Man United must seal Antony transfer deal

Manchester United ended their rather dismal previous Premier League season in sixth place with 58 points on the board.

Another disappointing aspect of their campaign is the fact that only Brighton & Hove Albion (42) and Wolves (38) scored fewer goals than the Red Devils (57) out of all the teams to finish in the top half of the table.

One man who stood out as one of United’s top attacking figures throughout the campaign is Bruno Fernandes.

In addition to scoring 10 goals and providing six assists, the midfielder player more minutes in the league than any other outfield player at the club. In his 36 league appearances, the 27-year-old racked up 87 attempts at goal and more shot-creating actions (145) than any of his team-mates.

Now that the Erik ten Hag era at Old Trafford has begun, there is still plenty of time left before the summer transfer window closes for the Dutchman to strengthen the squad that he currently has.

In terms of what new faces could join the Red Devils in the coming weeks, one player with whom the club have been linked and who could give Ten Hag the chance to create a scary duo alongside Fernandes is Ajax winger Antony.

In 78 appearances for the Amsterdam club, the Brazilian has found the net 22 times and delivered 20 assists across all competitions.

Prior to his move to Netherlands, the attacker bagged four goals and supplied six assists for Sao Paulo, meaning that he has now made 52 goal contributions in 115 senior club games.

Throughout his 32 appearances last term, the 22-year-old scored 12 goals and provided 10 assists, showing just how capable he is of making an impact in front of goal.

Having racked up the second-highest number of shots at goal (79) in the previous league campaign, it’s safe to say that despite already being a deadly attacking figure, having a player like Fernandes next to him who is able to create goalscoring opportunities on a regular basis could be very beneficial for Antony.

Labelled a “beautiful” player by Dutch scout Piet de Visser, the Ajax youngster could be a valuable asset for United and develop into a long-term figure under Ten Hag’s guidance once again.

AND in other news: “Been told..” – Sky Sports journo drops huge MUFC transfer update supporters will love

West Ham: Danjuma transfer talks could be imminent

A recent report has now shared a potentially significant update involving West Ham United and Villarreal winger Arnaut Danjuma.

The Lowdown: Moyes in forward hunt…

Sky Sports claim West Ham boss David Moyes could be a ‘very busy’ man this summer and wants at at least six new signings in total before the start of 2022/2023.

After just missing out on a place in the Premier League top six last season, the east Londoners are seemingly determined to keep pace with England’s elite who are strengthening all around them.

West Ham have already signed Morocco international Nayef Aguerd and sealed Paris-Saint Germain goalkeeper Alphonse Areola with attacking additions now being eyed.

The Latest: Report shares significant Danjuma update…

As per a report by El Periódico Mediterráneo, via Sport Witness, it appears the Irons could be set to move for Danjuma of Villarreal soon.

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Indeed, they state talks between both the La Liga side and West Ham ‘may begin this week’ after ‘first contacts’ with the player’s representatives have commenced.

However, it is believed Villarreal ‘would only start negotiating with a starting price of €35 million (£30m)’.

The Verdict: Pay the price?

For around £30m, or potentially even more, Danjuma would still prove a snip for West Ham.

As per WhoScored, the Netherlands international finished 21/22 as one of Villarreal’s best-performing players whilst racking up their most attempts at goal per 90 on average.

Danjuma scored ten goals and assisted three others, the most goals and assists combined out of any of his teammates in the Spanish top flight.

Indeed, we believe Villarreal are well within their rights to demand £30m, especially since members of the media like football analyst Marcus Bring have called him a ‘ridiculous player’.

Tottenham must land James Maddison

Fabio Paratici has been hard at work this summer with Tottenham to improve the team ahead of the 2022/23 campaign.

The former Juventus chief has brought in Ivan Perisic, Fraser Forster and Yves Bissouma to bolster the squad before pre-season has even begun.

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With a Champions League group to prepare for, Spurs may want to add more players to the group and they have been linked with a host of talented gems in recent weeks.

Football.London reporter Alasdair Gold recently claimed that the club have a long-standing interest in Leicester City talent James Maddison.

Antonio Conte’s own Mason Mount

In securing a deal for the midfielder, bought for £25m from Norwich in 2018, Paratici can land the Italian head coach his own version of Chelsea’s Mason Mount.

The obvious comparisons are there; English, young, attacking midfielders, can score goals, can assist, and have flair.

In the Premier League last season, Mount produced 11 goals and ten assists for Thomas Tuchel – averaging a SofaScore rating of 7.43.

The England international has proven that he can score and assist on a regular basis in the top-flight as he has made himself an integral part of a Champions League outfit – winning the competition in 2021.

Meanwhile, the Leicester man also caught the eye with a stunning campaign under Brendan Rodgers with the Foxes…

As you can see in the graphic above, the 25-year-old was outstanding in the final third as he managed 20 direct goal contributions in the Premier League – one less than Mount had for Chelsea.

Maddison was once dubbed a “genius” by BBC Norfolk’s Rob Butler and England boss Gareth Southgate once claimed that his set-piece delivery is “world-class”, showing that he has caught the attention of pundits and managers alike in his career.

The gem also caught the eye in Europe last term, producing one goal and two assists in three Europa League starts before plundering three goals in five Europa Conference League starts for the Foxes.

His statistics, domestically and in Europe, suggest that he has the quality to make the step up to play for a top-six side as his return in the Premier League is similar to Mount’s for Chelsea.

Therefore, Paratici would land Conte his own version of the 23-year-old Cobham star by snapping Maddison up from Leicester and he must now get a deal over the line for the former Norwich man.

AND in other news, Spurs now in pole position to sign £20m monster with “no nerves”, he’s Vertonghen 2.0…

Liverpool will listen to offers for Ox

Liverpool will listen to offers for Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain during the summer transfer window, reliable journalist Paul Joyce has confirmed.

The Lowdown: Ox’s disappointing season

The Reds may have had a season to remember, with a treble still possible, but one player who has struggled to make any kind of impact is Oxlade-Chamberlain.

The 28-year-old hasn’t played a single minute of action since the FA Cup clash with Nottingham Forest back in March, also making just nine Premier League starts all season.

Oxlade-Chamberlain appears to be surplus to requirements under Jurgen Klopp, with a summer exit in the offing.

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The Latest: Joyce makes key claim

Writing for The Times, Joyce claimed that Liverpool are happy for the midfielder to move on at the end of the season, having fallen completely out of favour:

“Liverpool will listen to offers for the 28-year-old, who has one year remaining on his contract.”

The Verdict: Perfect time to move on

It makes complete sense for everyone concerned for Oxlade-Chamberlain to depart Liverpool this summer, allowing the Reds to receive a fee and the player to become a regular elsewhere.

His current deal expires in 2023, so this is their last chance to get significant money for the former Arsenal man before losing him on a free next year.

Oxlade-Chamberlain’s Liverpool career has certainly fizzled out in recent times but he should still be remembered as a solid signing who has played a part in the Reds’ great success under Klopp, with the manager himself describing his player as ‘spectacular’.

In other news, one Liverpool player is expected to sign a new deal. Find out who it is here.

Pundit drops Oxlade-Chamberlain exit claim

Liverpool midfielder Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain could look to join another Premier League team with European aspirations, according to former top flight manager Alex McLeish.

The Lowdown: Ox out of favour

The 28-year-old has found himself increasingly out of favour for the Reds this season, as Jurgen Klopp’s men battle across four competitions.

Oxlade-Chamberlain has been limited to just nine starts in the Premier League, with his last appearance for Liverpool coming back in March, against Nottingham Forest.

With his Englishman’s current deal expiring next year, it looks highly likely that he will move on this summer.

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The Latest: McLeish makes new claim

Speaking to Football Insider, McLeish claimed that Oxlade-Chamberlain is yet to hit his peak and will look to join another high-end English team:

“Players stay at clubs because of that special relationship with the clubs and the manager. Maybe they don’t get the minutes that they would perhaps want. Look at Divock Origi, who is going to leave Liverpool this season. He didn’t seem too worried about not getting minutes.

“There comes a time when possibly they look at the clock and say: ‘Time’s running out. Maybe I can go and play every week.’

“Oxlade-Chamberlain’s got his peak time ahead of him. Individuals sometimes seem to be in comfort mode, and I don’t mean that in disrespect. I mean they’re comfortable with their life, playing a bit-part for Liverpool.

“The time sometimes comes when you say: ‘I’m 28 now, I’d love to play more games. I’m sure one of the big clubs would snap me up.’

“He’s a very versatile player and he has a hateful of medals now. In Chamberlain’s case, he could rightly say: ‘I’m looking for a club who’s going for a European place, going to try win a cup or get a Champions League place.’

“Why shouldn’t he have that ambition? It will be a club that has that ambition as well.”

The Verdict: Time to leave this summer

It makes complete sense for Oxlade-Chamberlain to move on at the end of the season, having clearly dropped down the midfield pecking order under Klopp.

It could even be that he has played his last game for Liverpool and his Reds career will likely be viewed as hit-and-miss overall, with injuries hampering him at the best of times.

A move to a club in the top half of the Premier League would suit all parties, allowing Oxlade-Chamberlain more regular playing time and bringing in key transfer funds for Liverpool to replace him.

In other news, Jurgen Klopp has set his sights on one Liverpool signing. Find out who it is here.

Jack Leach provides vital control as England's one-day freedom comes to the fore

England learn from success of white-ball side, as flexibility gives spinners the space to shine

George Dobell at Pallekele18-Nov-2018If there has been an abiding criticism of England in recent years, it is that they have become, in effect, green-track bullies.There has been some truth in the criticism, too. They arrived in Sri Lanka having not won any of their previous 13 away Tests, after all, and without an overseas series win in almost three years. They were dangerous in England, certainly, but without the Duke’s ball and seam and swing-friendly conditions, their bowling attack could look toothless. Over the last couple of British winters, they have conceded 600 totals on four occasions: twice each in India and Australia. Over the same two seasons in England, they have conceded 400 only once.Sri Lanka knew all that. And they knew that England’s spin record – both delivering it and playing it – was modest. So they attempted to produce pitches that would exploit England’s enduring weakness and encourage their own strengths.To some extent they were successful, too. Only one wicket in the entire Kandy Test fell to seam bowling and 38 fell to spin. England’s seamers have, to date, taken just three wickets in the series. In normal circumstances, you would expect figures like that to bode ill for England.Yet here they are two-up with one to play. So well have they adapted to the challenge in front of them that they have their first series win in Asia since 2012 and their first in Sri Lanka since 2001.While Sri Lanka are clearly not the side they once were – how could they be after the retirements of Rangana Herath, Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene in recent times – the fact is they have defeated South Africa and Australia here over the last couple of years. They have won in Bangladesh and the UAE, too. This is, therefore, a significant victory.The key to England’s success is the options and depth their allrounders provide. To have two men in the top six (Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali) who have centuries and five-wicket hauls at Test level is an incredible asset for any captain. When you also throw in Sam Curran, whose first-innings 64 was vital, and Adil Rashid, who is averaging 22 from No. 9 in this series, you end up with a batting line-up that is both tough to finish off and can exploit a softening ball and weary bowlers. The combined value of England’s two tenth-wicket stands in this Test was 101. You don’t have to be a mathematician to understand the significance in a match where the margin was 57 runs.More than that, though, the all-round strength allows England selection options they could not afford if they were forced to pick a side containing six specialist batsmen, a keeper and four bowlers. While a few non-Asian sides might have played three spinners here, not many have also managed to field three seamers. In theory, at least, just about every base is covered.Moeen Ali claimed the key scalp of Niroshan Dickwella•Getty ImagesThat has been particularly true when picking the spin attack. In isolation, all three of England’s spinners have flaws. Rashid bowls too many four-balls; Moeen does not quite have the control to build pressure and Jack Leach can look just a little pedestrian.But in combination, it is their strengths that are highlighted. So Leach adds control and troubles right-handers, in particular. Moeen adds bite and troubles left-handers, especially. And Rashid, who has it in him to bowl wicket-taking balls on flat surfaces when the batsmen are on top, is the partnership breaker. When Root is able to combine all three of them – and throw in a few overs himself when required – he has a potent weapon.”The three of them complement each other beautifully,” Root said afterwards. “Jack gives a lot of control and the fact that they all spin the ball differently does help. It brings a lot of variations and gives the batters something to think about all the time.”The key difference, however, has been Leach. His control has allowed England to build pressure in a way that was noticeably absent in Australia and India. Maybe Moeen’s batting will retain his position as first choice when they return to England but Leach has quickly emerged as the most reliable of the trio and the man to whom Root turns most often. He has bowled more overs than either of them in this series.”When pressure is building at the other end with the likes of Jack bowling, it allows Moeen and Adil to be really aggressive and try to take important wickets. The impact Jack has had – the way he’s performed on these surfaces and shouldered the pressure despite not having a huge amount of experience – has been brilliant.”Somerset deserve a mention here. Some of the surfaces they have provided over recent years at Taunton have provided substantial assistance to Leach and co; a fact that has left some opponents deeply unimpressed. But bowling in those conditions appears to have developed Leach’s experience and confidence. And if that has helped England win in Asia,”Jack has taken all the experience that he’s had at Somerset bowling on those wickets at Ciderabad, or whatever they call it down there, and he’s done a fantastic job,” Root said.They are not especially easy to captain, though. All three are more likely to deliver far more four-balls than the likes of John Emburey or Ray Illingworth might have done in the past. As a result, Root is obliged to stick with in-out fields that can allow batsmen to pick off relatively easy singles. But, such is the pace – and the mentality – of the modern game that batsmen rarely seem content with such slim pickings. Still, Root deserves credit for keeping his side calm and focused in the field despite periods of play – not least on the fourth afternoon – when Sri Lanka looked capable of winning. Someone does need to have a quiet word with him about his bowling, though. To have bowled after lunch yesterday was madness; no wonder he admitted to a sleepless night and doubts over not asking Stokes to bowl.It might be simplistic to credit just Root here, anyway. When we reflect on this period in a few years, it may well be we conclude that the 2015 World Cup was the turning point in England’s fortunes. Having been humiliated in it, England – encouraged by Eoin Morgan, in particular and the inspirational example of Brendon McCullum – identified new players and a new way of playing that suited them which has been encouraged by a laid-back coaching team who emphasise enjoyment and skills more than discipline and restraint. It has clearly fed into the way in which they play their Test cricket”We are learning from the one-day side,” Root said. “Eoin said to the guys ‘go and play with freedom’ and you saw them embrace that. We saw a big improvement very quickly.

We are learning from the one-day side. Eoin said to the guys ‘go and play with freedom’ and you saw them embrace that. We saw a big improvement very quickly

“It’s not quite as straightforward in Test cricket. You can’t just say ‘swing as hard as you can’ but at times being able to take pressure off each other and have a good understanding of how you want to play in certain circumstances, can really help you. Sometimes you’ll make the wrong decision but get away with it because you’ve really thrown yourself into it.”In this part of the world, on surfaces which spin dramatically, it can be very difficult to trust your defence. The conditions have been extreme. So we’ve got to play to our advantage as much as we can. We saw that as an opportunity to play in that [aggressive] manner in these conditions.”It can be difficult to stay true to that. In one-day cricket things are all laid out for you; if you’re batting second for example. And the wickets are generally pretty good. In Test cricket, you have to be more adaptable. So we’re learning. But you are starting to see the confidence grow and an improvement within the squad. This is a very special win.”There are other factors. The investment in Lions tours and overseas placements has enabled several of this squad to arrive with some familiarity for the conditions. So has England’s superior fitness and agility in the field. Indeed, the fielding is the biggest point of difference between these two sides. Had Stokes missed with his shy at the stumps or Keaton Jennings, at short leg, not been able to parry the ball to Ben Foakes for catch, Sri Lanka could well have won.And, while Root deservedly won the Player-of-the-Match award, there were really significant innings from Rory Burns, Ben Foakes and Curran that played huge roles, too. Root is quite right when he credits the entire side.It was an especially significant performance for Leach, though. Not only did he register his first five-wicket haul in Test cricket, but he returned to a ground where he had endured one of the lowest points in his career and came away victorious.For it was here, in February last year, that Leach was left out of the England Lions side for the first unofficial Test against Sri Lanka A after struggling with his new bowling action. Despite finishing the 2016 season as the second-highest wicket-taker in Division One of the County Championship (he claimed 65 at 21.88), Leach had missed out on selection for the tours to Bangladesh and India and was then found to have an illegal action during routine tests at the national performance centre in Loughborough.Remedial work on his action had, initially, appeared to have gone well. But, playing a warm-up match on the tour, Leach went for 68 in 14 wicketless overs (the other specialist spinner, Ollie Rayner, took three for 55 from 22 overs by comparison) and was subsequently left out of the unofficial Test that followed.To have come back from that low and bowled England to victory in Asia is a remarkable achievement. It demonstrates courage, resilience, determination and a huge amount of hard work. He, and England, deserve all the praise that comes their way.

India – 212 runs, 20 wickets, 444 balls

Stats highlights from the third day in Pune where Australia wrapped up a comprehensive win against India

Bharath Seervi25-Feb-20172012 Last time India lost a Test at home, to England in Kolkata. Since then, they were unbeaten for 20 Tests in which they won 17 and three were drawn. This defeat also ended their unbeaten run of 19 Tests since their loss in Galle in 2015.7 Consecutive Tests lost by Australia in India before registering a win in Pune. Their last win here came in 2004 in Nagpur after which they lost seven and drew four in their next 11 Tests. Also, before this win they had nine consecutive losses in Asia – four in India, two in UAE and three in Sri Lanka.333 Margin of defeat – India’s second biggest in a home Test and fourth largest overall. Their biggest loss have also been against Australia, by 342 runs in Nagpur in 2004-05.212 India’s match aggregate – 105 in first innings and 107 in second innings – their lowest in a home Test losing all 20 wickets. Their previous lowest was 272 runs against the same oppositions at Eden Gardens in 1956-57. Overall, this was India’s fourth-lowest match aggregate.444 Balls faced by India in this whole Test – their third lowest in any Test when losing 20 wickets, and lowest at home. Their previous least balls faced in a home Test was at the Wankhede Stadium against Australia in 2004-05, which they had won.Steve O’Keefe registered the second-best match figures by a visiting bowler in India•ESPNcricinfo Ltd12 for 70 Steve O’Keefe’s match figures – the second best by a visiting bowler in India. Only Ian Botham’s 13 for 106 at Wankhede in 1979-80 have been better. O’Keefe’s figures are the best for Australia against India bettering Alan Davidson’s 12 for 124 in Kanpur in 1959-60.1993 Last instance of Australia spinners getting the oppositions all out, at Edgbaston – Shane Warne and Tim May picked five wickets each. In the fourth innings of this match, O’Keefe picked six and Nathan Lyon took four. This was the ninth such instance for Australia and fourth against India.13 Single-digit dismissals for India batsmen in this match – their joint most against Australia. KL Rahul and Ajinkya Rahane were the only India players to get into double-digit scores in both innings.1995 Last time a bowler took a more economical 12-wicket haul than O’Keefe’s 12 for 70 – Courtney Walsh picked 13 for 55 in Wellington. Overall, O’Keefe’s haul is the fifth-cheapest 12-for in Tests and second-most economical in the last 100 years.13 Lbw dismissals in this match – the joint second most in a Test in India. In the match against New Zealand at Eden Gardens earlier in this season, there were 15 such dismissals, which is the most.13 Runs scored by Virat Kohli in this match – the lowest for him in a home Test when batting in both innings. His previous lowest was 26 runs against England in Kolkata in 2012-13, which was India’s last home defeat.5 Centuries for Steven Smith in five consecutive Tests against India. Before the hundred in this match, he had also scored centuries in each of the four matches of the 2014-15 Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Australia. He became the eighth Australia captain to score a ton in India.

Why the Gatting ball is not the best of the century

A challenger for the title of the ball of the century

Saad Sultan07-Sep-2015For years now, one of Shane Warne’s delivery in an Ashes Test in England has been touted as the ball of the century, i.e. the Mike Gatting ball. That regulation legbreak, drifting in as it pitched outside leg, fizzing away to beat Gatting stretching forward, clipping the top of off to send the disbelieving batsman on his way as the umpires looked on mesmerised.But why was that ball not the ball of the 20th century?The clue lies in the name. No disrespect to Gatting, but with an average of 35.55 across 79 Tests he deserves to be damned by faint praise. He didn’t achieve the heights he would have wanted to in his 17-year Test career and, therefore, that ball will always be a highlight in his career. The ball of the century may have already been bowled to a player who has done more on the field than merely face that legspinning ripper from Warne.If it was the sheer aesthetics of the ball delivered that counted, then which delivery could match Wasim Akram’s mindboggling “double-swing” yorker to Dominic Cork? The ball was angled in from around the wicket to the right-hander and seemed initially to swing in with the angle, only to change direction and move away about a third of the way down, squaring Cork up, beating his outside edge and hitting him flush in front of middle. Now there would be a couple of problems with calling this the ball of the century. Firstly, the batsman wasn’t given out. Secondly, the batsman was Cork. And the ball of the century cannot, by default, be one that was delivered to a bowler who bats a bit. It doesn’t matter how great the delivery was. It just doesn’t fit.Besides, the ball Warne delivered to Gatting wasn’t that great. It was just a case of Gatting making a delivery look a lot better than it actually was. Don’t take my word for it, take the word of Garry Sobers, one of the sport’s all-time greats, who writes in his autobiography:

“… this dismissal was as much Gatting’s fault as it was Warne’s ability. If a bowler bowls a ball outside leg stump on a turning wicket, you should cover your stumps – that’s basic. You cannot be out leg before wicket. If Gatting had gone across instead of trying to play the shot or stand up, it would have been no problem.”

Yes, if ever an innocuous legspinner pitching outside leg was forced to look like a magic ball, this was it.To call the Gatting ball as the ball of the century is similar to calling Muhammad Ali versus Chuck Wepner the fight of the century. You were very courageous, Chuck, but a fight can’t be the fight of the century if you’re in it. Or it’s a bit like calling Rosaline the greatest love of Romeo’s life. The truth is, Rosaline, you were just a silly crush, nobody remembers you; where’s Juliet? Or like saying that Frodo and Sam taking back the Shire from Saruman was the most valuable thing they did for Middle-earth. Nobody cares about what happens after you’ve destroyed the ring; it wasn’t in the movies.So don’t be fooled by the hype, cricketing world. To call that ball the ball of the century is, in fact, a travesty.So which ball was the best in this century?The Gatting ball, for all of its flaws, was undoubtedly bowled by one of the all-time greats of the game, Warne, the Earl of Twirl. But that, as I say, is not enough. There has to be greatness at both ends for a delivery to count as the Ball of the Century. And what delivery could be greater than one that not only gets the greatest batsman of his time out, but actually brings him to his knees?It is 1997. On a sweltering afternoon in Rawalpindi, Brian Lara, the Prince of Trinidad, is facing up to Waqar Younis, the Sultan of Swing. Lara has already taken ten off the over, going onto the back foot to relatively well pitched-up deliveries, and smashing them through cover and mid-off. Waqar, undeterred, steams in from over the wicket, hurtling down a yorker that looks certain to go well wide of off with the angle. Lara shapes up to go through the off side again. But before he can blink, the ball, as if by magic, changes direction, tailing into his toes. Lara tries to adjust but looks completely flummoxed as the ball clatters into his stumps. The best that he can do is to avoid having his toe broken, desperately moving his feet out of the way of the swinging thunderbolt, and in the process knocking himself off his feet, splattering down embarrassingly on all fours.Now here is a ball that even Sobers would approve of; unplayable off front or back foot, even by the best in full flow. This is the image, the image of Lara brought down to his knees by Waqar, that the Ball of the Century needs and deserves. So, cricketing world, the next time you are asked about the ball of the century, don’t make a reference to the Gatting ball. Let the world know that we have higher standards than that. Our ball of the century will be nothing short of greatness bringing greatness to its knees.If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line.

SA's rare SL win, Sangakkara's elite club

Stats highlights from South Africa’s rare Test win in Sri Lanka, at Galle

Shiva Jayaraman20-Jul-2014 This was South Africa’s third win in 11 Tests in Sri Lanka and their first win in three visits to the island. Their last win came in the 2000 tour in Kandy when they beat the hosts by a margin of seven runs. Barring Australia, Sri Lanka is the only away/neutral country were South Africa have lost more Tests than they have won since their readmission to international cricket. This was South Africa’s 14th Test win in the subcontinent since their readmission. Their win-loss ratio of 1.40 during this period is the best among teams in away Tests, played in the subcontinent. The year 2014 has already seen seven away wins in 16 Tests. Last year, there were only two wins in 41 Tests by touring teams, both of them coming against Zimbabwe who were beaten by Bangladesh and Pakistan. Dale Steyn’s 9 for 99 are the best bowling figures by a fast bowler in Tests at Galle. Morne Morkel’s 7 for 78 in this match also beat the previous best figures by a fast bowler at this venue – Waqar Younis’ 7 for 79 in 2000. The 16 wickets shared between Steyn and Morkel in this match equal the most taken by a fast-bowling pair in a Test in Sri Lanka. Chaminda Vaas and Nuwan Zoysa also took 16 wickets in a Test against West Indies at the SSC in 2001-02. The tally is also the second-highest by a team’s fast bowlers in Galle. Pakistan’s fast bowlers took 17 of the 20 Sri Lanka wickets to fall in a Test in 2000, which are the most taken by a team’s fast bowlers in a match at this venue. Kumar Sangakkara played a lone hand for Sri Lanka in their second innings scoring 76 runs. This was his ninth fifty-plus score in 13 innings this year. He has already scored 1036 Test runs in 2014, at an average of 86.33, the first batsman to aggregate those many runs this year. His last nine innings have produced one triple-hundred, two hundreds and five fifties. Sangakkara has now aggregated 1000-plus runs in an year five times in his career. He becomes only the sixth Test batsmen to hit 1000-plus runs in a calendar year five or more times. Sachin Tendulkar achieved it six times. Matthew Hayden, Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and Brian Lara did it five times each. Including Sangakkara’s five, there have been only 12 such instances by Sri Lanka batsmen. Sanath Jayasuriya and Mahela Jayawardene are the other Sri Lanka batsmen to do it more than once. Quinton de Kock took five catches in Sri Lanka’s second innings taking his tally of dismissals for the match to nine. This is the sixth time a South Africa wicketkeeper has made nine or more dismissals in a Test. AB de Villiers’ 11 dismissals against Pakistan in Johannesburg last year are the most in a match by a South Africa wicketkeeper. Imran Tahir bowled 19 overs in Sri Lanka’s second innings without taking a wicket. However, South Africa’s part-time spinner JP Duminy bowled ten overs that fetched him the wickets of Sangakkara and Rangana Herath. Duminy was clearly the better spinner for South Africa in this match, taking 3 for 85 from 25 overs. Tahir took 1 for 139 from his 45 overs in this match. This is Sri Lanka’s fifth loss in 18 Tests at home since Muttiah Muralitharan’s retirement from Tests and they have managed only four wins during this period. Sri Lanka’s win-loss ratio of 0.80 during this period is far inferior to their record at home before Muralitharan’s retirement. In Tests since 2000 and up to Muralitharan’s retirement, Sri Lanka had won 32 of the 54 Tests they played at home and lost 11 for a win-loss ratio of 2.90. Only 11 Tests had resulted in a draw during this period.

A champion of the players' cause

Tony Greig was one of England’s premier allrounders and a man who didn’t mind being villified for fighting for what he believed was his right

David Tossell29-Dec-2012With barely two of his enormous strides, Tony Greig crossed the Lord’s hospitality box, into which his sister Sally Ann had invited me for tea, and stuck out his hand. “So,” he said, smiling down in my direction, “have you sold all of those books of yours?”It had been a year since publication of my biography of the former England captain, a project in which he had generously participated without there being anything in it for him. He had even offered to do some interviews “to create some headlines” in order to publicise the release date, and had duly taken swings at everyone from Dennis Lillee to the BCCI in the cause of publicity.When I’d suggested he might want to see the book before helping to publicise it he’d responded: “I can’t believe I wouldn’t want it to do well.” After the interview time, the family contacts and photographs, and the endorsements he’d given on my behalf to doubtful interviewees, this really was above and beyond the call of duty.As we chatted now, guests of his brother-in-law, MCC president Phillip Hodson, while England and Australia fought out an ODI below us, I ventured the question to which I dreaded the answer: “You never did tell me what you thought of the book. Did you like it?””Well… I have to admit I haven’t read it from cover to cover,” he said, and in his reply was the implication that he’d probably read not a single word. It should have come as no surprise. Tony Greig, the South African-born captain who was accused of betraying English cricket, a man for whom controversy lurked at every turn of his career, had long since ceased worrying what people said about him.Nor did he ever back away from the challenges that confronted him, whether it was the bouncers of Lillee and Thomson, Roberts and Holding, or the cricket authorities he defied by becoming a leading figure in Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket in 1977. It was why news of his death by heart attack early on Saturday as he fought cancer came as such a shock. If anyone was ever going to beat that most cruel of diseases, surely it was this greatest of competitors.Born in Queenstown, South Africa, on October 6, 1946, Greig had a comfortable childhood, but it was never quite the idyllic upbringing that a white, professional family in the era of apartheid might have expected to offer.That was due partly to the alcoholism that afflicted his Scottish father, Sandy, after a distinguished wartime RAF career that ended with his posting to South Africa as an instructor. Just as significant was the discovery, following Greig’s collapse during a teenage tennis match, that he was epileptic. As a result, Greig began a lifetime of disciplined medication, keeping his condition from all but the closest of his team-mates over the years until acknowledging it publicly in 1980.Sussex team-mate Peter Graves, one of those in the know, recalled the threat of an attack being a constant presence. “You always worried whether it was going to happen,” he said. “Tony was like this juggernaut and he used to get really tired and that was when it could strike. He used to take a lot out of himself. But he wasn’t a boozer and he wouldn’t be up late.”Greig had arrived at Sussex in 1966, scoring a century against Lancashire on his Championship debut the following season. A striking 6ft 7in blond, he quickly established himself as an attacking middle-order batsman and purveyor of useful seamers off a jerky, pigeon-toed action.Taking advantage of the opportunity denied his countrymen by South Africa’s sporting exile but offered to him by his English residency and a British father, Greig won a place in the England team against the Rest of the World in 1970. The downgrading of that series meant it was not until the Ashes contest of 1972 that he played his first official Test, beginning an England career that lasted for 58 matches. During that time he dominated the team in a manner that few have done before or since.His best performances were reserved for overseas tours, many of which are lost to cricket history due to the lack of TV coverage. On four consecutive tours – India (1972-73), West Indies (1973-74), Australia (1974-75) and India (1976-77) – Greig was England’s outstanding player, proving himself Test cricket’s pre-eminent allrounder.

It was not until 20 years after Packer that the MCC life membership traditionally afforded to former England captains came his way; not until the 2005 Ashes series that Greig was invited to commentate on a full England home series on a British station

In the Caribbean, he set up a series-saving victory in Trinidad by taking 13 wickets after deciding to try his hand at offspin. He’d already scored two centuries in the series and now, according to his great friend Alan Knott: “In that match he was the greatest offspinner I have ever kept to.”In Brisbane, in the first Test of England’s disastrous Ashes defence, he thrashed 110 off Dennis Lillee and new fast-bowling discovery Jeff Thomson. When he wasn’t deliberately upper-cutting Thomson over the slips, he was driving Lillee through the covers and celebrating by signalling his own fours.His marathon effort in Calcutta two years later, when he defied India’s spinners, the stifling atmosphere of an 80,000 crowd and a temperature of 40ºC, to score a match-winning 103, could not have been more different in character. “I have two memories that qualify Greigy as a top-quality player,” said Derek Underwood. “The hundred in Brisbane and then the century in India against the best spin attack of all time. It shows that against any attack he was very high quality.”His Test batting average of 40.43, including eight centuries, and a bowling mark of 32.20 speak for themselves, placing him in the company of Ian Botham and Andrew Flintoff as England’s great post-war allrounders. That he is not always acknowledged as such is because he was never a man of the people like “Beefy” or “Freddie” and that his exploits are not all over YouTube or retro TV sports channels.Not to mention that two episodes as England captain tend to dominate popular memory of Greig.Leadership of his country passed to Greig in 1975, in spite of reservations among those who felt his attempt to run out Alvin Kallicharran while stumps were being drawn at the end of play in the West Indies were indicative of an over-competitive nature unbecoming to the post.When he announced on the eve of West Indies’ visit in 1976 that he intended to “make them grovel” it wasn’t just those dissenters who were outraged. Michael Holding remembered: “He was a white South African and ‘grovel’ was an offensive word for him to have used. It smacked of racism and apartheid.”As Holding and his team-mates made England pay with a brutal 3-0 series victory, Greig, who acknowledged immediately that he had made a clumsy choice of words, even went on his hands and knees in front of the West Indies fans at The Oval to do his own piece of grovelling.Greig always knew how to charm. As Sussex and England skipper, he was accommodating to journalists – which could also be a source of trouble – and understanding of how to get the crowds on his side. Nowhere was that more evident that in his team’s 3-1 win in India, where he praised the umpires, encouraged his men to play up to the stands, and walked away a hero.Yet it was soon after that tour that his crown slipped, when it was announced that not only was he defecting to Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket, but that he had been busy recruiting players for the Australian tycoon in his battle against established cricket over TV rights.Greig was no longer English cricket’s saviour; he was a money-grabbing South African. Alec Bedser, chairman of selectors, was one of many who said Greig had “betrayed” his adopted country. When his children began getting abuse in the playground, Greig knew it was time to head permanently to Australia. His protestations that all cricketers would benefit were met by deaf ears and closed minds.One of the first players to understand that he had a commercial value to be exploited, Greg said in later years that he went to WSC primarily for himself and his family, and secondarily because the cricket establishment needed shaking up. He saw that England players merited more than £210 per match and that county players deserved better than to work as shelf-stackers in the winter.Within a year, Test fees were up to £1000. And when, only a couple of years after WSC, his brother Ian showed him his new contract offer from Sussex, which was more than he’d ever been offered even while captain of his county and country, he knew he had been vindicated.Greig with his team-mates after winning the 1977 Ashes•PA PhotosForgiveness took longer. It was not until 20 years after Packer that the MCC life membership traditionally afforded to former England captains came his way; not until the 2005 Ashes series that Greig – an established and typically controversial commentator on Packer’s Channel 9 – was invited to commentate on a full England home series on a British station, Channel 4. It was completed earlier this year when he was asked to deliver the MCC’s prestigious Cowdrey Lecture at Lord’s.No one who heard that predictably forthright speech knew that Greig’s rehabilitation had come just in time; that a few months later he would be gone. He had seemed invincible.He leaves a wife, Vivian, and four children, Beau and Tom, and from his first marriage, Mark and Samantha. And to cricket, cricket lovers and cricketers he leaves a legacy of defiance and brilliance; images of an upturned-collar and long-legged cover drives; and a debt of gratitude that every young professional in his sponsored car should acknowledge.

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