Leeds: Orta closing in on Kalimuendo deal

Leeds United are closing in on a deal to bring Arnaud Kalimuendo to Elland Road this summer.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to a report by French publication L’Equipe (via Leeds Live), who claim that Victor Orta is now just £4m short in negotiations with Paris Saint-Germain regarding the transfer of the centre-forward – with it being reported that the Spanish director of football had launched an initial €20m (£17m) bid for the 20-year-old last month.

Leeds Live go on to suggest that, with Raphinha now looking set to join Barcelona in a €72m (£61m) deal, Orta should have no trouble in stumping up the extra cash in order to get a deal for the France U21 international over the line – something that means Kalimuendo could now be set to become Jesse Marsch’s seventh signing of the summer window.

“New wave”

Considering just how exciting a prospect Kalimuendo undoubtedly is, the news that Leeds appear close to sealing a deal for the striker this summer is certainly fantastic news for everyone involved with the Whites – not least Marsch himself.

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Indeed, over his 34 Ligue 1 appearances while on loan at RC Lens last season, the £16.2m-rated talent was in sensational form, scoring 12 goals and creating three big chances for his teammates, as well as taking an average of 1.8 shots – 0.9 of which hit the target – making 0.6 key passes and completing 0.8 dribbles per game.

Furthermore, according to FBref, the £6.6k-per-week hitman also ranks in the top 28% of centre-forwards in Europe’s big five leagues and European competitions for non-penalty goals per 90, as well as the top 1% for passes completed, the top 19% for progressive carries and the top 11% for progressive passes received over the last 365 days.

As such, with it being clear that the player who Jacek Kulig dubbed a “new wave” talent is exceptional in the final third, fantastic in his progression of the ball and is excellent in involving his fellow attackers in build-up play, it is unsurprising to learn that the 20-year-old is now Orta’s “top target” ahead of 2022/23 – according to James Marshment.

Indeed, if the French youth international is available for as little as £21m, and the striker continues his astonishing development after a potential move to Elland Road, Kalimuendo’s signing could easily prove to be one of the Spaniard’s best captures this summer.

AND in other news: “Sources say..”: Phil Hay reveals big Leeds transfer update, supporters surely buzzing

Man Utd: Alex Crook makes Abraham claim

TalkSPORT journalist Alex Crook has made a claim involving Manchester United and a potential pursuit of AS Roma striker Tammy Abraham. 

The lowdown: A star is reborn

Signed by the Serie A outfit for £34m in 2021 as he linked up with ex-United and Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho (BBC), the 24-year-old has been nothing short of a revelation in Italy.

He scored nine times in 13 outings as Roma became the inaugural winners of the Europa Conference League, recapturing the form he once showed on loan at Aston Villa.

Unsurprisingly, the upturn in fortunes has led to interest from the Premier League, with one journalist now suggesting that the Red Devils could be watching on with intent.

The latest: United have ‘looked at’ Abraham

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Crook suggested that Erik ten Hag might turn to the 10-cap England striker after missing out on Liverpool-bound Darwin Nunez.

The talkSPORT man said: “It wouldn’t surprise me if they were sounding out Tammy Abraham again. I know they’ve looked at him in the past and he’s done well in Italy, but Mourinho is the problem.

“We spoke to him on our Boot Room programme a few weeks ago and seems quite settled in Italy, so whether they could tempt him, I don’t know.”

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The verdict: Worth the risk?

Previously mooted as only being available should an eye-watering €80m (£67m) asking price be met, signing Abraham for such a lofty figure would certainly represent a gamble from the new-look Old Trafford recruitment setup.

After leaving the Premier League with 26 goals in 89 appearances, the 24-year-old – who was previously hailed as ‘lethal’ by former England marksman Gary Lineker – scored 26 times in 52 appearances across all competitions last season.

The 6 foot 3 Englishman – who may be suited to Ten Hag’s style based on the success of Sebastian Haller at Ajax last term – earned a superb 7.06 Sofascore rating whilst winning 5.2 duels, making one key pass and attempting 2.6 shots per league game.

That return to top form, combined with the homegown factor and his ideal age, would make Abraham a worthwhile addition to the Manchester United ranks, particularly as Ten Hag possible looks towards finding a long-term successor to Cristiano Ronaldo.

In other news – Fabrizio Romano: Man Utd and Ten Hag are now in ‘new’ talks for ‘huge talent’ as well as De Jong

Leeds: Journalist makes Helder Costa claim

Leeds United look set to part ways with winger Helder Costa this summer, according to The Daily Mail’s Jacob Ranson.

The Lowdown: Valencia loan

Costa, who was hailed as ‘immense’ by his former Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo, made the move to Leeds back in 2019. The 28-year-old was a regular in Leeds’ title-winning campaign in the Championship and made 22 appearances during their first season back in the Premier League.

However, Marcelo Bielsa decided to send Costa out on loan to Valencia last summer after he eventually brought Dan James to Elland Road. The winger struggled massively in La Liga, failing to score and registering just two assists in 27 games.

As a result, Valencia have decided against exercising their option to make a loan move permanent, but Costa could still be on the way out of the club, along with star man Raphinha, who has been heavily linked with a move to Barcelona.

The Latest: Costa claim

Ranson shared a story for The Daily Mail late on Friday evening, looking at a forgotten player from each Premier League club.

When it came to Leeds, the journalist chose Costa, stating that ‘the Portuguese winger could be heading for the exit door or may well want to after falling out of favour at Leeds and then enduring a miserable loan spell at Valencia’.

Ranson added that Costa is set to return to Elland Road over the summer, although the club may look to move him on in order to improve their squad further.

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The Verdict: Exit needed

Costa, thought to be on £46,000-a-week, appears to have had his time in Yorkshire, and a new challenge could be best for all involved over the coming months.

He seemed surplus to requirements after James arrived, and with Jesse Marsch now in charge and looking to use inverted wingers such as new signing Brenden Aaronson, Costa may not fit into a narrower system.

Leeds would do extremely well to recoup a large percentage of the £15.93m they paid Wolves for his services, especially as his Transfermarkt valuation has plummeted from £9m to just £4.5m during his time in Spain.

In other news: ‘Quality’, ‘They aren’t waiting around…’ – News of ‘another’ Leeds move has pundit buzzing

Arsenal: Pete O’Rourke drops Jesus claim

Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta could well prove to be the deciding factor in any move for Manchester City striker Gabriel Jesus, according to journalist Pete O’Rourke.

What’s the word?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, the respected insider suggested that Arteta’s links to the forward – having previously worked under Pep Guardiola at the Etihad as assistant manager – may well help tempt the 25-year-old into a move to north London.

Amid reports linking the 54-cap international to the Emirates, O’Rourke revealed that both the Gunners boss and their Brazilian contingent could have an impact on the move going ahead: “I think the opportunity to work under Mikel Arteta again would be a big factor in any decision from Jesus and there’s quite a few Brazilian players at Arsenal as well, which would maybe make it easier for him to settle in if he were to leave the Etihad for the Emirates.

“Arsenal are going the right way under Mikel Arteta, I think it’s fair to say, so I’m sure it’s something that he would definitely consider if Arsenal do follow up their interest.”

This latest claim follows centre-back Gabriel teasing a move for his compatriot to join him at the club, with a new striker seemingly on the agenda despite Eddie Nketiah nearing a contract renewal.

Supporters buzzing

That update from O’Rourke will only get pulses racing among Gunners supporters, with Jesus an ideal fit to solve their centre-forward woes, particularly with experienced marksman Alexandre Lacazette looking set for a departure.

In truth, while it had been a turbulent last 18 months or so prior to his eventual exit in January, former skipper Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has no doubt left a notable void in Arteta’s squad, with the Gabon international having scored 68 Premier League goals during a four-year spell at the club.

In the most recent campaign, the squad’s highest scorer was Bukayo Saka with 12 goals in all competitions, although only two other players got into double figures, with that shortage of goals potentially proving costly in their failure to secure a top-four berth.

That is where the City gem comes in, with the £45m-rated hotshot having scored 13 goals and registered 12 assists across all fronts in the 2021/22 season for the title winners, notably bagging four in a brutal dismantling of Watford back in April.

As well as offering versatility, having featured on either flank or through the middle during his time in England, the 5 foot 9 speedster also offers a wealth of experience when it comes to lifting silverware, including winning four league titles in just the last five seasons.

In what remains a youthful squad in north London, adding a player of such elite calibre could well prove a real masterstroke, with supporters set to be ecstatic at managing to pluck such a gifted asset from a Premier League rival.

Although it is perhaps a worrying thought that City are so well-stocked that they are potentially happy to cash in on a player who has scored 95 goals in 236 games for the club since his £27m arrival back in 2016, it would remain a coup for Arsenal nonetheless.

Having fallen short in their bid to secure Champions League football for the first time since 2017, the club – and its supporters – will no doubt be optimistic that Jesus can finally get them over the line next term.

IN other news, Vieira 2.0: Arsenal gifted chance to sign “top-class” £25m ace, he could guarantee UCL…

Leeds: Orta can axe Klich with Aaronson

In a recent Q&A for The Athletic, Phil Hay revealed that, should Leeds United go on to secure their place as a Premier League side in 2022/23, Victor Otra will once again make a move for RB Salzburg’s Brenden Aaronson in the summer transfer window – with the journalist adding that the Whites have a good chance of getting this deal over the line.

In response to a fan asking for an update on Jesse Marsch’s potential summer transfer targets, Hay said: “If Leeds stay up, they’ll try again to sign Brenden Aaronson from Salzburg. There’s a good chance of that happening.”

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And, it is not difficult to see why Orta would be interested in a move for the 21-year-old attacking midfielder – for whom he saw a £20m bid rejected in the January window – this summer, as the USA international would appear to be something of a perfect fit for Marsch’s tactical setup.

Indeed, the £18m-rated talent covers a great deal of ground in fixtures, with Hay stating in a report back in February that Aaronson will travel an average of 10.7km over the course of a typical 90 minutes – something that sees the youngster rank amongst the highest distances covered by Premier League players this season.

The £19k-per-week dynamo is also an extremely active and efficient presser, with his average of 27.23 pressures per 90 seeing him rank in the top 1% of attacking midfielders and wingers in Europe’s big five leagues over the last 365 days.

Furthermore, the player who Matthias Jaissle dubbed a “monster” is also impressive in the final third, scoring four goals, registering four assists and creating seven big chances over his 23 Austrian Bundesliga appearances this season.

As such, with it being said that Orta has identified clear shades of Mateusz Klich in the American, and with the 31-year-old Leeds midfielder looking as if he could be “on his way out” – in the words of Mirror journalist David Anderson – of Elland Road this summer, the 21-year-old would appear something of a perfect replacement for the £34k-per-week Poland international.

Indeed, the player who Joe Wainman dubbed “lacklustre” has been exactly this over his 29 Premier League appearances this season, averaging an extremely disappointing SofaScore match rating of 6.69 – ranking him as the Whites’ ninth-worst performer in the top flight.

So, when taking all of the above into account, it would indeed appear a very wise move for Orta to move the £3.6m-rated Klich on to pastures new at the end of the current campaign, before reinvesting the funds received from his sale – as well as his substantial weekly wage – into a £30m move for Aaronson this summer.

AND in other news: Phil Hay drops update on big-money summer deal, Leeds supporters will be buzzing

'A father figure and a shrewd tactician'

The cricketing fraternity reacts to the death of former India captain Ajit Wadekar

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Aug-2018

No neutral ground on neutral venues

As cricketers, groundsmen and administrators weigh in on the debate, the majority feel that the move will lead to smaller crowds and diminishing interest in the tournament

Nagraj Gollapudi and Arun Venugopal22-Jun-20163:42

Agarkar: Should be good enough to play at opposition’s home

Two major decisions could be made at the inaugural BCCI conclave in Dharamsala on Friday – the identity of the new India head coach and a decision on whether all matches in the Ranji Trophy should be played at neutral venues.The board’s technical committee, headed by former India captain Sourav Ganguly, had recommended the move as a remedy for the long-standing problem of home teams playing on tailor-made pitches and “to expose players to play in different conditions.”But it doesn’t seem to be an open-and-shut case. If anything, the players, coaches, groundsmen and administrators feel the longstanding system of playing matches home and away shouldn’t be altered.”The interest within home teams and getting crowds to come and watch the game is going to diminish, obviously,” Karnataka batsman Robin Uthappa said. “It’s not like the numbers are very big to start off with anyway, but the interest was growing in domestic cricket. I think this will kind of pull it back a little bit because how many guys are going to watch a Karnataka-Tamil Nadu game in Mumbai?”Amol Muzumdar, the second-highest run-getter in the Ranji Trophy and a former Mumbai captain, agreed. “You need to pull in the crowds. You need a [Cheteshwar] Pujara playing in Saurashtra to come and watch him and have youngsters dream of playing for India one day. Youngsters would want to come and watch Rohit Sharma in Mumbai. They won’t come to watch in Guwahati. And for what? For those guys who are greedy for the spots [in the points table], who make bad wickets so that it suits the home team? For those guys, you are denying fans coming to the grounds?”Tamil Nadu Cricket Association secretary KS Viswanathan wondered if there were enough neutral venues to host first-class matches in India. “You need to define what is neutral,” he said. “You cannot play in nine centres [of the teams in the same group]. If I have Mumbai and Delhi in my group, for instance, I can’t play there. Have you got those kinds of [alternate] venues with [quality] facilities? All these things they [the board] are trying are experimental. We will put forth our views, but it is up to them.”Viswanathan was also unconvinced that this change would guarantee better pitches. “How do you ensure all these neutral venues will have sporting wickets? Wickets are actually controlled by [state] associations, not by BCCI,” he said. “Basically, BCCI curators can’t come and prepare wickets. Consistently preparing wickets is not that easy.”The push for neutral venues has been backed by the BCCI president as well. It is understood that Anurag Thakur had been peeved after Himachal Pradesh, his home state, took a beating on turning pitches last season.‘Having turning tracks is not doctoring’Last November, Odisha lodged a complaint against an “underprepared pitch” at the Bengal Cricket Academy Ground in Kalyani. The home team Bengal had knocked Odisha out for 37, their second-lowest total in Ranji history.Former champions Tamil Nadu often make pitches to suit their spinners. Last year’s finalists Saurashtra have been accused of producing slow turners over the years. In 2015, Ravindra Jadeja took a record 37 wickets in three matches at the start of the league phase to return to India’s Test team. A BCCI official said, “first three games were rank turners, Jadeja took 30-odd wickets. They won all the matches in two or three days and [it] helped them qualify into the knockouts.”Shitanshu Kotak, the former Saurashtra captain and their current coach, said it wasn’t right to call every pitch that assists spin ‘underprepared’. “Playing on spinning tracks is not doctoring,” he said. “In Rajkot, I have seen teams scoring about 150 runs in the first session. If batsmen are playing aggressive cricket and getting out and the match gets over in two-and-a-half days, then I am not sure you can blame the wicket.” Kotak felt a pitch should be marked down only if the ball misbehaves so badly that a batsman’s health was threatened.Last year, Saurashtra played two of their home matches at the Madhavrao Scindia Cricket ground in Rajkot, which produced the lowest average for spinners across the country – 14.05. But Kotak pointed out that in one of those matches, against Jharkhand, 373 runs were scored on the first day for the loss of 20 wickets. “So it is not that you can’t score runs. You can on these pitches. It is about playing time and not going in with an aggressive attitude all the time.” At the Saurashtra Cricket Association ground, where Kotak’s team played their remaining three home matches, the spinners averaged 25.41.Kotak also pointed out that Saurashtra secured four outright wins – three of them inside three days and two in the knockout stage – in their five away matches last season, played on green pitches. That, he said, showed the team was equipped to handle all kinds of conditions.Odisha were all out for 37 by the home team Bengal in Kalyani•PTI Lack of infrastructureWith the inclusion of a new team, Chattisgarh, each round would comprise about 10 matches. But currently, the BCCI’s pitch and grounds committee has ten curators. Insiders reckon it would be impossible for one of them to be at at every venue; just as it would be impossible to increase the pool of qualified curators overnight.Having experienced and qualified curators has been a long-standing problem. Even a venue like Eden Gardens is currently in the care of by administrator, Sujan Mukherjee, who had to step in when the head groundsman, the late Prabir Mukherjee, had quit.‘Honesty in reporting by match officials required’As many as 17 out of 108 league matches in the last Ranji Trophy ended within two or three days. The need for change is apparent. But one BCCI official insisted that instead of pushing for matches at neutral venues, punitive action should be taken against the state associations that produce sub-standard pitches. “A match finished in two days on a rank turner and the match referee does not write a comment. He just signs and sends it to the BCCI. What good is that?”Muzumdar wanted “honest” reporting from match officials. “If there is honesty in the reporting, things can improve,” he said. “You need home-and-away concept. If you are concerned, add an additional day. And make sure the pitch has to survive for five days. If the curator does not make a pitch that will last for five days, and if the match gets over in two or three days, then obviously something is wrong. It should not be an unplayable pitch.”Muzumdar also said that with a lot of matches being recorded by the BCCI video analysts, there could be merit in forming a separate committee to look through the footage and decide on the fitness of pitches around the country.Another method that could be trialled, according to Muzumdar, is doing away with the toss to give the away team the choice of batting or bowling first. The move was trialled in English county cricket this season to prevent teams from preparing heavily seamer-friendly pitches.Lack of interest and increased costThe debate on neutral venues is nothing new. The pitch and grounds committee had suggested the knockouts should be played on neutral venues. The 2008-09 Ranji semi-final between Mumbai and Saurashtra was played in Chennai. Sachin Tendulkar, who was part of that match, commented that neutral venues rob teams of crowd support, which could be vital in a must-win match. TNCA secretary Viswanathan recalled that, “there was not a single guy watching the match, so that is one of the reasons why they said that we should not be hosting [even] knockout matches elsewhere.”The following season, the knockouts were played per a rotation policy, but since 2014, the BCCI has gone back to staging play-offs at neutral venues.Another issue with playing solely in neutral venues is inflated budgets. “[Increased cost] is also one of the reasons,” Viswanathan said. “As of now, of eight matches we play, four [happen] in our home grounds and four outside. Now, all the matches are outside, which means we will have to travel and we will now incur additional cost on travel as well as on the lodging.”There is only a media rights grant which we’ll have to utilise. Every year, we might get about [INR] 20-25 crore, including IPL money, but our expenditure is itself going to be 18 to 20 crore now. It costs about INR 4-5 lakh [to host] a match at home. We have a squad of 35 people and everybody gets a single room and we travel by air. One tour will cost about 15 lakh.”Uncertainty seems to be the dominant theme in this debate but there are positive signs too. “It (neutral venues) gives cricketers an opportunity to play in different conditions which are not home conditions,” Uthappa said. “In that sense, there is an opportunity to grow for cricketers.”

Vijay's six in the third dimension

Plays of the day from the match between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Kings XI Punjab in Hyderabad

Devashish Fuloria11-May-2015 The Maxwell effect
With no help in the first six overs for either the seamers or the offspinner Gurkeerat Singh, David Warner and Shikhar Dhawan made brisk progress, adding 56 runs. So when Glenn Maxwell came in to bowl in the seventh over, Dhawan hoped to continue in the merry way. Maxwell, not known for turn, not only got his first ball to dip, but also got it to spit away from an advancing Dhawan, leaving him stranded down the pitch.The Neo effect
Warner had been hitting the ball hard all day, but one got very close to the non-striker. As the batsman made room to hit Sandeep Sharma inside out in the 11th over, the bowler followed him. Warner, though, went ahead with the shot and hit it firmly back at Moises Henriques, who, to his credit, stayed mostly still before just getting his right shoulder out of the way. The ball was travelling at some speed, but Henriques probably saw it in slow motion.The parallax
In the 17th over, Warner, while trying to make room, had to reach out for a low full toss outside off. He managed to hammer it over cover for a boundary but instead of being forced to stay on his normal stance, Warner went in the other direction. He took stance way wide of leg stump, just inside the wide marker. Anureet, confused whether to go for the open stumps or the batsman, ended up serving another low full toss. That was clubbed to the cover boundary as well.The misfiring gun
No runs should have come off the last delivery of the Sunrisers innings. Instead, two were given away. Sandeep Sharma bowled an accurate yorker that was dug out back down the pitch, straight to the bowler, by KL Rahul. As the batsmen went for a non-existent single, Sandeep had plenty of time to walk to the non-striker’s end and take the bails off. But he chose to fire a throw from his position a couple of meters away from the stump only to miss them. Sandeep couldn’t believe it. George Bailey couldn’t believe it either.Six in third dimension
It would be hard to beat Chris Gayle on the length of his sixes, but M Vijay could now possibly stake claim on the vertical dimension. He greeted Trent Boult with a flick that launched the ball as high as the light towers and but didn’t seem to have much horizontal distance. When it landed, though, it was over the square-leg boundary, 68 meters away.

'Broady pitch it up for god's sake'

A near-ton from a debutant No. 11, beer snakes, controversial umpiring and more – Day 2 of the Ashes was even better than Day 1

Jack Vittles12-Jul-2013Key performer
It’s hard to ignore a man who broke the world record for the highest score by a No. 11. Ashton Agar played one of the best innings I’ve ever seen and that’s including top order players. It wasn’t the way that he attacked but rather the way that he defended that really impressed me. It was hard to tell who was the No. 11 during his partnership with Phil Hughes. Despite being a patriotic England supporter I would have loved to see him score a hundred. You could feel the tension in the ground while he was in the 90s and it was no surprise that he holed out. I do however take full responsibility for Agar’s runs as, when he walked to the crease we mercilessly taunted him about being a no-hoper.Things I’d have changed
I only wish that I was returning for Day 3. The game is right in the balance, after Alastair Cook and Kevin Pietersen played without any trouble on the second evening.Interplay
Agar vs. Swann and Broad in the 90s. Agar had looked untroubled for 90 runs but the contest between Agar and Swann, and then Broad brought the crowd back to life. Agar suddenly started flinching at bouncers from Broad that an hour earlier he was dispatching to the boundary. It finished in dramatic style with England taking the wicket and crowd reacting with a mixture of disappointment and excitement.Wow moment (and shot of the day)
Agar’s shot through mid-on off James Anderson in the afternoon was out of this world. It wouldn’t have looked out of place coming from Pietersen’s bat but coming from the bat of a debutant No. 11, it was simply breath-taking. Agar got up on one leg, flamingo style, and whipped it through mid-on. It was this shot which turned spectators around me from being disgruntled at England’s poor bowling to simply enjoying the history unfold before them.Player (and photographer) watch
Being positioned at fine-leg, it was Jonathan Trott that was in the firing line from the Aussies (and as the afternoon wore on, the English got pretty rowdy too). It started with good natured banter, people asking for waves etc. but as England’s bowling deteriorated the crowd got more impatient. A lot of people were asking when he was going tohave a bowl and trying to get him to tell ‘Broady to pitch it up for god’s sake!’ There was also a photographer positioned right in front of us and many of us enjoyed piling the pressure on him while Agar was in the 90s telling him not to miss the historic landmark.Crowd meter
The atmosphere had completely changed from yesterday. Whereas Day 1 was chilly and fans were annoyed at England poor batting and then quickly euphoric at Steve Finn’s 2 in 2, today the crowd was completely relaxed, the weather perfect and the alcohol flowing. There was a much more laid back atmosphere today with people still enjoying a day at the cricket even as Australia were piling on the runs. It did change late in the day though, as the crowd debated Trott’s ‘dismissal’.Entertainment
Apart from the on-field entertainment from Agar, most of the entertainment was to be found in the stands in the late afternoon. A day of soaring temperatures and heavy drinking took its toll and numerous beer snakes reared their heads around the ground, as well as the now ubiquitous beach balls. As Cook and Pietersen played out maiden after maiden the crowd made their own entertainment and this mostly came from ribbing the sub, David Warner.Overall
Another enthralling day of Ashes cricket. However Jonathan Trott’s dismissal was a low point. The entire crowd cheered as the inside edge was shown on the large screen and then were livid when the decision was overturned. The communication inside the ground was poor and people were clueless as to why the side-on hotspot wasn’t shown. It was left to social media to update the crowd and there was murmur around the stands in the following hour as people debated the decision and came up with numerous theories to explain the decision.Marks out of 10
7. Still a great day’s cricket, especially England’s efforts with the ball to take 5 wickets for 9 runs but the controversy around Trott’s dismissal, and then Cook and KP’s non-batting detracted from some of the Agar magic in the morning.

Whose place will Clarke take?

It can be seen as a sign of strength that none of the Australians who played the last league game merits a drop, but you would love for things to be clearer a day before the final

Sidharth Monga in Brisbane03-Mar-2012Australia’s defeat to Sri Lanka in Melbourne has left them not only facing a side that has now beaten them in three successive games, but also given them a selection headache: whose place does the returning captain Michael Clarke take? It can be seen as a sign of strength that none of the XI who played that game merits a drop, but you would love for things to be clearer a day before the final. Australia landed in Brisbane during an afternoon shower, and the tight schedule – there’s only a day’s gap between the finals – means there is no training day to perhaps assess in the nets how the candidates for the drop are going.It has been an interesting series for Australia. The sheer duration of it demanded a fair bit of rotation of players, but injuries to Clarke and Brett Lee have brought in a bigger pool of players than they would have perhaps wanted. They have also sacked Ricky Ponting, who captained Australia to a win in his last match, midway during the series. Ryan Harris is out, Ben Hilfenhaus is back as an ODI bowler. Shane Watson is back too, and is bowling as well.In the middle of all that, Clarke went out with a sore back, and has come back to find out that while he should be playing the final two or three games of the summer, the tough decision is his too, along with the other selectors’. Going purely by statistics, David Warner should be the man to sit out, with Watson moving up the order to open with Wade. Selection decisions, however, are not made on statistics alone. Warner showed enough glimpses of how he can play above the game when he scored an imperious 68 out of 107 while he was at the crease on a tacky SCG surface, against India. He can win matches single-handedly, and that’s what makes it difficult to leave him out of a big match.”He is that kind of player, isn’t he?” Daniel Christian said on the eve of the final, agreeing with the sentiment. “He is a match-winner, and I am sure he will get it together in the final series. He has had a pretty good summer. Good 70 [68] in the last game at the SCG. He is not far away from a big score.”Going by playing style, Clarke is a like-for-like replacement for Forrest, but Forrest is Australia’s only centurion of the tournament. His debut, when he scored 66 against India, had been impressive. He is an organised player, equally at ease against pace and spin. His assured debut was the reason Australia could go ahead and drop Ponting, and it will be fair to say they haven’t missed Ponting sorely since.The Hussey brothers remain important to the side, Michael through experience and David through form, which is why Forrest would have loved to convert more than one of his starts into a big one. “I think we have been a little bit inconsistent so far in this series,” Christian said. “Batting probably hasn’t quite clicked the way we’d like it to. But we know all our batters are in good nick, it’s just a case of us all getting it together on the day.”Precisely because none of the batsmen have been entirely reliable, Watson’s batting should keep him in even though he has played only two games on return – with a half-century in Melbourne – so far. Like Warner, Watson too can win a match on his own. It is difficult to keep these players out. That should have put the pressure on Christian. And he responded with a hat-trick and a five-for in his last outing. That ought to be enough to keep him in, but Christian is not sure yet.However, Christian did say that he and Watson in the same XI aren’t one allrounder too many. “I don’t see why we both can’t play in the same team,” Christian said. “The more the bowling options the better, I think. Obviously I need to be scoring runs as well. I am not there as a bowler, I am there as an allrounder. Last night [in Melbourne, with the bat] I missed out. Hopefully I’ll get something in the next couple of games.”If Christian is to miss out because Watson brings something extra to a batting line-up that hasn’t been a million dollars, he will live. “Watto is a fantastic player,” Christian said. “He has shown it over a number of years. If I lose my spot to him, that’s the way it goes. As I said, there is definitely room for both of us to play in the same side. Hopefully the selectors [think] the same way.”Apart from these candidates, a left-field choice could be Clint McKay, as Watson does bring with him the ability to bowl yorkers at the death. But Australia, traditionally, don’t like going into a game weak on the bowling front. If McKay were to be dropped, that would leave Watson, Christian and David Hussey 20 overs to bowl between them.Whatever way he and the selectors go, Clarke’s is not an entirely enviable position to be in. Once he decides whom he replaces, he will have to find a corresponding man for Lee: Hilfenhaus has been impressive and had taken a five-for on return, while James Pattinson took four wickets, also on return, in the last game.Edited by Nikita Bastian

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