Tottenham keen on Pervis Estupinan

An update has emerged on Tottenham’s pursuit of Pervis Estupinan in the summer transfer window…

What’s the talk?

According to Marca, Fabio Paratici is now eyeing a deal to sign the left-back from Villarreal alongside an interest in landing his teammate Pau Torres.

The report claims that the Spanish team are open to cashing in on the £15m machine as they see this as a great opportunity to make money off of their Champions League run in 2021/22.

Silenced Robert Lewandowski

Estupinan would be an excellent addition to the squad to compete with Ryan Sessegnon as he is a young talent who has caught the eye with his displays in Europe.

Villarreal beat Bayern Munich in the quarter-finals of the Champions League and the Ecuador international helped to silence Lewandowski in a 1-0 win at home in the first leg.

The Polish centre-forward played the full 90 minutes and blanked in front of goal as he registered one shot on target and ended the match with a SofaScore rating of 6.6.

[snack-amp-story url= “https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/read-the-latest-spurs-news-transfer-rumours-gossip-much-more” title= “Read the latest Spurs news, transfer rumours and more!”]

Estupinan made an eye-catching six clearances, one interception and three tackles throughout the game as he impressed at left-back to ensure that Lewandowski, or any of his teammates, did not get anything out of him.

Football Consultant Reece Chambers previously dubbed him “really impressive” and that is exactly what he was in that clash with the Bundesliga giants as he silenced the legendary striker.

He was also superb in Villarreal’s other Champions League outings as he made ten appearances in the competition last term, making 2.9 tackles and interceptions and 2.9 clearances per game – winning the ball back for his team on a regular basis.

These statistics suggest that he was defensively solid throughout the tournament, whereas Sessegnon made 2.2 tackles and interceptions and 1.5 clearances per match in the Premier League.

At the age of 24, Estupinan would also be a player Antonio Conte can work with over time to develop him into the perfect full-back for his system. He is a player with the potential to improve as he is yet to reach the peak years of his career and he would, therefore, be an investment by the club whilst also making an impact in the here and now.

Spurs will be playing in the Champions League next season and he has proven that he can be a solid defender in Europe’s top competition.

AND in other news, Paratici and Conte now eyeing Spurs swoop for £45m-rated “machine”, he’s Eriksen 2.0…

Palace: Vieira must unleash Schlupp

Although there may appear little to play for for Crystal Palace in the final week of the Premier League season, Patrick Vieira’s men head into Thursday’s clash at Goodison Park with lingering ambitions of securing a top-half finish.

That would represent a promising debut campaign at the helm for the former Arsenal captain, although his side will be faced with an Everton team that are desperate to retain their top-flight status, with the Toffees knowing that a win will confirm their safety.

On recent evidence, the odds will be in the visitors’ favour, however, with the south Londoners having already won twice in this fixture this season, notably running out comfortable 4-0 winners in the FA Cup quarter-final meeting at Selhurst Park just a few months ago.

Looking to make it three from three against the Merseysiders, one man whom Vieira should call upon is former Leicester City star Jeffrey Schlupp, with the Ghanian having made a vital impact off the bench at the weekend to nick a point away at Villa Park.

Just three minutes after entering the fray as a late substitute against Steven Gerrard’s side, the versatile midfielder reacted quickest to a Marc Guehi flick on to instinctively prod home past Emi Martinez, netting his fourth league goal of the campaign – his joint-best top-flight record.

Previously dubbed “underrated” by former boss Roy Hodgson, the 20-cap international has so often flown under the radar for the Eagles, although has seemingly done enough of late to warrant a starting berth this evening.

Formerly a title winner with Leicester, the £7.2m-rated speedster has proven an invaluable asset for his new boss this term, slotting in as part of the forward line but also as a dynamic, midfield presence.

The club’s £60k-per-week unsung hero has performed favourably among his fellow midfielders across Europe’s top five leagues, ranking in the top 4% for blocks made, as well as in the top 7% for dribbles completed and 8% for touches in the attacking penalty area, illustrating his value at both ends of the pitch.

The 29-year-old – who has been labelled “quite incredible” by Hogdson – is out of contract this summer, however, with the remaining two fixtures potentially offering him the chance to stake his claim for a new deal.

On his form this term, the one-time Brentford loanee – who is the seventh-best performing player in the Palace squad this season – deserves both a start tonight and a contract extension, with it difficult to replace such a flexible and versatile asset.

AND in other news: Vieira now heading for 1st summer transfer disaster, Palace supporters will be gutted

Aston Villa: Dean Jones makes Victor Nelsson claim

Transfer insider Dean Jones has made a claim regarding Aston Villa’s interest in Galatasaray defender Victor Nelsson, GiveMeSport report.

The Lowdown: Villa links

Villa appear to be on the hunt for defensive reinforcements this summer, with the futures of Ezri Konsa and Tyrone Mings up in the air.

Nelsson has been just one centre-back who has been linked with a move to the Midlands, with reports suggesting Villa are ready to make a ‘serious offer’.

The 6-foot colossus has a €25m (£21m) release clause in his Galatasaray deal and has gone from strength to strength in Turkey this season, with his Transfermarkt valuation increasing from £3.15m to £9m.

The Latest: Jones’ comments

Jones, talking to GMS, had this to say on Nelsson, admitting the centre-back is ‘definitely of interest’ to Villa chiefs and urged the club to be ‘smarter’ in the transfer window.

“Victor Nelsson is somebody that is definitely of interest. It’s probably good that they’re looking for players a bit different to all the other names you see linked to all the big clubs.

“Villa have got to be a little bit smarter about their recruitment this summer because they don’t want to get in price wars with some of the other big clubs in the Premier League as you just end up paying over the odds.

“That’s not really a situation they want to be in even though they have got a lot of money.”

The Verdict: Smart move?

Villa could be in for a busy summer ahead of Gerrard’s first full season when it comes to incomings and outgoings, and club officials will know all about the Denmark international.

The 23-year-old was the subject of a £9m bid from Villa back in 2020, so fellow countryman Johan Lange could have been the one to bring him to Gerrard’s attention recently.

It looks as if another offer could be a shrewd move following his impressive form in Turkey, and he may not be the only centre-back to arrive ahead of the 2022/23 campaign.

In other news: Villa now edging closer to summer move for ‘clinical’ ace as Gerrard gets his way. 

Why you should win the toss and bat first in Galle

The spin of the coin seems to have a particularly big effect on the way Test matches pan out at this venue. Here are the stats to demonstrate it

Bharath Seervi25-Jul-201717-6 – Sri Lanka’s win-loss record in Galle, in 29 Tests. Their win-loss ratio of 2.83 is their second-best at any home venue. Their scoring rate of 3.28 is their best at any home venue.9 – Number of wins for Sri Lanka in Galle since 2010, in 14 matches – they’ve lost three and drawn two. At all their other home venues in this period, they have won only seven game in 22 Tests. They have won each of their last four Galle Tests.

Sri Lanka at home since 2010

Venue Mts Won Lost Draw W/L ratioGalle 14 9 3 2 3.00All other home venues 22 7 7 8 1.0011-1 Sri Lanka’s win-loss record in Galle after winning the toss. They have won the toss 16 times and the only defeat came against Pakistan way back in 2000. They have a 6-5 record after losing the toss. They had elected to bat first in 15 of the 16 Tests after winning the toss. After losing the toss, only four times were they asked to bat first and they lost only one of those Tests.12-3 Win-loss record of teams batting first in last 10 years in Galle, in 18 Tests. In 24 of the 29 Galle Tests teams have elected to bat first and only five of those resulted in a defeat. Incidentally, four of those defeats were for the visiting teams.3-1 India’s win-loss record in Galle. Their only win here was in 2008. They have lost all the three Tests they’ve lost the toss in; in that solitary win, they had won the toss.99 The highest successful chase in Galle. Thirteen times a target of more than 100 has been set in Galle and 11 of those chases resulted in defeat.5 Man-of-the-Match awards for Rangana Herath in Galle, in 16 Tests. In 65 Tests outside Galle, he has only five such awards. He has 93 wickets in Galle, the most at any venue. If he takes seven more wickets here, he will become only the second bowler after Muttiah Muralitharan to take over 100 Test wickets at a single venue.62.45 Dinesh Chandimal’s average in Galle. In 14 innings here, he has scored 687 runs with three centuries. Both his top scores have come in Galle – 162 not out against India, and 151 against West Indies. Sri Lanka will miss his services this time around as he is ruled out due to pneumonia.

Amid chaos, de Villiers finds batting zen

On Tuesday night, AB de Villiers took a score of 29 for 5, touched it up and made it match-winning, almost like a fairy godmother turning the ugly duckling into a beautiful swan

Alagappan Muthu in Bangalore25-May-20161:44

‘Virat is a thinker, I am not’ – de Villiers

It took a lot to ascertain a very important truth. Royal Challengers Bangalore were made to look like wimps. Gujarat Lions had to endure giddying amounts of false hope. Virat Kohli was forced to go through so many emotions that screen grabs of his face should be supplied to young actors.But finally, there is proof that cricket is in AB de Villiers’ DNA. If not that, then the events at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Tuesday night at least emphasise the fact that there is no one better than him at risk management during a batting innings.He took a score of 29 for 5, touched it up and made it match-winning, almost like a fairy godmother turning the ugly duckling into a beautiful swan. Real life, however, is not often as obliging. The pitch picked Tuesday to mutiny against the batsmen. It was slow and offered uneven bounce. De Villiers was aware of this. So was Kohli. And they had got together to devise a counter.

De Villiers on …

When it was time to attack
“It was in that Dwayne Smith over in the 15th,” he told . “Virat sent a message out saying there is a bit of bad weather around and it was probably the best time to try and get up with the run-rate again. So, I decided to have a go in that over to see where it takes us.”
Using his experience
“I have failed so many times in the past in pressure situations like that, but tonight my experience helped me. This is a million times better than any hundred I have scored. I don’t look at hundreds or two hundreds or all of that nonsense. I just want to cross the line for the boys.”

“It’s a funny thing,” de Villiers said afterwards. “Virat and I actually spoke about it before our batting innings. He was really full of energy, giving a lot of information out. He came and sat at my place and was talking really energetically and I told him, ‘Virat, you know I just go naturally about it.’ He’s a thinker. I’m not a big thinker.”That can’t be true. Then again, de Villiers is no liar. So is it possible that he defies scoreboard pressure – 29 for 5 became 68 for 6 in the 10th over after a rough lbw decision to his partner Stuart Binny – and situational pressure – Binny was the last specialist batsman and Royal Challengers were 91 runs off target – because he has been built to?”I follow my instincts,” de Villiers said. “I try and watch the ball closely. I’ve played the game for many years now and I know my talent will take over if I just watch the ball and enjoy myself out there.”One of the best ways for a sportsman to enjoy himself is to win. And de Villiers is obsessed with winning. The only way that was going to happen in Bangalore was if he shepherded the chase all the way through. In other words, the risk of losing him at any point – even with one run needed – was too high.So de Villiers dialled down his strokeplay. Pushes down the ground with a straight bat. Glides that made use of the bowler’s pace. Short of letting a bad ball go unpunished, he focused entirely on safeguarding his wicket. He scored 50 of his 79 runs in boundaries. Only one of them was a reverse sweep.There were other matters he had to be mindful of – rain in the air and Dhawal Kulkarni overpowering every batsman in his path so effortlessly that it seemed like he had gone out celebrating on the eve of the match, bumped into Asterix and stolen his magic potion. Kohli had been slapped with his first duck in almost two years of competitive cricket. Chris Gayle escorted the ball onto his stumps. KL Rahul was knocked out by an unplayable delivery. De Villiers was key.”I didn’t think it was possible to win from there when I started batting and when we were five or six down,” de Villiers told . “I thought ‘Oh, we are in trouble,’ and it was a big mountain to climb from there on. I tried to break it down into small targets. I wanted to focus on each ball and enjoy it even though we were down and out.”And so de Villiers absorbed the early barrage for Royal Challengers like a boxer willfully taking blows until he could spot an opening for the right hook. That came in the 11th over, when he got the strike for a free-hit against uncapped left-arm spinner Shadab Jakati. Six.The only way a batsman can be dismissed off a free-hit is via a run-out. And this one was a length ball outside the off stump, giving de Villiers ample room for a big old golf swing. In summation, there was absolutely no risk in depositing that ball straight down the ground. Royal Challengers needed 80 off the remaining 56 balls and de Villiers had just switched on.And now the game changes. Clear risks are suddenly not risks at all. Like shovel-sweeping against Jakati’s turn over the square-leg boundary, even with a fielder there. All de Villiers had to do was get outside the line of the ball and let those powerful forearms, strengthened from his years of playing hockey, take over. Or reverse-sweeping Praveen Kumar’s pace from outside leg. This was 42 balls into his innings. And this was with 26 needed off 20 balls, with four wickets in hand. This was reward for all that sober batting earlier. This was a first sip of scotch.The last shot he played was a gentle push to long-on because that was what was needed. That is all de Villiers ever does on a cricket field.”I honestly don’t give a rat’s…” his tired body and mind almost slipped up at the post-match press conference, but then he smiled and said, “damn about any stat. I don’t care about hundreds, fifties, averages. Tonight was special for me. To cross the line for the team, to have an impact on winning the game – that’s why I play this game.”

Remembering Archie

Phillip Hughes’ death brings to mind the grief felt across Australia at the passing of brilliant, humble 23-year-old Archie Jackson 81 years ago

Greg Growden03-Dec-2014An electrical storm was about to hit Sydney. The clouds were swirling, darkening. Last Sunday afternoon, many did not venture outside. They had obviously looked out to the west, seen what was coming from over the Blue Mountains, and thought it best to stay under cover.Maybe that’s why the Field of Mars Cemetery in Ryde was near-deserted. Two women, walking a Jack Russell that was clearly irritated to be on a lead, were having a brief sit-down, leaning up against a palm tree. Two or three cricket pitches away, in the Methodist Section, was the only other person in the cemetery grounds. He was slowly running his fingers along the front of a red granite gravestone, getting emotional when they went over four special words.

****

Eighty-one years earlier, this spot was the scene of overwhelming grief. Thousands had arrived at the cemetery to mourn the tragic end of a precocious sporting talent. People had walked for hours to this out-of-the-way spot to pay their respects.As with today, when a nation struggles to comprehend the sudden loss of a special cricketer, in February 1933, Australia found it difficult to comprehend why such a mighty athlete, “our Archie Jackson”, had been taken. He was only 23.As police cordoned off the crowd at Field of Mars, six distraught Australian Test cricket team-mates took on the duty of pallbearers, picked up the casket and walked it through the cemetery grounds.At the front were Victor Richardson and Bill Woodfull. Behind them were Bill Ponsford, Don Bradman, Bert Oldfield and Stan McCabe. When they eventually arrived at the gravesite, Alan Kippax replaced McCabe, who had suddenly been taken ill.As the body was lowered, Reverend Sam McKibbin, who, due to the dying wishes of Archie, had travelled from Singleton for the burial address, said: “All over the British Empire there will be a sense of disappointment and loss today, as we lay beneath the sod the body, whose short but brilliant career started in such a blaze of glory and now ends in this sudden way. Words are but poor instruments to express the things we feel.”In the Referee newspaper that weekend, editor JC Davis wrote: “It is sad to realise that such a beautiful flower of the cricket field should pass almost just as it became a full bloom. And what a wonder bloom!”

Bradman described Jackson as “tall and slim, rather lethargic and graceful in his movements”

It had been the most trying of summers. Just a month earlier, the Bodyline series had become venomous. Woodfull and Oldfield had been hit during the Adelaide Test. The crowd had threatened to jump the fence. Now those who had been battered by Larwood and Co had lost their dear colleague to tuberculosis. Some found it hard to cope.Archie was not just loved by his fellow cricketers. He was admired by all who had met him in day-to-day life, or observed him when he had on the cricketing crèmes. A quiet, self-effacing character who grew up in the tough working-class waterside suburb of Balmain, he was humble, forever thinking of his fellow man.Like the rest of his impoverished family, he had it tough for considerable stretches of his short life. Alan Kippax and HV (Bert) Evatt, later to become leader of the Federal Parliament Labor Party, helped him when funds were short, always ensuring that his Balmain club membership was paid for and he had the required cricketing equipment.On the field, Jackson was a poet. He played cricket with a flourish. Daring. The word most commonly used to describe his batting was “elegant”. Bradman described him as “tall and slim, rather lethargic and graceful in his movements”.In his celebrated biography, David Frith described Archie as “the Keats of cricket”. Another delicate, romantic talent who, at 25, departed far too early, also from tuberculosis.Earlier on February 18, 1933, the Australian XI team had formed a guard of honour at Central Railway Station when the coffin arrived on the Brisbane Express. The Sydney Morning Herald described it as “a pathetic scene”.Then on to his parents’ house in Drummoyne, where the funeral procession began for Field of Mars – a brisk four-mile, hour-and-a-half walk away. The coffin went along Victoria Road and Lyons Road, with the crowd three or four deep virtually all the way.Jackson’s grave in the Field of Mars cemetery•Getty ImagesThe SMH reported: “Long before the hour appointed for the cortege to leave the house, crowds began to pour into Drummoyne from neighbouring suburbs. The funeral passed through densely packed streets. As it went by Gladesville Park, a number of young lads were playing Jackson’s favourite game. As soon as the cortege was sighted, play ceased, and was not resumed for a time.”Jackson was, after all, one of them. He had begun his first-grade career with the Balmain club when just 15 years and one month old. His biggest problem at that young age was not how to handle his mature cricketing opponents, all wanting to put this upstart in his spot, but his dangerous habit of sleepwalking. So concerned was his father that Archie would walk off the balcony of their original Balmain terrace, his bedroom door handle had to be tied up.When the teenager established himself as one of the mightiest of Sydney batting talents, his sleep patterns improved. Eventually Mr Jackson was able to untie the bedroom door.Representative cricket soon followed, and before he was 20, Archie was in the Australian team. There was no quiet initiation period.After his first Test innings, in February 1929, cricket writers were describing Archie as a “national hero”. Not surprising considering that it was a near-faultless innings of 164 against England at the Adelaide Oval. Even when advised by his batting partner, Bradman, to be careful in compiling his century, Jackson opted against inhibition. He instead hit the next ball from Larwood to the point boundary. The Members Stand stood as one. They stood again when he passed three figures.It again involved Larwood, who later wrote: “He cover-drove me to bring up his hundred… That ball was delivered as fast as any I had ever bowled previously. That glorious stroke has lived in my memory to this day for its ease and perfect timing. I am sure that few among the many thousands present sighted the ball as it raced to the boundary.”There was a darker side. When his innings was finally finished, Jackson was near exhaustion. Team-mate Stork Hendry said that Archie was limp when he returned to the rooms. “We had to mop him with cold towels,” Stork said. “Poor little devil.”From then on, ill-health blighted his career. He suffered badly after an operation to remove his tonsils, losing more than 6kg. He often had to withdraw from matches due to various issues, which included a bout of influenza brought about by being caught in a storm when crossing the Hawkesbury River once.

“Well Harold, it’s only a game, but what a grand one we’re having today! You know, you’ve hit me almost as many times as I’ve hit you! I wish you’d drop one a little off line occasionally”

Then before the NSW-Queensland match in Brisbane at the start of the 1931-32 season, Jackson collapsed and was rushed to hospital after coughing up blood in the dressing room.Jackson thought he had influenza, was discharged within a week, and returned to Sydney with the NSW team. The Australian Board of Control, concerned by the collapse, installed him at Bodington, a Red Cross sanatorium in the Blue Mountains, in the hope the problem could be traced.Then seeking treatment for psoriasis, Jackson went to the Calvary Hospital, Adelaide, in July 1932. A short time later an Adelaide physician sent a confidential report to the New South Wales Cricket Association that confirmed that Jackson had “pneumonary tuberculosis with fairly extensive involvement of the lungs”.The following year, Jackson collapsed again. This prompted him and his girlfriend, Phyllis Thomas, to announce their engagement. He also moved to Brisbane in the hope that warmer weather would improve his condition. It didn’t.At 12.15am on February 16, 1933 – a short time after Ponsford, Woodfull, Arthur Mailey, Len Darling, George Duckworth and England manger Plum Warner had visited him at the Ingarfield Private Hospital in Brisbane – Archibald Jackson died.Even those from opposing teams struggled to believe that such a talent had departed so early, and after just eight Test appearances, which involved 474 runs at 47.4.Larwood was one of many to admire Jackson’s mixture of beauty and bravado. He recalled in the foreword to Frith’s biography Jackson’s innings of 73 during the fifth Test of the 1930 series, at The Oval.Between glorious innings, Jackson was often seriously ill•PA Photos”He was taking quite a physical beating. As he came down the wicket to level a high spot or two, he said: “Well Harold, it’s only a game, but what a grand one we’re having today! I hope you’re enjoying our battle as much as those spectators seem to be. You know, you’ve hit me almost as many times as I’ve hit you! I wish you’d drop one a little off line occasionally.”Larwood also appreciated Jackson’s sportsmanship. “One of my most cherished possessions to this day is a personal telegram sent to me by Archie while undoubtedly a very sick boy in Brisbane; it congratulated me on my bowling in that controversial Test of 1933. At the time he must have been very close to meeting his Maker, but he was still conscious enough to remember an old friend.”Two years after his death when the NSW players arrived at the dressing room at the Brisbane Cricket Ground for their match against Queensland, they discovered a photograph of Archie on the dining room table, alongside a bowl of roses. It had been left there by his fiancée to mark the second anniversary of their engagement. The players, some in tears, bowed their heads in memory of a distinguished team-mate they never forgot.

****

On John Keats’ grave in the Protestant Cemetery in Rome are the words: “Here lies one whose name was writ in water.”On the other side of the world, the electrical storm had passed. The two women and their Jack Russell had long fled. The couch grass that covers the top of Archie’s grave was damp. Several weeds in the corners of an otherwise manicured grave drooped with droplets of rain.The only part of the gravestone, designed by former Test cricketer Tommy Andrews, that was dry, was right at the bottom.Where it says: “He played the game.”

Wankhede's first

The Mumbai stadium’s maiden Twenty20 international was an affair to remember

Mihir Gosalia23-Dec-2012Choice of game
The Wankhede Stadium was hosting its first Twenty20 international which was also the first India match I was watching live at a ground.The series was set up nicely by India’s emphatic win in Pune the day before. If India were to win this match and the next two against Pakistan, they would have become the No. 1 T20 team. My prediction was an India victory since the team had been playing well in the shorter formats.Team supported
India.Key performer
England captain Eoin Morgan has already built a reputation for himself as a dangerous player in the limited-overs formats. He plays the sort of finishing role for England that Michael Bevan used to play for Australia, and now Michael Hussey.One thing I’d have changed
I wanted Eoin Morgan’s wicket – bowled, caught, run out – off the last ball of match, rather than have to watch him hit it for a six out of the ground. I would have also liked to have seen more of Virat Kohli, given the aggressiveness in his batting and the kind of boundary shots he played. It was a delight to watch him bat in full flow. I could see the attacking intent in his batting from his stance. He certainly looked determined to turn on the heat against England but the innings was unfortunately cut short.Face-off I relished
Since several stars were being rested, it was a chance for players like Ashok Dinda, Parwinder Awana and even Yuvraj Singh, who was dropped from the Test side, to cement their places in the side.Wow moment
Apart from Morgan’s last-ball six hit, Yuvraj’s three wickets were impressive in the match. When the English openers got going and India couldn’t break the stand, the crowd asked for Yuvraj to be given a chance. When he was finally given a bowl, he dismissed Michael Lumb off his second ball. The expectations increased when he came to bowl his second over, and once again he obliged by trapping Luke Wright plumb in front of the wicket. In his final over, he managed to get rid of the dangerous Alex Hales.Close encounter
Since my seat was in the North Stand near the sight screen, there was always a fielder present near the boundary rope. We got a close look at Tim Bresnan, Jade Dernbach, Wright, Stuart Meaker, Awana, Dinda, Ajinkya Rahane, R Ashwin and Rohit Sharma. Indian fans never miss a chance to call or heckle any fielder who comes to the boundary, and it was sporting of Dernbach and Wright to acknowledge the crowd with smiles. Ashwin gave us a thumbs-up after being welcomed him with “Vanakkam!” which is “hello” in Tamil. The crowd also told Awana that they’d forgive him for dropping a catch if he took a wicket.Shot of the day
The last-ball six hit by Morgan, which reminded me of the famous Javed Miandad hit in Sharjah in 1986, was the shot of the day. The entire stadium was standing, hoping for a win for India. My colleague was waiting to record the moment on his phone but all he captured was the six out of the park. Last-ball sixes have become a regular feature in cricket since the introduction of T20s. Who can forget Dwayne Smith hitting Ben Hilfenhaus for three sixes in the last over to seal a win for Mumbai Indians against Chennai Super Kings at the Wankhede earlier this year?Crowd meter
As the match progressed, the stadium slowly filled up. The only empty stands I saw were near the Vijay Merchant Pavilion side. There were three-to-four-year-old kids dressed in Indian jerseys with faces painted in the Indian tricolor. Their parents hoisted them up on their shoulders and made them cheer for the Indian team. The Mexican wave started early, from the second over the match, and gained momentum as the Indian innings progressed, particularly when Dhoni and Raina were batting in full flow.Fancy-dress index
There were the usual colourful Lasith Malinga wigs around, but the best one was from a spectator on the second level of the North Stand who wore the mask of a grumpy old man but was dancing and rejoicing when India were batting. He was cheered by the crowd in his stand and also caught the attention of those in other stands.Entertainment
Surprisingly there was no music or mid-innings entertainment, nor were there any cheerleaders, who could have boosted the spirits of the Indian bowlers. We got to see Sunil Gavaskar, Kapil Dev, Navjot Sidhu, and Sourav Ganguly when they were walking back to their commentary box positions. They got cheers and duly acknowledged them.ODIs or Twenty20s
I prefer T20s because the fast-paced action and thrilling moments are packed into three hours like a Hollywood movie. There are enough ups and downs during the three hours to make the experience enjoyable, and like a movie, the match is conveniently played in the evenings.Banner of the day
“Unleash the Helicopter Shot”, “If Dhoni plays well, India sleeps well” and “England, here’s the way to the Airport”.Practice makes you perfect
I reached the stadium almost an hour and a half early, and saw England practising on the field. India came out after some time. I wish they had come out to practise earlier or at the same time as England. I saw a few Indian bowlers practise hitting one stump and wondered whether they could have hit that stump had Alastair Cook been standing in front of it with a bat.Marks out of ten
10 for the close finish. The better team won.

'We could have won the World Cup'

England’s Mr Dependable, Mike Hendrick, on the 1979 World Cup final and other career highlights

Duncan Steer06-Mar-2011Mike Hendrick, arguably the most reliable seam bowler of his generation, was around for plenty of English cricket’s most iconic moments: the 1974-75 Ashes thrashing by Lillee and Thomson and the 5-1 Ashes win under Mike Brearley four years later. He played in the 1981 Ashes side and, the following year, was one of Graham Gooch’s South African rebels. These days, he’s bowling coach to county champions Nottinghamshire.
But when SPIN speaks to him in early February, it’s his part in the 1979 World Cup final – one of the three times England have fallen at the final hurdle – that seems the best place to start to discuss his glittering if slightly unsung career. That day England were beaten by 92 runs by Clive Lloyd’s West Indians at Lord’s. But, as Hendrick recalls, it could all have been very different.”We were confident,” he says. “We had them 90-odd for 4. I’d just bowled Alvin Kallicharran and Viv [Richards] comes in. I nip one back at him first ball and it hits him in front of all three. Huge appeal. Umpire says not out. I could not believe it and neither could Viv. And Viv looked at me and I looked at him and he just pursed his lips. And as I walked back to my mark, the lads on the balcony have seen a replay and they’re all giving me the thumbs up. So he should have been out first ball. And then of course he got 138 and Collis King joined him and smacked it all over the place…”When England batted, chasing 287 off 60 overs, they started steadily. Very steadily. Geoff Boycott and captain Mike Brearley batted for 38 overs, the score ticking over to 129 for 0. Was there confidence in the dressing room at this point? “Yes, there was, up to a point,” says Hendrick. “But then as the overs went on we were saying, ‘Shouldn’t they be starting to knock it around a little bit more’ because we were slipping further and further behind the rate. Then they tried to up the ante and both got out… and, as so often happens, the batsmen further down had to force the pace and got themselves out. But you can’t take it away from the West Indies – they bowled really well.”With his easy, high action, the 6ft 3in Hendrick extracted extra bounce from a good length and was a byword for accuracy and economy in the 1970s England attack. He had an economy rate of 2.17 in 30 Tests and says that his action really was as natural as it looked. “I had absolutely no coaching at all. I had to learn on the hoof. I had one or two bits of advice from senior bowlers. Stuff like, ‘If you want to make it as a bowler, you want to cut the four-balls out’.” Sensible advice.”Nobody seems bothered about how many runs you give away now. It used to be a battle of wits between an opening batter and an opening bowler. A game of chess. Now both are trying to dominate the other and batters are playing big shots at balls they shouldn’t be hitting, and the bowlers pick up wickets with complete rank deliveries.”Turned down after a spell with Leicestershire, Hendrick made his county debut for Derbyshire at 20. “When I started I was like a matchstick with the wood scraped off,” he laughs. Winters working on sites helped build him up, and dedication perfected his craft: “I’d go in the nets on my own and try and bowl off stump out of the ground, until I could do it consistently.”Sixty-six wickets at 20 each in 1973 earned him an England tour spot and, in 1974, a Test debut, on which he took a wicket with his first legitimate ball. Hendrick would play 30 Tests over the next seven years, interrupted chiefly by a hamstring injury picked up on the 1974-75 Ashes tour. Given the destruction wreaked by the Australian fast bowlers Lillee and Thomson, he possibly got off lightly.”Thomson said he wanted to see English blood on the pitch, but to be honest the first innings of the first Test wasn’t anything startling. But the second innings – blimey, it was a different story. Thomson broke Tony Greig’s toe, Dennis Amiss’ thumb. There were loads of lads getting hit and I’m thinking: ‘Hang on.’ My pads were like a pair of Ryvitas and I didn’t have a thigh pad, so I’m scrapping round for extra protection. So I put a towel down my trousers and a handkerchief in my pocket. No helmets, no arm guard, nothing. When I got out there, Thomson’s first ball knocked my bat out of my hands! I was thinking: ‘I’ve got a wife and kids at home. What am I doing?’ After the second one, I went and shook his hand and said, ‘Thanks for the game’ and walked off.”

“So I put a towel down my trousers and a handerchief in my pocket. No helmets, no arm guard, nothing. When I got out there, Thomson’s first ball knocked my bat out of my hands! I was thinking: ‘I’ve got a wife and kids at home. What am I doing?’ After the second one, I went and shook his hand and said, ‘Thanks for the game’ and walked off.”

Four years later England and Hendrick had a happier tour – Hendrick took 19 wickets at 15 each and England ran out 5-1 winners. “I was physically stronger and probably mentally too. I knew what I was doing by then.”Hendrick was selected for Headingley 81 but when the selectors found out Bob Willis was fit after all, the invitation was withdrawn. Hendrick returned for the final Test, at The Oval but it proved to be his last.After retirement there was an abortive move into umpiring, where opportunities proved limited, forcing Hendrick to find his way in the real world. “I got a proper job. I sold cars – not very successfully. Other bits and pieces. Eventually I worked for Radio Trent, selling advertising, which was great fun. And they got me doing reports from grounds on Saturdays and I ended up doing some stuff for , which was fun.”Finally Hendrick found himself back in cricket full time, coaching Ireland, then Scotland, before working with Derbyshire, Zimbabwe’s new Twenty20 franchises and, now, county champions Nottinghamshire.Hendrick obviously loves working with one of the strongest rosters of seam bowlers in the country, at Trent Bridge. “I’ve been focusing on the lads in the wings, working with the Academy this winter: And we have Luke Fletcher and Andy Carter, who are both in the ECB fast-bowling set-up, and Jake Ball. I’m excited to be working with them; there’s some real talent there.”Hendrick sees the modern game close up and is well placed to compare it to his own playing days. “If I had a choice, I would play now – for the money. But for fun I don’t think it compares. We always had a lot of fun. Both teams would go for a drink at close of play. But as long as you performed on the field next day, no one was bothered…”I remember one pre-season as an 18-year-old I’d bowled for two and half hours in the nets and I was standing outside the dressing room with a pint of orange squash. And this senior fast bowler who’d never spoken to me before looked at me and said: “If you want to be a fast bowler, lad, get some ale down you.”He laughs at the memory. “Wise words,” he says.

Howell's howlers

A closely contested and wonderful Test series has been marred by Ian Howell’s poor umpiring

Sambit Bal12-Aug-2007


Wide of the mark: Ian Howell had a dreadful time at Trent Bridge, and has made plenty of mistakes at The Oval as well
© Getty Images

It is a pity that matters outside bat and ball should continue to spoil what has so far been wonderful advertisement for Test cricket. The first Test was decided by the weather, and the second, which was won by a skilful and determined performance by the Indians, was overshadowed by jelly beans, player behaviour and inconsistent umpiring. And it will be a tragedy if umpiring becomes a decisive factor in this Test.Umpires deserve plenty of sympathy. Theirs is a thankless vocation and they are noticed only for their mistakes. Their actions are judged and damned by experts, journalists, and millions of viewers who now have the benefit of hugely sophisticated cameras and technologies such as Snickometer and Hotspot. But still, it’s not that difficult to tell when an umpire is not up to it.Simon Taufel, who invited the wrath of Indian supporters for denying Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly well-earned hundreds at Trent Bridge, is a good umpire who had an ordinary match. But it is difficult to say the same about his colleague in that Test. Ian Howell had a dreadful match at Trent Bridge, and it has only got worse at The Oval. It can be considered poor taste to pun on someone’s name, but given the number of he has made in the last two Tests, Howell has brought it upon himself.The ICC has a system in place to assess every decision an umpire makes during a match, and it is often trotted out that umpires get over 90 per cent of the decisions right. Of course, considering that they track every appeal and that teams are appeal-happy these days, Howell might still end up with fairly high percentage. But to anybody who has followed his finger, Howell has got more decisions wrong than right when it really mattered.Few things can be worse for cricketers, batsmen and bowlers alike, than to play in the knowledge that their fate hangs in the hand of an adjudicator who is consistently inconsistent. There are not-outers, none more famous than the legendary Dickie Bird, there are those who are trigger-happy – Dave Orchard springs to mind – there are those who are conservative about front-foot lbws and there are ones who are spinner-friendly. In many instances, umpires go by the pitch, and are likely to adjudge lbws on the basis of bounce. At Perth, for instance, batsmen can leave the ball on its length, safe in the knowledge that it will sail over the stumps.But how safe can a batsman feel when faced with Howell? Apart from his obvious tendency to give wrong decisions, it has been impossible to detect a pattern with Howell. May be it lies in his approach to tailenders. This morning he was happy to give Monty Panesar on the forward stretch against Anil Kumble. Panesar had no reason to quibble; he was dead in front. But on what account did he spare Paul Collingwood on the third day? Collingwood’s front foot was perhaps a few inches ahead, but as Ian Chappell remarked on television, if that wasn’t out, they might as well remove lbw as a mode of dismissal. And when he did give Collingwood out, the ball looked, irrespective of what you saw on Hawk-Eye, to be sliding past the leg stump.At Trent Bridge, he denied Panesar two lbws in his first two overs in India’s first innings. They were vital decisions, for they allowed Dinesh Karthik and Wasim Jaffer to swell the first-wicket partnership to 147, but he was happy to send back RP Singh and Sreesanth in quick succession: Singh looked out, but Sreesanth deserved the benefit of doubt.It’s futile labouring the point, but the lbw that he handed out to Ganguly has perhaps been the shocker of the series. Admittedly, the ball has been swinging exaggeratedly, sometimes changing path after passing the batsman. But this was a deviation palpably off the bat. If he didn’t hear the nick, he should have seen it. Was he late in looking up? If he was, it was a schoolboy error from an international umpire.Which raises the next question. Should Howell have been standing in the series in the first place? Of course, the ICC cannot be blamed for not anticipating the errors, but Howell is not part of the elite panel, and since no other international cricket is on at the moment, those appointing umpires had a full list to choose from. Were none of them available?It is sad that umpires rarely get the credit for a job well done. In that, they are like wicketkeepers. Matt Prior has become the object of ridicule after two bad matches; it’s only fair that the heat is now turned on Howell.Should umpire Ian Howell, who is not part of the ICC’s Elite panel, have stood in the Oval Test? Tell us here

Wrexham owner Rob McElhenney reveals admiration for Liverpool but admits desire to 'mash their dreams into oblivion'

Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney revealed his admiration for Liverpool but claimed he wants to 'mash their dreams into oblivion' one day.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • McElhenney revealed admiration for Liverpool
  • Dreams of mashing Reds' dream into oblivion
  • Wrexham secured third consecutive promotion to Championship
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Hollywood actor reflected on yet another successful season at SToK Cae Ras as Wrexham secured their third consecutive promotion and reached the Championship, a division the club last played in 43 years. McElhenney spoke about the bond in the club while revealing his admiration for Liverpool's anthem 'You'll Never Walk Alone'.

  • Advertisement

  • WHAT ROB MCELHENNEY SAID

    Speaking on the podcast, the It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia star said: "It's the relationship and the love that you have for each other and your community is forged in pain, which I think says something beautiful about humanity. When we are at our most vulnerable and beaten down, we have each other to hold on to and to help lift each other up. I think sport is just a great metaphor for that. Hopefully one day we'll be competing with Liverpool, but their song, You'll Never Walk Alone, is just so unbelievably beautiful for a football team and for a community."

    He added: "One day I hope to mash their dreams into oblivion, but for now I celebrate along with Humphrey [Ker, Wrexham board member] because he loves Liverpool. Interestingly, it's also [striker] Paul Mullin's team, and so I've followed Liverpool and I'm so happy for them and their supporters. But really that song exemplifies what we're trying to do as well."

  • Getty

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    McElhenney and co-owner Ryan Reynolds have changed the Welsh club's fortunes immensely since their 2021 takeover. The actors now continue to dream of reaching the Premier League. The Red Dragons will experience a very busy summer transfer window as Phil Parkinson's side prepares for life in the second tier

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR WREXHAM?

    The players are now enjoying a well-earned break in Las Vegas as Wrexham are in Nevada for the third year running after back-to-back-to-back promotions.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus