Sadio Mane set to exit Liverpool

Liverpool forward Sadio Mane has decided to leave Anfield for a new challenge, with Bayern Munch the leading contenders for his signature.

What’s the latest?

Journalist Fabrizio Romano tweeted to say that Mane has “decided to leave” following the Champions League final and is ready for a new challenge.

“Sadio Mané has decided to leave Liverpool this summer.

“He’s ready for a new experience after many special years with Reds – it will be confirmed to the club.

“FC Bayern are strong contenders – but it’s still open and not completed as Sadio wanted to wait for the final.”

It is set to be confirmed by the club soon with German side Bayern Munich strong contenders to secure his signature. The news comes after the player said he would give an update on his future after Saturday’s final, in which the Reds lost 1-0.

It was reported recently that Bundesliga champions Bayern were in pole position to sign him, with a fee as little as £25.5m stated due to the fact the 30-year-olds contract is running down.

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Supporters will be gutted

For Liverpool supporters, this is their worst nightmare come true. Although they knew that one day Mane would depart for pastures new, many won’t have thought it would have come this soon.

He made the move to Merseyside in the summer of 2016 for £34m from Southampton. In many ways he represents the beginning of the Jurgen Klopp revolution that has seen The Reds lift their first ever Premier League title, and appear in three Champions League finals in five years, one of which they won.

His overall record at Anfield is out of this world with 168 direct goal contributions in 269 games. Those are numbers that will be hard for anyone new to repeat, but they’ll have to do all they can to recruit a ready made replacement.

He’s considered one of the greatest in Europe right now, and ranks in the top 5% for goals when compared to his positional peers in Europe’s top five leagues over the past year.

Along with Mohamed Salah he has become key to the success on the pitch and they will find it difficult to replace him. Does this mark the beginning of the end of Klopp’s tenure?

Well with the German recently signing a new deal we think not, but what he’s now tasked with is refreshing the squad whilst ensuring the levels of success don’t drop.

He’ll no doubt go down as a legend for Liverpool, but it seems as though we have seen him wear the famous red shirt for the final time.

AND in other news: Liverpool now eyeing £27m-rated “phenomenon”, could be their perfect Mane replacement…

Sheffield Wednesday eyeing move for Wiredu

Sheffield Wednesday are interested in signing Colchester United midfielder Brendan Wiredu, according to a report from the Sheffield Star journalist Joe Crann. 

The lowdown: Wiredu’s career so far

Still only 22, the London-born starlet came out of the Charlton Athletic academy before being sent to Bromley on loan in 2019.

Signed by Colchester last year, Wiredu has been a revelation for the League Two club this season, making 45 appearances across all competitions and helping them towards a comfortable mid-table finish.

Following this breakout campaign, a move up the English football pyramid could now be on the cards this summer…

The latest: Wednesday interested in Wiredu

Taking to Twitter to cite his in-depth report from the Sheffield Star, Crann outlined Sheffield Wednesday’s interest in Wiredu.

The journalist stated: “Hearing that 22-year-old Colchester United midfielder, Brendan Wiredu, has made his way onto #SWFC’s radar…He’s still under contract with the U’s, but a transfer fee wouldn’t be huge. For now he’s just on a long list of potentials.”

Meanwhile, within the report, it is that claimed that Owls manager Darren Moore is ‘on the lookout for a combative midfielder’ this summer, and Wiredu has been earmarked as a potential target.

The verdict: Smart signing

Although he’s unproven at League One level, the talented youngster has shown with his performances throughout the 2021/22 campaign that the step-up seems an achievable one for him.

Overall, Wiredu – who was described as an ‘explosive player’ by his former Colchester boss Hayden Mullins – earned a 6.96 Sofascore rating in the fourth tier, supplying four assists and winning a staggering 8.8 of his total duels per game.

Those statistics would certainly lend themselves to Moore’s requirement for a combative midfield operator, and at just 22 years of age, the Colchester ace still has room to develop even further, potentially at Hillsborough.

How Maradona mania can explain India-Pakistan madness

When the football great once stepped out in the heaving San Paulo Stadium he said: “When you are on the pitch, life goes away. Everything goes away”. India-Pakistan will be no different

Nagraj Gollapudi in Manchester15-Jun-20191:56

When Wahab yorked local lad Yuvraj

In 2011, I covered my first India v Pakistan World Cup match. I was ESPNcricinfo’s Correspondent No. 3 in Mohali, and did not have a seat in the press box. I did get a ticket, though. And that helped make it one of the best experiences of my life. Sitting amid the fans, the cacophony and the delirium, riding the swing of emotions, which would rise to ecstasy and then shift to tension, the sort of up and down no alcohol or drug can ever give you.ALSO READ: The meaning of India-Pakistan, for India and for PakistanSitting in the same stand in Mohali, behind me in a corner, was Wahab Riaz’s family. I only realised who they were when Wahab tossed a few bottles of water to them. We spoke. Annie, Wahab’s sister, agreed that sitting in the crowd, feeling the tension, was unique, something she would not barter for an air-conditioned seat. Not that there was one – all prime real estate had been taken up by the premiers of the two countries, their entourages, and other worthies.Chandigarh was abuzz even two days before that semi-final. The Pakistanis were welcomed with open arms, there was a sense of bonhomie, real bonhomie. It was beautiful.In 2013 and 2017, I would watch, and report on, more India-Pakistan matches, all in the UK. Two of the three matches were played in Birmingham and one, the 2017 Champions Trophy final, at The Oval. That final was terrific for its cricket, mainly the supreme artistry of Mohammad Amir with the new ball. A record audience followed that match. In London, Birmingham, Manchester and Bradford, Pakistan fans went berserk. You could see just how much the result meant to them.Two years down the line, you would expect that needle to have only become sharper, not to forget the recent – or renewed – political tensions between the two countries.Virat Kohli warms up with some football at a practice session on match eve•AFPIn Manchester on Friday evening, Saif, a young Afghan man born in Peshawar, said he wanted good cricket, but also wanted the rhetoric by the media in both countries to stop. On Saturday afternoon, an ICC volunteer – a Pakistan fan – cheered every Pakistan player and support staffer coming out of the indoor training centre. “We will win. We will win,” he screamed. When he spotted Amir getting into the team bus to go back to the hotel, the volunteer burst out cheerily: “Tomorrow a five-for.” Amir smiled and gave him a thumbs-up. All part of the massive build-up.These emotions will only gather momentum on Sunday morning as fans from the two countries pour in to Old Trafford by the thousands. The stands will be painted in the Pakistani green and the Indian blue. Tendulkar’s No. 10 will mix with Afridi’s No. 10.On Friday evening, I watched another No. 10: Asif Kapadia’s compelling docu-film . Kapadia’s captured not just Maradona’s ridiculously fantastic skills with the ball, but also his personality – smart, cheeky, vulnerable. Maradona confesses he was no saint. But there are not many bigger gods than Maradona in football.As I walked outside into the Manchester evening drizzle with the weekend party spots buzzing, what ran through my mind was Antonio Pinto’s haunting music and the words spoken by Maradona as he walks up the tunnel to step out in the heaving San Paulo Stadium in Napoli to chants of “Diego, Diego, Diego.””When you are on the pitch, life goes away. Everything goes away,” he says.On Sunday, when Virat Kohli and Sarfaraz Ahmed lead the Indian and Pakistani teams out for their national anthems, emotions at Old Trafford and the Indian subcontinent – and in groups of people from the two countries elsewhere in the world – will hit fever pitch. But, a few minutes later, . It will be time for cricket, and nothing else.

Smith, Dhoni central to Pune's turnaround

There were rumours about Rising Pune being a bickering and uninterested unit because of off-field decisions, but amid the noise, the think-tank addressed the underlying issue of how to win games

Arun Venugopal in Hyderabad20-May-20174:06

Tait: Dhoni is spiritual leader of Pune

On the morning of Rising Pune Supergiant’s game against Delhi Daredevils on April 11, Manoj Tiwary received a phone call that informed him that his father had died. Tiwary planned to spend time with his father after the IPL, but cancer had ruined them. His family urged him to play that night but Tiwary did not want to stay in Pune when his mind was in Kolkata.He did not watch much of the game, but was touched by a gesture from his Rising Pune team-mates. “I want to thank the team and all the players because they showed respect by wearing black armbands in the match,” Tiwary told ESPNcricinfo. “Everybody came up to me and made sure I was okay. The team members make sure they engage you in different ways so that you don’t keep thinking about it.”When Tiwary returned to the team, for the game against Gujarat Lions, there was gloom on the field as well. Rising Pune lost their third successive game by a significant margin, and their victory over Mumbai Indians in their first game seemed an aberration. They had finished seventh last season and jokes about their no-hoper status resurfaced.There were rumours about Rising Pune being a bickering and uninterested unit, as a result of decisions the franchise had taken before the start of the season. MS Dhoni had been removed from captaincy and replaced by Steven Smith, and provocative tweets from the team owner’s brother on the leadership issue did not improve public perception.Amid the noise, Rising Pune’s think-tank was trying to address the underlying issue – how to win games. Before their match against Royal Challengers Bangalore, their coach Stephen Fleming drew something like a flowchart that listed traits of successful and unsuccessful teams. Tiwary was so impressed by the illustration that he took a photograph of it, so that he could revisit the lesson when needed.”Fleming mentioned that three things come into the mindset of the players when we go through bad performances: lack of confidence, lack of belief, and lack of fun,” Tiwary said. “There are selection issues as well, with a lot of chopping and changing happening in the first XI. There are more meetings and inconsistency in behaviour. All this results in us spending too much energy on things we don’t need at that point of time.”When we sat together ahead of this IPL, there were a lot of expectations and hope. Fleming wanted us to have a similar thought process even after we lost three games. That gave us a clear message about how to go about things, rather than sulking and panicking over the losses. After that game, we didn’t look back.”Tiwary was referring to the fixture at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, where Rising Pune defended 161. It set the formula for the team’s combination.Rahul Tripathi has played a key role at the top of the order•BCCIRising Pune went on a hot streak, as old and new heroes played a part in winning nine out of their next 11 games. In Rahul Tripathi, the team’s second highest run-scorer, they found a robust opener to make up for Ajinkya Rahane’s off-colour season. In Jaydev Unadkat, who had played only two IPL games, for Kolkata Knight Riders and Delhi Daredevils, in the last two years, they found a contender for the Purple cap. He has 22 wickets at present. In 17-year old Washington Sundar, signed as replacement for R Ashwin, they found a bowler for the tough overs; he was Man of the Match in the first qualifier. Dan Christian and Lockie Ferguson stepped up as well.Rising Pune’s story is not only about surprise packages, though. Their big guns boomed too, and they don’t come much bigger than Ben Stokes and Imran Tahir, who was signed as a replacement for Mitchell Marsh and finished with 18 wickets.When Stokes was bought for INR 14.5 crore at the auction in February, a Rising Pune official said the franchise wouldn’t have minded paying a crore more for him. His rationale was that Stokes would have earned his wages if he won seven league games on his own. He was ultimately not far off that fanciful mark.Stokes finished with 316 runs from 11 innings, including a hundred and a fifty, at a strike-rate of nearly 143 and claimed 12 wickets. He was Man of the Match thrice and had an important role in at least two other wins. That Rising Pune did not suffer for his and Tahir’s absence in the first Qualifier wasn’t a surprise either. The result was indicative of the team’s depth and the strong leadership of Fleming, Smith and Dhoni.While Fleming runs team meetings, Smith, along with Dhoni, has made sure there were few communication gaps on the field. The equation between captain and predecessor – frosty? indifferent? – had been a major talking point in the lead up to the season. In reality, Smith and Dhoni’s working relationship has appeared professional and dignified. Smith backed Dhoni to overcome his patchy batting form, and hasn’t been averse to hearing a suggestion or two from the former captain.Baba Aparajith, a young batsman in his second season with Rising Pune, said there was no change in the way Dhoni conducted himself. “Some may think I am saying this for the sake of political correctness, but that’s not the case,” Aparajith, who was with the Dhoni-led Chennai Super Kings in the past, said. “To tell you the truth, he’s a wonderful human being and he provides the same inputs and makes the same contributions.”Tiwary said the way Dhoni and Smith had handled a potentially awkward situation was a lesson for youngsters. “I know whatever he [Dhoni] has been asked to do, he has done that,” Tiwary said. “It’s something we have to learn from him, because as youngsters we all get so emotional. When things don’t go our way – there is so much written on social media – you just get your frustrations out immediately.”After captaining for so many years, it’s not an easy thing to just hang back. It’s a natural instinct of a born leader and also he is a wicketkeeper who has very good ideas from behind the stumps. So whenever he sees something, he goes up to Smith or makes a personal adjustment on the field. It’s something Smith has handled really well too. He is open to all the suggestions.”In the Kings XI Punjab game, after Shardul [Thakur] bowled three overs, Smith was giving the ball to Sundar. I went up to Smith and said Shardul was in good rhythm and asked him to ensure he bowls four overs [on the trot] because he had anyway not bowled in the slog in the previous game. Steve gave the ball to Shardul and it nearly paid off because the first ball went past MS and Dan Christian”.Jaydev Unadkat believes team spirit has been key to their resurgence this season•BCCIUnadkat said he had been a beneficiary of Smith’s leadership as well. In the away game against Mumbai Indians, Unadkat was trusted with the final over to defend 17, and was undecided between bowling cutters – his strength – or deliveries like wide yorkers. Smith told him to back his cutters. Unadkat dismissed Hardik Pandya and Rohit Sharma and Rising Pune won by three runs.”At times it has happened that Smithy has wanted me to do something, and I told him ‘No, I will do what I am good at’ and he has backed me for that. It has been a two-way communication,” Unadkat said. “At times he felt something but I felt differently and vice-versa, but we have always been on the same page.”It was also important to have the backing from Mahi as well. He has been critical at times, even when I got those wickets in the Sunrisers match. When I got hit for a six in between he came and said you cannot get hit by this batsman, you are [too] good for that. Those points keep you tight in the situation and the team has been lucky to have such leaders in the team.”The key traits that players attribute the turnaround to are professionalism and care. Aparajith said Rising Pune had started looking ahead at 2017 during the final stages of their failed campaign last year. New players were tried and at the end of the 2016 season the players were given a fitness programme to follow. “That showed their professionalism and clarity of purpose,” Aparajith said. “They knew the direction they were heading towards and they had the hunger to win.”Unadkat said Rising Pune was one of the better franchises he’s played for in terms of camaraderie. Stokes nicknamed him the “mango-shake man” for supplying drinks for the team while in Rajkot. Small gestures like these, according to Unadkat, went a long way towards bringing the players closer.”We have some good banter in the team and he [Stokes] is one guy who keeps the atmosphere light,” Unadkat said. “We became close during this period of five-six weeks when he was here. He has been very supportive and he liked what I did on the field. He still keeps wishing us well on our team chat groups and eggs us on to do better. It feels nice to know someone like him at a closer level. Same with someone like Dan [Christian], who I have known for some time.”Such a bond develops only if you have a connection with the guy, or if you feel that you are a part of the team. If you do some gestures like this [making milkshakes] – not for the sake of doing it, but from the heart – it is always heart-warming for them as well to see someone is caring for them. You give love, you get love.”Despite their qualification for the final, Rising Pune won’t exist next year. Their contract with the IPL was for two years only, but that isn’t on the players’ mind. Neither is the weight of playing in the final.”The talk has been to remain calm and composed rather than be too aggressive and get carried away,” Unadkat said. “Doing more than what we need to at times is also not good. That has been the talk in the team – to keep things simple not to worry too much about it being a Qualifier or an Eliminator. I think it has worked for us”.

Oman stay cool in face of Hayat's hot bat

Over the last eight months, Oman has demonstrated an invaluable capability to ignore pressure and execute the basics in crunch time, traits that were on display again in a hair-raising victory over Hong Kong

Alagappan Muthu in Fatullah20-Feb-2016It was well past midnight, but the Oman team manager Jameel Zaidi said his phone was buzzing off the hook. “I got more than 600 messages in half an hour. The people back home are really happy. You wouldn’t believe it, but there had been a concert happening while the match was on and they announced our result in the middle of it.”Over the last eight months, the team has secured a place in the ICC T20I rankings, the chance to play the World T20 next month in India and now a hair-raising victory over Hong Kong that showcased them as a team trusting in newfound batting depth – they lost two wickets in three balls during the 11th over and yet from the 13th onwards they were scoring in double-digits – and an invaluable capability to ignore pressure and execute the basics in crunch time.Having leaked 27 runs to Babar Hayat in the 18th over to reduce the equation to 18 needed off 12, left-arm seamer Bilal Khan – who earlier smacked by Hayat for three boundaries in the third over – gave away only three runs off the penultimate over. Left-arm spinner Ajay Lalcheta wrapped it up by defending 14 off the final one.Until then, Hayat had been in the process of justifying why his coach Simon Cook rated him “the best batsman in Hong Kong.” Simple numbers say he struck 122 off 60 balls. The record books have his name down against the highest score made by a batsman from an Associate nation in T20Is. A more telling statistic could be that the next best contributor to a chase of 181 was Aizaz Khan with 15.Babar was the only man standing against UAE and he stood breathtakingly firm. His strokes did not want for power. He can pepper the cover boundary with an orthodox loft as easily as the one at cow corner with a fearsome slog. Out of his first 17 balls, eight of them were sent to the boundary. It must be noted that they were pulled in, but not everyone can exploit that to the tune Babar did. He had nine fours and seven sixes when he was finally dismissed with two balls left in the chase.Besides the clean ball-striking, the right-handed No. 3 batsman seemed unperturbed by any obstacle in front of him. It can’t have been from the weight of runs he had in T20Is prior to tonight – 248 in 14 matches at an average of 24.80 – but it may have stemmed from the form he’s struck in 2015-16: 624 runs in 12 innings across formats at an average of 54.It’s a stunning improvement. Is there a secret behind it? Yes. He has batted at No. 3 in every one of those 12 innings.”I used to bat No. 5 or 6, but I talked to Simon Cook and he said you are going to move up. I’m really happy batting at this position,” he had told the media in November 2015, when he became Hong Kong’s maiden first-class centurion and led them to victory over UAE.A part of his success up the order boils down to his temperament too. He was quite content to be pulled into the middle in the very first over, endured the mankading of Mark Chapman by Aamir Kaleem and pummeled four sixes in five balls off left-arm spinner Zeeshan Maqsood to reach a maiden T20 century at a strike-rate of 203.33.”I’ve never done that before,” Hayat said referring to the six sequence. “I did target the bowler, and at that stage we had no choice but to go for it. I thought from there we deserved to win.”Most teams would have thought the same. After all, he had reduced an equation that read 46 runs off 18 balls to 18 off 12. But Oman had steel beyond their limited big-match experience and were inventive too. They punted on a player on only his second tour with the team.

“Even though they have not played [much] at the highest level, they are all experienced players who have been in the circuit for a long time. So I would say, they know exactly how to tackle [match situations].”Oman coach Duleep Mendis

Bilal was not with Oman when they qualified for the World T20 in July 2015. He made his T20 debut in November on a tour to the UAE and finished as joint leading wicket-taker. He only took one tonight, but his changes of pace kept the batsmen to only three runs in the 19th over.By the end of it, even the rampaging Hayat was hoodwinked into forgetting about his strength. After thumping most of his runs in front of the wicket, Bilal’s accuracy in line and unpredictability in pace and length forced him to resort to dinky little lap sweeps. On a flat deck with true bounce, it was a fantastic effort not to get lined up, especially by a batsman who had been on 117 at the time.They went to their trusted weapon, left-arm spin, for the final over. They have three exponents of it – Maqsood, Kaleem, Lalcheta – and with Maqsood bowled out, the choice was between Kaleem and Lalcheta who had one over each remaining. Lalcheta stepped forward. He had 14 runs to defend and Hayat on strike with a strike-rate of 208.77. But the pressure on the batsman, even one hitting the ball sweetly, at the closing stages of an innings can be a bowler’s best friend.In this case, for example, none of Hayat’s previous boundaries mattered. Hayat knew he needed to hit a couple now or his team would lose and his efforts would be in vain. Lalcheta sensed that anxiety, put two men back on the straight boundary and threw the ball up. Jatinder Singh, Oman’s most consistent batsman since the World T20 Qualifier, took the catch at long-off and a win most Full Member teams would be proud of was achieved.”Even though they have not played [much] at the highest level, they are all experienced players who have been in the circuit for a long time,” Oman coach Duleep Mendis said. “So I would say, they know exactly how to tackle [match situations]. Sometimes it goes out, sometimes it comes back. That is the game.”Mendis had been Sri Lanka captain when they were moving up the ladder as an Associate team in the 1980s and is now just as integral to Oman’s success. He was appointed in 2012-13 and has been heavily invested in growing cricket in the country. From keeping an eye on grassroot cricket, ensuring a youth development programme was put in place, helping the seniors gain central contracts in 2015 and lining up tours to keep the team match fit, his influence has been considerable.Can Mendis and Oman add a maiden Asia Cup appearance to their growing resume? An opening-day win over Hong Kong was a big first step in that direction.

White Nights, grey skies and a Gayle shower

Our correspondent returns to familiar surroundings down under and learns that you need to pack mittens, even for the New Zealand summer

Firdose Moonda01-Mar-2015February 6
Raindrops on runways and travel bug bitten. Heading to summer so no need for mittens. Heavy laden suitcase almost tied up with strings. These are a few of my favourite things.Hitting the road for another overseas trip came with much excitement, but to get there I had to beat time itself. The journey from South Africa to New Zealand includes two eight-hour flights and a ten-hour stopover in Perth.The middle bit may sound as pleasant as popping in at your aunt’s place on your way to somewhere else – there are enough Saffers on Australia’s west coast for that to be literal – but for me, it’s not. There is no relative I can sneak off to see, and the Perth airport is a shoddy substitute. I am pleasantly surprised to run into my high-school BFF, who is making the same journey, though, and time has never been defeated so soundly.February 8
Most of Christchurch has been razed to the ground. In the developing world, construction sites are a norm for us; in the developed they stick out, suggesting something has gone wrong. Not on New Regent Street, though. They call it the loveliest lane in the country, and with charming pastel coloured buildings and quaint balconies, it’s easy to see why.February 9
Remember that thing about no need for mittens? Scrap it. New Zealand is too close to the Antarctic and I should have known better. Swirling winds, rain and 12-degree weather greet me and South Africa. In the makeshift press box at Hagley Oval, the gusts cause the tent to shake and rattle. On the field South Africa hold firm to beat Sri Lanka in a tense chase. It’s only a practice game but we all know how important that could be. February 10
Finding the soul of a place when it’s stripped bare can be stirring, and a walking tour of Christchurch confirms as much. We start at the stunning Botanical Gardens, which our tour guide Kelly explains became a sanctuary because they were untouched by the earthquake. Alongside flows the Avon River, an underappreciated part of the city, on which a boardwalk development has begun. Our 4km stroll takes us to a containerised shopping village, which was one of the first projects embarked on following the quake, past several buildings whose façades are being propped up while their insides are redone; the Cathedral, over which there is much debate; and the haunting 185 chairs, a memorial to those who died. Christchurch is a place of resilience and I salute it.Exhibit A: Cathy Freeman’s shoes on display at the sports museum at the MCG•Firdose Moonda/ESPNcricinfo Ltd February 12
Hamilton-bound. It is the first time I am returning to an overseas destination on tour in my time as a cricket journalist. I consider myself a “homie” in this town, I’ve even booked the same hotel as last time, albeit that it goes by a different name. Le Grand on Victoria Street is now the Hamilton City Oaks but they have changed nothing, not even the carpet, which is still in need of a good scrub. February 13
Begin my day with a run along the Waikato, a cathartic experience. The last time I was here, I was a huffer and puffer, a pretender who was taking baby steps. Now I still huff and puff, but I make it all the way home. I wish I had a Hawk-Eye-style comparison between then and now but memory will have to do. February 15
The Soweto Gospel Choir, who saw South Africa off with a moving rendition of the national anthem in Johannesburg 11 days earlier, are in town. They performed at the Hamilton Garden Arts Festival two nights ago, and although they will not be popping in at the match, they are giving a free concert in Garden Place two hours before the start of play. Considering the tickets are NZD$59, this is an opportunity that cannot be turned down. To my surprise, I get a front-row spot and my view is unrestricted among both South Africa and Zimbabwean fans, who bring a little bit of Africa to Middle Earth. February 16
Australia may just be across the ditch from New Zealand but the ditch isn’t as small as it sounds. A lengthy trip to Melbourne culminates late in the afternoon, when traffic is teeming. Wander down Hardware Lane in search of dinner and remember why bright lights and big cities have always been my thing. February 17
South Africa have the day off, which provides me a rare opportunity to go look beyond the boundary. Zimbabwe’s Solomon Mire spent time in Melbourne, so I seek out people who knew him. Swan Richards, the co-founder of the Crusaders Cricket Club is one of them and he delights me with tales of Mire’s rags-to-riches story. February 18
Going to the market is among my favourite things to do back home, so when I hear the Queen Victoria Market is open once a week at night, I have to go. It does not disappoint. From vintage clothing to a food stall specialising in grilled peaches, it has everything. The queues go around corners, which makes buying anything a pretty arduous task but as a community space it’s a winner.Feels like home: the Soweto Gospel Choir perform in Garden Place, Hamilton•Firdose Moonda/ESPNcricinfo Ltd February 19
The MCG. Been to the concourse before but had not been in it. Everything about the experience is larger than life. Walk past the Federation Bells, cross the William Barak Bridge and hear the chime. Inanimate objects are not supposed to talk to you in that way. Then enter the “Colosseum” and hear the silence.When it’s empty the MCG is an intimidating place. A few days later I find out what it’s like when it’s full. The museum is a particularly enlightening one for me because of the way they have chronicled the history of Australian sport. We do not have anything similar in South Africa and perhaps our divided past does not allow us to. In the MCG’s museum you can see everything from a photograph of an Aboriginal cricket side that played Australia in 1866 to Cadel Evans’ Tour de France-winning bicycle and Cathy Freeman’s shoes. February 20
South Africa are in hiding. The Indian media contingent is roughly four times the size of their own and much more aggressive. South Africa don’t put up their usual player-a-day for a chat. I can sense an uncomfortableness about them, which sits uneasily. February 21
There’s nothing like that when I meet my colleague Melinda Farrell for the first time. We click so easily it only takes a few words and a nod or two for us to decide we will shoot our first Polite Enquiries show sitting on the World Cup hashtag outside the stadium. How cool are we?Tonight is White Night, Melbourne’s celebration of arts and culture. The entertainment includes buskers, dancers, painters and projections onto buildings. It’s estimated 700,000 people have arrived in Melbourne this weekend for this festival, the cricket and Chinese New Year, and I can believe it. February 22

Almost 87,000 of them are at the MCG and most are cheering India. It is intimidating. Full stop. Among the few who are not is Graeme Smith, who knocks on the press box window to say hello. February 23
Grey skies greet the final morning in Melbourne and it begins to spit at the airport. In Johannesburg, we call it drizzle. In Melbourne, it is considered enough to close the airport for three hours. Eventually we are off to Canberra, where a real storm arrives. The thunder rumbles with the anger of a hungry bear and sheets of rain splatter from the sky. Now that is rain. February 24

Chris Gayle plunders the first double-hundred by a non-Indian batsman in a one-dayer and Zimbabwe are shell- shocked. I haven’t seen him bat like this before: The first half is studious, the second sensational. February 26
In Sydney, South Arica are unconcerned, especially when Gayle does not turn up for training the day before the match. They have their own injury worries with Vernon Philander ruled out and JP Duminy injured but they are wounded and I expect them to fight hard. February 27
The Victor Trumper stand is like Centurion’s grand stand is at that stage of a Sunday afternoon when the beer has been flowing for a few hours. Afrikaans is the only language I hear until the cries give way to “Ole, Ole.” South Africa’s campaign is back on track, and although home is still a month away, at the SCG, it seems around the next corner.

A Pythonesque Test

The Jo’burg Test was crazy twisted, but how to fill up those empty Test stadiums?

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013As the Johannesburg Test slalomed in a spectacular way towards its baggy-green denouement, the TV cameras pick out a placard in the crowd which posed the question: Is Test cricket dead? Perhaps on the reverse side, there was a range of multiple-choice answers, ranging from: (a) yes, it died the moment Australia won at The Oval in 1882; through (d) no, but it has been taken hostage by some angry-looking goons wearing IPL replica shirts and they do not seem especially keen on negotiating a civilised resolution to the stand-off; to (g) who cares, Mozart is dead too and his tunes are still damned catchy.The cameras then resumed their more important regular task of zooming in annoyingly close as the ball is bowled to ensure that the viewer cannot fully see what happened until replays are shown, several of which have also been zoomed in to the point of perspective-obliterating meaninglessness, all the while prompting the watching cricket fan to ponder from the comfort of his or her sofa: Why is that, as televisions become bigger and bigger and better and better, TV cricket seems intent on showing a smaller and smaller part of the action?I digress. Anyway, the evidence of the contest being played out in front of the placard suggests that the correct response was: “Is Test cricket dead? Is the Pope an aubergine?”This was close to the perfect Test match, a game of constantly shifting momentum which contained more twists and turns than an ice-skating snake’s high-risk Olympic final routine.Innings of 30 or 40 were valuable, partnerships of 50 felt match-changing, every session saw the balance of the game wobbling from one side to the other like a drunken tightrope walker on a windy day.On the evidence of the game, if not the crowd at the ground, Test cricket clearly is not dead. It might be in a nursing home, but, frequently, its faculties seem as sharp as ever. Admittedly, it does wish more people would come to visit it. And it is not entirely sure that it can trust all of its family members, some of whom seem to be scrabbling over its inheritance before it has even made its will.Nevertheless, it was a little sad to see the final day this all-time classic match played to a stadium so sparsely populated that you wanted to give it a cuddle and tell it to keep its chin up. What can cricket do to attract fans to Test matches, without using military threats, or paying people twice their daily wage to attend?I have met almost no cricket fans who do not claim Test cricket is their favourite form of the game (although I don’t get out of my house very much, so that is not the most scientific of opinion polls). There is clearly a healthy passive following for Test cricket, but in a world swamped by infinite competing distractions, coercing people to physically place themselves in a stadium for some or all of a five-day contest is a Herculean task. Given that cricket has still not worked out how to adequately police bad light and somnolent over-rates, I think even Hercules himself, the celebrity former 12-time Greek Labourer Of The Year, might balk at taking on the task of refilling its empty stadiums.Australia showed remarkable skill and resolve, amidst outbreaks of their now trademark carelessness, to recover from their Newlands Nightmare, aided by Patrick Cummins making one of the most striking Test debuts of recent years (more of which in the next Multistat blog, later in the week). I cannot remember exactly what I was doing when I was his age, but I am fairly confident that it was not taking 6 for 79 on my Test debut and calmly slapping the winning runs in one of the most tense finishes in cricket history.However, just as Australia tossed away a winning position in Cape Town, so at the Wanderers South Africa flung their superiority out of the window like an unwanted motorway banana skin.The Proteas’ World Cup bid was fatally undermined by a middle-order megabloop that exposed a tail longer that the one Kate Middleton was so desperately trying to hide under the train of her wedding dress. They lost in Johannesburg for the same reason, flunking in the first innings from 241 for 4 to 266 all out, and then in the second from 237 for 3 to 339 all out. This followed their first-innings Cape Town calamity when they alchemised 49 for 1 into 96 all out, before being decisively out-calamatised by Australia’s brilliant counter-calamity.In this series, the South Africans’ sixth to 10th wickets totalled a startlingly useless 138 runs in 15 partnerships ‒ 9.2 runs per wicket, the Proteas’ rubbishest lower-order series performance since 1907, and their fourth cruddiest of all time.Since readmission, the lower middle-order had been one of South Africa’s great advantages over their rivals. Not anymore. Since 2006, South Africa’s Nos. 8 to 11 have collectively averaged 15.8, placing them sixth of the 10 Test nations, with no hundreds (all other teams have at least one, except Zimbabwe, who have only played three Tests), and just seven fifties in 55 Tests ‒ and three of those were by Boucher after a nightwatchman had bumped him down to No. 7.From 2000 to 2005, South Africa’s lower order averaged a world-leading 20.3, with three hundreds and 16 fifties in 67 Tests. From 1992 to 1999, their 8 to 11 were way ahead of the field, averaging 19.8, with four centuries (as many as the rest of the world put together) and 19 half-centuries in 66 matches.This new-fangled lower-order brittleness is one of the reasons that Smith’s team have let slip a one-Test lead in three series out of their last five, and, having seemingly scaled the peak of world cricket by winning in Australia late in 2008, have won just one rubber (in West Indies) since the start of 2009. Their team is still speckled with world-class players, but it has an Achilles heel visible from space (with a powerful telescope and access to Statsguru).All in all, Cape Town and Johannesburg have provided the cricket-watching world with two unforgettable Tests, albeit that the memories most people will be not forgetting will be of a TV screen rather than a cricket ground. It has been a compelling start to the series, which is now perfectly set up for the remaining zero Tests.EXTRAS● This was the 13th successive Test between Australia and South Africa to end in a positive result. There has been one draw between them in 20 Tests over seven series this millennium, and the lowest overall scoring rate in any of those series has been 3.40. Cricket is showbiz nowadays. And there is a saying in showbiz: “Always leave them wanting more.” Cricket has done that. A third Test would be greedy. A fourth ‒ the height of indulgence. A fifth, and you might as well wake up Lenin and tell him he won the Cold War.● Perhaps the 21st-century cricket lover should simply be thankful that at least these series happen twice every three or four years nowadays. In 91 years from their first meeting in 1902 to the resumption of southern-hemisphere hostilities after Apartheid, the Australians set their baggy-green feet on the veldt in just seven Test tours, with the South Africans heading over to Baggy Greenland just four times (they also made up a wet and one-sided corner of the 1912 triangular series in England). If there are legitimate complaints these days about cricketing overkill, it could equally be said that our cricketing forefathers were guilty of underkill.

The rollercoaster dives again

A lack of consistency has made Andrew Strauss’s team the most watchable at the World Cup, but could now cost them a quarter-final place

Sidharth Monga in Chittagong12-Mar-2011After England had produced yet another thriller, this time a two-wicket loss to Bangladesh, Andrew Strauss was asked how England could conceivably win the World Cup after having lost to the co-hosts and Ireland. The question makes sense, for England have lost two of the nailbiters that they were in a very good position to win; they have tied a game they should have at various points lost, won and lost; and they have won two games where they had played themselves into losing situations.Strauss paused before answering. He looked for the right words. Then he said: “We still believe we can. We have put in some very inconsistent performances. We still haven’t had a game where our batting and bowling fire at the same time, but we need to do it pretty quickly now. We have got to have to do it in the last game against the West Indies.” Not quite Steve Waugh’s simple-we-have-to-win-every-match from the 1999 World Cup, but the closest a non-dramatic captain such as Strauss can get to it.Critics will lay into England, and not unfairly either. They gave away 23 runs in wides in a defence of 225, James Anderson and Ajmal Shahzad bowled rubbish at the start, Anderson bowled rubbish at the end, too, and their batsmen didn’t capitalise on the 109-run fourth-wicket stand between Eoin Morgan and Jonathan Trott that helped them recover from a poor start.Still there has been a lot to recommend England in this tournament. And it’s not just the knack of producing close games, something if you told Strauss now, he wouldn’t find amusing. They have been the most perplexing side in the event so far, losing as they have to Ireland and Bangladesh, but beating as they did South Africa from a hopeless position.Yet, except for the Ireland match, there hasn’t been a game where they haven’t made a comeback, ranging from notable to the remarkable. That is a trait you wouldn’t associate with the English teams of the past, to make comebacks on such a regular basis, and not always from expected quarters. In the game against India – a chase of 338 – England not only put themselves into a winning position, but also tied the game from a losing position they had contrived to subsequently find themselves in. They haven’t won as often as to inspire confidence, but at least they have the knowledge they have the people to put them back into the contests.In Chittagong, after a slightly under-par score and a horrible start with the new ball – Bangladesh were 50 for 0 in the eighth over – they did a lot right. Shahzad produced three near unplayable deliveries to get his wickets, Tim Bresnan found a way through Tamim Iqbal with some extra pace and skid, Anderson produced a smart run-out, and Graeme Swann took out two despite the dew.That they didn’t seal the deal was “desperately disappointing”, as Strauss put it, but he is not talking from wonderland when he says their performance hasn’t “dropped off”. “I don’t think we are necessarily dropping off,” he said. “We beat South Africa in the last game, and we did some good things in this game, but not enough to win it. Our performance hasn’t dropped off. It has just been inconsistent, which is not something we want to be making a habit of, and clearly we need consistency from now on if we want to progress in the tournament.”They have also been fun to watch because going by formbook and traditional wisdom, they have no business competing at a World Cup. They have too many old-fashioned nudgers to survive in the hard-hitting, high-scoring subcontinent, they have had too many injuries, they have had too long a tour leading into the tournament, and have therefore not been at their freshest. In other words, they have ticked off almost all the boxes Pakistan usually tick when they decide to confound everybody and win a big tournament. “World Cups are funny things,” Strauss said, now knowing that the next loss will be his side’s last in this World Cup. “You can gain confidence just at the right moment, and get a real run of form just when you need it.”Yes, England have been fun to watch and all that, but right now they need access to that Pakistan-like space. With Pakistan winning their first three games to move towards the quarter-finals, before their slip-up against New Zealamd, we could do with a team that just about scrapes through in the early rounds, and then finds a “run of form just when you need it”. Knowing how England did just that in the World Twenty20 last year, it’s still not quite impossible.

Gillespie's records, and Hussey's too

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket. This week there’s a lot about Jason Gillespie’s amazing knock

Steven Lynch24-Apr-2006The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket. This week there’s a lot about Jason Gillespie’s amazing knock:


Jason Gillespie’s 201 not out is by far the highest score by a nightwatchman
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Was Gillespie’s innings the highest in a Test by a nightwatchman? asked almost everyone, including Adeel Ahmed and Chris Johnson
Jason Gillespie’s 201 not out at Chittagong was easily the highest score by a nightwatchman in a Test – the previous-best was 125, by Mark Boucher for South Africa v Zimbabwe at Harare in 1999-2000. Three other nightwatchmen have scored Test centuries: Nasim-ul-Ghani, with 101 against England at Lord’s in 1962; Tony Mann, 105 for Australia against India at Perth in 1977-78; and Syed Kirmani, 101 not out for India against Australia at Mumbai in 1979-80. There has been some debate about whether Boucher and Nasim-ul-Ghani (who later opened in a Test) were genuine nightwatchmen – but in the matches in question they both came in at No. 6, at the end of the day, ahead of more recognised batsmen.How many people have scored their maiden first-class hundred in a Test? And has anyone else converted that into a double? asked Martin Bowen from Australia
Rather surprisingly, perhaps, more than 30 players have scored their maiden first-class centuries in a Test: Shahriar Nafees, of Bangladesh, did it in the match before Gillespie, at Fatullah. But only one of those also passed 200: Brendon Kuruppu, the former Sri Lanka wicketkeeper, extended his score to 201 not out, just like Gillespie. That was against New Zealand at the Colombo Cricket Club in 1986-87. Kuruppu later added four more first-class hundreds (but no more in Tests). Possibly the oddest statistic in this regard is held by Gillespie’s former Australian team-mate Ian Healy, who scored four centuries in his 119 Tests – but no more in 112 other first-class matches. Despite that his overall first-class batting average (30.22) was higher than his Test one (27.39).Is the gap between Gillespie’s highest score and his second-highest another Test record? asked Carl Bulliard from Australia
Gillespie’s second-highest score is currently 54 not out, against New Zealand at Brisbane in 2004-05, giving him a difference of 147 between his top and next-highest scores. The record, though, is held by RE “Tip” Foster, who scored 287 on his Test debut for England against Australia at Sydney in 1903-04: his next-highest score was 51, a difference of 236. In first-class cricket I suspect the record-holder is Charles Gregory, a member of the famous Australian cricketing family: his two centuries were scores of 102 … and 383, for New South Wales v Queensland at Brisbane in 1906-07.


Michael Hussey reached 1000 Test runs just 166 days after his debut
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Seven New Zealand bowlers took at least one wicket in the second innings at Centurion. Has this happened before in a Test? asked Alan Graham
Before last week’s first Test at Centurion there had only been three previous instances of seven different bowlers taking a wicket in the same Test innings. The first was by England against Australia at Melbourne in 1897-98. It happened again in 1922-23, by South Africa against England at Durban, and most recently by Australia v South Africa at Johannesburg in 1966-67 (Australia used eight bowlers, but one of them – Tom Veivers – didn’t take a wicket).A while ago you said that Andrew Strauss had become the fastest batsman to 1000 runs in Tests. Has Michael Hussey broken that record now? asked Richard Treacy
Last year Andrew Strauss did break the record for the fastest first 1000 runs in Tests – he did it in 228 days, breaking the old mark of 244, set by another England opener, Herbert Sutcliffe, in the 1920s. But you’re right, Michael Hussey has smashed that record now. Hussey made his debut against West Indies at Brisbane on November 3, 2005 – and sailed past 1000 runs on April 18, 2006, early in his innings of 182 against Bangladesh at Chittagong. That’s just 166 days, and will be a tough one to beat.I understand that Rudi Koertzen recently officiated in his 150th ODI. Is this a record? asked Ganesh Arya
The first match of the DLF Cup in Abu Dhabi between India and Pakistan was Rudi Koertzen’s 150th one-day international. He also stood in the second game, so has now done 151. The only umpire ahead of him at the moment is David Shepherd, who officiated in 172 ODIs. In all, seven men have umpired in 100 or more ODIs: for a full list, click here. Koertzen is currently third on the Test list, level with the retired Srinivas Venkataraghavan on 73 matches, and behind only Shepherd (92) and Steve Bucknor (111).

Lyon's Rayan Cherki agrees personal terms with Man City as Pep Guardiola closes in on Kevin De Bruyne successor

Lyon's Rayan Cherki has reportedly agreed to personal terms with Manchester City as Pep Guardiola closes in on Kevin De Bruyne's successor.

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  • City have an agreement with Cherki
  • Gearing up to submit an official bid to Lyon
  • Cityzens have already agreed to sign Reijnders
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to the 21-year-old is now expected to complete a move to the Etihad Stadium as part of Guardiola’s strategic rebuild following a disappointing 2024-25 campaign. Talks between the two clubs reportedly began over the weekend and have progressed swiftly. Negotiations have reached the final stages, with a formal offer from City expected within hours following the successful agreement on personal terms.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Cherki reportedly has a release clause in his Lyon contract worth approximately £25 million ($34m). City are expected to activate that clause imminently in order to bring the creative midfielder into their ranks.

    The Premier League champions endured a rare trophyless season, finishing third in the league and falling to a shock defeat against Crystal Palace in the FA Cup final. With long-serving midfield maestro De Bruyne set to exit the club this summer, Guardiola is determined to reshape the core of his squad, and Cherki is being positioned as the Belgian’s natural successor.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    City have already agreed a deal worth £59m ($80m) with AC Milan for Tijjani Reijnders, who was named Serie A’s midfielder of the year. The Dutch midfielder's arrival, along with the imminent capture of Cherki, signals a clear intention from Guardiola to refresh his midfield options after an underwhelming campaign.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER CITY?

    While midfield is receiving the most immediate attention, Guardiola is also plotting changes in the full-back department. Veteran right-back Kyle Walker is set to leave the club permanently, prompting the City boss to consider younger alternatives. Newcastle’s Tino Livramento is understood to be high on City’s list, though the complexity of any potential deal could delay progress. In contrast, City appear closer to completing a move for Wolves’ left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri, who has impressed Guardiola.

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