Bangladesh A sweep series with huge win

ScorecardFile photo: Mohammad Mithun hit three fours and a six during his 60•BCB

Half-centuries from Rony Talukdar and Mohammad Mithun set up Bangladesh A’s 122-run victory against Zimbabwe A at the Harare Sports Club, ensuring the visitors also swept the series 3-0.Bangladesh A, after being inserted, began positively as Talukdar and Tasamul Haque shared a 90-run opening partnership. After Tasamul fell, Mithun kept the runs flowing by stroking a 64-ball 60, with three fours and a six, while Talukdar hit six fours and three sixes for his 77. The pair’s 57-run stand laid a solid groundwork, which Bangladesh A’s middle and lower order built on, as handy knocks from Mahmudul Hasan (31) and Muktar Ali (20*) powered the team to 286 for 8.Zimbabwe A lost wickets right from the off during the chase, and were eventually bundled out for 164 inside 42 overs. The opener Kevin Kasuza top-scored with 43, and Ryan Burl chipped in with 41, but only one other batsman – the captain Godwill Mahmiyo with 36 – managed to make more than 12. Mohammad Shahid was the pick of Bangladesh A’s bowlers, collecting 3 for 13.

Newcastle backed to sign Joe Gomez

Liverpool centre-back Joe Gomez could potentially join Newcastle United in the summer transfer window, according to journalist Dean Jones.

The Lowdown: Gomez out of favour at Liverpool

The 24-year-old has had a frustrating season to date, finding himself behind Virgil van Dijk, Joel Matip and Ibrahima Konate in the centre-back pecking order at Anfield.

Gomez has only started one Premier League game all season and even that was at right-back against Norwich City last weekend.

It is only natural that he may be keen on earning more regular playing time elsewhere, with other clubs rumoured to be eyeing up a move for him.

The Latest: Journalist backs Newcastle move for Gomez

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Jones claimed that Newcastle could end up being Gomez’s next destination this summer amid links with a move to Tyneside, seeing him as a more realistic signing than someone like Paul Pogba.

The journalist stated: “I think when names like Pogba get thrown around, and then you’re also seeing Joe Gomez, you’re like, ‘Well, that seems much more sensible’. And from what we’ve seen so far, a much more likely route that they go down.”

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The Verdict: Keep hold of him

Gomez may currently be struggling to make his mark at Liverpool but he is a proven defender who remains relatively young, having been hailed as ‘sensational’ by Jurgen Klopp in the past.

It would be a huge shame to see him move on, and with Van Dijk and Matip both turning 31 this year, he should still be viewed as a long-term option at the back for the Reds.

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While serious injury problems may have had an impact, which could alter Liverpool’s thinking, it makes more sense to persevere with him into the future, rather than possibly allowing him to excel at another Premier League club.

In other news, one pundit is excited about a potential Liverpool signing. Read more here.

'Slim' chance of Warne joining ICL

Shane Warne is worried about “flying in the face of officialdom” © Getty Images

Shane Warne’s manager says the legspinner’s chances of joining the Indian Cricket League (ICL) are “reasonably slim” because he does not want to be part of an unofficial event. The Indian board has threatened any local players with life bans if they join the league, which is focussing on Twenty20 matches and is planned for September.Warne’s manager James Erskine told the Australian the bowler had not made a decision on whether to join the competition. “There’s the small thing about grounds not being made available, the Indian players not being available and being threatened with bans,” he said. “I would think the chances are reasonably slim that Shane would do it because it’s flying in the face of officialdom and I know he doesn’t want to be part of anything that’s not officially sanctioned.”However, AAP reported Dean Jones, who is on the ICL’s board, had returned from an overseas holiday and would resume negotiations with Warne and Glenn McGrath. McGrath said in Canberra this week he was interested in playing, but Brian Lara is the only high-profile player committed to the league.”I’m not going to make any comments about players signing or anything like that,” Jones said. “Obviously we’re talking to them, we’re just trying to make sure it goes ahead, that’s all.”No players contracted to Cricket Australia have approached the body requesting to appear in the tournament in India. Despite the lack of big names, Jones was confident the series would go ahead.”The fans and the viewers will be quite happy with the signings we’ll get, trust me,” he said. “The fixtures and the squads will be released soon, sooner than you think.”

Newell won't lodge complaint

Mick Newell: ‘I don’t feel robbed as such but I’m a little disappointed as I thought it was fairly clear’ © Getty Images

Mick Newell, the Nottinghamshire coach, won’t be making a formal complaint despite the controversial finish to the Twenty20 Cup final at Trent Bridge. Leicestershire edged home by four runs but Jim Allenby’s final delivery was extremely close to a no-ball for being over waist height.However, following the result Newell said the issue would now be laid to rest despite being unhappy at the umpire’s decision. Asked if he thought it should have been called, Newell said: “Yes. But I won’t be mentioning it to the umpires. They’re not going to change their minds now.”I don’t feel robbed as such but I’m a little disappointed as I thought it was fairly clear, but it happens I suppose. I assume either umpire could have called it had they seen it but Leicestershire were already celebrating, so it was a tough situation and if they don’t see it they don’t see it.”But Samit Patel, who was interviewed moments after the match finished, was less restrained in his comments. “It was clearly a no-ball and it’s cost us a chance to win the final,” he told Sky Sports. “We got so close but someone has to lose and it’s us today.”However, winning skipper Jeremy Snape disagreed, insisting that the decision to allow the delivery was in line with the policy the umpires had followed all day. “I had complete faith in the umpires,” he said. “We got in a winning position and Jimmy [Allenby] – credit to him – bowled a great last couple.”Heavy rain was falling during the closing stages of the final and Snape said that played a part in the frantic finish. “The ball was wet and the bowlers had rags to control the ball in the rain so it was hard but we’ve seen balls at that height all day not being called.”Leicestershire have become the first team to win two Twenty20 titles but Snape is not getting carried away by the success. “We’re only four years in so we’re not going crazy about making history but we’re really pleased.”It was tough but we believed we could come and win and credit to the spinners, they have been big match-winners for us all season.”

Murali spins Sri Lanka to victory

Scorecard
How they were out

The West Indians had no answer to Muttiah Muralitharan’s wizardry © Getty Images

Muttiah Muralitharan took eight wickets to annihilate West Indies in the second Test at his hometown of Kandy. Set an imposing 378 to win, West Indies were not expected to pull off any miracles, but the manner in which they were decimated by Muralitharan that left them shellshocked, and rendered the capacity crowd at the Asgiriya Stadium delirious with joy. In the end, West Indies were shot out for 137, with Lasith Malinga and Rangana Herath claiming the other two wickets, as Sri Lanka won with more than four sessions to spare.Even a turning pitch and an inexperienced West Indian batting line-up could not detract from a monstrous bowling performance by Muralitharan, who swept away batsmen in a manner reminiscent of one swatting pesky flies. If the offbreak was dangerous, the doosra was unplayable, accounting for most of his victims. The batsmen were left clutching at air, in a maelstrom of offspin bowling that sucked them in, whirled them around and then spat them out. This was not a contest. This was a case of schoolchildren being taught a lesson they would remember for a long, long time.For the record, Sri Lanka won the Test match by 240 runs and the series by a 2-0 margin. But neither scoreline could adequately describe the outright humiliation that the players and spectators witnessed on the fourth afternoon at Kandy. The threat of rain was looming all the time, and Sri Lanka missed the talismanic Chaminda Vaas. No matter. With Muralitharan being in the form he was in, West Indies could have fancied their chances of saving the game only up till the point that he came on to bowl.

Rangana Herath celebrates the dismissal of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, one of only two batsmen who didn’t fall to Murali © Getty Images

If Muralitharan had looked competitive in the first innings, in the second he was positively devastating. Runako Morton, Ryan Ramdass and Sylvester Joseph were left flummoxed by vicious doosras, the last two off consecutive deliveries, and Narsingh Deonarine, the only batsman to pose any kind of resistance, was forced back on to his stumps and bowled. Omari Banks followed an offbreak down the leg side into the hands of the keeper Kumar Sangakkara, and Daren Powell gave Mahela Jayawardene his fourth catch of the innings at silly mid-off. Denesh Ramdin’s promising knock ended with yet another doosra – he was drawn out of his crease and bowled. Tino Best was undone by a ripping offbreak. In the middle of the carnage, Herath snapped up Chanderpaul to to capture the only Test-class batting talent that West Indies possessed. Malinga picked up the wicket of Xavier Marshall, but these were just side-shows in the Muralitharan extravaganza.Sri Lanka had their eyes on a series whitewash long before Marvan Atapattu called his players in with the Sri Lankan score on 375 for 7. Play commenced late after rain delayed the start of the fourth day’s morning session. Sangakkara continued from where he had left off, moving effortlessly to 157 not out from his overnight 135, a performance that got him the Man-of-the-Match award. Atapattu chose to delay his declaration, possibly influenced by Vaas’s injury, and Muralitharan’s recent attack of the flu. Sangakkara and Herath used the opportunity to share a 54-run stand to put the target well beyond the reach of West Indies. But with Muralitharan bowling the way he did, they really needn’t have bothered.

West Indies second innings
Xavier Marshall lbw b Malinga 1 (2 for 1)
Shuffled across to a yorker that swung lateRunako Morton lbw b Muralitharan 9 (38 for 2)
Ryan Ramdass c Jayawardene b Muralitharan (49 for 3)
Sylvester Joseph c Jayawardene b Muralitharan 4 (49 for 4)
Shivnarine Chanderpaul c Jayawardene b Herath 24 (77 for 5)
Narsingh Deonarine b Muralitharan 29 (105 for 6)
Omari Banks c Sangakkara b Muralitharan 1 (111 for 7)
Daren Powell c Jayawardene b Muralitharan 0 (119 for 8)
Denesh Ramdin b Muralitharan 28 (131 of 9)
Tino Best b Muralitharan 8 (137 all out)

Tendulkar joins in on the opening debate

Sachin Tendulkar: typically guarded in his response© AFP

Sachin Tendulkar has joined the debate regarding India’s opening pair for Tests, stating that it would be extremely difficult to pick between Aakash Chopra and Yuvraj Singh as the partner for Virender Sehwag in the coming season.Speaking to the media during the Indian team’s fitness training camp in Bangalore, Tendulkar said: “It’s going to be a tough call. Either way, somebody is going to miss out. Both are equally good. It’s going to be a difficult decision.”If you pick Yuvraj, you lose out on a very good opener. And if you pick Aakash, you lose out on somebody who is exceptionally talented. It’s a very tricky situation.”The opener’s spot has come into focus over the last few days, after Sourav Ganguly picked Yuvraj as Sehwag’s likely partner for the forthcoming home series against Australia. Sehwag himself disagreed with the move, stating the need for a technically sound, defensive batsman at the other end to balance his own aggressive instincts.Chopra did an exceptional job at the top of the order in Australia, blunting their pace attack and providing solid starts which India’s formidable middle order then built on. Chopra’s contribution to India’s success on that tour wasn’t lost on Tendulkar. “Chopra has done exceedingly well as an opener on two tough tours of Australia and Pakistan. In the recent past, he is one of the best opening batsmen,” Tendulkar said. “He looked very confident, solid and mentally tough. That’s what you require as an opener.”

It's not the passport

Now then, has John Geoffrey Wright, that infernal Kiwi, the Canterbury interloper, that foreign fellow, prostrated himself before our own BCCI president, just got right down on his arrogant knees and thanked His Dalmiyaness for giving him a one-year extension? I mean, there he was, sometimes on a two-month extension, unsure about his future, just how we like it, and we go and give him 12 months. Talk about indulgence.We Indians are hospitable to the point of hysteria, still hauling along our tedious colonial baggage. So many pontificating pundits and garrulous gurus with Indian passports, and we still choose Wright? So what if these former cricketers have no real coaching resumes; so what if they can go three days nonstop without a pleasant word to say about the team (and then they expect the players’ respect!); so what if they promise us a retreat into a cricketing stone age? They’re Indians, aren’t they?What does Wright know about us Indians? ask some former players. Indeed, what does he know? Instead of Aamir Khan videos to relax with, he bungs in tapes of opposition batsmen at work (what bhai, they don’t see enough of them on the field?). Instead of a chai piyo first and a Kapil Dev-like `Enjoy, boys’, he runs them into the ground and has them dirtying their whites (Remember Chris Evert who said no shot was worth diving for? Well that’s us). Instead of players looking for the nearest Indian restaurant when they enter a hotel, they’re first checking if it has a good gym.Our Indian way is going to hell.What were we thinking?Wait a minute, hold your horses and those Dilip "Why do we need a foreign coach?" Vengsarkars for a moment. Maybe we’re finally thinking.Maybe we figured it out (or we should have): this guy is good for us. This guy whose father is dying of cancer in New Zealand, but who still finds the concentration and courage to not just hang with his team at the World Cup but help take them closer to the promised land than we dared imagine, really cares.This guy, who embraces everything Indian, who Javagal Srinath says "thinks about the team all the time, his focus is 100 per cent, and that sort of dedication is rare", may be the real McCoy.This guy, who strangely enough retreats from headlines; who Rahul Dravid says has made a difference in planning and organisation and has "created an environment where everyone is made to feel comfortable to give his best, and that only an attitude to improvement will be tolerated", has had a telling effect.This guy, who former player Arun Lal says "has with the support staff brought in professionalism, is first at the nets, sees the wicket is okay, the nets are okay, knows what to do with each player and is tremendous for the team", is doing a decent job. Maybe that’s the problem.He was supposed to fail. He was supposed to be proof (to some of us) that we know best. Forget the fact that the Indian team’s an improved side; forget that they actually win Tests abroad these days; forget that they won the NatWest Trophy while under pressure about contracts, and also the ICC Trophy. What’s incredible, says Lal, is that at the World Cup, after an indifferent start, they didn’t fold like a cheap pack of cards as Indian teams usually do, but found the nerve to scrap their way back. Still, the foreign coach is no good? (No one’s forgetting Sourav Ganguly’s considerable contribution; it’s just that this isn’t about him).So sure, there are lacunae, and we’re about a million miles away from Australia in consistent excellence, and the players are sometimes overtly touchy; but the incremental improvements are obvious. Running between wickets, fitness, focus, discipline, attitude, shouldering responsibility. A once-disparate team full of cliques and cabals is now actually huddling, and not just to decide which sponsor pays most.Funny thing is, ask the former Indian coaches and players, some who slag Wright off, and they say they never had enough time with the team to put their plans into action. Yet Wright doesn’t deserve any? They want him to turn a team arriving from an amateur system into world-beaters by tomorrow – something they knew they couldn’t do. But they’ve had their chance; now let Wright have his.As Ravi Shastri says flatly: "No one else but John Wright should be coach. No one (in India) has the qualifications or delivery (and follow-through). No Indian is a patch on him. He comes without baggage, he’s honest, he’s sincere, the boys like him and he has done wonders. If there’s a criticism – but I know his hands are tied – it’s that I’d like to see him crack the whip more".You think every former player in Australia likes their present team? You think everyone in the Australian team is so cuddly-close they’d marry their sisters off to the next guy? Still, they understand that the cause they’re fighting for – i.e. Australia – is bigger than any pettiness. They pull together. We tear each other apart.So these fellows, KD and gang, great players no doubt, who see no value in Wright, do they ever think, `Maybe, instead of shooting from the lip every time I see a microphone, I could contribute a few original ideas, travel to Australia to do a coaching course, ask John, "Hey, is there any way I could help at the nets?" ‘ Or is Anshuman Gaekwad saying that the boys are swallowing some illegal elixir the best we can do?How many times should we say it: great players don’t necessarily make great coaches. Coaching is not about grandstanding; it’s not about how many Tests you played or the continent-sized reputation you own or the fact that you can come up with seven cringe-inducing similes in five minutes flat. It’s about interest and detail and humility and ideas and homework and subjugating your ego and patience.But what bothers me most is why some people don’t like Wright. If the statistics showed we were going backward, then okay. If the team said he sucked, then fine. But that’s hardly the case. A former player says there are agendas at work, that people are pulling Wright down because they want the job. Earning the post is clearly too time-consuming. But more worrying is this. Could it be that some of us, the very same people who feel discriminated against by western nations (and we’re not always wrong, mind you) are now guilty of an ugly xenophobia? How pitiful that would be.No one’s saying Wright’s beyond criticism, or that he’s some messiah, but let’s treat him like any other coach. And that’s the key. Don’t judge him on colour, passport, accent; judge him on performance. Thing is, are these former players who are doing the sniping primarily concerned with the primitive idea of a foreign coach showing us up, or are they interested in us being a better team, whatever it takes?Let’s remember why so many of us thought foreign coaches might be a good idea. Not because they’re better, but because they’re different. Because a foreign coach might bring a fresh mindset; because we’re high on flair but need discipline; because he wouldn’t care if a player was from Mumbai or Meerut; because too many Indian coaches have come and gone without any effect; because we want a system and direction, not platitudes. And, oh yes, because the team thought we should have one too. They were reasonable reasons and they’ve been borne out.We live in a time of internationalism, where a Swede coaches England’s soccer team, an Australian was asked to help the West Indies cricket side, and an American baseball coach works with the Australian cricket team. Sport is a better place for such exchanges, for knowledge should never have borders. John Wright is learning every day about, and from, our country and he will be a more rounded man for it. To not learn from him (Why isn’t he coaching coaches, he feeding off them, they feeding off him – like maybe Ashok Malhotra hopefully did as assistant coach?) would be arrogant.One day, sooner than we think, Wright will be gone. And the greatest compliment we can pay him is by not missing him. By having a bevy of trained, ambitious, humble, dignified, tough, literate-in-modern-cricket Indian coaches ready to take his place. Endless pontificating and uselessly undermining him is not the prescription; hard work is. Alas, that’s something we’re not always too familiar with.

Bruyns quits Boland

Andre Bruyns has resigned his position as Director of Cricket with the Boland Cricket Board.According to the South African Press Association, Bruyns cited personality clashes among his reasons for leaving.”There was not a lot more I could contribute to Boland cricket. I reached a stage where I felt I was restricted in my duties because there are too many amateur structures in place,” Bruyns told Sapa. “I tried to run the affairs strictly along business lines which was important given the financial position of Boland, as well as the run up to the World Cup.”In particular, Bruyns said he was “astounded” by a decision to turn down an offer a a cash injection from Sail (South African Investments Ltd).”It would have worked brilliantly for the Board and it would have helped to develop the facilities in the region so that it would compare with the best in the country,” said Bruyns."If somebody wants to try a new direction, it’s his right. There is nothing sinister in his decision," the Boland president Henry Paulse told the Afrikaans newspaper Rapport

The 20 Premier League ‘Bosman Deals’ worth taking a gamble on

As the season draws to a close, many of the endless talents in the best league in the world become available on the Bosman ruling at the end of their contracts. With many Premier League clubs now unable to compete in the transfer marker due to financial constraints, turning to the list of players who are available free of charge can pay dividends can the end of the season. For teams who have just been promoted to the league, a cheap way of finding Premier League experience is to look towards players who are out of contract. The importance of the Bosman rule was indicated perfectly last year when Newcastle signed Demba Ba for absolutely nothing and received one of the most lethal strikers in the country. On this list of 20, you will find players with International experience, from Canada to Jamaica, from Senegal to Columbia, Champions League winners and players who were once signed for over £20 million.

You will find players who have been plagued by injuries, players close to retirement and players who are just starting their football careers. Have a look at who has made the list and see who your club could be signing for free this summer.

 Click on Diame below to unveil the top 20

Rangers handed Lowland League boost

A major Rangers development has emerged regarding their B team at Ibrox ahead of the 2022/23 campaign…

What’s the talk?

The Daily Record have confirmed, via an official statement, that the Gers’ reserve team will remain in the Lowland League for at least another season. Of the other 15 teams in the division, 11 voted to keep the Ibrox giants and their Parkhead rivals in it for another year.

They will not be allowed to be promoted or relegated from the fifth tier of Scottish football, which means that their participation is not preventing any teams from moving up or down the pyramid.

Buzzing

Gio van Bronckhorst will surely be buzzing with this news, as it is a huge boost to the club’s academy setup ahead of next season.

It allows the young prospects at Ibrox to play regular football at senior level without going out on loan. This means that the Gers can closely monitor their development and pick and choose when they are ready to make the step up to the Dutchman’s squad.

Instead of playing against other youth sides and not knowing how they can deal with the physicality of men’s football, playing in the fifth tier gives Rangers a broader perspective on their young players’ talents.

Speaking about the benefits, Ross Wilson previously said: “We want to test our players in different scenarios. Playing in the Lowland League would provide a completely different test for the young players, as well as our best-v-best games programme that we would continue to operate against some of the best teams in Europe.”

The sporting director also spoke about the need for the B Team to play in the division prior to the approval. He said: “We haven’t really seen any progress at all on some of the things that we think are to the betterment of Scottish football and player development in particular. Those things are steeped in data and research, not just something we have plucked out of thin air. They are concepts that have worked in other countries.”

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

Teenage striker Tony Weston is currently the second-top scorer in the league with 21 goals, six behind The Spartans forward Blair Henderson. Alex Lowry, who found the back of the net for Van Bronckhorst’s team in the Scottish Cup, has also scored seven goals in the Lowland League, which suggests that he has reaped the rewards of playing senior football.

Lowry is one player who has already benefited from playing in the fifth tier and hopefully he will be the first of many to do so. This is why the Dutch head coach will be delighted that his academy prospects will be playing in the division for another year.

AND in other news, Was £2.7m, went to £162m: Rangers fumbled deal for “alien” who’s the “god of football”…

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