Crystal Palace ‘seriously interested’ in Joe Aribo

Crystal Palace are ‘seriously interested’ in signing Nigeria international Joe Aribo, according to The Athletic.

The Lowdown: 19 goal contributions

Aribo, described as ‘unique’ and even ’like Yaya Toure’ by Ezri Konsa, made a whopping 57 appearances for Rangers during the 2021/22 season.

The Nigeria international turned out in a variety of positions ranging from centre-midfield to centre-forward, scoring nine times and providing ten assists. [Transfermarkt]

The 25-year-old’s last goal of the season came in the Europa League final defeat to Frankfurt, and it looks as if a move to the Premier League could now be in the cards.

The Latest: Palace keen

The Athletic’s Jordan Campbell provided a Rangers transfer update on Friday, looking at the club’s summer plans.

When it came to ‘who could go for big money’, Campbell said there is ‘serious interest’ from Palace when it comes to Aribo, with the Eagles believing the Rangers midfielder would fit in at Selhurst Park.

The Verdict: Get it done

Aribo impressed in a number of different positions last season and is at the peak of his powers with a career-high £9m Transfermarkt valuation.

And Patrick Vieira could also do with bolstering his midfield ranks, especially with Conor Gallagher returning to parent club Chelsea.

The Rangers star could be the perfect replacement for Gallagher at Selhurst Park, and with Aribo entering the final 12 months of his Ibrox deal, a transfer could be a real possibility over the coming months.

In other news: Palace and Vieira consider move for 34-goal ‘king’ who was once MOTM in a Euros final. 

Rangers had a ‘mare over Kris Commons miss

Rangers still have the opportunity to end the season with two pieces of silverware under their belts despite Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s men proving unable to regain the SPFL title.

After their final league game of the season at the weekend, the Ibrox club will then take on Eintracht Frankfurt in the final of the Europa League.

Then, the Gers will face off against Hearts in the final of the Scottish Cup after they beat their Old Firm rivals Celtic in the semi-final.

Despite this victory over their Glasgow enemies, the Hoops have recently been crowned league champions, bringing Rangers’ reign as top dogs to an end.

Another example of Celtic getting one over on the Ibrox club came back in 2011 when they secured the signing of Kris Commons.

Before he joined the Parkhead club from Derby County in January 2011, the midfielder was reportedly being eyed up by Rangers.

Speaking about the player and the club’s interest in him at that time, the late Walter Smith said: “He’s someone we would be interested in trying to get. We have made an enquiry and we are in talks with Derby to see what the situation is with him.”

After he joined Celtic, the Scotsman went on to become an impressive player for the Hoops, much to the detriment of Rangers, who will have had nightmares over their inability to sign him.

With 227 appearances under his belt for the Bhoys, Commons scored 89 times and provided 72 assists across all competitions.

This highlights just how much of a good signing he was for them and what a solid signing he could have been for the Gers.

Labelled as a “wonderful” player by former Celtic manager Neil Lennon, Commons retired back in 2018 with a combined total of 279 goals and assists to his name across the five clubs he played for.

With the benefit of hindsight, it’s safe to say that the Ibrox outfit should have done more, in addition to making their enquiry to Derby, to make sure they secured his signature.

Either way, despite this unfortunate situation, the club will undoubtedly only be focused on the present and making sure they get their hands on both trophies that are on offer to them this month to try and take the sting out of Celtic’s title win.

In other news: Rangers eyeing “fabulous” £28k-p/w gem who “rises to the occasion”, GvB would love him

Rohit Sharma's Bradmanesque home average

Stats highlights from the opening day of the Visakhapatnam Test, where Rohit stroked his way to a sixth consecutive 50-plus score in India.

Bharath Seervi02-Oct-20194- Number of Indian batsmen who scored a century when opening for the first time in Tests. Rohit Sharma joins Shikhar Dhawan, KL Rahul and Prithvi Shaw in doing so. Dhawan and Shaw achieved this feat on their Test debuts.ESPNcricinfo Ltd6- Number of consecutive fifty-plus scores for Rohit in Tests in India. Before his century this innings, he scored 82 and 51* against New Zealand in 2016, and followed it with 102*, 65 and 50* against Sri Lanka in 2017. Rahul Dravid is the only other Indian batsman to have made six consecutive 50-plus scores at home, between 1997 and 1998.98.22- Rohit’s average in Tests in India. He has played 15 innings and scored 884 runs with that healthy average, until Tea, and has four hundreds and five fifties. His average is the joint-best among all batsmen with 10-plus innings, sharing top spot with Sir Don Bradman, who also averaged 98.22 at home in 50 innings.ESPNcricinfo Ltd2015- The last time India had a 200-plus run opening stand in Tests, which was for 283 runs against Bangladesh in Fatullah.3- Number of double-century opening partnerships for India against South Africa. Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag had added 218 in Kanpur in 2004, while Sehwag and Wasim Jaffer put together 213 in Chennai in 2008. Overall, there have been five century opening stands for India versus South Africa, and three of them have been 200-plus.19- Runs scored by Rohit off his first 45 balls, at a control% of 82.20. He had control of over 90% after that and also scored runs at a quicker rate. For instance, in the second 45 balls, he smashed 38 runs whereas in his last 39 balls, he scored 34 runs.

Rohit Sharma’s innings progression on Day 1
Balls Runs SR Control%
0-45 19 42.20 82.20
46-90 38 84.40 91.10
91-135 24 53.30 97.80
136-174 34 87.20 92.30

4- Number of fifties for Mayank Agarwal in Tests, in eight innings. His score of 84 not out is the highest score of his short Test career. He had hit two fifties in Australia and one in West Indies before this knock.

Mustafizur stands out amid Bangladesh pace woes

Bangladesh’s fast bowlers struggled, managing only five wickets over 108 overs in the first Test; only one of them went out of his way to try and break the cycle

Mohammad Isam03-Oct-2017It was first the South African top-order, and then their captain who went after Bangladesh’s pace bowlers in Potchefstroom. Mustafizur Rahman, Taskin Ahmed and Shafiul Islam couldn’t provide early breakthroughs, contain the continuous flow of runs or find a consistent rhythm.They combined to take five wickets in 108 overs, which doesn’t make for good reading, especially when the opposition’s fast bowlers have taken 11 wickets in 82 overs. South Africa’s fast bowlers took a wicket roughly every 45 balls. Morne Morkel and Kagiso Rabada hurried the Bangladesh batsmen with pace and bounce while the visiting trio couldn’t even regularly beat the South African bat.But amid the wreckage of a performance, Mustafizur offered some promise in the second innings. Coming from around the wicket, he had both Aiden Markram and Hashim Amla caught behind cheaply. Markram, however, wouldn’t have been given out had he taken the review. Amla fell trying to guide the ball through third-man. Nonetheless, it was something to hang on to, and Mustafizur provided some sort of a counter.His change of angle also showed to his fellow pace bowlers that thinking a little out of the way can go a long way in moderately unhelpful conditions. Mustafizur is evidently a very different bowler than Shafiul and Taskin, with his combination of cutters and slower balls, but with teams finding out more about his skills through video footage, it is important for a bowler like Mustafizur to find new ways to get batsmen out.What he did to Markram and Amla wasn’t rocket science. Many left-arm pace bowlers do this to cut down the angle for right-handers to drive freely through the off-side field. In Tests, he has used the changed angle from around the wicket to give effect against right-handers. Six out of his 11 wickets of right-handers have come from bowling around the wicket. In this format, he has already bowled 230 deliveries from around the wicket, which is 39 percent of the 588 deliveries he has bowled to right-handers.He has used it much less in ODIs though. Only one out of 27 wickets of right-handed batsmen has come from bowling around the wicket. In this format, he has only ever bowled 36 deliveries from around the wicket, which is 6 percent of the 599 deliveries he has bowled to right-handers.Perhaps he doesn’t need to attack the stumps so often in ODIs , which prompts him to bowl so few from this angle. Batsmen are usually hasty in this format so he’d like to angle them away as much as possible, with the hope of finding an edge or deceiving them with his off-cutters.Taskin Ahmed in his delivery stride•AFPWhile he ended up conceding six boundaries from around the wicket, he was more attacking. In Bloemfontein where there is likely to be a more pace-friendly pitch, bowling from around the wicket, particularly if it is on a good length, could create doubt in the batsmen’s minds.Before Potchefstroom, Mustafizur used this angle the most against Sri Lanka in Colombo in March. In an outstanding spell, he removed the in-form Kusal Mendis, Dinesh Chandimal and Dhananjaya de Silva all from around the wicket. On that occasion, he had to create the angle to give the Sri Lankan batsmen something to think about. It ended up being a game-changing spell.It wasn’t as dramatic in Potchefstroom, but it was better than the fourth and fifth stump line used by Taskin and Shafiul. Both these bowlers have looked out of ideas throughout the Test and with Mushfiqur sending out a warning that poor performance will not go unpunished, their days are likely to be numbered. Subashis Roy and Rubel Hossain are in the Test squad, and at least one of them may get the nod.Taskin’s poor form cannot just be blamed on not bowling enough when playing at home. He also lacks in first-class experience – in other words, bowling long spells. He has said in the recent past that bowling in Tests is a new experience for him, and he has also looked lethargic in the field after long spells. While they undergo hard physical training like most Test bowlers, playing experience makes a huge difference.Morkel was the most experienced pace bowler in Potchefstroom while from Bangladesh’s side, it was Shafiul who was playing his 11th Test in seven years. Interestingly, Rabada, who made his Test debut few months after Mustafizur in 2015, has played 21 as opposed to the latter’s seven. Taskin and Duanne Olivier both made Test debuts this year but there is a key difference: Olivier has played 64 first-class matches. Taskin has played only ten; both their first-class careers had begun in 2011.

Asia Cup seeks more relevance with new format

Mostly the Asia Cup has gone by without creating much of a ripple, and this time too it’s being served as an appetiser before the main course – the World T20 – but in a new format

Mohammad Isam23-Feb-20165:13

Who are the Asia Cup favourites?

For years, there has been monotony about the Asia Cup. The contest has usually been exclusively between the Test-playing nations with one or two Associate nations being added on occasions to give it a wider appeal. Mostly, it has gone by without creating too much of a ripple. This year will be the Asia Cup’s 13th edition and to keep its relevance, the tournament has gone T20, a format that has usually brought teams closer in contests and is now expected to give everyone a chance in this usually predictable competition.The changed format was, however, down to its timing and proximity to the World T20. Since it is scheduled to end a few days before that major event, it was felt to be convenient for every team to use it as a warm-up tournament. The conditions in Fatullah and Mirpur would be similar to what most of these teams would face in India during the World T20, and in any case most of these teams don’t really play a lot of T20 internationals, so this would be a proper exercise to gear up ahead of a major tournament.ACC currently being run by two staff members

The ACC is currently being run with two staff members – events manager Sultan Rana and finance director Thusith Perera.
“There is a lot of restructuring at the ACC,” Rana told ESPNcricinfo on the eve of the Asia Cup. “At the moment, we have cut down the staff. Obviously we have all the support from the Test-playing countries. I gather that they are trying to revive some of its activities, which we were used to carrying out, like the development of cricket. I hope we are able to do it again. We have been doing it for the last 12-15 years. The contribution of the ACC is clearly shown in the four Associate teams that are playing ODIs.”
Rana said that there will be Asia Cup for the Under-19s and women while they are also hoping to hold a tournament for emerging nations which was part of Anurag Thakur’s plan to revive the ACC.
“We will be having Asia Cup for U-19s, women and emerging teams championships in which the A team from the Test-playing nations will participate with four Associate countries in a one-day competition.
“ACC is still there in the original form. We have all the Test-playing countries who are in the executive board. It is only the office. We have shrunk, you can say.”

Given the circumstances, defending champions Sri Lanka would welcome the Asia Cup. They are no longer the team of 2014 when they won both the Asia Cup and World T20 so a lot would now depend on how quickly they can gel and take momentum from this tournament into the World T20. Lasith Malinga, Angelo Mathews, Nuwan Kulasekara and Rangana Herath are important players in the team which is mostly youth-focused though Tillakaratne Dilshan would remain the batting leader.Sri Lanka’s richness in spin-bowling allrounders will be fulfilled by newcomers Milinda Siriwardana and Shehan Jayasuriya and they will also have Thisara Perera and Dasun Shanaka as pace-bowling allrounders. They will also hope that Dushmantha Chameera will carry his pace and movement from India to Bangladesh.India, who beat Sri Lanka in the recent T20 series at home, would be the favourites in the tournament although they haven’t made it to the Asia Cup final in the last two editions. This time, they will bank heavily on their top-order batsmen and spinners, and try to get a closer look at allrounder Hardik Pandya and left-arm spinner Pawan Negi while also give game-time to veterans Ashish Nehra and Yuvraj Singh. India will have to ensure that their pace attack and middle order get enough exposure and with it confidence ahead of the World T20.Hosts Bangladesh have a lot to play for, given their lowly T20 value. This is one format they haven’t cracked mainly because they hardly play T20s even at the domestic level. This time, however, they will be equipped with experience in the BPL and the six T20s against Zimbabwe in November and January. They have some new T20 match-winners in Mahmudullah and Sabbir Rahman but they will be without Tamim Iqbal, who did very well in the PSL, because of paternity leave.The PSL was also useful for Pakistan to pick their World T20 and Asia Cup squads. The likes of Sharjeel Khan and Mohammad Sami will add to Shahid Afridi’s reserve of experienced players like Mohammad Hafeez and Shoaib Malik. Mohammad Amir will remain the team’s biggest attraction after having played the bilateral series against New Zealand, and the BPL and PSL.The Asia Cup is already a success story for UAE who made it to the main stage by winning all three of the qualifying matches. Rohan Mustafa, Mohammad Naveed, Mohammad Shahzad and Mohammad Kaleem did well against Oman, Afghanistan and Hong Kong, and this tournament will be their showground in their quest to become a fully professional side. They will also be the only side in the Asia Cup who will not be looking ahead to the World T20.This edition of the Asia Cup will also be the first under the downsized Asian Cricket Council, who shut down operations in their Kuala Lumpur headquarters last June. They were supposed to become just ACC events but in October last year, BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur said that the ACC should be revived and as a first step, the Centre of Excellence is being set up in Dharamsala in India.A shrunk ACC running a tournament that has historically lacked a major impact might be stretching it but the Asia Cup hopes to remain relevant. Even if this time it is being served as an appetiser before the main course. It will be a similar situation in 2020 while the 2018 event is likely to feature ODIs. This, the first Asia Cup in T20 format, will say a lot about its survival in the consciousness of those watching, and those playing.

The long tail

In the unsung suburbs, in the shadow of the Gabba, flourishes the soul of Queensland cricket

Peter English04-Nov-2014To understand cricket in Brisbane, look away from the Gabba’s blinding light towers and long shadows. While the main games throb in that stadium, the sport pulses through the city on suburban grounds, in venues such as Graceville and Toombul, Valley and University.It is in clubs like these that the game in Brisbane has evolved, with skills and traditions learned, passed on, and remembered. For some, these traits lead to higher places and baggier caps. The rest depart, having contributed to Brisbane’s cultural cricket footprint.Like the poinciana and jacaranda trees that form the backdrop of these games, it is the hardy, resilient players who flourish in the hot and humid climate. “It’s tough,” says former Queensland fast bowler Greg Rowell. “[Cricket is] played in the heat of the summer, so it’s punishing physically.”A lawyer who last played first-class cricket in 1999 – after district cricket in Canberra, Sydney, Hobart and Brisbane – Rowell, at 48, remains connected to the grassroots as chair of Queensland Cricket’s grade committee. “There’s a good culture in Brisbane grade cricket,” he says. “I’m a fan of it.”A major part of that culture is the social side, which sees players from rival clubs get together off the field. Rowell also likes the way the competition acts as a school for fast bowlers. Within a couple of seasons at his club, Wests, for instance, Rowell bowled in an attack including Queensland greats Craig McDermott, Carl Rackemann and Dirk Tazelaar.”One of the things about playing in Brisbane is that couch grass – so important for good wickets – grows almost ten months of the year,” he says. “In the southern states, on the other hand, it does not start growing until later in the season.” This physical peculiarity means that pitches in Brisbane are suited to fast bowling, while those down south help spinners. It explains why, in Queensland “there has been a run of fast bowlers”, in Rowell’s words, a line that stretches from park grounds to the green-tinged Gabba.There is also a long and proud trail of players from the bush. Over Christmas in Brisbane, a cluster of grounds at Marchant Park hosts the 67-year old Country Week carnival. From senior-citizen farmers to green youngsters – who are made to umpire at square leg for hours – everyone downs tools and picks up from where they left off in the summer.In each of these city or country outfits, there are people like Rowell who want to stay involved in an area of great importance to the sport. “Club cricket is the cornerstone and foundation of Australian cricket,” emphasises Rowell.Michael Jeh, a Valley regular for more than two decades, still fills in when the lower grades are short. “It has lost none of its competitiveness and much of its charm,” he says of the local cricketing culture. “They play in exactly the same hard-nosed way that the Australian team plays but when you don’t even have the skill to carry it off, it can look sad,” Jeh says, pointing out that even at the sub-district level, the sledging can be fierce, with the junior games boys copying their televised heroes.Those role models appear most visibly at the Gabba, a ground that, in recent times, has been nicknamed the Gabbatoir. It has been the scene of brutal triumphs for Australian sides – and previous versions of rampant Queensland Bulls.If cricket grounds are a reflection of a state’s culture, then Queensland possesses large mobs of sozzled fans who spend afternoons trying to dodge a suffocatingly officious regime. One memorable ground announcement at a domestic game declared that anyone seen to throw a would be escorted out of the stadium. Not even the state’s rules-obsessed Liberal National Party government has considered such heavy-handedness yet.At the same time, the loutish behaviour can be disgraceful, and is responsible for many of the security controls that make viewing so demanding. “The searches and the hour it takes to get into the ground for an Ashes Test – that’s the trade-off for all the previous bad behaviour,” says Dean Tuckwell, another Brisbane club player with two decades of experience. He was a boy when he first went to the Gabba, when it was an actual cricket ground.Currently the Brisbane Lions Australian Rules club dominates the stadium, which is soulless compared with the former collection of mismatched stands overlooking a greyhound track. “The old ground was wonderful,” Rowell says. When he played for Queensland, 3000 people might have watched the Sunday of a Sheffield Shield game. “It was a small crowd but it made a buzz and it would feel packed,” he says. “There are no spiritual undertones to the new ground, that’s the AFL influence.”Australian players sit under the shade of a tree at Allan Border Field, 2000•Getty ImagesBefore its redevelopment from the mid-1990s, the Brisbane Cricket Ground was a hotchpotch collection that had as its centrepiece the Sir Leslie Wilson Stand, a structure that angled away from the ground. There was also a large grassy hill and a beer garden in the members’ section next to the dressing rooms. “The players would come out and mingle [with the spectators],” Tuckwell remembers.Back then, the Queensland Cricketers’ Club looked more like a rickety pavilion than prime viewing space for the handful of people lucky enough to squeeze into a spot on the balcony above fine leg. Long socks and walking shorts were the done thing in the “posh” areas, and bare feet on the hill.The current Cricketers’ Club, a treasured space over the fence from third man and midwicket, is one of the few spots at the ground where it’s possible to view some cricket history. Another place that remembers great times past is Queensland Cricket’s headquarters in Albion, a suburb just north of the city. Allan Border has a field, Ray Lindwall an oval, Greg Chappell a street, Stuart Law a stand, and Rackemann some nets. There’s also a statue of Eddie Gilbert, the tiny but supremely fast Aboriginal bowler who frightened Bradman in the 1930s. In the boardroom, there’s a wall-sized print of the scoreboard from Queensland’s first Sheffield Shield success. That delirious celebration came in 1994-95, after 68 years of frustration.”For a long time Brisbane grade cricket was behind, in facilities and tradition,” Tuckwell says. “Brisbane had a lot of catching up to do and it’s no coincidence that Queensland started to win things once these things were established.” The importance of the grade scene is usually overlooked when thinking about cricket in Brisbane. It’s a mistake.

Trouble is, Bailey is the best Australia have got

George Bailey might not be the answer to all, or any, of Australia’s problems but at the minute he’s their brightest light. That is their biggest problem

Jarrod Kimber at Edgbaston08-Jun-2013There is this recurring theme that George Bailey isn’t much of a batsman. That he is lucky to be there. That without his captaincy skills he wouldn’t even be picked in this line up.It is all based on the fact that for the first time since Australia’s first Test, a player was picked to captain Australia despite the fact that he’d never played international cricket. Sure, it was only T20, a form that has never been taken seriously in Australia. But this was a massive thing.Bailey was seen as one of the mad professor’s gambles. Australian cricket often fears anything different, and with John Inverarity picking cricketers based on their intelligence and leadership skills, Bailey became an easy target. He’d never had a massive Sheffield Shield season that demanded he be picked. His first-class average was not monumental. He’d not dominated county cricket or the IPL. And he was no young prodigy that could play for the next 10 years. Bailey was often a punch line for a cricket system that was failing on many levels.Of course Bailey had little to do with Australia’s fall from grace. He hadn’t played when they lost the No. 1 Test match crown or the last World Cup. Even in the World T20 he took a poor side and got it to the semi-final. They were beaten by the eventual champions West Indies, and while his team crumbled, he played his best innings against them.Today in the press box, there was talk that he was the worst batsman of any Australian captains since the Packer era. Kim Hughes, Allan Border, Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke are fair batsmen. And had Bailey been anywhere near their talent, you’d expect he would have played far earlier in his career. He didn’t, because he just isn’t that good. Most aren’t.But with Clarke injured, Bailey is the most likely batsmen in this team to make a score. In his ODI career he averages 45.50 with a strike rate of 83.74. The average is amazing, the strike rate, could be higher. Bailey wasn’t picked in the ODI side as a captain, he was picked as a batsman, and as a batsman in the last two years he has been by far Australia’s most consistent in all conditions.Despite their reputations, in the same period Shane Watson and David Warner strike rates are only 80 and 81 respectively. Watson averaging 37.37 and Warner averaging 34.95.Hughes has averaged 49.55 in that period, but with a strike rate of 75. And despite some of his trademark flashes through the off side, here looked completely out of his depth. He made 30 off 55 balls, and gave two chances, or three, as he might have edged the ball he was should have been stumped off.Despite the fact that Matthew Wade is Australia’s first choice ODI keeper, his Test record is far better, and this was another disappointing outing for him, with his average now barely staying above 20.Mitchell Marsh at No. 6 just doesn’t look right and then Australia only have Adam Voges, who is only a few matches into his comeback. He’s looked really good after a comically bad run at the start of Australia’s domestic summer.The shame for Australia, is that in all forms of cricket they have quality fast bowlers. Today they did well to restrict England, who at one stage looked like they would skip merrily to 300 with their eyes closed. In the end, all the bowlers good work only made Australia’s losing margin less embarrassing.This bowling line up doesn’t even include Ryan Harris, Peter Siddle or James Pattinson. And yet when compared to the batting line up, it’s just far superior. In fact, it would be awkward to even compare the two on talent or form right now. This bowling attack with almost any other batting line up, perhaps Pakistan excluded, would be in a better position, or an actual position, to win this tournament.With this line up, it’s hard to see how Australia will even get into the semi-finals. On form and confidence, James Faulkner could bat as high as No. 5 and not look out of place.Today, Warner was out in typical fashion. As did Watson. Hughes just couldn’t get going. Voges and Wade were undone by movement. Marsh absolutely smashed the hell out of a ball, straight to Morgan at point.Of the batsmen, it was only Bailey who looked at home, scored with any ease, and handled the moving ball. When he got out, he also looked the most passionate. Right now, he, and potentially Voges, look the best of a very poor bunch.Bailey might have been picked as an experiment, and he might not be the answer to all, or any, of Australia’s problems. But right now he’s the best they have to work with. And that is the major problem.

West Indies struggle to retain stranglehold

The once-dominant West Indies has spent more than a decade unable to close out games, especially away from home

S Aga08-Nov-2011In 2006, after India had won the first one-day match of their Caribbean tour, Greg Chappell, then the India coach, raised hackles across the Caribbean by suggesting that the men in maroon had forgotten how to win. In the outrage that followed, the kernel of truth in the statement was forgotten.The team that once put together the blueprint on how to dominate cricket matches has spent more than a decade unable to close out games, especially away from home.The numbers don’t lie. Since Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose – the last special products of a fast-bowling assembly line that lasted a quarter century – retired a decade ago, West Indies have won precisely Test away from home against established opposition. That came in the Boxing Day Test of 2007, when a century from Shivnarine Chanderpaul and disciplined pace bowling from Daren Powell, Jerome Taylor, Dwayne Bravo and Fidel Edwards upset South Africa in Port Elizabeth.There have been several near misses, especially in Sri Lanka and Australia in recent times. It hasn’t been restricted to Test cricket either. Even during the World Cup earlier this year, they lost games against England and India that they could so easily have won. One poor decision led to another, and before you knew it, the game had slipped away.When they came out to field a second time today, West Indies had every right to be confident, with the last three wickets having added 96 runs. Only twice had teams chased 276 or better in India, and the erratic bounce that ended Darren Sammy’s sprightly innings would have interested pace bowler and spinner alike.But the best laid bowling plans count for little when Virender Sehwag is at the crease. On a pitch that R Ashwin reckoned had nothing for batsmen or bowlers, he batted as though someplace else, cruising to a run-a-ball half-century before chopping the ball onto his stumps.Had Ravi Rampaul held on to a difficult return catch when he had made just 12, the afternoon’s play may well have panned out differently. Instead, the 100 came up quickly and Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar could ease their way into proceedings, removing much of the anxiety from the dressing room and stands alike.”We didn’t bowl as well as we had in the first innings,” said Ottis Gibson, the coach. “The odd ball was keeping low, but we didn’t hit the right areas as often as we’d like.”He remained confident, however, that a turnaround was possible. “We thought 276 was a good score to set,” he said. “And things have happened in the morning session right through this match.”In Gibson’s eyes, though, the West Indies could have easily have set India something in the region of 350. “I thought we could have been a little more positive, without being reckless,” he said. “See the way Sehwag plays. He does it on every surface. But he’s been playing 10 years. Our younger batsmen will also learn to read situations better.”The intent that Gibson spoke of was certainly in evidence when Chanderpaul and Sammy were batting, but those two aside, the first half of the day was all about Ashwin and his variations. “We know he’s a quality spinner,” said Gibson. “We’ve seen that from his performances in one-day cricket. He’s brought that confidence into Tests. Some balls kept low, but he bowled wicket to wicket.”West Indies didn’t early on, with Sehwag and Gambhir again getting India off to the ideal start. “It didn’t look like the pitch was doing anything when Sehwag was batting,” said Gibson with a rueful smile. “But nothing’s gone to slip or gully the whole match and we felt we had to have a ring field to keep the runs down.”That tactic worked once Sehwag departed, but it’s wickets rather than containment that West Indies need on the fourth morning. The morning papers will doubtless have endless references to the possibility of that 100th century, and perhaps Gibson can put some clippings on the dressing-room wall to rile his players. After all, Chappell’s alleged barb did inspire four straight West Indian wins.

Done on the development trail

Cricket has had a long and loyal following, born not only out of the village greens of England or the dusty Indian maidans, but the war-torn wastelands of Afghanistan and a spare scrap of land in Canada

Will Luke in Potchefstroom02-Apr-2009
Richard Done: ICC High Performance Manager © ICC
Cricket has had a long and loyal following, born not only out of the village greens of England or the dusty Indian maidans, but the war-torn wastelands of Afghanistan and a spare scrap of land in Canada. It is increasingly described as a global sport, despite the lack of penetration into the American market, and yet Associate cricket nations – or minnows as they are understandably coined – still struggle to take the next step up and compete with the big boys.That isn’t to say that cricket’s administrators are blind to their plight. Far from it. The ICC are lambasted by confused fans and angry journalists – much of it justified, some of it hysterically bombastic – but the ICC’s attitude and commitment to developing nations cannot be so furiously challenged. A key figure in ensuring the likes of Kenya, Ireland and Scotland continue to progress is Richard Done, the ICC’s High Performance Manager. His job title might sound implausibly vague but his role is altogether more defined.”Within the development department, there are a number of functions with the Associates and Affiliate world,” Done, born in Australia but now based in Dubai, told Cricinfo during the first day of the World Cup Qualifiers in Johannesburg. “I look at the top six sides. If you go forward from here, the top four are going to qualify for the World Cup. The focus is going forward and working with those top six, with emphasis on the top four, to make them as competitive as possible.”Ah. Competitiveness. Bar sporadic success by Kenya, in the 2003 World Cup, and Ireland’s enjoyably free-spirited campaign in 2007, Associates have not so much underperformed as been horridly outclassed. Tournaments such as the successful Intercontinental Cup (a four-day competition spread over 12 months) have given these sides vital match practice, and the rivalry is sufficiently intense to generate a watchable contest. Pit some of them against Full Member nations such as Australia, and the outcomes are depressingly predictable.”Associate versus Associate cricket; Intercontinental Cup and ODIs, which are official ODIs – they are the core of our cricket,” Done says. “There’s something like 35-40 days of cricket a year as a base. What we need to do then is add on matches against Full Members. Particularly for Ireland and Kenya at the moment who are on the top table because they have to play eight every two years.”The class disparity is a never-ending topic, but the ICC is beginning to lay out a structure – a word Done used consistently – to lay a foundation upon which they can build. Full Member nations (ignoring Zimbabwe just briefly) take administration and coaching almost for granted; the money and commercial interest is there, and with it comes a professional set-up that can lay the base for players to launch their careers. Administration and full-time coaches are two vital and basic aspects of Associate nations which have been horribly lacking, until now. Done has introduced match analysis systems for each country, which are now all used as a matter of course.”In any country, the cricket on the field is reflected in the administration off the field – the structure, the back-up and so on. So we’ve been spending a lot of time in the last two years to push the countries and improve the structures and the planning processes. Everything from budget planning to administration, to coaching pathways, to players coming into the system and developing their own plans.”We have full-time coaches in place there, so we’re looking after things on the field. I don’t think it’s realistic for us to be expected to produce top sides without full-time coaches.”Ireland are coming along on and off the field. Scotland have had a really strong administration for a long time now. So this was the idea and we then had a follow-up last November in London. The transition for us was to go strongly in to the structure and background and linking the coaching staff with the CEOs to keep them on the same page. Both parties had to know what each one wanted to achieve and how it fitted into an organisation.” “We’re not going to jump from nothing to full professionalisation. People are going to have to make choices. The avenue to go down is with younger players – and, yes, sometimes that’ll be for less dollars. And employ them not just for cricketers but training, coaching, school coaching and so on.”The more Done speaks, the clearer his vision becomes and the more evident it is that cricket – even Associate cricket – is as much a business as a sport. Done may disagree, but his role is effectively as a management consultant, brought in to inject cash and the basics of forming an effective organisation, before setting them free: hopefully with good results. Yet for all the talk of structure and foundation-laying, there is a far greater challenge facing Done. “We’re still stuck in that grey area of amateur and professional where players are paid match by match. To make a big difference in the next World Cup, we really have to professionalise them.”To be a better cricketer, you’ve got to play high levels of competition. You’ve got to improve by playing better teams than yourself.”To achieve that, teams cannot rely on players making personal and financial sacrifices. Only three from Scotland have contracts, and even those faced a tough challenge to ditch their long-standing careers and become full-time cricketers.”We’re not going to jump from nothing to full professionalisation. People are going to have to make choices. Ryan Watson [Scotland captain] has chosen to forget his job and become a full-time cricketer. The avenue to go down is with younger players – and, yes, sometimes that’ll be for less dollars. And employ them not just for cricketers but training, coaching, school coaching and so on and that’s what I’ve been suggesting to them [the boards] about bridging the gap between amateur and full-time professionals.”If and when that does happen – and the recent success of England’s women cricketers shows how well such a scheme could work – the progression suddenly becomes easier. “We want to have, for example, Scotland play two four-day games against New South Wales; a couple of one-dayers, and then maybe an ODI against that country [Australia]. But you can’t do that without professionals. Up to 70 days of a cricket a year, not including tour games around it and travelling in between cricket, is a hell of a lot. What do most people get, four weeks’ leave? So how do you make 70 days work in a programme [of amateurs]. You’re asking a hell of a lot.”A “quicker route to professionalisation” is Done’s biggest gripe. Understandably, too. It is a hurdle too steep to leap in one stretch, but there are other aspects of improving Associates which, as he puts it, are controllable.”With the global cricket academy opening up, that’ll open up a lot of doors. Certainly within 2009. I’ve already started talking to Rod Marsh about the fitness and fielding benchmarking and making sure from a fitness and fielding stance, which are very controllable parts of the game, that we present ourselves in the next World Cup as one of the fittest teams. It’s a basic of the game.” A basic which has been cruelly exposed in previous World Cups, but one which is being addressed. Scotland and Ireland (who possess several county-contracted players) are the fittest by a distance.Done, whose predecessor was the late Bob Woolmer, has one major goal during his tenure: to tackle the perennial underachievement of the batting. “That is the one thing we’ve really got to work hard at. If you’re going to the World Cup to play the best, you’ve got to be able to put some runs on the board. That doesn’t mean reaching 300, but we do need 200s and 250s.”The best analogy is if you watch the 2007 rugby World Cup and look at some of those minnows and they went really well. They gained a lot of credibility, just because of solid and tough performances. Those like the USA who really competed for 60 minutes of the game. The reality is, we don’t have the depth of ability of Full Members. But there are basics and controllable basics which we can help with.”Such as the mental side of the game. Before Jeremy Snape, the former England spinner, was appointed as “performance coach” for the IPL side the Rajasthan Royals, he was used by Kenya. With a masters degree in sports psychology, Done is again looking to utilise him for Associate players and coaches.”I’ve met him here again and discussed doing the same sort of things and we want to design a programme. It’s exciting. There are two aspects. One is making sure the players are building their own belief structures, and the second part is supporting the coaching staff so they can develop too. We need to support the coaches just as much as the players, the way they’re thinking and planning and make the team more cohesive. Generate more belief.”We need to do a good job advising the right countries, and help make them more efficient about what they do. Then if the country has the structure in place, they’ll get the right results. Like Scotland and Ireland. They’re coming along, but it’s not just from the ICC – the country has to be ready to do the job.”And with that, we came full circle. Yes, the ICC are helping, but they can only spare so much money. Their funding has increased exponentially over the last few years but, as Done reiterated, they can only do so much. The rest is down to the individual boards. How they respond over the next two years will decide which teams fall by the wayside, and which might eventually regularly challenge the big guns.

State of the USMNT – Goalkeepers: Matt Freese ascends at Gold Cup, while minutes matter more than pedigree for Matt Turner

With the 2026 World Cup less than a year away, GOAL looks at the state of the shot-stoppers vying for a spot next summer

With the Gold Cup complete and the World Cup on the horizon, there are still more questions than answers at the U.S. men's national team's goalkeeper position. Traditionally a position of strength for the USMNT, goalkeeper remains a major talking point at the moment – one that was furthered, but not ended, by an interesting summer run.

At the Gold Cup, USMNT boss Mauricio Pochettino surprised many by sticking with one player, Matt Freese, throughout the tournament. Matt Turner, the incumbent, watched from the bench. As a result, the U.S. didn't eliminate contenders from the goalkeeper race but, instead, added them, making it even more complicated as they head into the home stretch of this World Cup cycle.

Currently, there are options, both veteran and inexperienced, in this pool, and all of them will believe they have a chance at making it onto the World Cup roster. Three will be included, but only one will start, and the races are heating up for each of the spots heading into next summer.

Post-Gold Cup, GOAL is looking at the state of the USMNT, analyzing the positional battles that will ultimately define next summer's team. First up: goalkeepers.

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    The Starter: Matt Freese

    This, of course, is very much up for debate and could certainly change by the World Cup, if not sooner. At the moment, though, the edge goes to Freese, who proved capable throughout the Gold Cup.

    Handed his first start just before the tournament, Freese was generally solid during his run this summer, save for one botched clearance in the group stage. His penalty kick heroics against Costa Rica gave him a signature moment, too, as he stared down the legendary Keylor Navas and never came close to blinking.

    Instead, he went the correct way over and over again, making three crucial saves to send the U.S. to the semifinals.

    Freese's biggest assets are confidence and minutes, and he'll continue to build on both with New York City FC.

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    The Backup: Matt Turner

    Throughout the summer, the message from USMNT camp centered on how helpful Turner was to Freese. Despite being the only experienced member of the goalkeeping pool, Turner didn't treat his Gold Cup backup status as a demotion. Instead, he treated it as an opportunity to help, going above and beyond to work with Freese.

    And while Turner was magnanimous in his backup role this summer, that doesn't mean he's settled on that outcome. He will, of course, be gunning for that starting spot, and he'll need to make a critical club move if he wants to land it.

    His proposed transfer to Lyon seems to still be on and, if he does head to the French club, he'll need to play not just consistently, but perform at a high level. He clearly has the talent and attitude, so it may all come down to the right fit at the right club – and the time is now to make that happen.

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    In The Mix: Patrick Schulte and Zack Steffen

    There's a butterfly effect at play here. If both Schulte and Steffen hadn't been injured, Freese may not have started six straight games at the Gold Cup – and as a result, may not have emerged as the potential starter coming out the tournament. Such is the impact injuries can have, but it's also a reminder of how quickly things can change.

    Steffen, thus far, has seemed the most likely contender, having impressed during January camp. Unfortunately, the Colorado Rapids goalkeeper has been unfortunate, with injuries keeping him out of the team at crucial junctures. Steffen has plenty of ability – but as they say, the best ability is availability, and he hasn't been healthy often enough since Pochettino took over.

    Schulte, too, was unavailable this summer after sustaining an injury just before camp. He looked poised for a breakthrough after starting against Canada last fall. There's still time for the Columbus Crew shot-stopper, though, as he looks to make his own case.

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    For The Future: Chris Brady, Diego Kochen, Gaga Slonina

    There are multiple interesting goalkeepers in the pipeline, all of whom have some level of USMNT experience on their resume.

    Brady had the most recent engagement, having served as the third goalkeeper at this summer's Gold Cup. Again, that opportunity fell his way due to injuries, but it was certainly worthwhile, as he got to spend a month competing and learning from Freese and Turner – as well as the USMNT's coaching staff. The Chicago Fire star will surely benefit from that experience as he looks to keep building in MLS.

    Slonina, a former Fire star, just won the Club World Cup with Chelsea, albeit as the club's third goalkeeper. He'll almost certainly be headed back out on loan this season after an injury cut his time at Barnsley short last season.

    And then there's Kochen, the rising Barcelona goalkeeper who could also use a spell away from his megaclub. Just 19, the Miami-born goalkeeper is one to watch as he looks to break through at the senior level.

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