Newcastle lose £10m from Ohio Cup

Finance expert Dr Dan Plumley has been left reacting to some ‘very disappointing’ news that he has now heard involving Newcastle United.

The Lowdown: Ohio Cup cancelled

As per The Daily Mail, the proposed Ohio Cup pre-season tournament, in which the St James’ Park club were set to take part, has been cancelled by the organisers without much explanation.

The Magpies, who were due to play Wolves and two teams from La Liga – thought to be Villarreal and Valencia – were left fuming by the cancellation at such short notice, which has now left them scrambling over their pre-season plans.

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The Latest: Plumley reacts

Speaking to Football Insider, Plumley has given his reaction to the news, claiming that it is ‘very disappointing’ and a ‘blow’ for Newcastle to miss out on the cash windfall which would have stemmed from their participation in the Ohio Cup.

He stated: “It is a blow. They aren’t going to close the gap on the top four any time soon but they are trying to diversify and grow in other areas to boost their revenue and bridge the gap.

“This is really important for clubs like Newcastle who are going to be on the threshold of smashing the glass ceiling in future years.

“It might not be in the 20s or 30s of millions but it could be, maybe, £10m or so.

“A lot of planning and operation stuff goes into it. There is strategy and branding all tied into this. To have it cancelled without much in the way of the reason is very disappointing.

“They will now have to reset their planning, so you can understand the reaction.”

The Verdict: Not ideal

The cancellation of the Ohio Cup is certainly not ideal for Newcastle, even if it is just £10m or so that they have lost from its cancellation.

Eddie Howe and his squad would have already had plans in place for the trip, and they could have tested themselves against a Wolves side who finished above them in the Premier League table; and possibly Villarreal, who reached the semi-finals of the Champions League.

Nonetheless, they will now have to make new summer plans quickly, as they look to prepare themselves in the best possible way for what could be a big season ahead at St James’ Park.

In other news, one player is allegedly ‘close’ to joining NUFC

Palace: Eagles eyeing move for Nketiah

Crystal Palace are among the clubs interested in signing Arsenal striker Eddie Nketiah, according to a report from 90min journalist Toby Cudworth.

The lowdown: Nketiah set for summer move

Out of contract at the end of June (Transfermarkt), the Gunners ace has already rejected offers of a new deal to stay in north London.

Having come to the fore in recent weeks for Mikel Arteta’s side, the 22-year-old’s future is coming under increased scrutiny as the end of the season fast approaches.

It now appears that a move away from the Emirates Stadium as a free agent could be on the horizon…

The latest: Palace interested in Nketiah

Taking to Twitter to share the in-depth report from 90min, transfer expert Cudworth explained the current situation regarding the England youth starlet’s future.

The reporter outlined: “It’s increasingly unlikely Eddie Nketiah will stay at Arsenal – #WHUFC, #NUFC, #EFC and #CPFC all chasing. Liverpool and Chelsea also monitoring situation – 22 y/o could provide attractive squad depth option.”

Furthermore, within the report, it was claimed that Palace are ‘firmly interested’ in signing the youngster, who was hailed as ‘extraordinary’ by his manager following one match against Manchester City in June 2020.

The verdict: Make it happen

Whilst the progress at Selhurst Park since the arrival of Patrick Vieira has been superb, it does feel as if the Frenchman could do with strengthening Palace’s centre-forward options.

As things stand, Wilfried Zaha once again tops the Eagles’ scoring charts, with attacking midfielder Conor Gallagher in second. Strikers Odsonne Edouard and Jean-Philippe Mateta are in the top five but neither have managed to reach double figures this season.

That is an area which needs to be addressed if Palace are to move on to the next level under Vieira, and the capture of Nketiah from the Gunners would go a long way to solving the issue.

Overall this season, the Londoner has scored nine goals and provided one assist in 26 outings across all competitions, starting to translate a remarkable record at youth level, scoring 16 times in 17 England under-21 appearances and 28 goals in 40 games for Arsenal’s under-23s.

With Nketiah soon to be a free agent, this move seems like a no-brainer for Crystal Palace.

In other news: Palace are now eyeing Championship star for summer transfer, read more here

Steven Smith sculpts the stuff of dreams

A hostile English crowd, a dicey pitch, a batting collapse, a rearguard century and adulation for one of the greatest innings ever

Daniel Brettig at Edgbaston01-Aug-2019How, over the 12 months in which he was banned from representing Australia, might Steven Smith have imagined making his return to Test cricket?How about this? A raucously hostile English crowd, a dicey pitch, a day one batting collapse, a rearguard century as tough as it was masterful, a cover drive off Ben Stokes to get there, a foothold in the game, and adulation for one of the greatest innings ever played.Amid all the isolation, the ridicule, the lonely batting sessions, the community service and the club games for Sutherland, that would have sounded pretty good. In fact it might have been the stuff of Smith’s dreams, or the script of a movie capturing the disgrace, recovery and redemption of an elite athlete. It is a dream, or a film pitch, no longer.On day one of the 2019 Ashes, Smith played an innings as good as any in his career, possibly better. He played an innings as valuable as any in his career, possibly better. And he played an innings more cathartic to Smith and Australia than any in his career.Wiggling, twitching and light sabre leaving in a fashion that felt even more exaggerated than he did before the ban, Smith blunted everything England, the pitch and the weather could hurl at him. In the course of doing so he also caused a perceptible change in the Edgbaston crowd’s response – booing overshadowed if never completely drowned out by ever more generous applause.A lone hand first innings century, this was a kind of performance only seldom seen in Australian Test history – a couple spring to mind. In 1981, Kim Hughes fashioned an even 100 out of 198 against the West Indies on a difficult MCG pitch, getting to the milestone with nine wickets down. And in 1997, Steve Waugh battled to 108 out of 235 against England at Old Trafford on a surface where seam and swing were available in generous quantities more or less all day. Both knocks set up Australian victories and are still spoken about, decades later, but neither had quite the subtext of this one.For almost three weeks now, Smith has been driving Australia’s assistant coaches to distraction with his ravenous appetite for net sessions and throw downs. He has hit thousands of balls, most of them delivered by the batting coach Graeme Hick, indoors and outdoors, morning and evening, optional sessions and mandatory, from Southampton to Birmingham. Asked whether the coaches effectively drew straws for who would throw to Smith, Justin Langer had laughed.”Yep. Yep pretty much,” he said. “That’s why I was out on my knees before, because he didn’t have that long a net today. It’s almost when he comes out, you’re down on your knees going ‘oh thank you, thank you’ because he loves hitting balls, which means you’ve got to throw a lot of balls. Graeme Hick works very hard…”Steven Smith looks to the skies•Getty ImagesThe obsession and compulsion of Smith’s preparation ran alongside his litany of superstitions and routines, all compiled over the years to ensure he feels as comfortable and normal as possible at the batting crease. These extend from the order in which he puts on pads, gloves and helmet, to the taping of his shoelaces to his socks to ensure he does not see them when he looks down at has bat tapping by his right shoe. They help Smith to feel cocooned at the crease, and he most certainly needed that feeling for the scenario that confronted him at 17 for 2 in the eighth over.In the hands of Stuart Broad and Chris Woakes, the ball was zipping, seaming and bouncing. Too much for David Warner, albeit via an erroneous lbw decision, too much for Cameron Bancroft. There was talk of a Newlands scandal hat-trick of sorts for Broad, but Smith responded with a broad bat and cool judgment of what to play and leave from the very earliest stages of his innings.A few deliveries beat the bat, and Smith soon lost Usman Khawaja’s companionship, but overall the impression was of a batsman who, after all that had taken place, still had the measure of the England attack as he had done in Australia two years ago. This was not in Australia, however, nor with a Kookaburra ball travelling gun barrel straight for most of its journeys. The degree of difficulty was undoubtedly far higher. This was true even when considering how James Anderson withdrew from the attack with a recurrence of calf trouble after only four overs, not delivering a single ball to Smith all day.For a period either side of lunch, Smith was able to play in the slipstream of a fluent Travis Head, playing his first Ashes innings with some panache, until a seamer from Woakes found the left-hander lbw. That signalled another rush of wickets, as Matthew Wade, Tim Paine, James Pattinson and Pat Cummins cobbled just 11 runs between them. Smith came close to being part of the procession, successfully reviewing an lbw appeal when he shouldered arms and saw that the ball had not seamed back quite enough to hit the stumps. But at 122 for 8, it did not appear as though this would matter all that much.Walking to the wicket, though, was Peter Siddle, a cricketer with his own story of second chances to tell. He had been surplus to requirements for most of the journey here in 2015, and his selection for the opening Test demonstrated how far Australian thinking had evolved since then. In England this year, Siddle has been making himself useful to Essex with the bat as well as the ball, averaging 32 in the County Championship. Not having to deal with Anderson, who has dismissed him 11 times in Tests, Siddle was almost as fluent as Smith in adding 88 precious runs.”I was just telling him to watch the ball and to keep watching it really hard and play his natural game,” Smith said of Siddle. “When they over pitched he drove a few balls really nicely, when they bowled short he was getting underneath it the majority of the time. He had a really good, strong defence which is what you need on a wicket which is doing a bit. His defence was magnificent.”He was willing to get beaten every now and again and just play the line of the ball. He did that beautifully. It’s great to see Sidds back. He’s very experienced, he’s played a lot of cricket over here and he’s a bowler that is similar to Woakes who hits the stumps a lot, maybe a little bit shorter and is able to hit the stumps from a shorter length. It’s going to be crucial on this wicket and I think it’s a wicket that will really suit him.”When Siddle exited, Smith was still 14 runs from a century, and he knew from recent experience here in the World Cup semi-final that it was eminently plausible he may be left short of the mark. But Nathan Lyon was able to endure in his company, to a point that Smith was able to go to three figures by following a thumping six off Moeen Ali with a sweet cover drive off Stokes to return to the ranks of Test century makers. He celebrated in something of a daze, the enormity of the occasion and the achievement taking time to soak in. The lower order help was serendipitous in itself, for so many of those extra batting sessions for Smith have taken place alongside similar additional nets for the lower order, the better to eke out every last available run for the cause.Once he had composed himself, Smith launched into a final third of the innings that was often brutal, consigning Joe Root to a task that was less a case of setting fields as ordering his men to disperse as widely as possible – all of them retreating to the boundary by the end. Smith was utterly cocooned in the aforementioned zone, complete with all its many, ever more pronounced fidgets, including one instance of self-reproach when he failed to get a tennis slog past cover. The ticks and twitches eased a little towards the end, but only slightly.When finally Broad found a way through, Smith sprinted off the field, almost as though he was seeking to reach the sanctuary of his teammates before another round of booing could engulf him. But there was rather more applause for a day that, in Smith’s own words, defied his ability to describe them. He is back alright, and Australia could not be more grateful.

South Africa need du Plessis to step up

The No. 4 position has become a problem for South Africa and captain Faf du Plessis is best placed to fill the hole in their batting line-up

Firdose Moonda at Old Trafford05-Aug-20171:35

A bad day today, but the Test isn’t gone – Amla

Nothing is working for South Africa. Not changing up the opening pair, not trying three different No. 4s, not altering the balance of the side from seven specialist batsmen to six and then going back to seven again. Not counterattacking, not trying to bat time, not even leaving. Nothing is working and, as this tour hits Groundhog Day, South Africa have to ask themselves why.The answers may lie in their failure to address the issues that existed last summer, when they were winning. And that is understandable. A team on the up – and South Africa were on a major up after slipping to No. 7 in the Test rankings this time last year – can brush their inadequacies aside. They can excuse them as mere speed bumps on the road to success, so that is what South Africa did. They said home pitches were generally seamer-friendly, especially in season when Sri Lanka were the sole visitors last summer, and they blamed conditions for the lack of hundreds in the New Zealand series in March, where Dean Elgar was their only centurion.Elgar is also the only one to have made a hundred in this series so far and South Africa can’t claim clouds and movement are the only reasons for that. Especially not after this showing.With the sun out at Old Trafford and after the early bite, this should have been a batsmen’s day. It was in the morning session, when England’s tail added 102 runs to their overnight total against a listless South Africa attack, whose only tactic seemed to be to wait for an error. And the defensive, dare we say negative, approach came from the top. Half of those runs came after Faf du Plessis moved the field out when the ninth wicket fell and Jonny Bairstow was then dropped on 53. The pressure was completely off the last pair and James Anderson could enjoy the best view of Bairstow taking England to a decent total, but not one that should have scared South Africa as much as it seemed to.

South Africa have thrown their two most promising players – de Kock and Bavuma – to the wolves while leaving the captain to clean up the mess

Their approach was to bed in. After the early losses of Elgar and Hashim Amla, just as he was getting going, Heino Kuhn and Temba Bavuma scored just 17 runs in the next 11 overs as they tried to show they could bat like Test players. But Kuhn got frustrated. Even though he was carrying a hamstring strain, he tried a tip-and-run and it almost cost him, then he was almost involved in a run-out after a mix-up with Bavuma, then he gloved a sweep and was almost caught behind and then he nicked off. Then the real rescue act was supposed to begin.Du Plessis spoke pre-Test about being “extremely hungry to make a play” at the place he used to call home; he spoke at the end of the last Test about “really enjoying those situations where there is almost no hope and you can just do your thing”. With him and Bavuma at the crease, South Africa were steady but when they were dismissed within three balls, South Africa had sunk to a position where a series-saving victory seemed impossible. And to where the proper scrutiny should begin.The No. 4 position has escaped the microscope because the opening partnership has been so poor but it can’t for much longer. In this series alone, South Africa have tried to fill it with experience in the form of JP Duminy, attack in the form of Quinton de Kock and an anchor in Temba Bavuma. They have not looked at making it the place for a leader.Du Plessis is probably the best candidate to bat there but is hidden at No. 5 instead, perhaps because the demands of the captaincy necessitate that he has some breathing room lower down the order; perhaps because his preference is to bat lower so he can come in if there is a real crisis. He should instead be thinking back to when he stepped into the role and how he fared. Du Plessis only batted at No. 4 in seven innings but in the time performed one his greatest rescue acts. His 134 against India in Johannesburg allowed South Africa to draw. When Jacques Kallis retired in the next match, there was talk of du Plessis taking over permanently but he only batted there in three more Tests before being moved.Temba Bavuma was the latest to bat at No. 4 for South Africa in the series and he top-scored with 46•Getty ImagesDu Plessis moved back to No. 5 for the tour of India and the home series against England and then he was dropped. When he returned, it was as captain and the decision was taken to move Duminy to No. 4. Duminy scored two hundreds in that position but a lean run in the last two series all but ended his Test career – he has not even been included in the A side that will play India A later this month – and means South Africa have to look elsewhere.Given that de Kock has been the most consistent performer in the last year, he was promoted to No. 4 but three failures in four innings forced another rethink. Bavuma was then promoted and it sounds like he will stay there. “Technically, Temba is very sound. He has been getting starts and the captain and coach feel he is the guy to hold the mantle,” Amla said, though he admitted South Africa are “still looking for the right combination”.Really, they have thrown their two most promising players to the wolves while leaving the captain to clean up whatever mess remains. It does not sound like the most effective way to order a batting a line-up, it sounds like a reaction to what could quickly become a crisis.South Africa are struggling for depth and though they may blood Aiden Markram in the home summer, Theunis de Bruyn – who made 11 batting at No. 7 here – is the only viable middle-order option. They need more batsmen to come through and the upcoming A series may help in that regard. David Miller has been included, Stephen Cook has been given a lifeline and the likes of Khaya Zondo and Jason Smith are on the radar. But none of them is likely to be the next No. 4. For that, they need du Plessis to step up again and maybe start to get things working.

Records galore for Taylor and Williamson

Stats highlights from a run-fest on the third day at the WACA

S Rajesh15-Nov-2015235* Ross Taylor’s score, the highest by a New Zealand batsman in Tests against Australia – he went past Martin Crowe’s 188 at the Gabba in 1985. Kane Williamson’s 166 is the third-highest. Five of the nine highest scores for New Zealand against Australia have been in Perth. Taylor’s current score is also the joint fifth-best by an overseas batsman in Australia.1 Double-centuries scored by an overseas batsman in a Perth Test – Taylor is the first to achieve this feat. The previous-best was 196, by Hashim Amla in 2012. Australian batsmen have scored five double-hundreds in Tests here. This is also the first instance of two double-centuries being scored in a Test match in Perth, and the first instance of three 150-plus scores in a Test in Australia.265 The partnership between Williamson and Taylor, the highest for New Zealand against Australia. The previous-best was also in Perth, in 2001, when Nathan Astle and Adam Parore added 253 for the eighth wicket. It’s New Zealand’s second-highest for the third wicket in all Tests, and the fifth-best for this wicket by any pair against Australia.262 Runs scored by Taylor in ten previous Test innings in Australia, with a highest of 75 and an average of 26.20.105.12 Williamson’s Test average in 2015 – he has scored 841 runs in nine innings, including four hundreds. Among all New Zealand batsmen who have scored 750-plus runs in any calendar year, Williamson’s average is the best.6 Instances of two 250-plus stands in the same Test – David Warner and Usman Khawaja had added 302 in Australia’s first innings. All of these six instances have happened since 2005, and three of those Tests have been in Australia – the other two instances were against India in Sydney in 2012, and against England at the Gabba in 2010.4 Pairs who have put together two or more 250-plus stands for the third wicket*. Before this partnership of 265, Williamson and Taylor had also added 262 against Sri Lanka in Colombo in 2012. The other pairs to achieve this are Hashim Amla-Jacques Kallis (three times), Mahela Jayawardene-Kumar Sangakkara, and Mohammad Yousuf-Younis Khan (twice each).5 Tests in Australia where both teams have topped 500 in their first innings. This is the first such instance at the WACA. Three of those five games have been in Adelaide, and all three in the period between 2003 and 2008.3 Instances of two New Zealand batsmen making 150-plus scores in the same Test innings of an away game (including neutral venues). The two previous instances were in 1972, in Georgetown, and last year in Sharjah. Also, the number of New Zealand batsmen who have more than one Test century in Australia: Martin Crowe, Andrew Jones, and Williamson (two each).1 New Zealand batsman who has scored hundreds in successive Tests against Australia – Williamson is the first. Glenn Turner, though, has scored a century in each innings of a Test against Australia, in Christchurch in 1974.2302 International runs for Williamson in 2015, the highest ever in a calendar year by a New Zealand batsman; the next-best also belongs to Williamson – 1933 in 2014.5030 Test runs for Taylor – he is the fifth New Zealander to top 5000 runs in Tests.38.17 The average runs per wicket in Tests in Australia since the beginning of 2012. Among all countries, it’s second-highest, after the average in Bangladesh (41.29).* Nov 16, 0400GMT: This has been edited to include partnerships for the third wicket only.

Weary India facing familiar test

After being pushed on to the defensive in the field, it is up to India’s batsmen to try and prevent a return to the bad old days of touring

Sidharth Monga at the Ageas Bowl28-Jul-2014A five-Test series was always going to be a challenge for India. In the second half of the first back-to-back Tests, at Lord’s, they gave it their all: batsmen showed discipline for long hours, bowlers bowled long testing spells, MS Dhoni went against the grain and showed rare aggression and tactical nous as captain. But the question always was, how much did it take out of India?In Southampton, Ishant Sharma was ruled out with an injury broadly described by India as a “sore leg”, Bhuvneshwar Kumar was down on intensity, with the ball not seaming as much as it did at Lord’s, and Mohammed Shami’s lack of discipline became exposed when others around him didn’t bowl that well. Now it’s down to the batsmen once again to make sure India do not fall back to the bad old days.It didn’t help India that their slips give no confidence to the bowlers – another catch went down, another catch that the wicketkeeper should have gone for – but the bigger concern would be that they decided too early that the pitch was too flat and that they couldn’t win the match. As early as the middle session of the second day, India went to Ravindra Jadeja as their main bowler, who darted balls into the pads with a six-three leg-side field.There wasn’t much success for India’s bowlers to celebrate over the first two days•Associated PressThe pursuit, like it was in Durban when they didn’t take the second new ball until they were forced to after 146 overs, seemed to just contain and delay England’s declaration. It is up for debate if thinking of a draw when your enforcing bowler is injured, you have a long series to go through, and you have the series lead, is such a bad thing, but that attitude can lead to dropping of intensity. Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who bowled tirelessly at Lord’s for six wickets in the first innings, echoed what was happening out there.”Wicket is flat, easy for batsman,” Bhuvneshwar said. “We tried our best as a bowling unit but we have had two long days.”The two long days led to extreme steps by Dhoni. In the middle session of day two, he had his bowlers bowling one-over spells for a long period. The 16th over after lunch was the first time a bowler had bowled two continuous overs from the same end. When Bhuvneshwar created an opportunity in the second half of the session, he was rewarded with another over. He was testing still, but that’s all he got. Debutant Pankaj Singh was brought on for the next over, and the first ball he bowled was a leg-side loosener. That can happen when you don’t let the bowlers get into any rhythm.Bhuvneshwar, though, said the number of overs they have bowled justified that extreme rotation of bowlers. “I found that really easy, being in the field for one-and-a-half days we were really tired,” Bhuvneshwar said. “Skipper wanted us to bowl one-over spells. By then we were in rhythm as well and we were not getting tired. Personally we found that easy.”When asked about conceding boundaries on both side of the wicket, Bhuvneshwar brought up fatigue again. “When [Gary] Ballance and [Alastair] Cook were batting, the situation demanded that we bowl on one side,” Bhuvneshwar said. “Sometimes we were tired, been a long day in the field, it is natural, we are human beings. We tried our best to bowl in a particular area. We tried different strategies.”The slips’ slips can’t be put down to tiredness, though. Bhuvneshwar sounded forgiving, although you can’t expect him or a lot of other India players to accept in a press conference that there is something wrong with them. “Being a bowler you have to know they are going to take some catches, and they are going to drop a few,” Bhuvneshwar said. “Every team drops a few catches, but you have to trust the fielder. You can’t ask anyone to come out of the slips. All you want is to give them confidence. It happens in cricket that catches are dropped. So far, in all three matches it has been good for us.”Tired bowlers, one injured bowler, dropped catches, dropped pace, captaincy waiting for declaration, an early wicket before stumps, it all sounds like a perfect recipe for disaster. India will dearly love to go to Old Trafford still ahead in the series but their batsmen have a long way to go to ensure that, going by how well James Anderson bowled in that seven-over burst and how the pitch has responded to his pace as opposed to India’s put-it-there bowlers.

Fulton's wait, Rutherford's record

Plays of the Day from the third day of the first Test between New Zealand and England in Dunedin

Andrew McGlashan in Dunedin08-Mar-2013Long wait of the day I
Let’s leave Hamish Rutherford aside for one moment. His opening partner, Peter Fulton, is almost as a good a story – given a chance to resume his Test career more than three years after his previous appearance. When he helped a short ball from James Anderson to long leg to reach fifty it was his first in Tests since March 2006 when he had made 74 in just his third innings. His celebration was muted, a gentle wave of the bat to the dressing room and the stands – where his girlfriend was enjoying a day with the Barmy Army – but this was a moment an awfully long time in the making.Long wait of the day II
Dale Steyn, caught at short leg by James Taylor, on August 19 was Stuart Broad’s last Test wicket before today. The length of time is slightly misleading – in six months England had played four Tests until this one – but it does include two wicketless outings against India before Christmas. Broad finally ended his wait in his 20th over of the innings when BJ Watling misjudged the line of his first delivery and lost his off stump.Stats of the day
Rutherford’s 171 meant the record books were well-thumbed; one of the landmarks he passed could not have been any older. When he reached 166 he went past Charles Bannerman, whose 165 in March 1877 in the first Test ever played was the highest score on debut in a first innings against England. Rutherford’s final tally was only five short of George Headley’s 176 in 1929-30 as the highest score on debut against England. His stand of 158 with Fulton was also New Zealand’s best by a new opening pair since Rodney Redmond (with a century in his only Test) and Glenn Turner added 159 against Pakistan in 1972-73.Frustration of the day
Shortly after Rutherford reached his debut hundred he bunted a straight drive back past Anderson in his follow-through. Technically it was a chance, but would have been a startling grab. Anderson’s response was to bang the next ball in short. Rutherford allowed it to hit his arm as he dropped his hands – ignoring the short ball as he did throughout. It was all a bit too much for Anderson. As the ball bobbled back down the pitch, he took a kick at it with his size 12s and sent it, rather apologetically, dribbling to Matt Prior.Drop of the day
England have been forced to juggle their slip cordon again following the injury to Graeme Swann. Jonathan Trott has moved to second (where he held a sharp chance off Ross Taylor) and, when he isn’t bowling, Anderson is at third. However, when Anderson has the ball, it requires another change. Kevin Pietersen was there for a while, but when he went off the field with a knee injury it was Joe Root’s turn. Shortly after Rutherford fell to the first delivery with the second new ball, Dean Brownlie edged to third slip but Root, diving to his left, could not hold on.

A plot of earth that knows its worth

Cricket is coming home for its 2000th Test, but even if the game’s a dud, it cannot take away from the glory of the ground hosting it

Michael Henderson21-Jul-2011Lord’s, glorious Lord’s! Whose step does not quicken at the prospect of visiting the greatest sporting forum in the world? Yes, greatest because it is not merely a place where cricketers play: it is the living, breathing home of the sport they practise. People come from all over the world just to set foot in it. And forum because it tends to attract those people who love the game most, and for whom the Lord’s Test is a never-ending conversation.Let’s summon a few witnesses.”Welcome to the greatest room in the world.” With these words Harold Pinter greeted guests to a bash in the Long Room, organised on his behalf by the BBC, which was presenting a festival of the playwright’s works on radio and television. Pinter loved Lord’s. He bunked off classes at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art to watch the great players of the post-war era, and later in life could usually be found in a box during Test matches, watching intently the contest between batsman and bowler. Whether the Long Room is the greatest room in the world, it is surely the greatest room in sport, and the heart of Lord’s. All those famous portraits on the walls, great figures from the past secretly judging today’s players as they process through the room to take their place in the middle.”Lord’s is a pendant to the Royal Parks of London.” So says Philippe Auclair, French journalist, broadcaster and author. Auclair was taken to Lord’s when he first came to London, and now he never misses a Lord’s Test. He is not an uncritical observer. “These people wandering round in blazers, trying to recreate the Golden Age. They’re just buffoons. Don’t they know that Grace and Ranji were pioneers? They weren’t looking back.” Lord’s is indeed a pendant to the Royal Parks. What a wonderful phrase.”It’s a reason for living in London.” This is how Michael Billington, the ‘s long-serving theatre critic, sees Lord’s. Growing up in Leamington Spa, a keen follower of Warwickshire, he imagined the delight of popping into Lord’s for an hour or two to be part of London life. And it is certainly true that while Lord’s looks magnificent , with a full house savouring a classic Test, it looks pretty good all summer long, whether Middlesex are playing Glamorgan, or Eton playing Harrow.What makes the Lord’s Test unique? The setting, the history, the occasion. There are bigger grounds, and grounds some may consider to be more beautiful – Trent Bridge, Adelaide, Cape Town spring to mind. But Lord’s stands alone, not in an arrogant way, simply as a plot of earth that knows its worth and sees no reason to apologise for its breeding. It has a dignity that nothing can erase.

There are bigger grounds, and grounds some may consider to be more beautiful – Trent Bridge, Adelaide, Cape Town spring to mind. But Lord’s stands alone, not in an arrogant way, simply as a plot of earth that knows its worth and sees no reason to apologise for its breeding

As for a sense of occasion, that must never be overlooked. Even when people are not watching the cricket (and there are hundreds of people dining on the lawn of Coronation Garden who hardly see a ball bowled after lunch), they are still playing their part in the drama. It would be wrong to call it part of the “season” but it is a gathering of the cricketing clans. The invisible threads that link English society, through school, university and club, twitch vividly into life behind the Warner Stand every lunchtime. And Friday is the great day.The best Lord’s Friday of all? It is hard to beat the 2000 Test when England skittled West Indies for 54 to set up a victory target of 188. The next day was one for the annals. Not a mouse stirred as Michael Atherton and Michael Vaughan added 92 of the most valuable runs either man ever scored. Time and again Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh went past the bat. If an over yielded as much as one run it was a boon. The crowd, mindful of the circumstances, drank it all in, silently. Things reached a hectic pitch in the afternoon, as England won with two wickets to spare, and the celebrations were loud and long, yet it was the silence in the morning that remains the abiding memory of that day. It showed Lord’s at its best, and the best of Lord’s is unmatchable.We live for such days, storing them in our minds, sharing them with friends so that they acquire a fresh lustre with each recollection. There are those who speak of Ted Dexter’s batting against Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith in 1963, the match when Colin Cowdrey came out to bat with a broken arm. Others recall how the pavilion stood to acclaim Greg Chappell in 1972, when he made one of the great centuries. More recently Mohammad Azharuddin charmed everybody with his century in 1990, and Andrew Flintoff’s ferocious bowling against the Aussies in 2009 added another chapter to the old story.The 2000th Test match promises to be a classic contest. There are two good teams, and Sachin Tendulkar needs one more century to make it 100 hundreds in international cricket. Whatever befalls him, and the other players, we shall all leave the greatest ground with happy memories – even if it rains for five days.

A sorry saga of neglect

In the second in our series of reports on the state of cricket in Zimbabwe, we look at club cricket in the country

Steven Price10-Feb-2008

The cricket field at Selous, near Harare, which used to stage country districts matches
© Cricinfo

While the picture of schools cricket we presented last week gave some reason for cheer, there is less positive news as far as the club game inside Zimbabwe is concerned. The economic and social meltdown, which money and privilege help protect schools from, has ravaged the social game and left it in a parlous state. So bad have things become that even Harare, where the bulk of good-standard club cricket was played, is seriously affected.One former international cricketer who has given up playing completely, even though he is at an age where he should be at his peak, highlighted the situation. “There used to be at least 76 club grounds countrywide, including country districts cricket, which Zimbabwe Cricket does not recognise any more,” he said. “The number of grounds in use has declined since 2003. It only takes a trip out of town to see the old grounds with knee-high grass growing in the outfield. Why are they not being used? Where is all the money going?”We visited several prestigious club grounds in and around Harare and it was clear that some of them have not staged any cricket this year and probably for longer. The grass was indeed knee-high and the facilities derelict.The virtual racial purge of the board is reflected in the local leagues. “There is hardly any cricket in either of the Asian clubs here in Harare,” one former administrator said. “Both Sunrise and Universals have stopped playing club cricket. Sunrise has a team that participates in Saturday-afternoon friendly cricket, where there are about 12 teams playing. Most of the teams are white players who have stopped playing the league cricket.”The one club that is bucking the trend is Takashinga, which has dominated Harare’s club competitions for several years. However, there is widespread anger at its success, which is born not so much of jealousy as a feeling that Takashinga receives preferential treatment. “They are fully funded by ZC as board employees like Steven Mangongo and Givemore Makoni are running this club,” one former provincial administrator said. “The club entices all the talented black players, since the perception is that if you play at Takashinga, your chances of being selected for provincials, age-group teams, and ultimately national teams are greater.”

The overgrown outfield at Kadoma, some 140km to the south-west of Harare, which also used to stage a good standard of cricket
© Cricinfo

The club’s links to ZC are undoubted, and the association with Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party is no less evident. Former Zimbabwe coach Geoff Marsh once sent some Takashinga players home for wearing Zanu-PF t-shirts and bandanas. A couple of years ago one newspaper quoted an opponent as saying: “The ZCU makes them a powerful club, because they want them to be powerful. They have some real radicals and that suits some people at the ZCU down to the ground.”This perceived favouritism also puts off players from rival clubs. “Some good guys get frustrated and give up,” one player said. “Others leave the country never to return.”There is also the issue of having to make a living in an increasingly fragile economy. As a player pointed out, once club cricketers leave school, “they are left to fend for themselves and they have to get a job immediately to cope with inflation. Half of them end up working and can’t afford the time to play unless they get selected immediately and earn what the current players earn. ZC just keeps employing more administration staff, but not enough is done for cricket at grassroots level to support the game.”Outside Harare, the picture is even bleaker. Several people told us that in some areas the game had almost collapsed, and the inability to maintain grounds was making it harder for clubs to keep going. With inflation out of control, most clubs cannot import parts for tractors and mowers, so outfields cannot be cut. Basic equipment is also getting scarcer. One club secretary in Matabeleland said that games had been cancelled because there were no balls available. At some clubs the net facilities are unusable because the matting that covers the concrete base has worn out and there is no money to replace it.One player from Bulawayo, who is among the lucky 20 per cent of Zimbabweans that has a job, admitted that “getting a bat and a pair of pads is out of the reach of even those of us that do work”. He added that the only way his club survived was because “the lucky ones that have equipment share it with the rest of us”.

The Old Hararians ground in Harare, which staged an England A match in 1999
© Cricinfo

“The standard has gone down drastically over the last few years,” another Bulawayo cricketer shrugged. “Most of the teams don’t practise … they just meet on Sunday, and as long as they can raise 11 people, they play a game.”Looking at the club matches that do take place, it is evident that in some areas the game is maintained because there are enough schoolchildren to ensure that teams take the field with enough players. “The boys who should be groomed through the school system are the ones now trying to sustain the league,” a Manicaland cricketer said. “They have been forced to join the few ‘big guys’ left to get a league going. I think schoolboys provide just about 80 per cent of players in the league right now.”Furthermore, the few good older players outside Harare head to the capital, since that represents their best chance of being recognised, which in turn further weakens the local standard.Clearly, it is hard to see how many of the clubs that have survived so far will still be here this time next year. The financial pressure is worsening by the day, the local currency is valueless, and the social situation is such that cricket is becoming an irrelevance.In fairness to Zimbabwe Cricket, even with the funding it receives from the ICC it cannot hope to do enough to maintain all the club sides. However, that is not to paper over the fact that it seems that it is actually doing nothing in some areas. For every Takashinga there are dozens of clubs that will die from neglect. The board should be providing basic equipment and balls, but to its shame it does not appear to be doing even that.The depressing feeling is that it might already be too late. And when grassroots cricket dies, the decay is sure to permeate all the way to the top very quickly.Next week: Provincial cricket in Zimbabwe

Shastri on Rohit: 'You can go flat no matter who you are'

“The resources that you had two or three years ago [at Mumbai Indians] isn’t quite the same – the challenges as a captain might have doubled for him”

ESPNcricinfo staff08-May-20232:17

Shastri: Rohit’s work as a captain has doubled since two years ago

Ravi Shastri believes Rohit Sharma’s challenges as captain of Mumbai Indians “have doubled” in the past two years, leading to poor returns as a team.”The resources that you had two or three years ago isn’t quite the same. The challenges as a captain might have doubled for him. The work as a captain would have doubled as opposed to two years ago when everything was nice, set – go out there and do the job,” Shastri said about Rohit’s captaincy on ESPNcricinfo’s Ravi & Raunak programme.”And then comes the challenge of how do you get them [the team] going, how do you motivate that bunch, how do you create a combination, how do you see who is the best in that lot to fit in and deliver at a certain stage of the game.”Related

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Rohit 'needs a little bit of a break' from the IPL, says Gavaskar

It’s a period in which they have lost players who formed their core in the glory years, there have been retirements, and injuries to key players.With two new teams coming in as the IPL became a ten-team tournament from 2022, Hardik Pandya and Krunal Pandya went to Gujarat Titans and Lucknow Super Giants, respectively. Lasith Malinga retired from all formats of the game before that, in 2021, while Kieron Pollard also called time on his international and IPL career last year. They did get Jofra Archer at the mega auction but he couldn’t play last year because of injury, and is still finding his feet in IPL 2023. Jasprit Bumrah was then ruled out of IPL 2023, throwing a spanner in Mumbai’s plans of unleashing the pace duo together. They do have Ishan Kishan and Suryakumar Yadav from the old core in the mix, but the rest of the line-up is a new one from MI’s point of view.Rohit is the most successful captain in the history of the IPL, having led MI to five titles – the highest in the IPL – in 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2020. However, they had their worst seasons last year, when they finished last on the table with just four wins in 14 games. They lost their first two games this season as well before stringing a few wins, and currently sit sixth on the table.The dip in results has coincided with Rohit losing form. He scored 268 runs in IPL 2022 without a single half-century, with an average of 19.14 and strike rate of 120.17. Rohit’s 2023 is going no better: in ten innings, he has scored 184 runs at 18.39 and a strike rate of 126.89. This includes two ducks.2:36

Moody: Rohit looks mentally fatigued

There have been calls for Rohit to take a step back.Sunil Gavaskar recently suggested that Rohit “needs a little break” and should return refreshed for the last stage of the IPL’s league phase and the World Test Championship final. Tom Moody, speaking on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time:Out recently, noted that Rohit has looked a bit “mentally fatigued”.Shastri agreed that not being in form with the bat has affected Rohit’s captaincy as well.”If you start getting on a purple patch where you are scoring runs, the job as a captain becomes much easier, the body language on the field changes, that energy on the field is different as opposed to when you are not getting runs. You can go flat no matter who you are,” Shastri said. “That’s where, as a captain, it is more important that your performances come into play. It is harder now because of the stage of his career, the kind of team that they have.”The same team could be a terrific team in a year’s time or two years’ time, once they start gelling together. But to get that right mix, that’s the job of the captain.”

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