Liverpool eye move for Kalvin Phillips

Liverpool are reportedly targeting their midfield as an area of improvement this summer, and now a previously linked transfer target has been identified as a potential interest to the club ahead of next season.

What’s the latest?

According to The Mirror, Liverpool are now prepared to rival Manchester City for the signing of Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips this summer after losing out on Aurelien Tchouameni to Real Madrid.

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As per the report, Jurgen Klopp is understood to be a huge admirer of the player and the West Yorkshire club are preparing themselves for an approach from both the Merseyside club and Man City.

Forget Tchouameni

It has been widely reported that Tchouameni prefers a move to Spain this summer and with that in mind, FSG need to move on fast to identify another midfielder that can offer dominance in the centre of the pitch, with Phillips clearly the alternative option for the Reds.

The £60m dynamo who was hailed “outstanding” by England manager Gareth Southgate has struggled with hamstring injury issues during the most recent Premier League campaign making only 20 appearances, despite that he has still shown glimpses of his talent and capabilities in the team.

According to SofaScore, the midfielder delivered one assist and created one big chance, making 2.7 tackles, 1.2 interceptions and won 4.8 duels on average per game and was successful in the majority of his dribbles (58%), proving that he can make an instant and consistent impact.

“For me, he is one of the best midfielders in the world right now,” once claimed his teammate Liam Cooper during Euro 2020 last summer.

Liverpool are looking for fresh perspectives in their midfield three and although the Kopites had one of their most successful seasons under Klopp winning the FA Cup and Carabao Cup, Thiago Alcantara, Jordan Henderson and James Milner are all well into their 30s.

Identifying younger players that can come through to succeed the current crop of midfielders can help Liverpool continue their reign of dominance and keep them fighting for trophies on all fronts for years to come preventing them from dropping off in key areas of the pitch.

With that being said, signing Phillips would be a major coup for the club and if they could complete the signing of the 26-year-old it would surely put to rest the worry that Liverpool weren’t able to secure a deal for Tchouameni.

AND in other news, Klopp could land his dream Mane heir with Liverpool bid for “unbelievable” £47m target…

Liverpool hero Thiago set to undergo scan

Thiago is set to undergo a scan on the injury suffered in Liverpool’s 3-1 win over Wolves on Sunday, according to reliable journalist James Pearce.

The Lowdown: Thiago injured in win

The Reds suffered Premier League heartbreak on Sunday afternoon, beating Wolves at Anfield but missing out on title glory to Manchester City in dramatic fashion, but all supporters really care about now is the issue with Thiago.

He left the field just before half-time and didn’t return for the second half, in what was a hugely concerning moment ahead of the Champions League final.

The 31-year-old now faces a race against time to be fit for the clash with Real Madrid on Saturday evening due to what was believed to be a right hamstring injury.

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The Latest: Pearce provides update

Taking to Twitter, The Athletic‘s Pearce shared a comment from Jurgen Klopp that the news is ‘not good’, before offering the update everyone’s been waiting on.

Thiago needs a scan to determine the severity of the issue, which certainly doesn’t bode well with less than a week until Paris:

“Thiago set to undergo a scan. Would be a massive blow if he misses the CL final.”

The Times’ Paul Joyce has added his own update at lunch-time, claiming it is actually an achilles problem and it will be a ‘battle’ to make it in time.

The Verdict: ‘Massive’ indeed…

Not having Thiago for the Champions League final could be a genuinely game-changing moment, given the Spaniard’s brilliance and importance in midfield this season – he started seven of the last nine Premier League games and played 120 minutes in the FA Cup final.

Liverpool would lose so much control without him around, and with Fabinho arguably coming back slightly undercooked, Madrid could suddenly have a big advantage.

It certainly feels as though Thiago is now more likely to miss out, considering the final is only five days away, and it would be a horrible blow for him and the Reds, especially after he missed the Carabao Cup final through injury, too.

In other news, Liverpool have been linked with a move for a midfielder. Read more here.

Master Pollard and protégé Pooran show West Indies the way forward

Pooran’s fire and Pollard’s ice gave India a scare and showed the way forward for West Indies

Deivarayan Muthu in Cuttack23-Dec-20191:19

Pollard has been like a big brother to me – Pooran

On the eve of the ODI series decider against India in Cuttack, West Indies coach Phil Simmons reckoned that West Indies’ best might not be good enough to topple India. However, he had stressed that this limited-overs series in India had set the scene for West Indies’ resurgence, after they had finished second from bottom at the World Cup earlier this year.As it turned out on Sunday, despite the best efforts of captain Kieron Pollard and Nicholas Pooran, who thumped 135 together in 16.2 overs – the highest partnership in the match – West Indies did fall short. However, Pooran’s fire and Pollard’s ice (only in comparison) during that stand gave India a scare and showed the way forward for West Indies.Debutant fast bowler Navdeep Saini had just bounced out Shimron Hetmyer (37) and then yorked Roston Chase (38) to reduce the visitors to 144 for 4 in the 32nd over. However, unfazed by that double-strike, Pooran went after India’s bowlers. Ravindra Jadeja was fiercely reverse-swept for four, Mohammed Shami was laced through extra-cover, and when Kuldeep Yadav was drilled over long-off for six, Pooran reached his second successive fifty-plus score off 43 balls.At the other end, Saini was harrying Pollard with serious pace and bounce. After having the batsman sway away from a bouncer, the quick let rip an inswinging yorker to ping Pollard’s toe, leaving the batsman needing some on-field treatment.Shardul Thakur also found some extra bounce with his slower bouncers and tied Pollard down to 4 off 11 balls. Then, as if a switch had been flicked on, Pollard lined up Kuldeep for a couple of sixes down the ground in the 37th over – in all, Pollard hit 21 off ten balls from the left-arm wristspinner.Pooran took more risks against the seamers and even pulled off some trick shots after getting to his half-century. When Shami came from over the wicket and bowled an off-stump yorker, Pooran opened the face of the bat and deftly ran the ball away between the keeper and short third-man for four.Two overs later, Pooran pulled off a more freakish shot. He had jumped across off to open up the leg side, but Saini chased him and tucked him up for room. Yet, Pooran swatted the ball away between deep midwicket and wide long-on. Soon after, he unveiled a Yuvraj Singh-esque flick off Thakur, sending the ball over the square-leg fence. Eventually, West Indies pillaged 105 off their last eight overs, hoisting the total up to 315 for 5.Kieron Pollard whips one into the leg side•BCCI”Polly [Pollard] obviously is stronger to the spinners, so we allow him to attack a little bit [against them],” Pooran said of West Indies’ game plan at the post-match press conference. “Against the pacers, I try to play a little more shots against them. It worked out today and we’re happy that it worked out that way.”It helped Pooran that Pollard was at the other end when West Indies were under pressure. They go back a long way, after all. After Pooran had met with a car accident in 2015, he feared for his leg – and career. The doctors weren’t sure if Pooran could return to playing cricket at all. It was during this turbulent phase that Pollard took Pooran under his wing and inspired him to come back.It didn’t stop there. It was Pollard who got Pooran an agent and encouraged him to grow his game by playing T20 cricket around the world. Now, after stints in the Bangladesh Premier League, Pakistan Super League, Indian Premier League, Global T20 Canada and Caribbean Premier League, Pooran has established himself as West Indies’ gun middle-order batsman both in T20Is and ODIs.”He’s been like a big brother, a father figure to me,” Pooran said of Pollard. “He’s been there [for me] since I returned to cricket from the accident. He gave me an opportunity, which I am thankful for. We know each other really well and we’re good friends on and off the field. So we complement each other while batting. We play for the same club and same franchise back home. So, it’s [about] understanding the wicket, the situation of the game and just execute the skills.”As for Pollard, from 37 off 39 balls, he ended with an unbeaten 74 off 51. During the World Cup, West Indies had been guilty of over-attacking, and as a result lost games from winning positions. Since Pollard has taken over the limited-overs captaincy, West Indies have looked to take chases deep, a departure from the smash-the-leather-off-the-ball approach.It worked for West Indies against Afghanistan and led them to their first ODI series victory in more than five years. It worked for Shimron Hetmyer and Shai Hope in the ODI series opener in Chennai. It seemed to work in the series decider in Cuttack and gave West Indies a total to work with. This could well be West Indies’ key takeaway from the two-month long India trip.”We’re definitely building,” Pooran said. “India are definitely one of the strongest teams in the world and they proved that again today. We came here and we showed fight. We could have won the T20I series and even this series. It showed that they’re one of the best teams and it showed that we’re fighting.”There are better things to come, but we’re taking it day by day and eventually we will get to where we want to.”

England lose 20 wickets in 96.1 overs

All the stats and landmarks from a memorable victory for South Africa in the second Test against England at Trent Bridge

Bharath Seervi17-Jul-20172009 Last time England faced fewer than 100 overs in a home Test, batting in both innings – against Australia at Headingley. They lost 20 wickets in this match for just 96.1 overs – 51.5 in first innings and 44.2 in the second. Overall, this is only the seventh such instance for England at home, only the third time in last 30 years, and only the fifth time since World War II.340 Margin of victory for South Africa – their fourth-biggest in Tests in terms of runs, and their second-biggest outside South Africa. They won by 356 runs at Lord’s in 1994, which is their biggest away win. This is England’s second biggest home defeat in last 20 years.7 Consecutive Tests without a defeat for England at Trent Bridge. Prior to this match, the last time they were beaten at the venue was against India in 2007. Since then they have won six and drawn one. South Africa had lost both of previous two Tests at Trent Bridge since readmission – in 1998 and 2003.3 Away Tests won by South Africa in which none of their bowlers picked up more than 3 wickets in an innings. The other two, before this win, were Kandy 2000 and Dhaka 2003. In last 10 years, their only such win, home or away, came against Sri Lanka in Cape Town in 2011-12.11 Runs for which England lost their last five wickets. They were all out for 133 after being 122 for 5, in a span of five overs. In the first innings, they lost their last four wickets for six runs.1934 Last time England’s last three wickets combined for fewer runs than in this match. Here, they added a total of 13 runs across both innings, which is their third-lowest in any Test in which they’ve completed two innings.2013 Last time Vernon Philander earned a Man of the Match award in Tests, against New Zealand in Cape Town. He picked up five such awards in his first 13 Tests, but this was his first in his last 32 games.10 Wickets for Keshav Maharaj in this series – the most among all South Africa bowlers. Only Moeen Ali (14) has more wickets than Maharaj while James Anderson has also claimed 10 wickets. After going wicketless in the first innings of the first Test, Maharaj has taken 4 for 85, 3 for 21 and 3 for 42 in the next three innings.1997 Last time England’s top three accumulated fewer runs in a home Test, batting in both innings, than the 79 runs in this game. They scored 73 runs against Australia at The Oval in 1997.21.93 Alastair Cook’s average at Trent Bridge, his lowest among all home venues. In 10 Tests and 17 innings, he has scored only 351 runs with a highest score of 50. He has averaged 23 as an opener at the venue, which is the lowest for any opener with 15-plus innings at a venue.12 Jonny Bairstow’s average against Keshav Maharaj in this series. He has scored 36 runs off 68 balls and has got out three times. Against all other bowlers has made 86 runs off 143 balls, for once out.

England thrive on Mahmood's pace and Mason's chokehold

Fast bowler Saqib Mahmood and legspinner Mason Crane have been the pillars of England Under-19s’ run in the World Cup so far, striking consistently and squeezing out the runs

Mohammad Isam and Vishal Dikshit06-Feb-2016England Under-19s have been one of the more exciting sides at the ongoing Under-19 World Cup. Jack Burnham and fast bowler Saqib Mahmood are the highest scorer and wicket-taker respectively in the tournament thus far while batsman Dan Lawrence, pacer Sam Curran and legspinner Mason Crane have also turned heads with their performances.As a fast bowler trying to take wickets in batting-friendly conditions in Chittagong, Mahmood has been a revelation. He took 11 wickets in the three group matches, including two four-fors against West Indies and Zimbabwe, and has shown the ability to move the ball late at decent pace, an important skill in Bangladesh conditions.Guidance from Stuart Barnes, the team’s bowling coach who also coached Bangladesh A a couple of years ago, and a focus on variations and attacking the stumps have made the difference, according to Mahmood.”Stuart Barnes told us which area is the most effective for the seamer in training before we came here and I just practise that and hope that the odd ball does something off the seam or naturally,” Mahmood said. “It’s been successful because I have been asking questions and I think also because my partner [Sam Curran] at the other end does the same thing. He has been creating pressure for me to take wickets.”Once the batsman has seen past the new ball, when the ball is not doing a great deal you have to rely on change of pace. Variation makes it hard for him to score. It’s more about line here because you can’t give width to the batsman as he will throw his arm around then. Instead if you are attacking the stump always, it’s definitely harder to score and that’s what I have been doing and getting wickets because of my consistency of bowling at the line of the stumps.”Mahmood idolizes England pacer Jimmy Anderson, whom he has met a few times as both are from Lancashire: “He is not around [in Lancashire] a great deal. A lot of people say that he is only effective in England but he used his variations in the UAE. Reverse swing and he used the crease to good effect, and that’s the kind of things you look at and learn from guys like him.”Crane’s emergence at Hampshire in the last county season garnered plenty of attention. The legspinner has taken 10 first-class wickets in three games for Hampshire, including a five-for. When wickets have not been forthcoming, he has relied on consistency and economy. In this World Cup, he has taken two wickets but is the team’s most miserly bowler, with an economy rate of 3.43 in the 23 overs he has bowled so far. Crane stated that on tracks without assistance, he adjusts quickly and tries to build up pressure through dot balls.Mason Crane did not get into cricket until after the 2005 Ashes, and when he did, he was clear about what he would bowl•Getty Images”So first of all at the top of my mark I am going to ask myself how I am going to get this guy out, how am I going to get a wicket here?” Crane told ESPNcricinfo. “If I am not going to get a wicket, how I will bowl a dot ball. Those sort of things go through my mind. You try to plan who you are going to bowl at in the over, and try to work out from there.”[What has worked for me here are] the paces I have bowled, and the lengths that we have worked on in the last year or two. We have spent a bit of time in sub-continental conditions so we are used to it now. Hopefully I can take it forward to the next game.”Crane did not take up cricket until the 2005 Ashes and, when he did, it began with legspin, inspired by Shane Warne. He has never tried any other type of bowling.”I didn’t take up cricket until the 2005 Ashes when I saw Shane Warne bowl,” Crane said. “So when I started playing, that’s what came out. I never bowled anything else. From the very first session I have had in cricket, I bowled legspin.”I just found it the easiest. It came out very nicely. I saw Shane Warne bowl and it was so exciting, I wanted to be like that. You do [try out his action] when you are young and then you realise he is unbelievably good and not everyone can be like him. I have obviously had to become myself, really, and that’s what I will try to do from now on.”Crane, who has been coached by Ian Salisbury, Raj Maru and Daniel Flint at various levels, believes that legspin has enough variations to suit a bowler who can give it a rip. Despite being a novelty, as an English legspinner, he wants to take things one step at a time, so the current goal is to help England win the Under-19 World Cup.”The beauty of legspin is the number of variations you can bowl. You can get good revs on it, which is probably the most important thing,” Crane said. “There are legspinners across the world who also bowl quite straight and use different variations of spin. You can get variations out of the pitch and do different things to confuse the batsmen.”It excites me but it is important to remember that I am 19 years old. I got a long way to go. It is important to keep focus on the World Cup, get us over the line and get back the trophy for the lads. For now I am focusing on this until I go back to my county.”

Action, atmosphere and Souvlaki

Non-stop action, atmosphere and Souvlaki. The perfect Canberra evening

Nimesh Divakaran20-Nov-2014Choice of game
A friend of mine bought tickets to the game for my birthday. Also an international game in Canberra is somewhat of a rarity. Two of the best teams in the world in my own backyard – this one could not be missed!Team supported
I just wanted to see a good game of cricket. I was mainly there to watch South Africa though. My perfect scenario was for Australia to bat first and post a competitive score, with Crazy-Eyes-Steyn and co firing it in. Then watching the South Africans chase, with an Amla and AB masterclass, going long into a relaxed and breezy Canberra night.Key performer
It’s hard to look past Aaron Finch’s hundred, or Steve Smith’s busy 70, but for me personally, Hashim Amla and his awe-inspiring wrists stole the show. While most of his innings comprised of measured strokes into gaps for singles, his quick hands and impeccable timing were real treats for the crowd. There were cheers from the South Africans, and lots of respect from the Australians.One thing I’d have changed
I definitely wanted to see Mitchell Johnson have a crack at the South Africans. Mitch has always been a raw talent, but after harnessing his aggression and skill against the Poms last summer, he’s really impressed me. It was a real shame he was rested. I would’ve loved to see him get into it with AB, who looks in such good touch these days, the only person that can get him out is himself.Face-off I relished
Steyn and Clarke was a no-go because of the latter’s injury issues. That was a real shame. Sadly, Johnson and AB didn’t happen either. However the duel between Kane Richardson and De Villiers was quite interesting. Richardson was coping a bit of a pasting from the crowd for his lacklustre performances this summer. However everyone changed their tune when he got the wicket of De Villiers. The good lord only knows why some as talented as that man plays the god-awful sweep and the on-one-knee slap shot. But Richardson won over some fans tonight, so well done to him.Wow moment
There was a bloke closer to the boundary who was causing a bit of a ruckus after a long day in the sun, and quite obviously a few too many. He was trying to start chants, to no avail, making a whole bunch of noise, and even getting aggressive towards others. The traditional ‘you are a wanker’ chants wrung out aimed at him, which he seemed to love. He was loving the attention until a man watching the game with his daughter stood up, and told him to pull his head in so that everyone could enjoy the game. The whole section of the crowd cheered for this man who stood up to the hooligan, laughing and clapping in agreement. Needless to say, after the cops rolled up, the clown got a mighty send-off from everyone (including myself), and we were able to enjoy a wonderful evening of cricket. Great stuff.Close encounter
Morne Morkel was fielding close to where I was seated and he took a lot of heat from the crowd for his performance with the ball. David Miller got a bit of birthday love, along with some heckling of course. Mitchell Marsh came past after taking a wicket and gestured for the fired up crowed to relax. Closer to the end of the game, Steve Smith gave us a bit of a smile, and then treated us to some awesome ground fielding, and an effortless direct hit from the deep.Shot of the day
Amla creamed a half-volley on his legs with just a swish of his wrist, in the air and straight to the boundary. That shot alone was well worth the price of admission. A weekend warrior behind me said: “I just need to learn that shot and I’ll be good”. Yeah, good luck with that mate.Crowd meter
While not a sell out, the crowd was pretty impressive. There weren’t any noticeable gaps in seating, and the noise levels were pretty big for Canberra standards. The majority of the crowd was definitely supporting Australia, although it was nice to see people get out of there seats for Amla, the same way they did for Finch when he reached his century. The weather was great, people were laughing and chilling, the cricket was entertaining and it was just great vibes all around.Fancy dress index
There was a man wearing a suit with a bald wig and a beak like nose prop. He could’ve been Nasser Hussain, Bill Lawry, Montgomery Burns or a combination of all three.Tip of the day
Souvlaki. Get one into ya. Better yet, get some hot chips too and put them in the Souv. Wash it down with a beer and you’ve got the quintessential Australian summer of cricket eating experience.Overall
9 out of 10. It was high scoring, so the bowling wasn’t the most outstanding, but the atmosphere was great, we got to see a wide range of talent, and the Souvlaki hit the spot too. Had a lot of Oohs, Ahs and laughs during the game, and it was great to share it with mates.Manuka is just a fantastic Oval for cricket. It’s a throwback ground, with the hill and plenty of open air space. It’s relaxed and calm, but you can also feel the energy of the crowd. It’s a wonderful space to just sit back enjoy the game and culture of cricket.

The England puzzle, and the case for/against Sammy

Which was their batting blip – the Tests against Pakistan or the one in Colombo just now?

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013The dust is settling on England’s fascinating, and, until Colombo’s belated redemption, spectacularly unsuccessful Test winter. And that dust is confused. Very confused. Is it covering a landmark underachievement, or an unfortunate blip? Has 2011-12 shown how vulnerable this supposedly world-leading England side is, and how the weaknesses in it had been camouflaged by an unprecedented collective burst of form and some fractured, sub-standard opposition; or has it strangely proved, as suggested by my World Cricket Podcast compadre Daniel Norcross, quite how good they are?They were, after all, not far from winning four Tests out of five despite having batted for most of the winter like a long-forgotten salad in an abandoned fridge, and they bowled persistently superbly (statistically far better than in 2000-01, when they returned from Asia with two series victories). As soon as the batsmen for the first time applied themselves correctly, they waltzed to a resounding victory. Albeit that the sound that resounded was the echo of the words, “Where the hell was that in the Gulf in January?” rebounding back from outer space.So many questions remain to be answered. Which was the batting blip – the first four Tests or the last one? Will the Pakistan whitewash remain a scar on this excellent England team’s record, or will it prove to be an open wound in which the maggots of doubt have laid out their towels for an interesting year’s sunbathing ahead?Your witness, history. Get back to us in nine months’ time with some supporting evidence from (a) this summer’s series against an increasingly-determined-but-almost-entirely-unacquainted-with-early-season-English-conditions West Indies, and a probably-should-be-No. 1-side-in-the-Test-world-if-only-they-didn’t -keep-tanking-one-nil-series-leads South Africa, and (b) the four Tests in India at the end of the year.Personally, my expectation is that England will beat West Indies comfortably, draw 1-1 with South Africa, and win narrowly in India, guided by their freshly printed multi-volume , which they are no doubt busy scribbling down from their failures this winter.However, my expectation was that they would win in the UAE against Pakistan, and they managed to avoid doing that in some style, in much the same way that the managed to avoid overshooting America on its maiden voyage.And, just as they had not faced high-class spin for a lengthy period before subsiding to Ajmal and Rehman, so they will not have faced the calibre of swing bowling they can expect from Steyn and Philander since Amir and Asif brilliantly hooped them to distraction two years ago before. Just as facing Xavier Doherty in Brisbane, or Mishra and Raina at The Oval, was not ideal preparation for encountering Pakistan’s crafty tweakmen in the Gulf, so seeing off Lakmal and Prasad in Colombo, statistically one of cricket history’s least penetrating new-ball attacks (their career figures suggesting they offered the incision of an ice scalpel in a sub-Saharan operating theatre), will not have honed England ideally for the South African pace and swing barrage. As preparation for that task, it was about as appropriate as Neil Armstrong training for his rocket trip to the moon by hanging a cantaloupe melon from his bedroom ceiling, saying “5-4-3-2-1-blast-off” and throwing a dart at it.Luckily, Strauss and his men have time and the West Indies series in which to reactivate their facing-swing-bowling heads. And hope that they work better than they did in 2010. And that England’s bowlers continue to provide the grip and penetration of a Viagra-addled boa constrictor, as they have done consistently for the last two years.Then, in November, England’s batsmen will have to switch heads back to the spin-oriented ones that only started showing signs of neural activity briefly in Galle, and only uttered coherent sentences in Colombo. India will enter that series with scores to settle, both with England and, more specifically, with themselves.They will be hoping by then that they still have a left-arm spinner who can remember how to bowl anything other than four overs of balls speared in at leg stump. Not only has this been England’s worst ever winter or summer season against spin (they lost 77 wickets to spin in the five Tests, at a little under 19 runs apiece), but Abdur Rehman and Rangana Herath both returned series hauls of 19 wickets against them. That is more than any left-arm spinner in a series against England since India’s Dilip Doshi took 22 in a six-Test rubber 30 winters ago, and more than any non-Indian left-arm spinner since Alf Valentine twirled England to post-war befuddlement in 1950. England are likely to face legspinners Devendra Bishoo and Imran Tahir this summer. I never thought I would write this, but Pragyan Ojha could hold the entire future health of Indian Test cricket in his fingers.EXTRAS● Excuse me for largely skipping over the first half of England’s Test summer, despite West Indies’ impressively cussed all-round performance in the first three days against Australia in Barbados. The Caribbean team’s last two early-season tours to England have been pointlessly one-sided and deeply depressing. Darren Sammy’s team seems unlikely to cave in as readily as Chris Gayle’s did in the two-Test-total-waste-of-time in 2009, but West Indies have lost 12 out of 14 matches in England since they last won a Test here 12 years ago. Excluding tours of Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, West Indies have played 65 away Tests since 1997. They have won two of them. And lost 50. I just hope for something resembling cricket to occur.● Is there a more underrated bowler in world cricket than Sammy? As I write (in between days three and four of the Barbados Test), the West Indian skipper’s Test bowling average stands at 29.60. This means that, of all West Indian bowlers to have taken more than 20 Test wickets, Sammy has the best average of anyone who has made their debut since Ian Bishop in 1989 (albeit only by a very slim margin over Jermaine Lawson, which a single boundary at the start of play today would wipe out).Sammy currently has a better career average than Jimmy Anderson, Morne Morkel, Brett Lee, Zaheer Khan, Umar Gul and Andrew Flintoff. That does not mean he is a better bowler than them, but Sammy’s statistics suggest that he is a far better bowler than his action and speed-gun readings suggest he is.● How much longer can West Indies continue to carry their captain, Sammy? His continued presence in the team, and the fact that he is not a good enough batsman to bat above No. 8, means that only two of a decent crop of Caribbean pacemen can play alongside Sammy and a spinner. Do not be fooled by his Test average of 29.60. It has been boosted by some cheap wickets against Bangladesh, and, excluding a home series against a weak Pakistan batting line-up, and a debut haul of 7 for 66 in England five years ago, in series against major opposition Sammy has not averaged under 34 runs per wicket, and has taken a wicket on average once every 14.2 overs. He might be forging a more dogged and disciplined West Indies team, for which all cricket fans should be wiping their brows in relief, but his limitations as a bowler are negating what could be their strongest attacking suit – an improving and increasingly potent pace attack.● Stats are confusing.

The finest non-white South African player of his generation

Basil D’Oliveira may have become a symbol of the battle against apartheid, but he was a more than handy player as well

Rob Steen21-Nov-2011When it comes to countervailing the wilfully naïve, almost invariably right-wing hordes who insist that sport and politics should never mix, Muhammad Ali and Jackie Robinson, whose impact on the American civil rights movement was undeniably profound, are most readily cited. Basil D’Oliveira, whose inspirational if turbulent career saw him become, however unintentionally, a stirring symbol of the battle to end apartheid, is no less worthy of global gratitude. In reaching the cricketing heights he did, he was a beacon of inspiration to anybody striving to overcome the drawbacks inherent in being born the wrong colour in the wrong land at the wrong time.The “D’Oliveira Affair” of 1968, one of the most politically charged episodes in sporting history, “led directly”, Gerald Majola, chief executive of South Africa Cricket, argued after D’Oliveira’s death was announced, “to the intensification of opposition to apartheid around the world and contributed materially to the sports boycott that turned out to be an Achilles heel of the South African government”. Ironically, as Huw Richards observed in the – not a newspaper renowned for its interest in cricket – the events of that summer “exposed the reality that while supporters of playing South Africa criticised opponents for bringing politics into sport, it was the apartheid regime that did precisely that by insisting that others conform to its racist norms”. That South Africa’s top-scorer against Australia on the day D’Oliveira died should be Hashim Amla was a welcome sign of the new order.Peter Hain, the future MP who orchestrated the protests that forced the abandonment of South Africa’s 1970 England tour, says Nelson Mandela himself told him he believed the campaign was “decisive” in the eventual triumph of the anti-apartheid struggle. But for D’Oliveira, and the anger his plight roused in the young Hain, himself a South African émigré, it might never have begun. Yet D’Oliveira never openly backed that struggle. “At the time many campaigners felt let down,” admitted Hain. “But in retrospect, because he retained the quiet dignity of a cricketer first and last, he touched parts of public opinion that anti-apartheid activists could never reach.”It would be misleading, though, to depict D’Oliveira as wholly apolitical. As he told the in 1998, he wanted “to prove that I could bat and that people from the black and coloured community… know how to conduct themselves”. His greatest accomplishment, amid the maelstrom, was to prove just that.Somewhat inevitably his qualities as a player tend to be overlooked. Possessed of a short backlift, stern concentration and withering power, “Dolly” amassed nearly 20,000 first-class runs at 40.46, with 45 centuries. How many more he might have compiled had he been born in a more advantageous environment we can only guess. In 44 official Tests, plus four against the Rest of the World in 1970, he made 2792 runs at over 40, including six centuries. If that history-changing 158 against Australia at The Oval stands tallest – it made his subsequent omission from the winter tour to South Africa all the more indefensible on cricket grounds but also because he had the determination and self-belief to promise his wife nothing less – no less admirable was an unbeaten 114 against Pakistan in Dacca, more than double the next-highest score.Adversity was his fuel. At the MCG in 1971 he came in at 88 for 3 and made 117; in the decisive final Test, a fifth-wicket stand of 69 with Ray Illingworth, in the context of a contest England won by 62 runs, was vital. Two weeks later, a match-winning hundred on a capricious Christchurch pitch came from a launchpad of 31 for 3.Those wobbly medium-pacers, moreover, delivered with the most deceptively easeful of actions, accounted for 551 first-class victims, and 47 in Tests at a smidge under 40 (plus nine against that mighty Rest of the World line-up). Much the most memorable came at The Oval in 1968, when Barry Jarman left a delivery that clipped the wicketkeeper’s off- stump, opening the floodgates for Derek Underwood to pour through and square the series.A SO-CALLED “CAPE COLOURED” from Signal Hill in the Bo-Kaap area on the outskirts of Cape Town, his birth date remains uncertain even now. He was coy about his age when he came to England, for practical reasons. Officially recorded as having been born in 1931, he claimed he was three years younger so as not to be deemed too long in the tooth. “If you had said I was closer to 40 than 35 when I first played for England,” he later admitted, “I could not have sued you.”Early outings for Western Province testified to his batting gifts. “His first shot was struck over the long-off boundary for six,” related Alfred Amansure, an erstwhile team-mate at St Augustine’s CC, of an innings against Griqualand West in 1948-49. When a fielder was dispatched to the off-side boundary, “Basil responded by hitting another huge six over mid-on. So the Griqualand captain moved a player there too. Then Basil hit a straight six, cutting between both fielders.”

In reaching the cricketing heights he did, D’Oliveira was a beacon of inspiration to anybody striving to overcome the drawbacks inherent in being born the wrong colour in the wrong land at the wrong time

He was also a shrewd swing bowler – indeed, he owed his fateful recall to the England XI for the 1968 Oval Test in part to 21 wickets in two matches, against Hampshire and Gloucestershire. His all-round feats in South Africa, and for the nation’s first black representative sides, most notably when leading a 1958 tour of Kenya, made him a local legend. That he was the finest non-white South African player of his generation was undisputed.Famously, it was a letter to John Arlott in 1958 that led, two years later, to a contract with Middleton, a Central Lancashire League club. The transition was traumatic. Weather and playing conditions were alien, likewise the opportunity to mix freely with white people. “We’d walk down the street and [his wife Naomi would] say, ‘Do you see that?’ as a white girl walked hand-in-hand with a black man.” When they went to the cinema she assumed they would have to sit in a separate section. “Whenever the lights went up in the interval, she would die the death. She would grip my arm so tightly with tension that it would be bruised the next day.”Once settled, however, he was unstoppable. Signed by Worcestershire, his first full county season, 1965, saw him finish fifth in the national batting averages, behind four Test players. Within a year he was making his England debut at Lord’s. The symbolism was not lost on Garry Sobers and his West Indian tourists: unluckily run out after Jim Parks’ drive deflected off his heel, D’Oliveira was applauded from the field by the opposition, though he had scored only 27: call it brotherly solidarity.The next season brought a maiden Test century, against India, but he was acutely conscious of the potential consequences of selection for the 1968-69 expedition to his homeland and endured a poor tour of the Caribbean, prompting a recourse to alcohol, one of the alibis for his exclusion from that original tour party for South Africa. Come the summer of 1968 he had become increasingly isolated.In the first Ashes Test at Old Trafford he made 87 not out in an unexpected defeat, only to be ditched for Lord’s in favour of a seamer, Barry Knight; a far more plausible explanation was that MCC, aware that sundry South African grandees would be in attendance, and bent on ensuring that the winter tour of the Republic would not fall foul of the Pretoria government, felt his presence would send out the wrong signals.Mike Brearley, an active supporter of the “Stop the Seventy Tour” campaign, captured the sense of a man cornered: “He was under pressure from all sides, from militant black groups accusing him of selling out, to friends relying on him to carry the flag of non-white cricket, to those who would prefer him to be out of the picture.” The measure of the man was that he kept his head while all around were losing theirs. Blighted in his latter years, like Ali, by Parkinson’s disease, he personified dignity.

Extras galore, and Arafat's near-miss

Stats highlights from the fourth day of the Bangalore Test between India and Pakistan

S Rajesh11-Dec-2007


Misbah-ul-Haq and Kamran Akmal have become the second-most prolific sixth-wicket pair in Tests for Pakistan, in terms of runs scored
© AFP
  • It’s been a bad game for Dinesh Karthik so far. He didn’t make much of an impression with the bat, and then had a tough time behind the stumps. He leaked 35 byes, though all of it wasn’t his fault – the inaccuracy of the bowlers and the inconsistent bounce were major contributors as well. Only once has a team conceded more runs in byes in a Test innings: England gave away 37 against Australia at The Oval in 1934, but that was largely because their regular wicketkeeper, Les Ames, was off the field due to a strained back, handing over the wicketkeeping duties to Frank Woolley.
  • The 76 extras that India conceded is a world record in Tests – it’s five more than the previous record of 71, which West Indies had conceded in 1988, also against Pakistan. (Click here for the full list.)
  • Since making a comeback into the Pakistan Test team, Misbah-ul-Haq has scored 514 runs at an average of 85.67. Thanks to his second unbeaten century in consecutive Tests, Misbah’s career average has gone up from 17.25 to 42.27 in just three Tests. (Click here for his cumulative averages before this Test.)
  • For the second time in two matches, Misbah and Kamran Akmal put together a century partnership for the sixth wicket. In just four innings the pair have added 442 runs, which is the second-highest for any sixth-wicket pair for Pakistan – Imran Khan and Saleem Malik managed 589 in ten innings.
  • Pakistan’s total of 537 is their second-highest in a Test in India. Their highest, of 570, came at the same ground on the team’s previous visit here, in 2005.
  • Yasir Arafat fell just six runs short of becoming the eighth player, and the first from Pakistan, to score a half-century and take a five-for on Test debut. The last time this feat was achieved was almost exactly 20 years back, when Australia’s Tony Dodemaide scored 50 and took 6 for 58 against New Zealand in the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne in 1987.
  • For Sourav Ganguly it was another innings to savour – his unbeaten 63 makes him only the sixth Indian batsman to score a double-century and a half-century in the same Test. Rahul Dravid (thrice), Sachin Tendulkar, Sunil Gavaskar, VVS Laxman and Wasim Jaffer are the others to have done it. Five more runs will make Ganguly the second batsman to get 1000 Test runs in 2007, while 37 more will make him only the seventh to score a double-hundred and a hundred in the same Test.
  • Dane Piedt five-for triggers New Zealand collapse to give South Africa handy lead

    Stumps Playing his first Test since 2019, Dane Piedt recorded his best figures in the format to put South Africa ahead on the second day in Hamilton. Offspinner Piedt picked up 5 for 89 as New Zealand collapsed to 211 in response to South Africa’s 242. At one stage, New Zealand were 143 for 3 but lost their last seven wickets within 68 runs to concede a lead of 31.It started with quick bowler Tshepo Moreki dismissing Rachin Ravindra at the end of a seven-over spell bowled either side of tea. He slanted one across the left-handed Ravindra, who went for the cut and got an inside edge on to his leg stump.A few moments later, Tom Blundell became the fourth batter on the day to play on. He was late to withdraw his defensive push against Dane Paterson; the ball hit the back of the bat and deflected on to the stumps.Piedt, who had dismissed Tom Latham and Kane Williamson earlier, then sent back Glenn Phillips with a big offbreak. The batter got an inside edge on to his pad and wicketkeeper Clyde Fortuin grabbed the chance.Dane Piedt celebrates his first five-for in nine years•Hannah Peters / Getty

    Will Young, batting at No. 5 for the first time in Test cricket, was fighting it out. But with wickets tumbling at the other end, he ran out of patience. He skipped down the ground to Piedt and holed out to long-on.Piedt could have had his fifth when Tim Southee edged one to first slip, but Shaun von Berg could not hold on to a low chance. Southee eventually fell to Paterson for 5.A miscommunication resulted in Matt Henry being run out, leaving New Zealand 183 for 9, still 59 in arrears. But Neil Wagner smashed 33 off 27 to eat into the deficit, before Piedt had him stumped to complete his second five-for in Test cricket.In the morning, South Africa could add only 22 to their overnight total of 220 for 6, losing their remaining wickets in just 8.2 overs. Debutant Will O’Rourke broke the stubborn seventh-wicket stand between Ruan de Swardt and von Berg when the latter edged one on to his off stump. The pair had accumulated 70 on Tuesday evening but could add only seven more to it.At the other end, Piedt gloved a Southee bouncer down the leg side, with Blundell running in and diving forward to take a low catch.Tom Latham started well for New Zealand, and had a good stand with Kane Williamson•Getty Images

    Three overs later, O’Rourke had de Swardt playing on. The batter tried to defend a short-of-length delivery only to dab it on to his back heel. The ball went on to tickle the stumps and dislodge the bails. On the next ball, Paterson miscued a hoick giving O’Rourke figures of 4 for 59. He will be on a hat-trick when he bowls his first ball tomorrow.New Zealand did not have a great start with the bat either – Paterson had Devon Conway caught behind for a duck in the first over of the innings. Latham and Williamson chose the defensive route against tidy bowling. At one point, Williamson was on 1 off 21, and the partnership 17 in 12.2 overs. The first boundary of the innings came in the 14th over when Williamson swept a short ball from Piedt over square leg for four.At lunch, New Zealand were 27 for 1 in 16 overs. After the break, Latham and Williamson came out of their shells. Latham skipped down the ground to Piedt and launched him over long-on for a six, and Williamson pulled Paterson over midwicket before collecting another four off Piedt.The characteristic of Williamson’s innings was his leg-side play; off his 43 runs, only two came on the off side. Overall, both he and Latham looked unhurried and did not mind a string of dot balls. Their 74-run stand was broken when Piedt got one to turn past Latham’s outside edge to hit the off stump.Williamson hit two back-to-back fours off debutant von Berg but fell soon after, caught at short leg off Piedt. Ravindra and Young took the side to a strong position after that, but the collapse undid all the good work.

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