة أندية تسعى لضمه في ظل تألقه اللافت الموسم الماضي.

وبحسب ما أكده جونزالو جايتان، أحد الوكلاء في الشركة التي تدير أعمال ألكسندر إيزاك، لصحيفة “الرياضية” السعودية، فإن اللاعب السويدي، يدرس كافة الخيارات المتاحة، مع اقتراب حسم وجهته المقبلة، دون توضيح ما إذا كانت الخطوة القادمة ستكون بالرحيل أو الاستمرار مع فريقه.

طالع أيضًا | بشكل غير متوقع.. إيزاك يوجه صفعة مدوية لـ ليفربول

وأشارت الرياضية إلى أن إيزاك بات الخيار الأول لدى نادي الهلال السعودي، في وقت تؤكد فيه تقارير إنجليزية تمسك نيوكاسل باللاعب، مشترطة 150 مليون جنيه إسترليني للموافقة على رحيله.

وشارك إيزاك في 42 مباراة الموسم الماضي، سجل خلالها 27 هدفًا وصنع 6 أهداف، وفقًا لموقع “ترانسفير ماركت”.

Alana King refuses to be dethroned as Australia reassert Ashes dominance

Knight hails series as ‘best in history of women’s game’ as England target outright ODI win

Valkerie Baynes16-Jul-2023This Australian side isn’t going away any time soon. That was the message from Alana King after helping her side to an Ashes-retaining victory with three crucial wickets in the second ODI in Southampton.The nail-biting win, by three runs off the final ball, broke a three-game losing streak in the series which had allowed England to draw level on six points all and give themselves a chance of winning back the Ashes, held by Australia since 2015.But with England needing to stage their second record run-chase in as many matches after their successful pursuit of 264 in the first ODI in Bristol, this time needing 283, King blew the game open with a crucial spell yielding the key wickets of in-form opener Tammy Beaumont, captain Heather Knight and Alice Capsey for 15 runs in the space of 23 balls.And, despite Nat Sciver-Brunt’s unbeaten 111, Australia’s four-pronged spin attack, chosen for the conditions but also to change things up and “throw something different at England”, as King put it, prevailed. Ashleigh Gardner took three wickets and bowled a miserly penultimate over while Jess Jonassen typically held her nerve at the death with England needing five off her final delivery and Sciver-Brunt managing just one.”They’ve been really close games, and we’re glad that we got the win today,” King said. “It just shows that this team is not going anywhere, no matter what everyone throws at us.”A theme of this multi-format series has been whether the gap between Australia, dominant for so long, and England is closing, given the close nature of all the contests so far. Australia won the Test by 89 runs but were pushed at various stages before winning the first T20I by four wickets with just one ball to spare and losing three more close encounters. But King still believes Australia are a step ahead.”Yeah, I think there is,” she said when asked if there was still a gap between the sides. “And I think we’re still going to try and be ahead of the game. Yes, we want to bring other countries along because it’s going to improve the game worldwide, but I don’t see us slowing down anytime soon. I think we still want to be ahead and make sure that gap keeps getting bigger. So I don’t see it closing anytime soon.”Australia have maintained all along that their goal is to win the Ashes, not simply retain them, and that hadn’t changed after Sunday’s achievement.”We’ve come here to win the Ashes,” King said. “No-one really wanted to retain it but it’s great that we’ve ticked that box. If we win the Ashes that will be a job done for us and I think we keep stretching that. Yes, we want people to come with us but also we don’t want them to get too close. We want to still be ahead in world cricket and hopefully we can keep showing that.”Don’t get me wrong, it’s an exciting time, we’ve won a game in the Ashes series and it’s great that we’ve retained it, but there’s definitely no complacency with that. So we’ll go out there on Tuesday to make sure that we finish off this series the way we came in.”King hadn’t played since the Test, but she returned to great effect, her stunning legbreak to remove Beaumont after her 60 from 62 balls had set England’s run-chase off to a bright start was a gem, which had her father in raptures in the stands, among a crowd of 12,380.Related

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“I actually haven’t seen it but people keep telling me it was a great ball and my dad kept screaming out on the balcony that it was a ripper ball,” King said. “Glad to be back in the squad and glad that we got the win today.”For England’s part, Knight doesn’t believe there is a gap between the sides any more and her side would be out to prove that by seeking to add a 2-1 ODI victory to their T20I scoreline from earlier in the Ashes, which she described as the best series in the history of the women’s game.”This series has shown that we’re very evenly matched,” Knight said. “Cricket-wise we’ve definitely gone toe-to-toe with them. Our work on this has been trying to manage those big moments and trying to be a lot clearer and calmer in those situations. We’ve really done that brilliantly. There’s certainly the belief that we’re good enough to beat this side.”We probably could do a lot of things a little bit better and different today but it’s just been an unbelievable series, two titans going head to head and fighting it out. It’s certainly been entertaining, albeit nerve-racking, to play these games. I don’t think there’s too much between these sides, for us it’s to try and prove that and win the ODI series at Taunton, and try and level the series overall.”It’s got to be the best series there’s ever been in the history of the women’s game,” Knight concluded. “It’s been unbelievable. Two sides going toe-to-toe fighting it out. Every game has been pretty close. Obviously disappointment but pride as well in the fact that we got so close.”

Haris to lead Pakistan A in Emerging Asia Cup in Sri Lanka

Pakistan A will play against India A on July 16

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jun-2023Mohammad Haris will lead Pakistan A in the eight-team Men’s Emerging Asia Cup, which will run from July 14 to 23 in Sri Lanka. Omair Yousuf has been named his deputy in the 15-member squad that includes the likes of Saim Ayub, Shahnawaz Dahani and Mohammad Wasim among others.Haris was part of the senior T20I squad in the most recent series that Pakistan played against New Zealand at home. In all, he has represented the senior side in five ODIs and nine T20Is. Others in the squad who have senior international experience include Arshad Iqbal, Kamran Ghulam, Wasim, Ayub, Dahani, and Tayyab Tahir. Wasim is the most experienced out of the lot, with two Tests, 14 ODIs and 27 T20Is under his belt.Haris’ deputy Yousuf has not turned out for Pakistan but has a good domestic record, wherein he averages 43.33 in 40 first-class games. In List A cricket, Yousuf has scored 1158 runs in 41 matches at 32.16. He was Pakistan A’s leading run-scorer when they visited Zimbabwe for a six-game unofficial ODI series in May this year, with 275 runs in four outings at 91.66. Pakistan A had gone down 4-2 in that series.Pakistan A, the defending champions, have been placed in Group A alongside India A, Nepal and Sri Lanka A. They will open their campaign against Nepal A on July 14, followed by the clash against their Indian counterparts on July 16 and Sri Lanka A on July 18. The tournament will be held in the 50-over format. Group B consists of Afghanistan A, Bangladesh A, Oman and UAE.The top two sides from each group will qualify for the semi-finals. The final will be held on July 23.Pakistan A squad: Mohammad Haris (capt & wk), Omair Yousuf (vice-capt), Amad Butt, Arshad Iqbal, Haseebullah, Kamran Ghulam, Mehran Mumtaz, Mubasir Khan, Mohammad Wasim Jnr., Qasim Akram, Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub, Shahnawaz Dahani, Sufiyan Muqeem, Tayyab TahirReserves: Abdul Bangalzai, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Mohammad Junaid, Rohail NazirPlenty of internationals in Afghanistan AShahidullah Kamal will lead a strong 15-member Afghanistan A squad consisting of eight capped players for the competition. The squad has the likes of Ihsanullah Janat, Ikram Alikhil, Riaz Hassan and Noor Ali Zadran in the mix. Noor, who has represented Afghanistan in 51 ODIs and 20 T20Is, is the most experienced out of the lot.Afghanistan A are part of Group B and start their campaign against Oman on July 14, followed by Sri Lanka A on July 16 and Bangladesh A on July 18.Afghanistan A squad: Shahidullah Kamal (capt), Ikram Alikhil (wk), Ishaq Rahimi (wk), Riaz Hassan, Ihsanullah Jannat, Noor Ali Zadran, Zubaid Akbari, Baheer Shah, Allah Noor Nasiri, Sharafuddin Ashraf, Izharulhaq Naveed, Wafadar Momand, Ibrahim Abdulrahimzai, Salim Safi, Zia Ur Rehman Akbar, Bilal Sami.Reserves: Abdul Malik, Asghar Atal, Abdul Baqi, Zuhaib Zamankhil

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