خاص | الزمالك يوافق على رحيل لاعبه في يناير

كشف مصدر بـ نادي الزمالك عن موافقة القلعة البيضاء على رحيل أحد نجوم فريق الكرة البازرين خلال الفترة المقبلة.

ويعاني الزمالك من أزمات قوية في الفترة الماضية، بسبب عدم قدرته على دفع المستحقات المتأخرة لبعض لاعبيه ومدربيه السابقين، وحرمانه من القيد.

وعلم بطولات، أن هناك اتجاهًا في الزمالك للموافقة على رحيل حسام عبد المجيد خلال فترة الانتقالات الشتوية في يناير.

ويأتي حسام عبد المجيد، مدافع الفريق الشاب، ضمن أكثر الأسماء التي تحظى بمتابعة واسعة، خاصة بعد بروز اسمه مع الزمالك ومنتخب مصر الأول خلال الأشهر الماضية.

طالع | بشرى سارة لجماهير الزمالك قبل انتقالات يناير

ويأتي موقف إدارة الزمالك حال توفر عرض مادي قوي في ظل عدم وضوح موقف اللاعب بشأن تجديد عقده.

كما يرغب مسؤولو الزمالك في الاستفادة المادية من رحيل اللاعب الذي ينتهي عقده الموسم المقبل.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. Leaves Yankees Game Early With Apparent Leg Injury

Jazz Chisholm Jr. left the Yankees’ game against the Astros early Thursday after he came up gingerly when he tagged out Jose Altuve as he attempted to steal second base.

Chisholm's glove and Altuve's helmet appeared to make contact with the Yankees' second baseman's knee on the play. After the inning-ending throw out, Chisholm took a moment to gather himself before slightly limping off the field. He grabbed toward his left knee as he eventually jogged to the dugout. You can watch the full sequence below:

Chisholm stayed in the game and took his at-bat in the next inning, but he struck out on three pitches and left the game shortly thereafter.

The Yankees then announced that he was pulled from the game due to knee contusions in both knees per SNY.

According to Gary Phillips of the , the multiple knee contusions happened on different plays. It appears Chisholm aggravated his left knee on the play with Altuve, however it's currently unclear the other play where he suffered the contusion to his right knee.

On the season, Chisholm is slashing .243/.341/.501 with 28 home runs and 70 RBIs for the Yankees.

Mike Shildt Rips MLB Replay Officials for Controversial Call Overturning Home Run

Mike Shildt was absolutely furious with umpires and MLB replay officials Monday night.

The San Diego Padres manager ripped a decision from the league's replay hub that overturned a home run by Xander Bogaerts due to fan interference. It was a shocking call that cost the Padres a run in a game they eventually lost 4-3 to the San Francisco Giants.

The incident came in the bottom of the second inning when Bogaerts took a Robbie Ray fastball deep to left center. Giants outfielder Heliot Ramos drifted back to the wall and reached up to catch the ball, but it bounced out of his glove and over the fence. As he had reached up, two fans reached out to catch the ball as well.

Initially ruled a home run, it was overturned after a lengthy review. It was stunning that the league was able to find clear evidence of interference, as it certainly wasn't obvious on replay.

Video is below.

Shildt left the dugout to talk to the umpires after the call was overturned and was immediately ejected as rules prohibit arguing after a replay ruling.

After the game, he was still fuming.

"With the angle of the ball coming, where it went and where it landed, there was not anybody who was impeding with him," Shildt said. "And if it's so clear, how come it takes two minutes and 40 seconds to figure it out, if it's that clear? Why are we sitting there for two minutes and 40 seconds? We have 15 seconds to review a call in the first place. We got two minutes and 40 seconds to sit there.

"What are you looking for? If it's that clear, then overturn it early. If it's not, then it's a home run," he continued. "That's just really disappointing that we go that long and have to come up with a conclusion that's not conclusive to overturn a home run that ends up costing us an opportunity to win a baseball game."

Yeah, I'd say he's still pretty hot. That call is going to sting for a while.

Joc Pederson Blasts Clutch HR Seconds After Yankees Announcers Riff About His Body

The New York Yankees are mired in a prolonged skid and the losing ways are starting to put some serious stress on the team's quest to make the postseason. Aaron Boone's side had a golden opportunity to get a much-needed win Monday night in Texas against the Rangers go by the wayside after Devin Williams blew a save opportunity in the ninth, allowing a pinch-hit game-tying home run to Joc Pederson in the ninth inning. Jake Bird surrendered a game-winning blast to Josh Jung in extra innings to prolong the slide.

Every loss is tough when you're struggling and the regular season is rapidly shrinking in size but this one was particularly rough considering Pederson's lack of production this year. There's not much reason to fear a pinch hitter carrying a .126 batting average and .473 OPS to the dish with everything on the line.

Yankees announcers Ryan Ruocco and David Cone tried to convey how much Pederson, a two-time All Star, had fallen off. They also pointed out that his body looks a bit different than it did during his prime.

And a matter of seconds later the Rangers reserve delivered the biggest hit of the game.

Do the two events have anything to do with each other? A logical person would tell you they most certainly do not. But it does make for some compelling footage as a guy who didn't even know his body was being put up for regional discussion enacted some revenge.

Addison Barger Explains ‘Bad Read’ Baserunning Blunder That Ended World Series Game 6

Could this World Series end any other way? The Dodgers forced a Game 7 with a thrilling 3–1 win over the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre Friday. Toronto nearly pulled off a miraculous ninth-inning comeback when Addison Barger hit a controversial ground-rule double to left-center field after the ball was wedged between the warning track and the padded wall.

The ground-rule double took a run away from the Blue Jays as Myles Straw would have easily scored from first base, but he was put at third with the call. After Barger’s extra-base hit, the Dodgers went to Tyler Glasnow (who was due in the rotation to start Game 7) to work themselves out of the jam with no outs and two runners in scoring position.

Glasnow remarkably needed just three pitches to record the save and have the Dodgers escape with the win. Game 6 ended with a wild double play off a liner from Andrés Giménez where outfielder Kiké Hernández played shallow and was able to make the catch and double off Barger at second.

Following the game, the Jays’ right fielder admitted he didn’t read the ball well off the bat, which caused him to drift closer to third and get caught on the base paths.

“I was pretty surprised he got to it,” Barger said postgame via ESPN’s Jesse Rogers. “Off the bat, I thought it was going to go [right] over the shortstop's head. I didn't think it was going to travel that far. It was kind of a bad read.”

It was a smart play by Hernández and maybe even a better scoop by second baseman Miguel Rojas. This year’s Fall Classic continues to deliver. It’s only right it ends with a Game 7, with first pitch scheduled 8 p.m. ET at Rogers Centre Saturday.

New Zealand quicks channel their inner Hatchet Man

Neil Wagner wasn’t playing, but he was there in spirit, as NZ quicks employed the short-ball tactic with success

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Wellington23-Feb-20200:52

Short-ball plan against Kohli was a good one: Boult

Neil Wagner wasn’t at the Basin Reserve, but he was there in spirit.New Zealand had hardly missed him in the first innings, when Kyle Jamieson had proved to be a dissimilar but able replacement, and when the pitch gave their fast bowlers all the assistance they needed to bowl in mostly conventional Test-match fashion.But now, on day three, when India began their second innings, New Zealand might have noted the absence of their hatchet man as they trooped onto the field. They were 183 ahead, yes, but that’s not necessarily a watertight position on pitches in this country, which often flatten out around the time when both teams have completed their first innings.This pitch still had something in it, but it quickly became evident, as Tim Southee and Trent Boult got into their new-ball spells, that that something wasn’t necessarily seam movement off a good length. Once the swing subsided, the biggest ingredient for the fast bowlers to work with was bounce – or its vagaries, to be more precise.This wasn’t the kind of up-and-down pitch where some balls rear up and others scoot through low. The short ball, instead, was coming off the pitch at unpredictable pace. Some were skidding through quickly, others were stopping on the pitch and rising a little more steeply than expected.Wagner may well have bowled all day here, if he’d been around. He wasn’t, so Southee, Boult and Kyle Jamieson took turns bowling like him: hitting the middle of the pitch hard, from over and around the wicket, creating awkward angles by varying their positions on the crease.”I think the luxury is that I have played a lot of cricket at the Basin Reserve,” Boult said at his end-of-day press conference. “Generally, the wind is the biggest thing to deal with. But if I can chop and change those angles and not let a batsman get familiar or get set with what I’m trying to do, then I hope that will interrupt them.Trent Boult is pumped up after accounting for Virat Kohli•Getty Images”That’s the luxury of being a left-armer and being able to use those subtle changes. The red balls here in New Zealand haven’t been swinging as much as they have in the past, and if that’s not happening for me then it comes down to changing angles and using different parts of the crease.”Given the length New Zealand’s quicks bowled, the fields were heavily leg-side-oriented. Typically, there would be a long leg and a deep forward square leg on the boundary, and a leg gully and a forward short leg close to the bat. Occasionally, there would be something a little more unusual.For the first seven overs of India’s innings, Southee and Boult had bowled normal new-ball lengths, looking for swing and edges to the cordon. Mayank Agarwal, solidly, and Prithvi Shaw, less so, had moved India to 22 for no loss in that period.Then, in the eighth over, Boult went around the wicket to Shaw, stationing three fielders square on the leg side. He moved his fine leg to deep backward square leg, and then stationed two fielders at almost handshaking distance some 20 yards from the bat, a square leg and a square midwicket..Shaw dealt comfortably with the first two balls from the new angle, getting on top of the second one and chopping it between second slip and gully. The third ball, though, came out exactly as Boult wanted it to. It was short, angling into the batsman’s left shoulder, and skidding through quickly off the surface. Shaw had no room to pull, and just about managed a weak flick, which popped up to the fielder at catching square leg, Tom Latham, who took it smartly diving to his left.If he had been watching, Wagner would have nodded his approval.The thing about Wagner, though, isn’t so much that he bowls short to take bursts of wickets in the full-frontal, Mitchell Johnson way. He doesn’t have the pace for it. He’ll get the ball up to awkward heights, get it to come off the pitch at a hard-to-predict pace, and make life exceedingly difficult, but at Test level, quality batsmen can still survive this sort of examination.Boult, Southee and Jamieson aren’t Mitchell Johnson either. Their short bowling, therefore, was of the Wagnerian sort: nasty and brutish, but primarily defensive in intent.You can bowl like that when you’re sitting on a big lead. When India’s fast bowlers had bowled short earlier in the day, New Zealand’s lower order could afford to pull and hook with abandon, because they were already ahead and were looking to stretch their lead with a smash-and-grab approach. It was a high-risk, high-reward strategy, and on another day, they may have lost their last three wickets for not as many while taking the same approach, and not lost too much sleep over it.Hanuma Vihari evades a bouncer•Getty ImagesIndia, however, were trying to overcome a sizeable deficit, and could not afford to lose a clump of wickets playing low-percentage shots. Not on this pitch. So Agarwal and Cheteshwar Pujara, Agarwal and Virat Kohli, Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane, and then Rahane and Hanuma Vihari – all these pairs embarked on the painful path of trying to survive the short ball – ducking, weaving, or riding the bounce and playing with soft hands – and wait for mistakes.New Zealand’s bowlers hardly made any. This pitch gave them a bigger margin for error than one with truer bounce might have, but even so, it was a remarkable effort from the three fast bowlers to offer up nothing that sat up to pull, and very little that could be cut or slashed.”With the luxury of playing a bit of cricket on this wicket, we know it’s a very good wicket generally and day three and four is the best time to bat,” Boult said. “It’s slightly drier than what we’re used to but we know accuracy is a big thing.”Playing against Indian batsmen, they like to feel the bat on ball and free their hands. Being a left-armer – I’m not giving you all my secrets but I’m going to bowl around the wicket to change that angle.”Another factor that allowed the three quicks to bowl this way was a man who ended the day with figures of 0 for 25, having bowled 14 overs of naggingly accurate, into-the-wind military-medium outswing. Colin de Grandhomme remains a hugely underrated Test cricketer, but not for too much longer if he keeps batting the way he did on Sunday morning with the lower order – playing classically straight, timing the ball like a dream when he had to, but otherwise curbing his attacking instincts – and bowling the way he did later on – he was almost unerringly accurate, wobbling the ball just enough, and incredibly hard to score off, with two short covers – three when Pujara was on strike – and a short midwicket to complement mid-on and mid-off in cutting off the straight-bat shots.”He has found a way to be very defensive but very aggressive at the same time,” was how Boult described de Grandhomme’s bowling. “He almost plays the role like a spinner, and being able to bowl a few overs and control the run rate nicely. He has been very good for us and has been very frustrating for some oppositions.”How frustrating, exactly? Well, of every bowler who’s taken at least 20 wickets since de Grandhomme’s debut, only one, James Anderson, has a better economy rate than his 2.42.The presence of this metronomic fifth bowler allowed Boult, Southee and Jamieson to mostly bowl with the wind at their back – with Southee doing the into-the-wind role when needed – and usually while relatively fresh.Together, it was a masterclass in the waiting game. And India responded mostly in kind. It was an achievement, in a way, to only lose four wickets in 65 overs against bowling this relentless, but the runs came at a drip.Tim Southee and his team-mates celebrate Mayank Agarwal’s wicket•Getty ImagesFrustratingly for India, they lost wickets in avoidable ways. Cheteshwar Pujara suffered a momentary lapse of judgment with tea imminent, and shouldered arms to a Boult inswinger that didn’t start from all that wide outside off stump. Agarwal did all the hard work and got to 58, reaping the rewards for his patience against the fast bowlers by cashing in during a brief spell of left-arm spin from Ajaz Patel, before getting caught behind off a half-volley outside leg stump. Virat Kohli was the one batsman out while trying to hook a short ball. It was a low-percentage shot, given the field Boult had set, but such errors aren’t unusual when a batsman is under constant pressure.Boult acknowledged the pressure from Jamieson at the other end while talking about Kohli’s wicket.”In terms of Virat, he likes to feel the bat on ball like a couple of their guys,” he said. “Definitely almost we miss [our lengths and lines], he hits, and he hits it well and gets boundaries. From our point of view we were trying to dry that up and for me personally using the wicket and the shorter ball was a good plan to try and control his run rate.”It is nice to draw the error out of him but I think the way that Kyle has been bowling the whole match, especially that spell he bowled to him and not letting him get away to a racing start was a big part of it.”At stumps, India were 144 for 4, still trailing by 39 runs. They’ve gotten through two extended sessions of waiting game against waiting game, suffering a significant but not yet grievous loss of resources in the process, and they’ll have to get through a whole lot more of it if they are to make anything of this Test match.

Lever, McEwan and the rise of the Essex boys

Under Keith Fletcher’s canny captaincy, Essex defied their reputation as a small club

Paul Edwards21-May-2020June 22, 1979

ScorecardJuly 13, 1979
ScorecardRather like the county they represent so proudly, Essex’s cricketers go about their business with little grandeur and no fuss. If they are piqued that their club is regarded as small – and who would not be? – they rarely show it, preferring instead to win matches and see what comes of it. Perhaps only then, someone like Keith Fletcher will say how curious it is that a side of such lowly status has managed to collect seven more Championships in the 40 seasons since their first in 1979.Fletcher, of course, led Essex to their first three titles before handing over to Graham Gooch, who picked up three more. The last two have been won under the leadership of Ryan ten Doeschate, most recently at a damp Taunton last September when Alastair Cook’s clenched fist salute to the away dressing room signalled the job was done. Fletcher, Gooch and Cook all captained England; they played a total of 338 games for their country and scored a total of 60 Test hundreds. But their hearts belonged to Essex, too, and one always felt they returned to the compact ground in New Writtle Street with gratitude and relief.ALSO READ: Match from the Day – Hampshire 1961Every one of those titles was celebrated with boisterous abandon, all the more so, perhaps because there had been plenty of grim years before the pennant could be hoisted atop the Chelmsford pavilion. Admitted to the Championship in 1895, Essex had only twice finished in the top three before August 21, 1979 when the news reached Wantage Road on the dot of six o’clock that Worcestershire had drawn at Derby, thus confirming Fletcher’s team as the champions. Half an hour earlier Brian Hardie’s unbeaten century had taken his side to victory against Northamptonshire. It was their 11th win of the summer and there were to be two more before the season’s end. Essex had first led the table on June 1 and finished the campaign 77 points ahead of Worcestershire.”The basic philosophy of the club has not changed and the committee are determined that it will not do so,” Doug Insole, the chairman, said at the end of that season, in which Essex had also won the Benson and Hedges Cup. “Cricket is for enjoyment and for entertainment. It must be profitable; it must be business-like; but most of all, it must be cricket.”That relatively simple philosophy still holds true in Chelmsford. You would struggle to find any Championship-winning team whose members do not mention team spirit, but the collective ethos seems particular powerful at Essex. It has allowed England players to be developed and then welcomed back; it has allowed high-quality overseas cricketers to be recruited and retained; but each member of those two groups must understand that Essex does not warm to any self-anointed Billy Bigbollocks pulling his imagined rank.The 1979 Essex County Championship squad•Getty ImagesNeither John Lever nor Ken McEwan was guilty of such arrogance in 1979 and both men enjoyed fine seasons. When Derbyshire were overwhelmed by an innings at Chelmsford in late June, McEwan reached his century in 85 minutes and contributed 103 of the 131 runs in his third-wicket partnership with Mike Denness. The South African’s 185 helped Essex post a first-innings lead 177, leaving Lever to add four more wickets to the five he had picked up when Derbyshire had batted on the first day. Such feats were not particularly exceptional for either cricketer that season. Over the previous fortnight Lever had taken 13 wickets in successive games against Leicestershire and Warwickshire. He dismissed 53 batsmen in June and finished the season with 106 first-class wickets, 99 of them in the Championship. It was no wonder that Derek Pringle paid particular tribute to “JK” when he looked back on his time at Essex during the ’80s in his 2018 book :”Players considered to be a ‘captain’s dream’ are mostly mythical beasts existing in the minds of fantasists, yet JK managed to embody it for Essex…Need a wicket, whistle up JK. Need to keep it tight for 40 minutes, bring on JK. Need some yorkers at the death, give the ball to JK. He was a bowling everyman with the endurance to match.”Those early weeks were also memorable for McEwan, who made 787 runs in the first nine Championship matches before losing his form a little later in the season. By then, though, the South African, who had no prospect of playing Test cricket, was well-ensconced at Chelmsford. He would score over 1000 runs in each of his 12 seasons at the club and would contribute to two more Championship wins. Before him there had been Keith Boyce; after McEwan’s return to South Africa there would be Allan Border, Mark Waugh and, eventually, Simon Harmer. All of them bought into the Essex approach but rarely did they earn tributes quite as affectionate as that written by David Lemmon about one of McEwan’s innings in 1983:”Once, while making a century against Kent in Tunbridge Wells, Ken McEwan straight drove, square cut and pulled Derek Underwood to the boundary in the space of one over. Each shot was executed with regal charm, and never a hint of arrogance. He batted, as did the ancients, upright, correct and magisterial. He was incapable of profaning the art of batting, incapable of an ineloquent gesture.”

Fletcher might never have been able to remember anyone’s name, including most in his own team, but he knew how they playedDerek Pringle on Keith Fletcher

McEwan’s own feelings towards Essex during those dozen summers were expressed in humbler but no less revealing words: “At pre-season practice we had to put up the nets ourselves and, if somebody was moving some chairs, we had to go and help them. It was a lovely atmosphere. Every day I had a good laugh. I felt very at home.”But both Lever and McEwan knew that Essex’s success never revolved entirely around their performances. That was proved at Southend three weeks after the win against Derbyshire. Nottinghamshire were the visitors and for most of the three days they outplayed their hosts, gaining a 60-run first-innings lead and then dismissing Essex for 229 in their second dig. Lever had been selected in the Test squad and McEwan made only 27 runs in the match; Essex only set their visitors as many as 170 to win because the invaluable Stuart Turner made an unbeaten 68 and put on 42 with for the last wicket with David Acfield.None of which seemed to matter very greatly when Nottinghamshire were 87 for 1 but then the spinners Ray East and Acfield took the last nine wickets for 36 runs on a deteriorating pitch. It was another triumph for Essex and for the tactical ability of a skipper whose ability and services to the game have been insufficiently recognised – except, that is, in Chelmsford.”Fletch was tactically astute,” Gooch said. “He knew the game inside out. And he had an incessant drive to win, which is important in county cricket because you’re on a treadmill. Some county sides were happy for it to rain. But we weren’t. ‘You can’t win points in the dressing room,’ Fletch said. He never let things drift.”Nor were Fletcher’s abilities lost on the young Pringle, who rated his county captain a shrewder skipper than Mike Brearley:”Fletcher might never have been able to remember anyone’s name, including most in his own team. But he knew how they played, especially Essex’s opponents, and set traps accordingly.”Every season Fletcher would look at the fixture list and surmise that Essex would probably need 12 or 13 victories to clinch the County Championship title. He’d then begin to identify, bad weather notwithstanding, where and against whom they might eventuate.Ken McEwan bats during the 1979 B&H Cup final•PA Images Archive/Getty Images”He would also predict, broadly, how we might clinch those matches: ‘JK will win us four with the ball; Goochie four with the bat; the other bowlers and batsmen a couple each,’ he used to say. It was a reductive approach, and ridiculously facile for such a complex game, but it was uncanny how often his gnomic prophecies proved correct.”This determination to play attractive, winning cricket became known as The Essex Way. It brought the county their eight titles and a host of one-day trophies. Yet the Way seems little more than an aim, one that might be shared by most first-class counties. Its achievement was altogether more complex. It was founded, as is the case with any successful sports team, on the ability of the players. Its development, however, was dependent on the willingness of those players to consider their own achievement only in the context of the common pursuit; and equally, it rested on the tactical ability of a captain who was ready to take all manner of risks in pursuit of a possible victory. To lose one or two players, as Essex often did in the era of Gooch, Lever, Pringle and Neil Foster simply made demands on others to mend any breach.”There was no coach, no gym, no indoor nets, no standalone outdoor nets, no psychologists,” Pringle writes, “just a scorer, a physio and a captain who dared his team to win, no matter the circumstance.”To reduce The Essex Way simply to its ultimate goal is to make nearly as daft an error as to think Essex itself is no more than boy racers, cheap entertainment and . As Gillian Darley shows in her book the county is the “most overlooked and undersold.” in England; and when Robert Macfarlane made his superb film “The Wild Places of Essex” he visited not night clubs and nail bars but Tilbury Power Station, where he saw peregrine falcons and Billericay, where there were badgers, bluebells and barn owls. Most evocatively and mysteriously of all, there is the passage in John Le Carré’s novel in which Peter Guillam is driving the former spymaster George Smiley to see an agent who has had to be hidden deep in England. Essex, it seems, is the natural choice.ALSO READ: Essex’s ebullient eighties (2016)”On the signposts were names like Little Horkesley, Wormingford and Bures Green, then the signposts stopped and Guillam had a feeling of being nowhere at all…”As they got out the cold hit them and Guillam smelt a cricket field and woodsmoke and Christmas all at once; he thought he had never been anywhere so quiet or so cold or so remote.”And just as there is far more to Essex than Basildon, so there was far more to The Essex Way than a preparedness to take risks. Fletcher possessed perhaps the most instinctive and acute understanding of what could be achieved in a three-day county match during the modern era; his reward was a trio of titles which his players marked with appropriate revels. And they still enjoy their victories at Chelmsford, as journalists found when they were leaving the ground one evening in June 2017. A couple of hours earlier Harmer’s 14th wicket had sealed victory in the day-night game against Middlesex with eight balls to spare. But the songs of triumph were still ringing out from the home dressing room at near midnight. Just as they were, somewhere in Essex, last September. Match from the Day

Is Kyle Jamieson the tallest man ever to play for New Zealand?

Also: were Eoin Morgan’s seven sixes with no fours against South Africa a record in T20Is?

Steven Lynch25-Feb-2020In the last T20I against South Africa, Eoin Morgan hit seven sixes but no fours. Was this a record? asked Richard Hall from England

Eoin Morgan’s match-winning burst against South Africa in Centurion earlier this month was actually the third innings in all men’s internationals (note that the number of fours hit by Jimmy Sinclair in the Cape Town Test of 1902 is not known) – but the first for a Test-playing country – to contain seven sixes but no fours.The other two instances both came in T20 matches between Associate member teams last year. In July, Norman Vanua of Papua New Guinea thrashed 47 from 12 balls, including seven sixes, against Vanuatu in Apia (Samoa), then the following month Razmal Shigiwal of Austria belted seven sixes (but no fours) in his 53 against Luxembourg in Ilfov (Romania).The Test record was also set in 2019: Umesh Yadav’s 31 for India against South Africa in Ranchi in October contained five sixes but no fours.Is Kyle Jamieson the tallest man ever to play for New Zealand? asked Greg Willis from New Zealand

The Auckland fast bowler Kyle Jamieson, who made a stunning debut in Wellington, dismissing Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli in his first four overs, does seem to be the tallest man to play a Test for New Zealand. He is reportedly 203cm tall – that’s six foot eight inches – which is a centimetre more than Peter Fulton, a batsman who rejoiced in the nickname “Two-Metre Peter”. Fulton’s finest hour was scoring 136 and 101 – his only two Test centuries – against England in Auckland in 2012-13. Some sources, however, suggest that fast bowler Kerry Walmsley, who played three Tests for New Zealand between 1995 and 2000, is also 6ft 8in.As well as taking a wicket with his first ball in international cricket, Khizar Hayat of Malaysia took a second wicket before conceding his first run. Was this unique? asked Derek Rouse from England

The Peshawar-born seamer Khizar Hayat had a dream start to his representative career: in an official T20I for Malaysia against Hong Kong in Kuala Lumpur last week, he dismissed Kinchit Shah with his first ball, and Scott McKechnie with his fourth, before conceding a run: he finished with 5 for 4 in his two overs as Malaysia won a rain-affected match.Eight other men are known to have started by taking two international wickets before conceding a run – including Hayat’s Malaysian team-mate, slow left-armer Anwar Rahman, who actually struck with his first two deliveries, against the Maldives in Kuala Lumpur in June 2019. One which I happened to see was the England seamer Richard Johnson, in his first over in a Test, against Zimbabwe in Chester-Le-Street in 2003. The others are the Australians Tom Horan (the only other one in a Test) and Trevor Laughlin, Martin van Jaarsveld of South Africa, Sri Lanka’s Dhammika Prasad, and the Dutchmen Bernard Loots and Daan van Bunge (thanks to Andrew Samson for his help with this one). But pride of place has to go to the Nepal offspinner Anjali Chand, who marked her official T20 international debut last December with 6 for 0, including a hat-trick, against the Maldives in Pokhara (Nepal).US-born Jehan Mubarak played 12 Tests, 40 ODIs and 16 T20Is for Sri Lanka between 2002 and 2015•AFPPakistan have played eight Tests in Wellington and have never lost one. Is this the most at any foreign venue by a visiting team? asked Harshit Goyal from the United States

Pakistan’s eight Tests without defeat at the Basin Reserve – they have won three times there – comes in second on this particular list: Sri Lanka have played nine Tests at the Harare Sports Club in Zimbabwe without defeat, winning five. South Africa have also played seven Tests in Wellington without ever losing, while England are undefeated in seven in Delhi. England have also never lost in six Tests in Kanpur, while India have drawn all six of their Tests in Georgetown; New Zealand have won five out of six at Bulawayo’s Queens Club, with one draw.Have any cricketers born in the USA played for England? asked Divyesh Patel from England

Only two players born in the USA have appeared in Tests so far, and neither of them did so for England. The first was Kenneth “Bam Bam” Weekes, who was born in Boston, Massachusetts: he played only twice for West Indies, but did score 137 in his second match, against England at The Oval in 1939, in the last Test before WWII. The other was Jehan Mubarak, who played 13 Tests for Sri Lanka between 2002 and 2015: he was born in Washington DC in 1981, while his father was working there as a scientist.There might soon be an addition to the list: the West Indian legspinner Hayden Walsh was born in the US Virgin Islands. He played nine white-ball internationals for the USA last year, before making his West Indies debut against Afghanistan in Lucknow in November.Use our
feedback form or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Can Kedar Jadhav 'light the fuse' to ignite CSK's middle order?

And would he benefit from having a more defined role in the Super Kings line-up?

Nagraj Gollapudi09-Oct-2020Among several questions currently riddling the Chennai Super Kings, a significant one concerns Kedar Jadhav. What exactly is he contributing to the team? The plain and popular answer would be: nothing really.Nothing really, since those goosebumps-inducing moments in the IPL opener in 2018 against the Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede Stadium, when Jadhav limped back on one leg, having hurt his left hamstring earlier in the innings, to hit a six and a four off the last two balls to hand his new franchise a stunning win.It was for such acts of courage and unusual talent that the Super Kings, usually conservative at IPL auctions, paid INR 7.8 crore (USD 1.2 million approx) in 2018 to sign Jadhav, making him the most expensive auction buy for the franchise.Jadhav was the Super Kings’ third-most-expensive player behind captain MS Dhoni and vice-captain Suresh Raina. But he hasn’t set the franchise alight. In 21 matches for the Super Kings, Jadhav has faced 250 balls and scored 244 runs at a strike rate of 97.60.Jadhav is a notoriously slow starter: his first-10-balls strike rate in the IPL for the Super Kings is just 93.5, and he hits a boundary every 7.3 deliveries. Of all his runs for the franchise, 130 – from 139 balls – have come in this stage of his innings.On Wednesday, Jadhav walked in in the finisher role with the Super Kings needing 39 from 21 balls. The Super Kings sent Jadhav in ahead of Ravindra Jadeja and Dwayne Bravo because – their head coach Stephen Fleming later said – they felt he could dominate Sunil Narine.The Super Kings ended up losing by 10 runs. Jadhav finished with 7 off 12 balls, having failed to score off eight of them.Kedar Jadhav’s strike rate has dipped perceptibly since moving to the Chennai Super Kings•ESPNcricinfo LtdIn his first outing of this IPL season, against the Rajasthan Royals, Jadhav batted at No. 6, behind Sam Curran and his Maharashtra team-mate Ruturaj Gaikwad, who was making his IPL debut. Curran smashed two sixes in five balls, before both he and Gaikwad were stumped off successive balls against Rahul Tewatia.When Jadhav joined Faf du Plessis, also fresh at the crease, the Super Kings needed a further 140 runs from the final 11 overs with six wickets in hand.Jadhav’s innings was lit up by three successive fours off the legspinner Shreyas Gopal’s first three deliveries, but was cut short soon after by top-edged swish against a slower ball from Tom Curran. Jadhav would have been disappointed after scoring 22 runs off 16 balls on the small ground in Sharjah where Super Kings lost by 16 runs.In the next match against the Delhi Capitals, Jadhav walked in at No. 5 in another chase, with Super Kings needing 132 from 65 balls. Despite being at the wicket for six-and-a-half overs, however, Jadhav only managed 26 from 21 balls, with three fours.These examples only highlight Jadhav’s inability to accelerate, impose himself on the bowlers, build quick partnerships, and take charge of a chase. With the pre-season exit of Suresh Raina, there has been extra pressure on Jadhav and Ambati Rayudu to deliver as the two most experienced Indian middle-order batsmen in the squad behind MS Dhoni. Jadhav hasn’t delivered, and his struggles have become a story.What is Jadhav’s role?Before the 2019 season, Fleming put his arm around Jadhav, suggesting he would ease the burden on Dhoni by playing the No. 4 role. In 2018 Dhoni had his best IPL with the bat, batting mostly at No. 4 in the absence of Jadhav who was ruled out with the hamstring injury he picked up in the season-opener in Mumbai.MS Dhoni and Kedar Jadhav share a laugh•BCCIThis season, Jadhav has batted just once at No. 4 – in the chase against Sunrisers Hyderabad. The Super Kings needed 129 runs from 14 overs when he came in. He was caught in the covers having made 3 off 10.In his press conference after the defeat, Fleming was asked about the thought process behind sending Kedar Jadhav ahead of Dhoni. Fleming raised an eyebrow, probably at being asked about Dhoni’s batting position. Fleming checked whether that was the question. When it was repeated, he said: “Really? It’s a question?”According to Fleming, Jadhav is the Super Kings’ No. 4 with Dhoni being the “middle to back-end” player. “Kedar Jadhav is our No. 4. He plays dual roles, where [if] we get off to a good start he might move down to let Dhoni up. But when you are losing early wickets then your No. 4 batsman goes up.”Fleming, though, has acknowledged that the pressure is on his top-4 including Jadhav. He conceded that form can be brittle in the early phase of the IPL, but at the same time he expected a “substantial contribution” from Jadhav, whom he believes can “light the fuse at any stage” in the IPL.Would giving Jadhav a firm role at No. 4 regardless of the situation offer him a better chance to succeed? The likes of Suryakumar Yadav, Ishan Kishan, Nitish Rana, Rishabh Pant and Priyam Garg have been given specific roles in the middle order by their respective franchises, and it seems to have worked in their case.With a lower order that remains weak and inconsistent despite the presence of Dhoni, the Super Kings need Jadhav to play a more dominant role. Ultimately the responsibility lies with him. He forced his way into India’s ODI team with his unorthodox strokeplay, his street-smartness and the side-arm slow bowling with which he helped India win the Asia Cup final in 2018. In ODIs, Jadhav has played some spectacular support acts to Virat Kohli and sparkled on several occasions with Dhoni at the other end.But Dhoni isn’t the Dhoni of old now, and is perhaps better suited to playing the support role. There’s a vacuum where the Super Kings need a dominant middle-order force. Jadhav needs to take charge and show he can be that player.

'Naturally aggressive' Nicholas Pooran finds his sweet spot

“My innings was simple. If the ball was in my zone, I tried to strike it as clean as possible.”

Hemant Brar21-Oct-2020Nicholas Pooran doesn’t like to complicate things. Before IPL 2020, when ESPNcricinfo had asked him which team he was looking forward to playing against the most, his answer was: “All.” When asked which bowler he was most excited about facing, he said, “Everyone.”The same can be said about his batting too. In a 360-degree world, Pooran relies on drives and pulls to score a majority of his runs. While batsmen are busy slogging right, left and centre, he revels in playing proper cricketing shots. Tuesday was just another example of it.Despite Shikhar Dhawan’s second successive hundred, the Kings XI Punjab had restricted Delhi Capitals to 164 for 5. It wasn’t a big target but the Kings XI lost KL Rahul early. While Chris Gayle changed the momentum with a 26-run over, it was Pooran who flattened the Capitals.After Gayle’s onslaught, the Capitals had managed to restore the momentum in the very next over, which saw the back of Gayle and Mayank Agarwal. R Ashwin had bowled Gayle with a slider as the batsman went for a slog across the line, but Pooran drove him to the cover boundary first ball. While it was a fuller delivery, Pooran’s shot selection also made a big difference.Cometh the middle overs, the phase in which Pooran has been the most destructive batsmen this IPL. In overs 7 to 15, his 230 runs are second only to Rahul’s 241. But while Rahul’s runs have come at a strike rate of 133.88, Pooran has smashed them at 182.53. Among those with at least 50 runs in that period, no has scored at a faster rate.But before Pooran got going, there were some jitters, not in shot selection but in running between the wickets. One such mistake had already resulted in Agarwal getting run out. In the eighth over, it could have been curtains for Pooran as well when he tried to drop-and-run only to be sent back by Glenn Maxwell. Shreyas Iyer’s off-balance throw was a bit wide of Pant who failed to flick it on to the stumps and Pooran was saved.Nicholas Pooran provided impetus to the Kings XI Punjab innings•BCCIHad Pooran been run out, the Kings XI would have been 70 for 4 in the eighth over with not much batting to come. In that scenario, according to ESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index, the Capitals would have gone on to win the game.What followed instead was a period of such clean hitting that it resulted in Sachin Tendulkar tweeting in praise. After being 11 off 10 balls, Pooran tonked 42 off the next 19. Tushar Deshpande bowled short and got whacked over deep square leg. Marcus Stoinis tried length and was launched over long-on. In six balls, bookended by those two hits, Pooran struck two sixes and three fours to turn the game decisively in the Kings XI’s favour.

At the halfway stage, the Kings XI required just 64 from 60 balls with seven wickets in hand. Pooran and Maxwell added 69 in 40 balls, the latter’s contribution being only 16 off 15, and by the time Pooran got out, the equation had further come down to 40 from 45 balls, which the Kings XI achieved with one over to spare.Pooran did all this while playing shots right from the MCC coaching manual. In his 28-ball 53, ESPNcricinfo recorded eight cover drives, which fetched him 14 runs. The only more productive shot was the pull, yielding 16 runs from three attempts. The innings, where he scored at a strike rate of almost 190, had no reverse sweeps, no scoops, no ramps and just one slog.After the match, when Maxwell asked Pooran about his knock on , Pooran’s reply was: “My innings was simple. If the ball was in my zone, I tried to strike it as clean as possible.”At the post-match presentation, he told host broadcaster Star, “I am a naturally aggressive player. I play on merit. If it’s in my zone, I hit it. Simple as that. If it’s a match-up, it’s a match-up.” When asked about confusion while running between the wickets, he replied, “One of those nights, one of those nights. It was tough. Poor communication. Simple.”Those responses may come across as simplistic, but Pooran is aware of what he has been doing right and what he needs to improve upon.”I have been working really hard,” he said at the post-match presentation. “I have been hitting the ball pretty good. I have been getting starts but haven’t been able to convert those into big scores. Even tonight I got a start but couldn’t finish the game for the team. That’s disappointing for me.”Before Tuesday, Pooran had only threatened without actually inflicting much damage but if he can keep improving the way he has been, it won’t be too long before oppositions start considering him a real threat.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus