Cole Palmer explains savage shrug celebration against Man City as Chelsea star makes surprise 'disrespectful' claim

Chelsea youngster Cole Palmer has revealed what prompted him to perform his savage shrug celebration against Manchester City.

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Palmer revealed shrug celebration against Man CityWas not nervous before facing former clubEarned maiden national team call-upWHAT HAPPENED?

The Chelsea star revealed how he came up with the shrug celebration after scoring the last-gasp equaliser against Manchester City last weekend. The 21-year-old further suggested that he did not really think about his former club – where he spent a total of 15 years while making his way through the youth ranks – after netting the all-important goal.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

It was Palmer's fourth top-flight goal for the Blues since joining them on the transfer deadline day, and incidentally, all of those have been from penalties.

Right after the City clash, the striker got his maiden senior national team call-up as Gareth Southgate included him in the Three Lions squad for their upcoming Euro 2024 qualifying game.

WHAT DID COLE PALMER SAY?

Speaking to reporters, the Chelsea forward said: "I spent 15 years at the club. I can’t really go and celebrate how I would usually celebrate if I have scored a 95th minute equaliser because it would have been disrespectful. So I just decided to do a shrug. I don’t know why."

He added: "When I saw the ref give it I thought: 'It’s my time'. I spoke to Raz [Raheem Sterling] and he said: ‘What’s happening?’ and I was like: 'I wanna take it'. He was like 'Fine' and when I put the ball down I just picked a spot and tried to put it there. I felt I was waiting for a while to take it. So I did think about my old club and stuff but after that not really. It was a crazy game. I did feel a bit nervous before and it felt a bit weird to see everyone from my own club. I had been there for 15 years. But when the game started it felt normal and it was a good game."

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

The youngster could make his international debut on Friday when Southgate's men take on Malta. Palmer will also hope to feature in England's final Euro 2024 qualifying outing against North Macedonia on November 20.

Malik, Sami return to Pakistan ODI squad

Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Sami have been picked in the Pakistan ODI squad for the first time in over two years

ESPNcricinfo staff24-May-2015Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Sami have been picked in the Pakistan ODI squad for the first time in nearly two years. However, Saeed Ajmal was not among the 16 members to meet Zimbabwe in the three-match series in Lahore.Malik hadn’t played 50-over cricket since June 2013, but has averaged 50.36 in List A cricket over 12 matches in the last two years, including a hundred and five fifties – made in successive innings.Sami was last with the ODI team in June 2012. His last 12 months in domestic one-day cricket have fetched 19 wickets at an average of 23.63 and economy-rate of 5.10.A heavily revamped Pakistan ODI squad

In: Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Sami, Hammad Azam, Imad Wasim, Ahmed Shehzad, Babar Azam, Anwar Ali
Out Fawad Alam, Saad Nasim, Saeed Ajmal, Sami Aslam, Umar Gul, Zulfiqar Babar, Rahat Ali

After a 0-3 defeat to Bangladesh, the Pakistan Cricket Board had hinted at making considerable changes. Ahmed Shehzad and has reclaimed his place as well. Imad Wasim, who made his Pakistan debut in the second T20 against Zimbabwe, is also part of the squad.Umar Gul, Rahat Ali and Zulfiqar Babar have lost their place, though. So the fast-bowling workload will be borne by Wahab Riaz, Anwar Ali, Junaid Khan and Sami. Yasir Shah is the lone specialist spinner in the squad.Opener Sami Aslam and middle-order batsmen Saad Nasim and Fawad Alam have been dropped as well. Umar Akmal, who was not picked for the Bangladesh tour, hasn’t been preferred for this series either.Pakistan ODI squad Azhar Ali (captain), Mohammad Hafeez, Ahmed Shehzad, Asad Shafiq, Haris Sohail, Shoaib Malik, Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), Anwar Ali, Hammad Azam, Imad Wasim, Yasir Shah, Wahab Riaz, Mohammad Sami, Junaid Khan

Arsenal winger Bukayo Saka links up with rapper Central Cee and Saltburn star Barry Keoghan at London Fashion Week

Arsenal winger Bukayo Saka has been spotted posing for photos with rapper Central Cee and actor Barry Keoghan at London Fashion Week.

London Fashion Week in full swingArsenal's Bukayo Saka in attendanceMartin Odegaard joins his team-mateWHAT HAPPENED?

Saka has been enjoying some rare time away from the football pitch at London Fashion Week in Victoria Park. The Arsenal star was been hanging out with rapper Central Cee and actor Barry Keoghan, who has shot to fame with roles in 'The Banshees of Inisherin' and 'Saltburn'. Saka swapped his usual red and white Arsenal shirt for a chunky sheepskin coat to deal with the London chill.

Central Cee InstagramAdvertisementTHE GOSSIP

Saka wasn't the only footballer to be spotted at the event. Team-mate Martin Odegaard was also in attendance along with Tottenham's Hueng-min Son, Dele Alli, Ben Chilwell and former Real Madrid ace Gareth Bale. The players mixed with a host of celebrities including supermodel Naomi Campbell, actor Olivia Coleman and rap star Dizzee Rascal.

DID YOU KNOW?

Saka is a brand ambassador for Burberry but told GQ several of his team-mates would also be keen on the job. He said: "There are a lot of fashionable players. I don't want to say too many and end up missing people out. At Arsenal, Reiss Nelson for sure, and Julien Timber. Me and Martin are coming tonight, but there are a lot more players that have an interest and good style."

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR SAKA

Saka will be back in his Arsenal kit on Wednesday in the Champions League. The Gunners take on Porto in the first leg of their last 16 tie.

Harmison attacks ECB 'arrogance'

Steve Harmison has criticised the ECB for its handling of the Kevin Pietersen situation and the impersonal manner in which he was rejected for the vacant selector’s position

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Feb-2014Steve Harmison, the former England seamer who retired at the end of last season, has added to the criticism directed at the ECB this week, both for its handling of the Kevin Pietersen situation and the impersonal manner in which he was rejected for the vacant selector’s position.Harmison, who 222 wickets in 62 Tests for England, revealed in his column for north-east regional newspaper the that he had experienced the ECB’s “arrogance” first hand, after applying to join the selection panel in place of Geoff Miller. England require at least one new selector, after Miller stepped down at the end of last year.”Last month I answered an advert on the ECB’s website to apply for a job as an England selector,” Harmison wrote. “I didn’t get it. That’s fair enough, I didn’t really expect to. But it would have been nice to have been told by something other than a bog-standard automated email.”I’d like to think after playing more than 100 times for England in all forms of the game I’d at least get a personal reply, explaining why they came to their decision. But then, after everything that’s happened with Kevin Pietersen this week, they obviously don’t do explanations.”Harmison, a former team-mate of Pietersen’s, has been one of the discarded batsman’s most vocal supporters during a week in which debate about the end of his international career has raged on TV, radio and in newsprint – with Andrew Strauss the latest to voice an opinion.”I know Kev, and everything he has said about wanting to stay on until 2015, to play in the next one-day international World Cup, to get 10,000 Test runs and complete the set of home-and-away Test hundreds in South Africa, tells me he’s still hungry to play for England,” Harmison said.”KP is not unmanageable. No- one is. He will respond to a strong leader, as he did with Michael Vaughan.”Harmison also pushed for Vaughan, the 2005 Ashes-winning captain, to be considered as a candidate to succeed Andy Flower, who quit as team director last month, in the aftermath of England’s 5-0 whitewashing in Australia. Like Harmison, Vaughan has been prominent in giving his backing to Pietersen, even calling for him to be made Alastair Cook’s vice-captain.

Working on increasing pace – Sandeep

IPL newsfile on May 9, 2014

ESPNcricinfo staff09-May-2014Working on increasing pace – Sandeep
Kings XI Punjab seamer Sandeep Sharma has said he is working on increasing his pace, which will complement his impressive swing that has troubled some of the best batsmen in the IPL. Sandeep, 20, has ten wickets in five games this season, including two consecutive three-wicket hauls.”I was bowling around 125 kmph last year but now I am consistently hitting the 130 mark,” Sandeep told . “My pace has increased and I will continue to work in this direction. My pace will definitely increase as I have age on my side. The bones and muscles will only get stronger. In my interactions with the coaches, I have learnt that no matter how good the batsman is, he will struggle against the swinging ball.”Sandeep said he had learnt by observing Dale Steyn that a bowler needs to crank up the pace a bit more when the ball gets older and stops swinging. “When he (Steyn) operates with the new ball, he bowls around 135-137 and as it gets older he picks up speed. It is with the old ball that I will look to get extra yards because the ball doesn’t swing and one has to get the yorkers and bouncers right at that stage.”When asked about his interactions with his team-mates, Sandeep said Mitchell Johnson has been helping him with the mental aspects of the game, while Virender Sehwag has helped him plan against opposition batsmen. “He (Sehwag) helps me read the wicket and informs how it has behaved in the past. He also helps me plan for a particular batsman, by discussing their strengths and weaknesses.”Batsmen not converting starts – Albie Morkel
Royal Challengers Bangalore allrounder Albie Morkel has said his team’s main batsmen would have to step up and make bigger scores in order to rise from their current position at No.5. In seven games, RCB have had only three half-centuries – from AB de Villiers, Parthiv Patel and Yuvraj Singh – while the captain Virat Kohli has a highest of 49*. Chris Gayle has not carried on after making starts in three innings so far.”Most of our batsmen got good starts. But we didn’t convert,” Morkel said on the eve of Royal Challengers’ home game against Kings XI Punjab. “The best innings was of AB who hit 89. And if you want to win T20 games, out of top five-six batsmen, one has to go out and score a big one. Thirties and 40s can win you games on occasions.”Royal Challengers play their next three games at home and Morkel was confident the side would fulfill the expectation of winning at least five of the next seven games to qualify for the playoffs. “It is a blessing in disguise to play three matches (in Bangalore),” Morkel said. “We haven’t yet peaked. Hopefully, that happens tomorrow. We all know Virat Kohli is a feisty character and he will be up for it.”Enjoying bowling with Steyn – Bhuvneshwar
Sunrisers Hyderabad seamer Bhuvneshwar Kumar has said he is enjoying sharing the new ball with Dale Steyn and that his interactions with the South African have helped him improve as a bowler. Bhuvneshwar is currently tied with Mohit Sharma on top of the IPL wicket charts with 14. He has been one of the most impressive Indian bowlers this season, troubling batsmen with his swing with the new ball and maintaining an impressive economy rate of 5.45.”He (Steyn) is the one who always talks and shares experiences regarding the different situations in a match. Bowling at the death has been great as of now. I am glad I have been taking wickets and have been economical at the same time,” Bhuvneshwar told .Bhuvneshwar said that patience is key for a bowler, irrespective of the format. “It (patience) is the key while bowling in different situations. And as a bowler, there will be days when you go for runs and don’t get any wickets. But one needs to realise that patience pays off, and with time, it will get you results. I feel a bowler should learn to be patient come what may.”

No let up for BCCI in Supreme Court

Any penalty ‘disenfranchising’ teams from the IPL should be carried out by the BCCI, the Supreme Court observed today

Sharda Ugra08-Dec-2014Shivlal Yadav’s role questioned

Towards the end of the hearing a writ petition from supreme court lawyer Rahul Mehra was admitted on behalf of a former Hyderabad Ranji Trophy player. The petition questioned the role of Shivlal Yadav as a senior BCCI functionary and interim president of the BCCI, due to the fact that there was an enforcement directorate case against the Hyderabad Cricket Association around the construction of a stadium in Uppal.

Any penalty ‘disenfranchising’ teams from the IPL should be carried out by the BCCI, the Supreme Court observed today, while at the same time raising questions about the composition of the board that should be empowered to take such a decision. The observations, made by the two-man bench of Justice TS Thakur and FM Khalifullah, also put a doubt over the BCCI elections, scheduled for December 17.In hearing arguments by Kapil Sibal, counsel for sidelined BCCI president N Srinivasan, in the 2013 IPL corruption case, the bench said that should the court disqualify a team, it would appear to be interfering in BCCI duties. Justice Thakur then asked, “But which BCCI should do it? The BCCI whose term is over?” The BCCI’s term ended in September but it postponed its elections twice in the expectation the Supreme Court case would come to a conclusion. The judge then raised a question about the election. “Who should be allowed to fight? People who are subject to a matter of inquiry, people who are indicted by the commission? Should they proceed to capture the BCCI once again?”The three issues highlighted during the hearings today were around N Srinivasan’s alleged conflict of interest, which has been brought into focus by the two-man bench, the BCCI’s own official position on the issue, and the action to be taken in the IPL case.FIH clarifies its conflict-of-interest rule

The International Hockey Federation (FIH) has sought to clarify its conflicts of interest policy to counter the statement made in the Indian Supreme Court by Kapil Sibal, counsel for sidelined BCCI president N Srinivasan on December 8. In a statement sent to ESPNcricinfo, the FIH said it would like to “correct the record.” The conflicts of interest policy and guidelines state, “all members of staff and all members of the Executive Board and any committee or body appointed by the FIH are required to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest between their personal and official interests and activities.”
The FIH said their policy contains, “very thorough examples where a conflict of interest may arise and requires all individuals covered by the Policy to submit a declaration immediately following their appointment in respect of all interests which might result in a conflict of interest.” The policy also contains, “robust procedures” for “managing any actual or potential conflict that does arise.” The procedures include, “as a minimum” action, “prohibition” on the individual with a conflict of interest on voting “on the relevant issue(s).”

Sibal argued that, “the right to participate in the electoral process has nothing to do with conflict of interest,” at which point he was asked by the judge whether CSK should be disenfranchised, when Gurunath Meiyappan was found “indulging in betting activity.” Sibal said that should happen only if Gurunath was found to be a team owner. Srinivasan, he said, should be allowed to contest elections in keeping with the statutes of societies. He cited the example of the FIH (International Hockey Federation), which permitted officials to have commercial stakes in aspects of the sport as long as they made their interests formally known to the organisation. He did, however, let the court know that no such specific rule was present in the BCCI constitution.Justice Kalifullah said the BCCI president needed to be above board, and also above “any kind of allegation.” In Srinivasan’s case, the bench said, “Taking all circumstances in account, it is very difficult to accept your contention that there is no conflict of interest. You being MD of India Cements, India Cements owning CSK, an official of CSK involved in betting and you heading the BCCI.” Justice Thakur said Srinivasan was “dealing with dual capacities. You are a contractor and you’re heading a contracting party.” Sibal then argued that a bidding process had been involved in the purchase of the franchise and that the bench was making “speculations.” Khalifullah said to him, “We are not speculating. There is already a finding. There is a director who is involved in betting.”Srinivasan, Sibal said, should not “be foisted with vicarious liability, vicarious criminal liability. Why should I be saddled with the consequences due to the statements attributed to someone else?” He said that the litigants’ case was a “conceptual” argument over conflict of interest, as there was “not a single allegation against me.” His argument that Srinivasan would distance himself from the penalty given out to CSK and Gurunath was countered by Justice Thakur who said, “Bias acts in a subtle way. Even as a president if you go away, the bias will continue to influence the judgement of other people. Will it make a difference? [If Srinivasan is are distanced from the CSK case] It won’t.”The court said, the “purity” of cricket had to be maintained, “all persons at the helm of its affairs should be above suspicion.”The hearing resumes on Tuesday.

'Luck, momentum on India's side' – Bravo

Dwayne Bravo, the West Indies captain, said luck did not favour his side during the first ODI against India, but refused to blame the slow and uneven Kochi pitch for his side’s heavy defeat

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Nov-2013Dwayne Bravo, the West Indies captain, said luck did not favour his side during the first ODI against India, but refused to blame the slow and uneven Kochi pitch for his side’s heavy defeat. Marlon Samuels and Darren Bravo, two of the visitors’ top batsmen, were dismissed by deliveries that stayed alarmingly low. West Indies were 77 for 2 and 183 for 5 before they lost those batsmen, and managed only 211, which India hunted down in 35.2 overs.”Can’t blame the wicket. Both teams play on it. Nothing changes,” Bravo said. “Unfortunately we end up [with] luck not going our way. India are playing good cricket at the moment and the luck and momentum is on their side. We have to dig deeper and work harder as a team and hopefully those things can change. Marlon Samuels got a ball that kept very low, so did my brother. Two of our better players got starts and were unable to carry one because of deliveries that kept very low. In the Indian innings some balls kept low as well but they were not on the wickets.”We were 40 runs short. We had a good start even after we lost Chris Gayle early. Johnson Charles and Samuels put up a good partnership. We set a target of 280-285 but could manage only 211. We were on our target but we kept losing wickets. During the first 15 overs of both innings, we were on target. It is difficult for tailenders to bat during the last seven-eight overs in an ODI.”West Indies were dealt an early blow after their star batsman Gayle was run out for a duck and suffered a hamstring tear on his left leg. Gayle is likely to miss the remaining two ODIs and the start of the New Zealand tour immediately after this series. “Losing Chris is always a big blow for us,” Bravo said. “He is our best player. Psychologically, having Gayle at the top is good for us, so losing Gayle at this time and not having [Kieron] Pollard – two of our best players – it is hard for us to fill those two places. It leaves the door open for two guys to come in and get an opportunity against the No. 1 team, the world champions, to make a name for themselves.”Bravo felt his bowlers were lacking in control, although he commended them for their efforts in trying to defend 211. “The Indian bowlers executed their plans very well. They realised that the straighter they bowl it is harder to score. We did not maintain that discipline long enough as a bowling group. Therefore we end up on the losing side. Two hundred and eleven is not enough runs batting first on a small outfield. Yes, a couple of balls kept low but I still think we can do a lot better.”I think our bowlers gave their heart out. Both [Ravi] Rampaul and [Jason] Holder bowled very well and gave their 100 per cent in their second spell. Fielding was good at times. [Sunil] Narine played his apart again. As a captain, [I am] pleased with the effort by the bowling group.”West Indies’ hopes of making the chase difficult for India were dashed by Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, who put on 133 for the second wicket. Bravo said it was hard to stop such quality players when they were in top form.”When you look at the Australian series, the Tests and even today, they are at the top of their game. They played very well today and everything is going in their way. [It is] always difficult to bowl to batsmen in such form with that quality. They are world-class players. They are playing at home and know the conditions better than us. Difference between both teams is that when their batsmen get starts they carry on and put their team in a winning position. That is something we have to learn. Chasing 211, once two of your top batters get fifties, the game is over.”

Liverpool fans react as Arnautovic could miss Monday’s showdown

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Loads of Liverpool fans have been reacting to some news that could have an effect on the title race, as Marko Arnautovic left West Ham’s defeat at Wolves on crutches.

Newcastle did Liverpool a huge favour on Tuesday evening, but that wasn’t the only advantage they gained in the title race on the night.

West Ham will host the Reds on Monday night, and it looks fairly certain they will be without talisman Arnautovic.

The Austrian international, who recently signed a new contract amidst talks of a move away from East London, has scored seven times in the Premier League this season, per Whoscored.

He left Molineux in crutches on Tuesday though, as confirmed by injury expert Ben Dinnery.

Football.London’s Sam Inkersole has since said the injury “isn’t as bad as initially feared” but popular insider ExWHUemployee does expect the Austrian to miss one to two weeks.

The 29 year-old joins a long list of key first team players nursing injuries, such as Fabian Balbuena, Manuel Lanzini, Jack Wilshere, Carlos Sanchez and Andriy Yarmolenko.

The Irons have conceded seven goals across their last two games in all competitions, and the Twitter reactions down below are expecting a trouncing on Monday…

Gillespie the right man for Plunkett

Yorkshire’s bold decision to tempt Liam Plunkett away from Durham during the winter was widely regarded as a major gamble, but just five weeks into the new season their faith has been rewarded with his best bowling performance in nearly four years.

Myles Hodgson at Edgbaston15-May-2013
ScorecardLiam Plunkett took his first Championship five-wicket haul for his new county•PA PhotosYorkshire’s bold decision to tempt Liam Plunkett away from Durham during the winter was widely regarded as a major gamble, but just five weeks into the new season their faith has been rewarded with his best bowling performance in nearly four years.Few counties were queuing up to secure the services of a bowler good enough to play nine Tests and 29 one-day internationals for England, most recently in 2011. Indeed his radar had malfunctioned sufficiently for Durham to select him only three times in Championship matches over the past two years.But having battled through the dark times with Durham, he has responded to encouragement from Jason Gillespie, the former Australian Test bowler and Yorkshire’s first team coach, and claimed 5 for 32 to help dismiss Warwickshire, the county champions, for just 128. It was his best return since claiming 6 for 85 against Nottinghamshire in September, 2009 and provided hope that, at 28, his talent may yet be revived.”I felt good at the start of the year against the Universities and took six-for, so it’s nice going in the Championship as well,” Plunkett said. “I went away this winter and did some work in Adelaide and it was just nice to be able to prove to myself that I can take five in an innings. I’ve picked up twos and threes, but to get five makes you confident.”His display ensured Yorkshire dominated an opening day that had the morning session wiped out by rain. Exploiting swing-friendly conditions after winning the toss, Yorkshire seized control early with openers Varun Chopra and Will Porterfield falling to loose shots in difficult conditions.Only Jim Troughton, who carried his bat over three hours to finish unbeaten on 65, showed the necessary application to survive in testing circumstances. His team-mates failed to follow his example and fell to a succession of ill-judged shots with Plunkett claiming three wickets in 18 balls before returning to finish off the innings.”I’m enjoying my game massively,” Plunkett said. “I just felt a bit stale at Durham but being here I feel fresh and I feel in good rhythm. It goes hand in hand for me. When I’m enjoying it things fit in and that’s the way I’m feeling right now.”For someone to come and offer you a contract for three years and put that faith in you has been awesome. To have Dizzy, with everything he has achieved and the way he goes about things, do that is great. He is much more relaxed than I thought and for me that’s what I needed, not to have too many complications but just go out and enjoy your cricket, try and bowl quick and hit the keeper’s gloves and that’s benefitted me so far this year.”For Warwickshire, currently struggling with a casualty list that includes six players, it was a chastening experience. It was their lowest total since being dismissed for 98 against Hampshire in August 2011.

BBL faces delicate balancing act

Money isn’t a worry for the Big Bash League organisers this year. However, the tournament built more around celebrity culture rather than quality cricket, still faces a challenge

Alex Malcolm19-Dec-2013Timing is everything. Four hours after Australia’s humiliating defeat at Lord’s in July, Cricket Australia dropped a press release about the Big Bash League and was duly whacked for it. Now, four days after the Ashes was decided in Perth, the BBL is free to begin its third edition in front of its biggest audience yet. The timing could not be better.What this means is that the recurring ‘Test versus T20 players’ debate becomes a moot point, for the moment at least, due to the Ashes being in safe-keeping and with the BBL’s future secure on the back of CA’s $100 million broadcast deal with free-to-air network Channel 10.CA deserves a great deal of credit for what it has achieved with the development of the competition from a commercial standpoint. Commercial executive general manager Mike McKenna and his team held their nerve in the face of financial losses in the first two years to deliver handsome dividends in the third.But the BBL has been built, in many respects, on glitz and glamour, the star-power of Shane Warne, and a celebrity culture rather than quality cricket. That novelty has worn off, so to speak, with Warne hanging up his lime greens last season. Ricky Ponting, too, has left the playing arena for the Channel 10 commentary team.The upcoming tournament will however still feature a few Australian veterans. Michael Hussey has been sighted in nets across the country. He took his gear to Hobart to hit balls at the end of each day’s play during Australia A’s tour game against England in November while working as a television commentator. In between times, in Perth, he was regularly seen at an indoor centre in front of a bowling machine manned by his batting coach Ian Kevan. He also played two T20’s for his club side Wanneroo and approached those games with the same professionalism he exuded on each of the 302 occasions he represented his country.Simon Katich, likewise has played in the Ryobi Cup in October for Western Australia and, for the second straight year, made a century in a lead-up grade fixture for his old WACA club Midland-Guildford, ahead of captaining the Perth Scorchers.For players with national ambitions, these are the examples to follow.Much has been made of the exhausting length of the six-week tournament and the segregation of the Sheffield Shield season to accommodate it – only T20 cricket will be played between now and the tour of South Africa in February. George Bailey has been vocal about the tournament affecting his form in previous years. Yet, short-form cricket is a big reason why he can now call himself an Ashes winner.In fact, the triumphant Ashes team in Perth is full of players who have enjoyed success in the BBL. Steve Smith was the winning captain in the opening edition of the tournament in 2012, and Brad Haddin was the captain of Sydney Sixers during their Champions League triumph the same year. Australia’s coach Darren Lehmann was the mentor of the 2013 BBL champions Brisbane Heat. David Warner made his name in T20 and Nathan Coulter-Nile, who was the 12th man in Perth, rose to national prominence through the shortest format of the game.So while the virtues of this tournament can be debated endlessly, and the likes of South Australia and Adelaide Strikers coach Darren Berry and Queensland and Brisbane Heat captain James Hopes continue to voice their concerns about the length of the BBL in relation to their Sheffield Shield campaigns, every team and every player is in the same boat, with plenty to play for.As per previous years, the litany of player movements and short-term contracts is tough to keep track of for even the most vigilant of fans.Michael Hussey has joined the Sydney Thunder, much to the chagrin of Scorchers coach Justin Langer. The Thunder have been the laughing stock of the BBL in the last two seasons and have shelved the helicopter that flew Chris Gayle from his penthouse in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, to training at the ANZ Stadium. Instead, they have signed Hussey, Englishmen Eoin Morgan and Chris Woakes, and Sri Lanka’s Tillakaratne Dilshan and Ajantha Mendis. They will also have David Warner for the opening-round derby against the Sixers.No one player epitomises the nomadic nature of the BBL more than Mark Cosgrove, who has shifted cross-town from the Sydney Thunder to the Sixers while plying his trade domestically for Tasmania. He joins new signings Marcus North, Nathan Lyon and Englishmen Ravi Bopara and Chris Tremlett in Sixers’ magenta for the first time.There will be more Englishmen for the upcoming tournament than in the previous two editions. Alex Hales has moved from the Melbourne Renegades to the Adelaide Strikers, while Craig Kieswetter joins Australia’s super-sub fielder Chris Sabburg at the Brisbane Heat. Luke Wright remains at the Melbourne Stars alongside Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga.Incredibly, Owais Shah, a veteran of no less than 10 T20 franchises worldwide, remains loyally linked to the Hobart Hurricanes, where Dimitri Mascarenhas and Pakistan batsman Shoaib Malik will join him.The Melbourne Renegades will rely on spin again, with the side featuring Muttiah Muralitharan, Fawad Ahmed and Pakistan all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez.Pat Cummins will miss his third straight BBL due to injury, while Mitchell Starc, James Faulkner and Ben Hilfenhaus have all been withdrawn from the early part of the tournament, as CA continue to carefully manage their fast-bowling stocks.Warner, Bailey and Smith will be the only Test players available for the early part of the tournament, albeit for one game only.So even with the Ashes decided and BBL in a strong financial position, the delicate balancing act remains. The difference, now, being that the urn is firmly in Australia’s possession.

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