Ideal conditions help Ashwin grab chance at No. 6

Working on initial movements and having a slightly more open stance have helped Ashwin rediscover his batting mojo

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Antigua23-Jul-20162:03

‘Batting ahead of Saha a boost to my confidence’ – Ashwin

It was the easiest of takes, or perhaps not quite. A regulation edge and Shane Dowrich moved a step to his right, following the path of the ball. But just as it approached his gloves at waist height, it seemed to swerve towards the leg side, just a fraction. Dowrich should have probably still taken it, but he grabbed at the ball, hastily, unprettily, where other wicketkeepers’ hands may have moved with feline stealth. In an instant the chance was gone.The bowler, Shannon Gabriel, may have wanted to burst into tears. For the fifth time in eight balls, he had caused R Ashwin to miss or edge him. Bowling on a good length, or just short of it, he had beaten the outside edge once, the inside edge once, and had kissed the outside edge thrice. Twice the ball had died before reaching the slip cordon. This time it had carried at catchable height.

‘Batting in the top seven a long-term goal’

R Ashwin, who scored his third Test hundred during the Antigua Test against West Indies, has revealed that he learned he would be batting at number six on the first morning of the match.
“I’ve always wanted to bat in the top seven for the Indian team, which is a long-time goal that I have to try to strive to get better at,” he said at the end of the day’s play. “I need to thank Anil [Kumble] and Virat [Kohli] for having the confidence in me to be pushed at number six. There have been times in the past when I’ve played really well, and haven’t really got the promotion.
“This really says a whole lot of things about me. Virat called me in the morning and said “you’ll be batting at six, ahead of [Wriddhiman] Saha,” which is a big boost to my batting confidence. I had worked on it over the past one month in Chennai with my coach and I’m very, very happy with the way it’s come out.”
Ashwin came into the Test with a batting strike-rate of 59.42. Here, coming in at 236 for 4 late on the first evening, the situation required him to show a more patient side of his game.
“I’ve never left so many balls,” he said. “Ajinkya [Rahane] told before the Test match about batting 200 balls, my aim was to bat 150 balls and try and see where I get.
“In between, I played an over from [Shannon] Gabriel which was a bit loose, and Virat came up to me and said that is what you need to avoid in Test cricket to be more successful. I really thought I left really well and knew where my off stump was. It was about batting time more than runs for me this time.”

Ashwin was batting on 43. He had faced 87 balls, but only ten from Gabriel.Gabriel’s first spell of the match, on the opening day, was four overs long. He bowled 14 balls to M Vijay, whom he eventually dismissed with a snorter of a short ball, four to Cheteshwar Pujara, and six to Shikhar Dhawan.In those six balls, he caused Dhawan all kinds of discomfort. Or, more accurately, one kind of discomfort, the kind caused by fast, steeply rising balls at the body. Jumping a foot off the ground, Dhawan looked to fend one of them away into the leg side, and popped a leading edge in the opposite direction. It hung tantalisingly for a frozen instant, and fell to the ground well short of backward point. Then, a similar ball, and a similar response, went uppishly into the leg side, but into a vacant area behind the wicket rather than towards the helmeted short leg fielder.That was the only real uncomfortable period in Dhawan’s 147-ball innings. He made 84.It wasn’t as if Dhawan didn’t work hard for his runs. West Indies’ other bowlers – particularly Carlos Brathwaite, with his metronomic sixth-stump line – tested his patience. But they didn’t test his technique. Dhawan was battling his own instincts rather than the bowlers’ skills.And so it was with Ashwin, batting at No. 6 – and anywhere above No. 7 – for the first time in his career. He had scored two hundreds before this, and six half-centuries, all those innings showing off a batsman’s mentality, an innate sense of timing, and a wide range of shots. It got prompted observers to wonder if he could bat in the top six one day.Now, in his 33rd Test match, he got that chance. The batsman’s mentality was in evidence when he came in late on the first day, at 236 for 4, as he knuckled down to see India through to stumps alongside his captain.Shortly before his troubles against Gabriel, he had played a shot that would have made any top-order batsman proud, including Virat Kohli at the other end. A blameless, back-of-a-length delivery from Jason Holder, on off stump, and he simply stood tall and punched it back past him to the straight boundary. Forget not running, Kohli didn’t even look back to see the ball scudding to the rope.It was a stroke of hand, eye, and timing. Ashwin has great hands, a great eye, and exquisite timing.But we knew this already. What we didn’t know, what was being tested here, for the first time, was whether he could be a regular No. 6 in Test matches like this one, when India felt the need to play five genuine bowlers.No. 6s are the bridge between the top and lower orders, and need to be versatile. Sometimes they will need to play their shots and build towards a declaration. At other times, they may need to stem a top-order collapse. More often, they come in with their teams off to reasonable first-day starts, when they have reached promising if not entirely secure positions – as Ashwin did late on the opening day.At times like these, they often need to face the second new ball. West Indies had the option of taking it on the first evening, when Ashwin was batting on 17 off 38 balls. Jason Holder, their captain, opted not to take it, preferring instead to wait till the second morning, when Gabriel, his only real attacking threat, would be fresher.By the time Gabriel came on, new ball in hand, Ashwin had moved to 22 off 72 balls. Four runs in 34 balls – quiet, professional, end-of-day’s-play batting. One test passed, but not the toughest test, and not a new one for Ashwin.The first act of Gabriel v Ashwin was a short ball, but not of the venomous, throat-high kind that dismissed Vijay. Instead, it sat up for Ashwin to pull for four.Then came those two overs of good-length bowling, with a bit of inswing here and a bit of away-seam there. Ashwin’s hand and eye weren’t quite enough to counter Gabriel now. His feet were moving across the crease, half-a-beat late, so he was often on the move while playing the ball. His front foot wasn’t striding out towards the pitch of the slightly fuller ball, and his back foot wasn’t stepping back and across against the slightly shorter ball. His hands kept getting drawn to the ball and away from his body.Ashwin thanked the captain and coach for handing him an opportunity in the top six for the first time•Getty ImagesAshwin knows his technique isn’t perfect. He has been working on it, and probably knows more work needs to go into it. “First things first,” he said at the end of the day’s play, “[batting coach] Sanjay Bangar worked really closely with my stance for the last 12 months. It has been a challenge. I used to be extra side-on and I had to open myself a little bit. That change is very effective. I’ve not driven straight down the ground for a very long time. [So] that is a pretty evident one. The other things like my initial movement and other things had to be sorted. It was a process for like 10-12 months, and on the way I did lose a few innings as a batsman as well.”The straight back-foot punch off Holder, and another drive tracing the same path a few overs later, off the same bowler, this time off the front-foot, were evidence enough that opening up his stance had allowed Ashwin to play more shots down the ground. But the change also made him a little more vulnerable to Gabriel’s movement in the corridor. Often, even when he defended with the middle of his bat, his shoulders were in a completely open position.Contrary to traditional coaching manuals, being perfectly side-on isn’t ideal, since it can restrict a batsman from accessing the on-side and the V as effectively as possible, but being as open as Ashwin was against Gabriel can be hazardous, when the line is outside off stump. There is a middle ground, and it isn’t easy to achieve. Ashwin, who spoke of trying to “be as solid as possible” in trying to give India the option of using him more regularly at six, is probably striving very hard to do so.He hadn’t quite achieved it on Friday. There were two plays-and-misses against Gabriel, and three edges, of which one carried. Dowrich dropped it. After five more balls to Ashwin, Gabriel’s spell was over.Control percentage, measured by ESPNcricinfo’s data-gathering team, is a simple measure. After every ball, the scorer simply checks a box: was the batsman was “in control” or “not in control”? India’s batsmen, across their first innings, achieved a control percentage of 87, a number that suggested conditions were good to bat on, and the bowling not particularly threatening.But they weren’t so comfortable against Gabriel. Ashwin achieved a 73% control rate against him, Dhawan 73%, and Vijay 71%. Even Kohli, who achieved a minimum of 88% against everyone else, only managed 80% against Gabriel.It was hard evidence of a truth that was plain to see. It was Gabriel or nothing for West Indies. As soon as his spells ended, the game changed. It either became attritional, when the other bowlers got through the odd spell of sustained discipline, or extremely one-sided, with nothing preventing the batsmen from milking runs. Ashwin coped easily with both those reduced challenges, and every now and again unfurled one of those strokes that makes you sigh in aesthetic contentment.He had batted for 236 balls when Devendra Bishoo sent down a flat, shortish legbreak on leg stump. With a mild-mannered twirl of his wrists, Ashwin sent the ball running away between midwicket and deep backward square leg, too fast for either of them to stop it. With that one stroke, India reached 500, and Ashwin his third Test century.All three centuries had come against West Indies. The first was in Mumbai, in 2011, when he had walked in with India 331 for 6 in response to 590. The second was in Kolkata two years later, with India 156 for 6 replying to 234. Both were match-turning efforts. This one had come against a weaker attack, in a more promising situation.A batsman cannot control opposition and situation; he can only tick the boxes he is required to tick on a given day. On this day, Ashwin ticked most, though not quite all of them.

Kings XI win Super Over thriller

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Apr-2015Watson smashed five fours and two sixes in a 95-run opening stand with Rahane•BCCIKings XI dismissed Steven Smith and then…•BCCI…Glenn Maxwell took a stunning catch to dismiss James Faulkner and leave Royals 166 for 5 in the 19th over•BCCIKarun Nair’s quick-fire 25 took Royals to 191 for 6•BCCIVirender Sehwag and M Vijay were both run out inside seven overs of the chase, leaving Kings XI 42 for 2•BCCIThings didn’t get any better for Kings XI as Glenn Maxwell skied a Rahul Tewatia delivery to Smith at deep midwicket when he was on 1•BCCIShaun Marsh became the first Kings XI player to score 2000 IPL runs as he smashed five fours and three sixes during a 40-ball 65 that revived the chase•BCCIDavid Miller struck five sixes while racing to a 30-ball 54 before falling to Deepak Hooda, leaving Kings XI 166 for 6 in the 18th over•BCCIKings XI needed 14 off the final over, and Axar Patel sliced James Faulkner for a four off the final ball to send the game into a Super Over•BCCIBatting first, Kings XI managed 15 and dismissed Royals for 6 to end their unbeaten run•BCCI

An Aussie spy at The Oval

Who wouldn’t want to see KP and Ian Bell blazing away on a balmy summer’s day? Apparently the England team

Peter Bowman24-Aug-2013Choice of game
In 1997 I was lucky enough to tour with the University of Newcastle Cricket Club and attend the fourth day of the Lord’s test which was marred by rain, but included Matt Elliott’s debut ton. Great day.This time, as our touring group was going to be in London for the Last Man Stands T20 world Championships, we picked the game closest to the tournament. Through our tour organizer TTGolf, we were very fortunate to be hosted by the Surrey Cricket Club in the India room for the day at the Kia Oval.Team supported
We’re Aussies through and through. We’d hoped we would see Australia bat but after getting off the plane in Dubai, we discovered the score was 4/307 and that we would most likely be watching our boys bowl. Upside to this is we’d get the chance to see the likes of KP and Ian Bell batting together. Who wouldn’t want to see that combination blazing away on a balmy summer’s day? Apparently the England team. What we saw was batting as though they were trying to save the series.It’s interesting to hear the English talking about how wonderful an effort it was by their side to grind out such a day. Talk about being poles apart. Unlike earlier in the year where they staved off defeat in New Zealand by batting out a day, this time they were 3-0 up with the forecast for rain on days 4 and 5 and they didn’t even have a crack. Awful.Key performer
Tough to name a key performer on a day when the cricket was so dour. I was impressed with the way Steve Smith bowled and the few times that Ian Bell played a shot it was great to watch. My man of the day though, would be Chris Woakes for hitting a boundary straight up. It was also the shot of the day – slim pickings on a day of stone-walling.One thing you’d have changed about the day
The approach of the England team. I would have sat the England team down at lunchtime and told them to fire up. ‘We’ve won the series. The pitch is a road. Let’s have a crack. It’s going to rain tomorrow. Surely we can’t lose it from here. Let’s give the fans what they want.’Polite applause for 150+ ball 50s from the English crowd was diminished in the second half of the day by their own boredom when beer snakes and poorly executed Mexican waves became the centre-piece.The ground was packed. The weather was fantastic. The service of the staff in the India room was outstanding. The cricket was diabolical.Wow moment
Did I mention how negative the cricket was? My wow moment was talking to locals who genuinely believed their team had performed well on the day. While Australians have been blessed by the Border to Ponting years with success, we are happier when our team shows some heart and puts in some effort. I was genuinely blown away by the glowing praise of the home side.The funny moment of the day was watching a beer snake break on the far side of the ground before seemingly being supported on our side of the ground as fair play and entertainment to appease the masses.Crowd meter
The biggest cheers of the day were for beer snakes. Even the Barmy Army’s trumpeter was scarcely heard throughout the day. Perhaps the shout of “Boring army, Boring army” should have been embraced earlier in the day.Fancy dress index
We really didn’t see too many guys in fancy dress but noticed the cave men being introduced to the ground. It certainly wasn’t a carnival atmosphere but we were graced by a cow in our section. He must have lost a kilo or five in that suit over the course of the day.Entertainment
Brass bands and Kia racing cars were the two stand-outs for me. Kids (big and not so big) lined up to challenge themselves on the Kia racing remote control cars. Laughs were aplenty in the only driving event you could compete in and not worry about the fourth pint you had just had.We were treated to a wide selection of seafood, stir-fries and curried meats as well as build your own burgers for those with less adventurous palates.It was a real treat to have Jeff Thomson and Mark Butcher host a 20 minute chat at lunchtime. Would have been great to get a few photos with the guys post discussion, but they were on the clock and looked like they had to motor to the next venue.We were also lucky enough to win a bat signed by Andrew Strauss and Mike Gatting. The raffle was in support of a great cause here in the UK.Tests v limited-overs
I’m a cricket tragic. I love a contest and I love the fight it doesn’t matter what format.I’ve been blessed over the years to be at the ground when Steve Waugh hit his ton off the final ball in Sydney, Matthew Hayden smashing runs all around the WACA vs Zimbabwe on the way to world record, Glenn McGrath’s 50 at the Gabba, Michael Bevan’s match-winning last-ball four against the West Indies, and Sachin Tendulkar at the Adelaide Oval. Each of those games highlighted what is great about our game. Mental toughness, great skill, passion and fight. I don’t like cricket. I love cricket. But I love seeing positive cricket in any form. We didn’t see that yesterday.Enhanced viewing
The Oval really has a wonderful set-up for viewing. Two clear replay boards and the relatively close proximity meant you didn’t struggle to see the score or information provided on the day.I carried to the ground with me my club tie and baggy yellow-red. They didn’t help my viewing, but helped start conversations. As a proud life member of the Woden Wanderers Cricket Club, I’ve sported the red and yellow all around the world. The similarity to the MCC colours did pose a number of questions late in the day. Some wondered why someone working for the MCC was supporting Australia.Overall
It may sound like we didn’t have fun. That couldn’t be further from the truth. The people were engaging, the crowd tried its best to stay involved and customer service provided by the Surrey Cricket Club was second to none. We saw glimpses of the talent in the English side. Just not enough.The cricket was stodgy, cold, boring and uneventful. Not even the DRS could generate more banter.The Oval is an outstanding venue to watch cricket. The thing I appreciate the most about the smaller Test grounds in the UK is the feeling that you could reach out and touch the players as they’re so close. That you’re really a part of the contest and you’re cheering could influence the outcome. I’d love to come back again one day and see some attacking cricket.Marks out of 10
Venue, service, people, food and drink – 12/10. Cricket – 2/10.With apologies to Lord Tennyson, it is better to have tried to win 4-0 and have failed than to grind out a 3-0 series win. Or to paraphrase a former Australian prime minister, “Well may we say God save the Queen… for no one will save the crowd from English cricket.”

Familiar partnership and all-too familiar memories

Plays of the day from the 2nd ODI between England and Sri Lanka at Headingley

Andrew McGlashan at Headingley01-Jul-2011Carbon copy of the day
For one top-order batsman to be run out in a one-day international can be understandable, for two to go that way inside 10 overs is careless. Tillakaratne Dilshan had already been found short of his crease after misjudging a single to mid-on where Stuart Broad completed the dismissal, but Sri Lanka didn’t learn the error of their captain’s ways. Or, at least, Dinesh Chandimal didn’t. He tapped the ball towards the on side and raced off for a single, but this time James Anderson swooped from mid-on and hit the stumps direct with an under-arm flick. Chandimal, who has had precious few chances on this tour, was left with plenty of time to reflect.Drop of the day
England’s opening bowlers began well, keeping a tight leash on the openers in the early overs, but things started to go wrong in Bresnan’s third over. The most costly moment came off the second ball when Mahela Jayawardene top edged towards slip but Graeme Swann couldn’t hold onto a high chance and neither was Craig Kieswetter able to take a rebound (unlike in the World Twenty20 final against Australia). Jayawardene had 7 at the time and then off the final two balls of the over collected his first two boundaries. The first was an edge that didn’t carry to Swann, who couldn’t stop it, then Jayawardene played a silky cover drive to leave Bresnan less than amused.Milestones of the day
Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara have spent many hours batting together against England – although slightly less so on this tour – so it didn’t come as a huge surprise that the new third-wicket record of 159 they set surpassed their own partnership of 140 at Chester-le-Street in 2006 during the 5-0 whitewash. The statistics were remarkably similar as today as Jayawardene dominated with a hundred and Sangakkara played second fiddle with a cool half-century. Talking of Jayawardene, he also set himself a new career milestone in reaching 144. It surpassed his previous best of 128, made 11 years ago against India in Sharjah.Unfinished business of the day
Alastair Cook still has to convince many that he is suitable to be opening the batting in one-day internationals, so it will frustrate him hugely that he couldn’t build on a solid start and match Jayawardene’s earlier hundred. The signs were good as he kept the scoreboard ticking and kept his strike-rate as captain over 90. He’d reached 48 off 51 balls when he came down the pitch to Suraj Randiv but only managed to loft a catch to Angelo Mathews at deep cover. England needed more.Ball of the day
It’s meant to be Lasith Malinga who sends down the toe-crushing yorkers, but on this occasion it was Suranga Lakmal as he ended Jonathan Trott’s laboured innings with a superb delivery. He’d already removed Craig Kieswetter when he returned for a second spell and with his fifth ball back speared a delivery under Trott’s bat. However, for a while it appeared he may have done England a favour as Eoin Morgan and Ian Bell added a brisk stand. Trott had played one of those innings that raises more questions than answers, not hitting a boundary until his 27th ball, and putting pressure on other batsmen.Bad memory of the day
On Thursday, Tim Bresnan was asked to reflect on his tough day against Sri Lanka at Headingley in 2006. He was carted for 29 off two overs by Sanath Jayasuriya and Upul Tharanga then didn’t bowl again in the innings. “We got nailed in that series but everyone has moved on since then,” Bresnan said, which is true on all counts, but he would be forgiven if he’d had the odd flash back. It was a frustrating day for Bresnan back on home soil as he watched Jayawardene be given an early life at slip and finished with 70 runs off his nine overs. However, unlike five years ago, at least he opened his wicket tally when Nuwan Kulasekara was caught at deep square-leg. The less said about his 2 from 12 balls the better.

A journey into the unknown

The debut for Bangladesh’s women may be an insignificant
entry in the chronicles of cricket but should they go on to achieve
the success that their male counterparts are struggling to reach

Nishi Narayanan02-May-2008

Bangladesh’s women get a chance to prove their worth
© ACC

It has been less than a year since the Bangladesh women’s side was
formed and now they are preparing to take on India, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka in the Asia Cup starting Friday. This may be an insignificant
entry in the chronicles of cricket but should they go on to achieve
the success that their male counterparts are struggling to reach, this
entry shall act as a reference to how it all began.Bangladesh qualified for the Asia Cup after winning the Asian Cricket
Council tournament in Malaysia last August. That was their first
tournament and Zafrul Ehsan, their coach, said he had no idea how they
would play when he took charge. “When I saw these girls I realised
that even though they were older than the age-group players I had been
training, as senior coach of the National Academy, they needed to be
taught the basics. So I started training them as one would be train
first-timers and they were very enthusiastic.”But Ehsan wouldn’t have had a team to coach unless the Bangladesh
Cricket Board (BCB) had set up a women’s committee. In March 2006,
with the ICC pressuring each of its Full Members to start a women’s
wing, the BCB set up a committee and appointed Sahima Hossain, a
former MP, as the chairman. “In October that year, using eight lakhs
given by the board, we organised a tournament involving 10 districts,
Hossain said. “[Out of those] 31 girls, who scored 50 plus, or took
five or more wickets, were picked for a four-month long national camp,
beginning in April 2007.”The objective of that camp was to form a team that would participate
in the ACC tournament. “Our aim was to get a good result,” Hossain
said. “All other teams were new as well and no one had participated in
an international tournament.” The budget for the tour was 19 lakhs.
Bangladesh were clearly a level higher than the rest and they won the
tournament without dropping a single game. The victory not only meant
a place in the Asia Cup but also recognition from the people, the
media and officials back home. “A lot of people didn’t know there was
a national team for women,” Ehsan said. “We won convincingly and
everyone was surprised as to when these girls had learned the game and
won. We got a lot of praise, money, and appreciation.”Interest also grew among more women to play the sport. “At first the
thought that girls would play cricket was shocking to people, Hossain
said. “Now that is not the case. Previously I wouldn’t get enough
girls but now I’m not short of girls for any tournament.” The budget,
now raised to 35 lakhs a year, was divided between a schools
tournament, the district championship, a services tournament and a
coaches training programme.If winning a tournament, which had teams from countries not known for
their cricket, could create so many ripples in the women’s game in
Bangladesh, imagine what a credible performance at the Asia Cup could
do? But success in Sri Lanka won’t be easy. “To be honest we haven’t
got any video footage of the opposition teams,” Ehsan admitted. “I
don’t have much idea of the teams. We don’t have a situation in
Bangladesh where we can have two women’s teams play each other. We
have enough only for one team. We’ve played against some boys and we
will just try to achieve what is within our capability.” As a warm-up
to the tournament, Bangladesh hosted Hong Kong for a week-long series.
“We wanted India, Pakistan or Sri Lanka to come and play us but we
couldn’t get any side to agree,” Hossain said.Ehsan’s expectations from his side are not very high. “I don’t expect
we will be the best team in Asia. We want a place for our flag in
Asia. Now that we’ve come this far, I want to show everyone we are
worthy of playing at this level. We are arriving in world cricket and
will try in future everyone should recognise us. You may think this is
just talk but this is what we want to achieve.”

Chelsea have bad news for Cristiano Ronaldo as Blues take strong stance on Marc Cucurella amid Al-Nassr transfer talk

Marc Cucurella has been linked with Al-Nassr but is considered unlikely to leave Chelsea, according to the the latest reporting.

Chelsea clear on Cucurella transferCR7 rumoured to be pushing Al-Nassr interestLeft-back among Blues' most important playersFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

reports that Chelsea have "no intention" of parting ways with Cucurella, despite links with Al-Nassr. The Spain international has become a crucial part of Enzo Maresca's team at Stamford Bridge, after initially struggling when he joined from Brighton for big money in 2022.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Cristiano Ronaldo was credited as the source of Al-Nassr interest, thought to have personally told the Saudi Pro League club to pursue Cucurella. It comes after Al-Nassr agreed a deal with Chelsea for the permanent transfer of Joao Felix, Ronaldo's Portugal teammate who has already started training with the club, despite no official announcement of his move.

DID YOU KNOW?

Cucurella made 54 appearances for Chelsea across the 2024-25 season, including nine in the UEFA Conference League and six in the FIFA Club World Cup. His 4,346 minutes on the pitch was the most out of anyone in the squad, leading Moises Caicedo (4,289) and Cole Palmer (4,247).

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(C)Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Due to Club World Cup involvement, Chelsea only finished their 2024-25 season on July 13. The chance to rest for Cucurella and others will be very short, with a reported pre-season state date of August 4. The Blues have organised friendlies against Bayer Leverkusen and AC Milan at Stamford Bridge on August 8 and 10, respectively, before their Premier League campaign begins against Crystal Palace just a week later – barely more than a month since lifting the Club World Cup trophy.

South Africa squeeze in the bad amidst all the good

South Africa might not have intended to step off the gas, but they might have. Just a little.

Firdose Moonda in Johannesburg24-Jan-2018It looked good. Five fast bowlers on a green top under cloud cover at the Wanderers, allowed first use of conditions by the opposition captain.It looked so good. The first ball Vernon Philander – in his 50th Test – delivered pitched on off stump and snuck between KL Rahul’s bat and pad before he had decided whether he was going to play at it or not.It looked so, so good as Philander produced ball after ball that wobbled off the seam, that moved slightly and beat the bat in an exceptional opening spell.The figures look so good: 8-7-1-1. The highlights reel looks so good: Rahul caught behind off the inside-edge, Cheteshwar Pujara watching the ball from outside off veer towards first slip; Pujara preparing to defend and then realising the ball had flirted with the outside-edge but not touched it; Pujara again, surviving the delivery of the day, that curled into him after pitching on fifth stump. Morne Morkel and Kagiso Rabada, from the other end looked so good as they made the made the ball veer up from just short of a good length and struck a few body blows. At the first drinks break, with India 19 for 2, South Africa would have been feeling so good.But after the good, came some bad.India were 27 for 2 and under the pump when Virat Kohli pulled too early and sent an entirely catchable chance Philander’s way, to mid-off. Somehow, Philander got it wrong. Kohli had only scored 11 at that stage and South Africa knew the importance of getting him early. They would have known the mistake could prove costly; they would not have known that it was the first of several.AB de Villiers showed he is human too when he put down Kohli on 32, anticipating the ball earlier than it came to him and denying Morkel reward for a challenging post-lunch spell.Philander was guilty again when he overstepped for the ball that Ajinkya Rahane edged to Quinton de Kock, in an over in which he bowled a series of beautiful away-seamers.And then there were the half-chances, the balls that didn’t carry or that were just out of reach of fielders. Substitute fielder Theunis de Bruyn was in the wrong position twice: too close-in at third man when Mohammed Shami top-edged a cut, and too far back at mid-on when Shami mistimed a pull. Shami had another stroke of luck when he drove in the air but the ball didn’t carry to mid-on.South Africa did not pay too dearly for any of the errors individually but, collectively, it was the difference between dismissing India for under 150, maybe even under 130, and allowing them to get over 180.It still looks pretty good with India all out for 187 before the first day has ended and a selection of sexy seam bowling to admire. You have to give it to South Africa: they bowled some terrific deliveries, and it wasn’t just Philander. The bounce Kagiso Rabada extracted when he found the shoulder of Kohli’s bat and the bouncer that followed, the way Lungi Ngidi forced Pujara to play after pitching it full from wide of the crease only to threaten the outside edge, and the result Andile Phehlukwayo got when he managed to land the ball seam up and foxed Pujara were all examples of South Africa’s skill on a surface that suited their attack.What they may regret was lacking the same sharpness in the field, especially after Faf du Plessis promised South Africa were not going to take their foot off the gas. They may not have intended to, but perhaps they did. Just a little. And it has put them in a position in which they may look vulnerable.South Africa have already lost one opener, and their best batsman has a finger injury. De Villiers suffered bruising on the right middle finger when he caught a ball that came at him like a rocket and felled him as he grabbed it. He is expected to bat but conditions are only going to get tougher.There are cracks that the ball is deviating off and the bounce is already up and down according to Phehlukwakyo, whose advice to batsmen is to try and get going quickly. “You’ve got to be really positive and look to score,” he said, optimistically adding that it would only really get treacherous to bat on day four and five but admitting that it “already getting quite difficult”.It does not look good for the batsmen for the next few days, but it does look good for bowlers, and with ten fast bowlers in the mix, there will be plenty more emphatic deliveries on display. The only thing that will look good to South Africa on Thursday is getting past 187, even if they have to get there with some ugly strokes.

'They are lucky to have you' – Mohamed Salah sends emotional farewell message to Harvey Elliott after Liverpool team-mate's £35 million transfer to Aston Villa

Liverpool maestro Mo Salah has heaped praise on Harvey Elliott, calling him a 'champion' and stated his new club Aston Villa are lucky to have him.

Mo Salah posts emotional farewell to ElliottSays Aston Villa are lucky to have himPraised his loyalty and dedication Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Liverpool striker Salah is clearly disappointed that Elliott has left Anfield to join Aston Villa in a deal worth £35 million ($47m). His emotional post, which heaped praise on his now former team-mate, also backed him to do 'big things' at Villa Park after ending his six-year spell on Merseyside. 

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The writing was on the wall for Elliott this summer after a string of new signings arrived, increasing the competition for starting places. Florian Wirtz, Alexander Isak and Hugo Ekitike all signed and Elliott faced the prospect of his playing time being significantly reduced. But he'll be a key player under Villa boss Unai Emery, who sanctioned the one year loan with obligation to buy deal on deadline day. 

WHAT SALAH SAID

Salah said on X: "You’ll be remembered for your loyalty and dedication every time you were called upon. You leave as a champion, and I’ve got no doubt you’ll do big things at your new club. They are lucky to have you."

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Elliot has been handed the No 9 shirt by Aston Villa, a number which is traditionally worn by a club's striker – not a position Elliott has ever played. The shirt was vacated after Marcus Rashford's loan spell ended at the end of last season. Villa play Everton after the international break. 

Nicolas Jackson is heading to Bayern Munich! Chelsea striker set to team up with Harry Kane and join German champions on loan

Nicolas Jackson is set to join Bayern Munich on loan from Chelsea. According to Sky Germany, the west London outfit are willing to sanction a loan move with an obligation to buy, should a permanent deal prove tricky to finalise. But there’s a catch, as interested sides must stump up a hefty £10 million ($13.5m) loan fee.

  • Bayern Munich lead the race for Jackson
  • Chelsea demand a loan fee
  • Could face competition for places in Bavaria
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    Bayern's sporting director, Max Eberl, has been heavily involved in driving talks forward, keen to add attacking depth to a squad that will once again chase silverware on multiple fronts. They have agreed to cover the entire wages of Jackson, which has convinced the Blues to advance with negotiations. However, with Harry Kane entrenched as their first-choice striker, Jackson would need to carve out a role either as backup or in rotational games across the Bundesliga, Champions League, and domestic cup competitions.

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    Jackson’s looming departure highlights how dramatically his fortunes have shifted at Stamford Bridge. Once tipped to be a central figure in Chelsea’s rebuild, he now finds himself surplus to requirements after the summer arrivals of Joao Pedro and Liam Delap. Both new signings have been fast-tracked into the Premier League starting XI, while Jackson has been left out of the matchday squads altogether in the opening two fixtures.

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    Further complicating Jackson’s fate is Chelsea’s relentless activity in the transfer market. The Blues remain locked in talks with Manchester United for young winger Alejandro Garnacho, who has already agreed personal terms with Chelsea. Despite multiple bids being tabled, United are holding firm on their £50 million ($67.5m) asking price, so far rejecting every attempt to lure him away from Old Trafford.

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    At the same time, Chelsea are also engaged in discussions with RB Leipzig over Xavi Simons, a move that could be tied to potential deals involving out-of-favour forward Christopher Nkunku. The Bundesliga club are exploring whether Nkunku could return to Germany, a switch that may smooth the way for Simons to travel in the opposite direction. If Bayern’s interest in Jackson continues to accelerate, Chelsea could see more than one player heading to Bavaria before the transfer window shuts.

Joe Root century sets up Yorkshire victory push against Glamorgan

Northeast and Ingram resist but visitors still not save from innings defeat at Headingley

ECB Reporters Network05-May-2024

Joe Root works one to the leg side•Getty Images

Glamorgan 221 (B Root 51, Bess 4-25, Moriarty 4-74) and 171 for 3 (Northeast 46*, Ingram 43*) trail Yorkshire 519 for 7 dec (Bean 173, J Root 156, Brook 65) by 127 runs Joe Root completed a superb day three 156 as Yorkshire pushed for a Vitality County Championship victory over Glamorgan at Headingley.Root followed Fin Bean’s lead, the opener who scored his first century of the season late on day two and went on to make 173 in Yorkshire’s imposing first-innings 519 for seven declared.Glamorgan then reached close on 171 for three from 60 overs in their second innings, with unbeaten Sam Northeast and Colin Ingram approaching half-centuries. The visitors trail by 127.Root, 92 overnight, posted a classy century – his second in as many Division Two games – and shared 265 for the third wicket with Bean through until mid-morning as the hosts replied to a 221 total on a used pitch.Harry Brook then piled further pressure on the beleaguered visiting attack with two sixes in 65, though he fell to one-time England Test leg-spinner Mason Crane to spark the declaration in the first half of the afternoon.Crane finished with a consolatory five for 152 from 23.1 overs.Despite batting on a deteriorating pitch, Yorkshire’s innings advanced at a rate of just over 5.5 runs per over. They were helped out as a depleted Glamorgan attack erred with the ball.Last year, Glamorgan had much the better of an early season draw here when Australian seamer Michael Neser took a hat-trick. But this attack looks very different to the one which took the field exactly 12 months ago.Neser has not returned to the club this season, while fellow seamer Timm van der Gugten is injured. Another quick Harry Podmore is also sidelined and all-rounder Dan Douthwaite rested.Bean’s highest first-class score came as he batted with more aggression than usual, the left-handed opener making a conscious effort to put pressure on the bowlers.In January, the 22-year-old had spent time in India working on batting against spin as part of an England Lions batting camp.On this evidence, it was 10 days well spent given the spinning nature of this pitch, him hitting 24 fours and five sixes in 173 balls. Four of his five sixes were hit over long-on or straight off spin.For Root, he backed up last weekend’s 119 in the draw against Derbyshire with a typically classy innings. He reached this century off 100 balls in the opening 15 minutes of play and went on to hit 21 fours in 165 balls.Bean, having been dropped at first slip on his overnight 140, was the first wicket to fall, bowled playing back to Crane, before Root was trapped lbw by seamer James Harris.Crane is on a season-long loan from Hampshire in a bid to get more regular cricket.He took four of his five wickets on day three and will be most pleased that his last three wickets came at a cost of only one run, including Jonny Tattersall stumped for a confident 55 and Brook caught at backward point. The hosts declared immediately.Glamorgan’s openers Eddie Byrom and Billy Root started their second innings brightly, sharing 56 inside 18 overs.But both fell either side of tea as the score slipped to 72 for two. Root played on to Dan Moriarty’s left-arm spin for 35 before Byrom was caught at deep square-leg on the sweep against Dom Bess’s off-spin.Kiran Carlson was then unfortunate to be run out having struck a drive against Bess against Joe Root at silly point. The ball ricocheted back to wicketkeeper Tattersall, who removed the bails with the batter scrambling to make his ground – 93 for three.Thankfully for the visitors, Northeast and Ingram steadied the ship and held firm for the rest of the day and will resume on 46 and 43 respectively.They will, however, likely need to significantly build on their 78-run partnership to give Glamorgan a chance of avoiding defeat.

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