Wolves are keeping an eye on Batshuayi

Dean Jones has dropped an interesting transfer update on a Wolverhampton Wanderers transfer target as Bruno Lage continues to search for his fourth summer signing.

What’s the news?

Jones was speaking to GIVEMESPORT about the club signing Goncalo Guedes and suggested that they have also been looking at Chelsea striker Michy Batshuayi, saying:

“Guedes is a really good signing. He can be a bit flaky, but his quality is undoubted.

“Now they need a striker to go alongside him to finish off the chances that he will be teeing up.

“They’ve had a good look at Batshuayi recently. That shows that they are definitely in the market for a striker. Whether or not it’s him, we’ll have to wait and see.”

It’s clear that Lage is in the market for a striker, but will Batshuayi arrive at Molineux in the next few weeks?

A wonderful signing?

With Wolves’ goalscoring woes evident in their first two Premier League matches, where they only scored once, it’s vital that Lage replaces the goals injured Raul Jimenez gives them, and soon.

Batshuayi could be a wonderful option. The £69k-per-week striker has netted 135 goals throughout his senior career, with 15 coming in the Premier League, despite never being a regular at Chelsea.

The Belgian striker had an impressive spell at Besiktas last season, averaging a rating of 6.96 courtesy of SofaScore, while also scoring 14 league goals. Immediately, that paints him in a very vivid light compared to those at Wolves with top-scorer, Jimenez, finding the net on only six occasions.

His goalscoring exploits weren’t the only positive performance indicator, with the player showing off his all-round game during his spell in Turkey.

He missed 14 big chances, which although not a great statistic, shows he is normally in the right place to fashion a shot. However, he did make 0.8 key passes per match, and made 1.5 successful dribbles per game also, showing great maturity to become more than just a goal scorer.

To put that into context, Jimenez would manage 1.1 key passes while only four players bettered his take-on success in 2021/22.

As a result, these stats should more than convince Lage to move for the “wonderful” player in the words of Nizaar Kinsella, and he could become available for a cut-price fee considering his contract expires at the end of the season.

Thomas Tuchel’s loss could be Lage’s gain and if he wants to make his Wolves team take the next step up, attackers with Batshuayi’s quality will go a long way to achieving this. He could well be a marvellous capture for the Old Gold.

Whelan bemoans Calvert-Lewin injury

Former BBC pundit Noel Whelan has been reacting to the ‘huge’ Everton injury blow on Dominic Calvert-Lewin before they play Chelsea in the Premier League.

The Lowdown: Thursday update

Football Insider claimed after the initial injury news broke that Calvert-Lewin is facing as many as three months on the sidelines thanks to a tear in his lateral collateral ligament.

Frank Lampard has since confirmed in his pre-Chelsea press conference on Thursday that the striker could be out for around six weeks, but of course the striker would need added time to get up to full match fitness and sharpness.

The Latest: Whelan reacts

Speaking to Football Insider, Whelan claimed that losing Calvert-Lewin for a serious amount of time is a ‘massive, huge blow’.

Sharing ‘whispers’ of a deal for Michy Batshuayi, he says it’s ‘worrying’ for Lampard that the Goodison Park outfit have not managed to bring in another striker already:

“It’s a massive, huge blow.

“It’s the last thing they needed before the start of the campaign – their talisman is injured for possibly three months.

“They’ve only got Rondon to fall back on. He’s not a natural goalscorer, he doesn’t have the energy or the threat of Calvert-Lewin.

“They’ll be scrambling to get a striker. I’ve heard whispers about Batshuayi, but they need to get someone quickly.

“This is exactly what they should have been planning for. They’ve got nothing to fall back on.

“They could have gone out and got another striker to plan ahead for this.

“It’s worrying times for Frank Lampard.”

The Verdict: Big blow

It is a big blow to lose Calvert-Lewin for the start of the season, especially considering that Salomon Rondon is suspended against Chelsea and both Richarlison and Ellis Simms have been let go to Tottenham Hotspur and Sunderland respectively.

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In an injury-hit season last term, he still scored five goals and made two assists in the top flight, and in the two campaigns prior, he managed double figure goals (Transfermarkt).

The 25-year-old remains such a key player for the Toffees, and this latest injury setback will not only affect them, but also his chances of making Gareth Southgate’s England squad for the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

Celtic open to offers for Albian Ajeti

Celtic are ‘willing to listen to offers’ for striker Albian Ajeti this summer, according to Sky Sports reporter Anthony Joseph.

The Lowdown: Disappointing career at Celtic Park

Two years ago, the Switzerland international made the switch from Premier League outfit West Ham and has since struggled to live up to expectations at Celtic Park.

The forward got off to a flying start with his Hoops career, netting in five of his first six Scottish Premiership games at the beginning of the 2020/21 season.

However, the 25-year-old then began to struggle, scoring just once more during that campaign. In total, having netted just three times last season, partly due to a hamstring injury, the former Basel man has amassed a record of nine goals in 48 appearances playing in a green and white shirt.

The Latest: Joseph’s claim

Joseph has shared the latest news regarding Ajeti’s future at Parkhead. Taking to an interview with GiveMeSport, the journalist claimed:

“I think Celtic are very much willing to listen to offers to come in for him and it might be something like a loan with an option to buy.

“It really depends on the fee because Celtic got him for £5m and they’d really be trying to make up as much of that money as possible.”

The Verdict: Time to move on

When the striker first arrived in Glasgow, the £5m fee paid for the player seemed like an absolute bargain, with his clinical abilities fully on show in his first few games for the club. This led to him being dubbed a ‘natural finisher’ by by former Celtic teammate Jeremie Frimpong.

However, having played just 552 minutes of football for the Hoops last season due to a combination of falling down the pecking order and suffering from a long-term injury, it appears Ajeti has become surplus to requirements for Ange Postecoglou’s side.

Therefore, if Celtic can recuperate a sizeable amount of the £5m fee they paid for the forward in 2020, it seems a move away from Parkhead is the best option for all parties involved.

Everton transfer news on Becao

Reliable journalist and transfer expert Gianluca Di Marzio has now revealed some exciting Everton news involving Rodrigo Becao.

The Lowdown: Solid season

The 26-year-old was a standout player for Udinese last season, ranking highly among his team-mates in terms of aerial duels won and average tackles, interceptions, clearances, blocks and passes per match in Serie A (WhoScored).

The 6 foot 3 centre-back could now join new signing James Tarkowski at Goodison Park, as Frank Lampard looks to bolster his defensive options for next term.

The Latest: Talks ongoing

Taking to Twitter, Di Marzio has revealed that there is now a ‘negotiation in progress’ between Everton and Udinese over the potential transfer of Becao.

However, expanding in his latest column, he adds that there is still some distance between the two clubs over a fee, and an agreement is not close as of yet.

The Verdict: Get it done

Currently rated at £5.4m by Transfermarkt, Becao is not likely to break the bank, so this is a deal that Everton should look to get done as soon as possible, especially after the £60m that they received from selling Richarlison to Tottenham Hotspur.

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Becao is a fellow Brazilian, and at 26 years of age, he is about to enter his prime.

He could establish a formidable centre-back partnership with Tarkowski and would also provide extra competition for the likes of Ben Godfrey, Michael Keane, Mason Holgate and Yerry Mina.

Aston Villa open to John McGinn offers

Aston Villa are now open to offers for midfielder John McGinn following links to Tottenham, according to Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Conte target

Reliable reports from The Telegraph’s Mike McGrath revealed last month that McGinn was one of six players wanted by Antonio Conte in north London this summer.

Spurs have been extremely busy early on in the summer window, already securing deals for Fraser Forster, Ivan Perisic and Yves Bissouma, so it looks as though they are about half way through their business.

The 27-year-old Villa star meanwhile missed just two Premier League games under Seven Gerrard last season, who hailed the midfielder as ‘unique’.

Gerrard was adamant that the Scot was an irreplaceable part of his plans at Villa Park, but it looks as if he has made a surprise U-turn when it comes to McGinn’s future.

The Latest: Source shares update

FI provided an update regarding McGinn on Monday morning after being informed by a ‘Villa source’.

They claimed that Villa are now willing to listen to ‘top-tier’ offers for the midfielder, with Gerrard ‘not totally convinced’.

The source added that McGinn is always ‘whinging’ behind the scenes at Bodymoor Heath and isn’t the easiest to manage.

The Verdict: Interesting

This is an extremely big claim made by FI regarding McGinn, given his status as a near untouchable in the XI last season, so his future is one to keep an eye on over the coming weeks.

Villa have already bolstered their midfield ranks by signing Boubacar Kamara on a free transfer, but should McGinn leave, they would surely need another star addition.

Manchester United have also been linked with the Villa star this year, so it will be interesting to see if Villa receive any offers from north London or Manchester prior to the new season.

In other news: ‘Him and Coutinho…’ – Pundit excited by potential AVFC partnership amid interest in 103 G/A ace. 

Leeds: Raphinha seeking new club

Leeds United winger Raphinha is now personally attempting to find a new club ahead of the summer transfer window, according to a report from Spain (via Sport Witness). 

The lowdown: Rife speculation

Despite retaining Premier League status on the final day of the 2021/22 season, Raphinha continues to be linked with a big money move away from Elland Road this summer.

Having been heavily indexed to La Liga giants Barcelona, recently Liverpool have seemingly returned with their own admiration for the Brazilian attacker.

However, as all goes quiet from the Spanish front, the 25-year-old may now have taken matters into his own hands…

The latest: Move sought

As per Spanish reports, translated by SW, the Leeds star is now ‘looking for alternatives’ to Barcelona and Liverpool is a possible destination.

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It’s claimed that Raphinha – who was lauded as ‘sensational’ by South American football expert Tim Vickery – is ‘offering himself to other clubs’ as he attempts to secure a place in the Brazil national team squad for the Qatar World Cup later this year.

The report states that the prospect of a switch to the Catalan club is ‘losing strength’ due to the priority of taking Bayern Munich superstar Robert Lewandowski to the Camp Nou instead.

The verdict: An inevitable exit

Unfortunately, it appears highly improbable that Raphinha will still be with the Whites at the start of the 2022/23 campaign and at this stage, it’s questionable as to whether Jesse Marsch would want the Brazilian to stay.

Actively seeking a departure from Elland Road puts the skilful magician in an invidious position that would likely allow enough water pass under the bridge to see Andrea Radrizzani sell should an acceptable offer be forthcoming.

On that note, valued at £40.5million and with two years remaining on a deal in Yorkshire (Transfermarkt), Leeds should expect to boost their own transfer coffers to the tune of at least £50million as Marsch and Victor Orta eye a possible replacement in the shape of Takumi Minamino.

In other news: Leeds now eyeing move for lethal and sublime’ gem, read more here

Rangers dealt Borna Barisic injury blow

Rangers suffered an agonising defeat on penalties in the Europa League final on Wednesday night, and the players will now have to regroup ahead of today’s Scottish Cup final.

Giovanni van Bronckhorst could make a few changes as the Ibrox club look to end their 13-year wait to lift the domestic knockout trophy, although one player is definitely out of the Hampden Park clash.

Borna Barisic will be missing for the match due to an injury sustained against Eintracht Frankfurt in midweek, as Van Bronckhorst confirmed in his pre-match press conference on Friday: “Borna is not available for tomorrow, all other players who featured are available.”

This will result in a tactical change from the manager, as with the Croatian missing, Calvin Bassey will be required to revert to the left-back spot, which will open up a berth at the heart of defence.

With first-team mainstay Connor Goldson being more or less certain of a place, it will be up to the Dutchman to pick between Leon Balogun or give 18-year-old Leon King a start in a major cup final.

Rangers will miss Barisic

Whilst Barisic hasn’t been up to his usual high standards this term (his Sofascore rating in the Premiership is 7.29, compared to 7.4 last season), his absence will nonetheless be a big blow to Rangers’ chances of winning the trophy. His attacking threat is always a bonus, as he offers excellent support to Ryan Kent on the left-hand side.

As per WhoScored, only James Tavernier and Alfredo Morelos have exceeded the Croatian’s 1.9 key passes per game in the Premiership among Van Bronckhorst’s starters this season, while just four Gers players had more than his three assists in the league.

With there being transfer interest for Barisic during the January window, this season could be his last at the club. It would be a shame if the Europa League final defeat is his final match for the Ibrox giants, and his manager will no doubt be gutted not to have the 29-year-old’s creative spark to call upon today.

AND in other news, Van Bronckhorst must unleash “invaluable” £26k-p/w “Duracell bunny”, Rangers need him

Newcastle to announce USA friendlies

Luke Edwards has now revealed some exciting plans for Newcastle United in the summer.

The Lowdown: Pre-season in USA

The St James’ Park club are set to go to the USA for pre-season, a few weeks after their 2021/22 Premier League campaign ends away to Burnley on Sunday afternoon.

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They are not the only club in the top flight set to go to Stateside, with Arsenal set to play both Chelsea and Everton across the Atlantic.

The Latest: Edwards update

Taking to Twitter, Daily Telegraph journalist Edwards has revealed that Newcastle are due to announce a pre-season training camp in the USA in July and will play some friendlies in Cincinnati.

He tweeted: “#nufc are due to announce a pre-season training camp in the USA in July, with friendly games; in Cincinnati. Expect things to be confirmed this week.”

He added that he has had it confirmed from Stateside, but not from the Tyneside club itself, stating: “I’ve had this confirmed from the USA. Nothing yet from #nufc other than they are going to States this summer for pre-season.”

The Verdict: Exciting

It is always exciting to hear where your club is going to go for pre-season, and it will be good for the Magpies to train in the United States, with the view of potentially playing some of the best teams from the MLS.

The climate should also be nice and warm for them to relax after confirming their place in the Premier League for another season, and the players should enjoy themselves as they prepare for what looks to be a busy 2022/23 campaign ahead.

The new owners will no doubt want to stamp their authority on the market, so some big names could well come through the doors at the Toon.

In other news, find out who NUFC are now ‘confident’ of signing this summer

'Sometimes the ball goes for six even if I've not timed it, because of the work I've put in'

Andre Russell on the expectations on him after the IPL, and how his doping ban changed him

Interview by Alexis Nunes30-May-20191:51

Defiant Andre Russell looking to prove a point at the 2019 World Cup

Before heading to this year’s IPL, Andre Russell said to his family that he wanted the Most Valuable Player award at all costs. He got it. After the IPL, he said to his wife that there would be no time off for him because he wanted to work hard to take the same honour in the World Cup. In an exclusive interview with ESPNcricinfo in Southampton immediately after West Indies’ unofficial warm-up against Australia, Russell revealed how the one-year anti-doping ban he served in 2017 pushed him to try to become one of the best players in the world.You are back in West Indies colours after a while. That must be extra special, before the World Cup?
Yeah, of course. In the last series [at home, against England], I joined the West Indies team. It didn’t go well with my knee issues. I couldn’t even walk. And then to see the guys gelling together and playing in front of the Caribbean crowd, winning games, doing well and to tie the series – it was something I was eager to be a part of. I went back home, worked extra hard on my rehab and made sure that my knees are in the best form. I’m happy to be back, especially on a big stage like the World Cup.You have been in good nick after the IPL, where you were destructive. Do you feel people are expecting you to play just like that in the World Cup?
A lot of people expect me to do the same thing that I’ve been doing in other leagues, especially the IPL. People say to me that they can’t wait for the World Cup because I’m going to smash all these…It’s a total different feel, you’re talking about 50 overs. When you look at T20 cricket, me going out to bat with 30 balls to go, it’s a totally different mindset. I look to back myself. If I face 15 or 16 balls out of the 30, I can get close to 50 runs, and that is good for the team.ALSO WATCH: Russellmania hits T20But you have to bat a bit smarter in 50-over cricket. If I go with the same mindset here, it may work. And if it don’t work, you will look stupid, getting out with 15 overs to go. My mindset is still clear. Once the ball is in my area, I go with it and then be a bit more patient.There was a lot of talk about where you should really come in the batting order at Kolkata Knight Riders. There is this feeling that you were coming in too late. But you thrived in the high-pressure moments. Where are you most comfortable coming in to bat for West Indies?
I’m always a flexible guy. Originally [I’m] supposed to bat at six. If West Indies are batting and we have good momentum, 30 overs bowled, only lost two wickets, then with only [about] 15 overs to go and we are 240-250, we’re having a good day, I’ll come in at five. These are changes that I don’t have a problem with. As long as I get over ten overs to bat, the team will definitely see some fireworks from Dre Russ.

“The record is 59 sixes [in an IPL season]. I’m going to try and go for that record, because I’ve done it so easy this year without thinking about the record”

I back myself to bat wherever the team needs me. If they need me to bat at No. 4, to bat 30 overs, I’m willing to do that. But I’m happy batting when [there are] ten to 15 overs [left]. And I hope that the batsmen at the top can actually bat as long as possible because the longer they bat, they set the game up so I can come in and do what I do best. If I need to bat 35 overs, that’s going to be a game where we’re reeling. I need to come in and bat long. I can do that. So I’m ready to do whatever.Where does the strength lie with this West Indies team?
The strength is in our batting. You have Chris Gayle at the top, with Evin Lewis, then [Darren] Bravo and [Shimron] Hetmyer, Shai Hope, myself, Jason [Holder], Carlos [Brathwaite]. You have [Nicholas] Pooran as well. All these guys coming out of the IPL with form. We all know what they can do. We have to win this World Cup with the bat, because most teams are getting over 300 runs comfortably now. We can’t look to say we gonna defend. We have to try and win this tournament with the bat, meaning scoring close to 400 runs every game. Guys are going to feel the pressure. They’re going to make mistakes. Even if we bowl bad, we might still get wickets. You’re chasing 12-13 an over. For a batsman to go in and see they need 13-14 runs an over and to score that consistently for 10-15 overs [is tough]. That’s why we have to make sure we raise the bar with the bat in this World Cup.ALSO READ: Jarrod Kimber: Why Andre Russell is such a big deal in T20How do you embrace the role of being one of the most senior players in the team alongside your captain Jason Holder?
Jason is a very, very, cool guy. I’m willing to share whatever experience I’ve earned over the years. I know he must be picking Chris’ brains. When I’m with him [Gayle], I don’t talk cricket all the time because I know, as a player, it’s annoying. But I pick his brain and ask him what his mindset is like when he goes to bat. It is funny, you know – all these big players have nerves too.Really? Do you still get nervous?
Of course. I don’t show it. But every single game, I’m nervous. Nervous to do well. It’s not nervousness that “I am scared of the bowler”. The more I perform, the better people expect me to do all the time. The expectation is so high that it makes me nervous to do well. Once I get a boundary or two, I’m set and I’m underway.You had a year away from cricket due to the anti-doping ban. Not once during that time did I see you down. Where did that positive energy come from?
God put us on this earth for a reason. There is a saying, and you know this as well because we are from Jamaica: everything happens for a reason, and God don’t give a man more than what he can bear. I believe in that saying. When I got banned for a year, I didn’t do anything wrong and it happened. My family come to my house every two days just to sit and talk to me, try to comfort me. “You’re okay?” I’m like, “Yes, I’m good.” I still do everything. I never posted nothing negative about JADCO [Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission] or whoever was in charge. I was just saying to myself, “You know what? Maybe this is a part of my journey.””One of my favourite shots is a pull off a fast bowler, because a lot of guys have it that I’m not a good puller or hooker”•AFPI just called my trainer and I said, “Big man, I need you to start making me work harder.” I started running with parachutes on my back, started training like an NFL player. I tried to look for workouts, exercises that I’ve never seen a cricketer do. That’s how I motivated myself, because I wanted to come back stronger. A lot of people accused me. “Oh yeah, I know he was on something because he’s too strong. I know he was taking drugs.”You know, I’m strong, mentally. And if I wasn’t strong, maybe I would shed tears. Because when I showed my mum and my grandparents those things, they were like, “Oh my god, why are they saying that?” And I’m like, “That’s just how social media is. People always look for the negative things to comment.”But I’m still here. I look at David Warner and Steven Smith go through a similar situation. Their condition was better than mine, because they could still play in other leagues. My condition was so terrible, right? Just for filing failures. I didn’t update my whereabouts on time.ALSO READ: Andre Russell, MVPI couldn’t even go to certain grounds to a cricket match. I thought I had killed someone.The ban took you away from what you love, didn’t it?
It was so annoying. I couldn’t be seen at certain grounds practising. Once, a guy wasn’t allowed to bowl to me. I wasn’t allowed to bowl to him. It was so unfair to me. I was like, “Why is my life so hard?” But I didn’t question it too much. I just know that it is a part of life, and I’m going to use this opportunity to get more success.When I came back in 2018, I came back strong, smashing sixes for West Indies and working my way back into the 50-over format. Before I went to the IPL [in 2019], I wanted to achieve the MVP. I leave home and I said to my mother and family, “Listen, MVP – that’s what I want to achieve. Even if my team win or lose, the MVP should be Andre Russell.”

“I changed my mentality since I got banned. [Before] I was slacking off. When I got the ban, I came back stronger, leaner, more muscle. I’m hitting the ball effortlessly for six”

I set my standard. I didn’t plan to hit 52 sixes. That’s just crazy. Chris Gayle’s record is 59 sixes. I didn’t even know that. I just didn’t believe 59 sixes were possible in a season, but I could have done it. It’s actually something for me to think about next year. I’m going to try and go for that record, because I’ve done [52 sixes] so easy this year without thinking about the record. If I knew there was a record like that, when eight games were gone, I would have focused on just hitting sixes.Who in the cricket world stuck by you during your time off from the game?
Most players were still in communication. I live good with each and every player. I don’t live bad with people, because when you have enemies, it’s never healthy. I want to drive my cars in Jamaica with my window down and with my top back and enjoy life. I don’t want to be hiding and curse out people or be disrespectful to people. That’s not my life.The way Chris lives with people, that’s amazing. That’s why I choose a guy like that to be my idol. I idolise his career, the way he goes about it, how humble he is. He just gets along with people. He will just see two strangers and be like, “Hey mate, what are you drinking?” It makes me realise that it doesn’t matter what you achieve or how much you achieve. Always be humble and just be a nice person.I’ve met people on flights and they are powerful people – rich businessmen. They are so business-headed that it helped me become a businessman. Being a businessman is not easy while playing cricket, but when I picked their brains and talked to them about business and how would I do this or do that – it helped my game as well. You end up being smart, wiser.My biggest fear in life is to go back to where I came from. I’m from a poor background. Most athletes, most cricketers, most basketballers, most successful people, don’t get a handout. We all work hard for it. Cricket don’t pay forever. Our lifespan is until 35, and then you start thinking about another year, another two years, because your body is getting older. I want to play till I’m 38-40, but when I get to 35, I’ll see how it is. I’m 31 now and sometimes getting out of the bed, I’m like, “Aaargh.” ()”I back myself to bat wherever the team needs me. If they need me to bat at No. 4, to bat 30 overs, I’m willing to do that”•Getty ImagesYou said in the IPL that bowlers fear you. What are your plans when you attack bowlers? Is it instinctive or just natural to hit bowlers out of the ground?
When you have a skill and you are blessed in a certain way, it becomes easy for you. Someone sees from outside, they’re like “Wow, it’s hard.”So you’re born with it?
I think I have it naturally. It’s like Jofra Archer bowling at 150kph. Like, he don’t have a big, long run-up. He’s skinny. But his inner strength and his action is perfect. [Jasprit] Bumrah don’t have a proper run-up. I would never teach my son to run up like Bumrah. But at the end of the day, cricket is evolving. [Lasith] Malinga – different action. But they all bowl good pace and are very, very effective.With my batting – it’s just a gift. I work hard at it as well, because you might get a gift – like Steph Curry is good at shooting three-pointers, but if he takes a week away from the gym and doesn’t shoot any ball, he’s going to become rusty. That’s how I’m consistent. I make sure I keep batting, keep bowling, do something. I was home for a week or two weeks recently. I was planning a vacation after the IPL. I was saying to my wife, “Listen, I ain’t got no rest time. World Cup is coming next. MVP. People expectin’ Andre Russell to do what he’s been doing for KKR.”ALSO READ: Why aren’t T20 teams scoring bigger more often?So I went to the beach, put in some work. I have a gym at home. I put in work late nights. Because of the time difference [from India during the IPL], coming back to the Caribbean, I was up till 2-3 in the morning. Sometimes people think I post [on social media] every time I work out. No. I work out late nights, I work out early mornings – but I post when I feel like. I work out twice a day. I bat, go to the physio, then bowl, then go home, gym.When I look at Cristiano Ronaldo and LeBron James, I watch their progress. They work hard and that’s why they’re so successful. I changed my mentality since I got banned. [Before] I was slacking off. I was big. I was lazy. I wasn’t practising hard. Then when I got the ban, I came back stronger, leaner, more muscle. I’m hitting the ball effortlessly for six. Sometimes I don’t even time the ball well and it still goes for six just because of the hard work I’ve put in. We all have to be disciplined if we want to be a legend.

“The way Chris [Gayle] lives with people, that’s amazing – the way he goes about it, how humble he is. He just gets along with people. He will see two strangers and be like, ‘Hey mate, what are you drinking?'”

I would love to contribute big for West Indies and help them win this World Cup. If I can play an innings like I did in the IPL in the final of the World Cup and put West Indies over the line, lifting that cup would mean… I don’t even know how to explain it. Can’t describe that.What are you favourite shots?
One of my favourite shots is a pull off a fast bowler, because a lot of guys have it that I’m not a good puller or hooker. To be honest, since I saw what happened to Phil Hughes [who died after being hit on the side of the head] – may his soul rest in peace – it shake me up. I get serious and realise this is a life-and-death sport.When I bowled a ball and it hit [Usman] Khawaja [in the unofficial warm-up] this evening, I run to him and I was like, “You okay?” I tried to bowl a short ball to get him out or to bowl a dot ball, not to hit him. I don’t like to see blood. I don’t like to hurt someone else. It is a tough sport. We all have to be tough.So a short ball from a fast bowler and I pull it in the stands – that’s the best shot ever, because I’m used to hitting sixes in this area. I’m accustomed to batting at the death and that’s where I get most of my runs from. Yorkers, low full toss, length balls – I don’t worry about those. I worry about the short balls and pulling them or upper-cutting them for six. I get goosebumps when I play those shots. I’m like, “Okay, I’ve put the fast bowler under pressure.”

Languid, loose, luckless

Is he this blinding talent that is constantly checked by blameless adversity? Is he on a career-long quest to tick off every bizarre dismissal? Where does the bad luck end? Where does Upul Tharanga begin?

Andrew Fidel Fernando at the SSC04-Aug-2017A square drive like honey from a jungle hive; a pull so languid he is still playing the shot after the ball has been fetched from the boundary. And then, suddenly, wafts outside the off stump, bizarre dismissals when the team is in a tough spot – all of which indicate that after 12 years and 29 full Tests, we still don’t really have an answer.Where does the bad luck end, and where does Upul Tharanga begin?Take his dismissal today. The last time India toured Sri Lanka, Kumar Sangakkara (who, by the way, has been among the loudest, longest Tharanga advocates), edged R Ashwin to slip twice in this final Test, modelling the orthodox fashion for a left-hander to get out to a top-quality offspin bowler. But Tharanga is not orthodox. He blocked out four of Ashwin’s first five balls, and his outside edge was beaten by the other one – each of these being outstanding deliveries. But when, on the final ball of the over, Ashwin sends down short, legside filth, Tharanga taps it directly into the lap of KL Rahul at short leg. Rahul was already cowering expecting the batsman to unfurl a savage pull. But like a winning lottery ticket floating into an open shirt pocket, there he stood, having helped dismiss the batsman. Perhaps you could say he is unlucky to have been caught by a fielder who had not meant to catch him.But where does the bad luck end? Where does Tharanga begin?This dismissal comes after he had played such a quintessential Tharanga knock in the previous match. His drives were so pretty in the first innings, you almost wet yourself watching them. He picked length with such alacrity, it was as if the bowlers had given him a detailed rundown of where they would put every ball. He had made 64 of the sweetest runs that could be made, when, jumping out of his crease, he hit the ball to a close fielder, and though he dived back into the crease in time, his bat bounced and he was given out. He was unlucky the ball did not hit the stumps sooner, while his bat was still grounded. He was unlucky to become, perhaps, the last batsman ever to be dismissed in this fashion, with the rule change due to take effect in October.But then, where does the bad luck end? Where does Tharanga begin?And what does one say about his first-innings dismissal in the Test before that? Against Zimbabwe, at Khettarama, Tharanga had produced a half-century of such rare beauty, Renaissance painters would have chopped off their own limbs and thrown themselves off buildings in jealousy. His first five boundaries had come off his first nine balls. While he was at the crease, Sri Lanka were sailing. Then, when he’d stroked 71 off 107 balls, Dinesh Chandimal played a straight drive, the bowler got fingertips to ball, and Tharanga, his bat held uselessly in his wrong hand at the non-striker’s end, attempted to make his ground with his back foot, and was found a few centimeters short.Where does the bad luck end? Where does Tharanga begin?It is not as if this is merely a recent trend. Nor is it restricted to specific moments only. The line between misfortune and his own flaws are blurred on a macro scale as well. In 2014, for example, Tharanga top-scored in Mahela Jayawardene’s farewell Test at the SSC, hitting 92 and 45 to set up a victory. Then, bizarrely, he found himself axed from the squad for the very next match, in New Zealand. His fans will present this as some jailable injustice. His detractors will say that if your spouse flirted as hard and as often as Tharanga’s outside edge on seaming decks, you would set up covert cameras and quietly hire a divorce lawyer. His combined average in England, New Zealand and South Africa is 24.15.Is he this blinding talent that is constantly checked by blameless adversity? Is he on a career-long quest to tick off every bizarre dismissal?Sri Lanka need a consistent, experienced batsman so badly now and, at 32, Tharanga is running out of time to make the transition from promising player to run machine.The problem is, will the bad luck ever end? Will the age of Tharanga ever begin?

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