SAFC must unleash Broadhead vs SWFC

Sunderland will look to make the League One play-off final tomorrow night as they travel to Sheffield Wednesday for the second leg of their semi-final, with the Black Cats boasting a 1-0 lead on aggregate.

The Wearside outfit’s top scorer Ross Stewart got the decisive goal in the first leg on Friday night, capitalising on a mistake from Wednesday defender Sam Hutchinson.

Stewart’s effort was his 25th of an excellent first full campaign in the North-East since his move from Ross County last January.

However, in order to make it to Wembley, the 25-year-old will need extra support up front, with Alex Neil’s side’s lead a slender one considering that the Owls boast the best home form in the third tier.

Therefore, the imminent return of second top-scorer Nathan Broadhead will be incredibly welcome.

On the chalkboard

Broadhead missed Friday’s first leg through injury but his manager confirmed that he could be fit in time for tomorrow’s trip to South Yorkshire, stating: “He [Broadhead] will have a chance for Monday. Unfortunately, tonight was too soon.

“We will assess him over the next few days and make a call.

“Tonight he wasn’t ready. It’s tough as he is a good player but we have other good players.”

Labelled as “fantastic” by former Sunderland manager Lee Johnson, the £2.9k-per-week Everton loanee has scored 13 goals in 25 appearances in what’s been an impressive campaign for the 24-year-old, although injuries have prevented the Welshman from making a serious impact at the Stadium of Light.

However, no current striker in the Sunderland squad comes close to the numbers of either Stewart or Broadhead, with the next best tally from a striker coming from Leon Dakaju with four.

Therefore, it is imperative that the Welsh striker is fit enough for tomorrow, at least to make the bench, with the Black Cats looking to finally put an end to their miserable four-year stay in the third tier.

This is arguably the best chance the Wearside outfit has had to escape League One since their back-to-back relegations in 2017 and 2018, having made the 2019 final but being second-best to an impressive Charlton Athletic.

With Broadhead, Sunderland will have a much stronger chance of making the play-off final on 21 May, where they will face either MK Dons or Wycombe Wanderers at Wembley.

AND in other news: Neil can blow SAFC supporters away with £3.4k-p/w gem who was made “in a laboratory”

Timeline – How the Sreesanth saga played out in the courtrooms

The story of the fast bowler’s arrest and subsequent life ban to now, when the ban has been reduced to seven years

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Aug-2019Sreesanth reacts after the Supreme Court set aside the life ban in March 2019•Getty ImagesMay 16, 2013
Sreesanth – along with Rajasthan Royals team-mates Ajit Chandila and Ankeet Chavan – is arrested by Delhi Police for fraud and cheating in IPL 2013. The three were allegedly promised money ranging from US$36,000 to 109,000 for each fix. Eleven bookies are arrested too. The BCCI suspends the three players, pending enquiry. A few days later, the Royals franchise suspends their contracts.June 10, 2013
Sreesanth and Chavan are granted bail by a trial court in Delhi, with the judge stating that Delhi Police had not produced enough evidence to charge players under the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA), a special law passed by the Maharashtra state government in 1999 to tackle organised crime and terrorism, with stricter provisions relating to bail and admissibility of confessions compared to the Indian Penal Code. On the same day, Ravi Sawani, then chief of the BCCI’s anti-corruption unit, submits his interim report on the spot-fixing allegations against the players.July 30, 2013
Sreesanth, Chavan and Chandila are among 39 people named as accused in a 6000-page chargesheet filed by Delhi Police in the IPL spot-fixing case. The trial court issues notices to Sreesanth and Chavan in response to Delhi Police’s plea to cancel their bail.September 12, 2013
Following the submission of Sawani’s final report on the spot-fixing allegations in the IPL, the BCCI summons Sreesanth, Chavan and three others (Harmeet Singh, Siddharth Trivedi and Amit Singh) for a disciplinary committee hearing. The following day, Sreesanth and Chavan are handed life bans by the BCCI for their involvement in the scandal.July 25, 2015
A Delhi trial court drops charges against Sreesanth, Chavan and Chandila in the matter. However, the decision has no bearing on the life bans imposed by the BCCI. Anurag Thakur, BCCI secretary at the time, says the penalties imposed by the board would not be lifted.January 25, 2017
The BCCI denies Sreesanth permission to play in Scotland, after the fast bowler asks for a no-objection certificate to turn out for Glenrothes CC. In February, Sreesanth files a writ petition in Kerala High Court challenging his ban.August 7, 2017
Kerala High Court orders the BCCI to lift the life ban on Sreesanth, observing that the board’s refusal to do so is a “violation of natural justice”.September 19, 2017
The BCCI challenges the Kerala High Court judgement, asking whether the writ court could “sit in appeal” and “alter the quantum of penalty imposed” against the findings of the board’s disciplinary committee. A month later, a division bench of the Kerala court negates the judgement issued in August and rules that the BCCI ban cannot be overturned or reduced.March 15, 2019
The Supreme Court of India sets aside the life ban on Sreesanth and asks the board to “reconsider” and “revisit” the length of any fresh ban, “preferably” within three months. The court rules that while the BCCI did not violate any principles of natural justice in determining the sanction, it did not “advert to the aggravating and mitigating factors” as listed under its code.August 20, 2019
BCCI Ombudsman Justice (retd) DK Jain reduces Sreesanth’s ban to seven years, with the sanction period set to end in September 2020. Jain states that he had found a “few mitigating circumstances” under the BCCI’s code as pointed out by Sreesanth, such as no record against the player by the BCCI regarding his erratic behaviour, and “no allegation that he did not cooperate in the inquiry”.

'Since the women became full-time, they have become stronger cricketers'

Hilton Moreeng, South Africa women’s coach, on his quest to take the team to the top

Firdose Moonda06-Jun-2017As a child, Hilton Moreeng was taught to play cricket by a woman. In December 2012, Moreeng, then 34, completed a neat circle of life when he took over as coach of the South Africa women’s team. He also became the country’s first black African national coach, a pioneer in more ways than one.Moreeng’s career began when he was in primary school, under the care of a teacher called Ma Sara Swart. She started a mini-cricket programme in Kimberley, a city best known for diamond mines, and she had several raw gems among her crop. Loots Bosman, Victor Mpitsang and Moreeng were among the children she coached.”She dedicated herself to cricket, her whole life was transformed by it,” Eugene Jacobs, Northern Cape Cricket’s CEO, who has been involved in cricket in the region for more than two decades, said. “If you went to her house, there was just cricket everywhere.”Around the time Swart was coaching Moreeng and Co, several overseas professionals, mostly English, made use of South Africa’s provincial sides to keep their cricketing skills warm over their winter. Not only did these players help South Africa stay in touch with the global game, they also played their part in setting up cricket development programmes either side of unification.David Bairstow, the father of current England international Jonny, was one such. He helped establish a cricket club in Galeshewe, a township in Kimberley close to where Swart and the kids she taught lived. The club was named in his honour: Yorkshire Cricket Club. The irony is too good to ignore. While the north of England has a reputation for being damp with drizzle, the Northern Cape of South Africa is very arid. The club field was no Headingley, but it gave Swart’s squad somewhere to graduate to when they outgrew mini-cricket.The Yorkshire club was where Moreeng first began coaching. Although chiefly concerned with playing, from the age of 15, he was also taking care of younger kids of both genders.”It was just to help, because it was the culture of the club that the senior players would assist. It created continuity for the club,” he said.

“Globally women’s cricket is much more competitive than it was before, where you had the same teams dominating. There have been a lot of tight games and higher scores”

Bosman and Mpitsang were among the standout players at the club and began to climb the cricketing ladder, but Moreeng lagged behind. He was on the fringes of the Griqualand squad, and even though he was convinced to take up wicketkeeping as an additional discipline, he could not crack the nod ahead of Morne van Wyk. It quickly became clear that he might not have a future as a professional player.”But he didn’t bemoan his fortune. He looked for other opportunities,” Jacobs said.Moreeng moved to the big city – Bloemfontein – and worked at the University of the Free State, where he spent some time as a groundsman.Jacobs watched his progress from afar and was keen to have Moreeng back in his home town. After several attempts, he convinced Moreeng to return to Kimberley for a meeting. Over a meal at Nando’s, he offered him the job of club coordinator in the Northern Cape, which Moreeng accepted.The job was far-reaching, if only because of the vastness of the region. The Northern Cape is geographically the largest province in the country but also its most sparsely populated. The drive from Kimberley to Springbok, a town on the edge of the Namibian border, is around 800km. Jacobs still makes trips to and fro over weekends, if need be.With clubs scattered all over the region, Moreeng had his work cut out for him in putting together a programme. “He is a very careful planner and meticulous about the way he goes about things,” Jacobs said.After a few years, the bright lights of Bloemfontein called again and Moreeng left, this time to take up work at a disability school.”For me, it just spoke of the character of the man, because he wanted to go somewhere where he thought he could really make a difference,” Jacobs said.A young Moreeng (fourth from left) with Ryan McLaren and Loots Bosman (first and second from left)On completion of that job, Moreeng had coached at every conceivable lower level, from club to school, and the only logical step was upwards. He became the coach of the Free State provincial side.In 2012, he saw the that the position for coach of the national women’s side was being advertised. By then, Cricket South Africa had secured a sponsorship with financial institution Momentum, who, along with securing naming rights to the men’s ODI team and the domestic 50-over competition, wanted to add the women’s team to their portfolio, even though CSA was not looking for corporate backing for the side. That initial investment allowed CSA to award six women’s contracts and appoint a full-time coach.Moreeng was interviewed but then agonised over whether to take the job. Jacobs remembers several phone calls between them as Moreeng tried to weigh up whether he was making the right decision by moving into women’s coaching.His concerns were well placed. Despite the newly acquired financial backing, at that stage the women’s game was mostly run in an amateur fashion. Most of the players, even the newly contracted ones, had to work at other jobs for a living, and cricket was an after-hours activity. Even team camps were difficult to organise because not all the players could make themselves available at the same time.The environment was challenging but Moreeng stepped into it at just the right time. Within a year, CSA, with the money from Momentum and its own additional funding, was able to contract a full 14-member squad. Now cricket could become the primary focus for the top women players.By April 2015, South Africa women had won one-day series in India, Sri Lanka and the UAE against Pakistan. The win in India was the most important to Moreeng. “That series gave us a proper indication of where the team was,” he said.

“When I first started in cricket, I never thought that would be the case for women, but mindsets are slowly changing”

Moreeng saw that he had a lot of raw talent in players like Shabnim Ismail, whom he described as “always being fired up”, Mignon du Preez, the captain, who he allowed to step down when she wanted to concentrate on her own game, Dane van Niekerk, Lizelle Lee, Sune Luus, Masabata Klaas and others. What he needed to give those players was the confidence to perform to their potential.”The disciplines of the game are the same for men and women, so coaching has some of the same elements too. You have to give them the best opportunities to explore their talent. They need to be able to make decisions themselves and not always be looking at you as the coach for instruction.”We re-enact a lot of game situations and see how they handle pressure. There’s a lot of repetition involved, because the more you do something, the more confident you become in doing it.”With the players now able to spend more time working on their game, Moreeng saw his methods were working. “Since the women became full-time, they have become stronger and smarter cricketers. Globally women’s cricket is much more competitive than it was before, where you had the same teams dominating. There have been a lot of tight games and higher scores.”Under Moreeng, South Africa got their first ODI wins over England and West Indies. South Africa still struggle against more developed teams, like Australia and New Zealand, but they are closing the gap fast, and Moreeng has been a key factor in their advancement.When they hosted New Zealand for a seven-match one-day series last October, Moreeng felt they looked out of depth, after losing the first ODI by 12 runs.”He realised the team needed something he could not provide, so he phoned and asked me to organise a psychologist,” Jacobs said. “He said it must be a woman, must be young and vibrant.”She spoke to them for two and a half hours, and the next day they beat New Zealand.”Since Moreeng took over, South Africa have won 27 of their 52 ODIs•IDI/Getty ImagesThe women’s team does not have the same level of specialised coaching as the men’s team, a luxury Moreeng would welcome as it would allow him to “pay much closer attention to detail”. Instead, he has tried to teach himself more skills and has shadowed Russell Domingo, the men’s coach, for inspiration. It’s not a bad choice, considering how much the two have in common.Like Domingo, Moreeng does not have first-class playing experience but has gained a deep knowledge of the game through years of coaching. They are both pioneers – Domingo is the first national coach of colour, Moreeng is the first black African national coach. Both have the pressure to meet major tournament expectations: CSA has set the women’s team a target of reaching the World Cup semi-finals.But Moreeng has another aim. “He wants to make sure they beat England,” Jacobs said. “Because he believes that if they do that, they have a chance to win the World Cup.”Like Domingo, Moreeng is chasing history.It’s not unreasonable to think that Moreeng may even have an eye on Domingo’s job, though not quite yet. For now, he is coy about whether he will consider applying for the men’s head coach job – which is up for grabs at the end of South Africa’s tour of England, in August.Jacobs thinks Moreeng may need to tick another box along the way. “It would be nice for him to get an opportunity to coach a franchise and then grow from there.”In the meantime, the continued professionalisation of the women’s game has opened a door Moreeng did not think existed when he first started coaching. “It’s put some pressure on us to make sure the next generation of women’s cricketers are ready,” Moreeng said.Though more women are playing cricket in South Africa than ever before – 35% of all mini-cricketers are girls, and all CSA’s provincial members have a women’s cricket programme, compared to three years ago, when six of the 14 did not have anything in place – it is still difficult to get a steady supply of female players.”There are social pressures. A lot of girls get to 16 or so and then we lose them,” Moreeng said.A few are drawn to other sports, like hockey, athletics and netball. Most go on to more conventional careers, but Moreeng hopes they will soon start to see cricket as a viable option.”When I first started in cricket, I never thought that would be the case for women, but mindsets are slowly changing.”There’s no greater proof than the man himself.

A record 99 for McCullum

Stats highlights from day one of the Hamilton Test

Bharath Seervi18-Dec-201599 The highest number of consecutive Tests by a player from debut, now held by Brendon McCullum after he took the field in this match. During the Dunedin Test, McCullum had equalled AB de Villiers on 98. McCullum made his debut in Hamilton and got to the record at the same venue. The record of playing most consecutive Tests at any stage of a career is 153 by Allan Border.26 Sixes by Angelo Mathews as captain of Sri Lanka in Tests, including his three in this innings on the first day. He went past Arjuna Ranatunga’s tally of most sixes by a Sri Lanka captain in Tests. Ranatunga had hit 25 sixes in his 56 Tests and 92 innings as captain. Mathews surpassed Ranatunga in half the number of his innings – 46. Overall, the record for most sixes by a captain in Tests is held by Misbah-ul-Haq with 58. McCullum (52) and MS Dhoni (51) are the other captains to hit 50 or more.64.75* Mathews’ batting average as captain in Tests for Sri Lanka, including his unbeaten 63 on the first day. He is the only player to average more than 60 having played 40 or more innings as captain. The next best is 59.11 by another Sri Lankan, Mahela Jayawardene. Mathews averaged just 39.71 before he took over Sri Lanka’s Test captaincy.0 Number of times two or more Sri Lanka batsmen hit three or more sixes in a Test innings, before this match. On Friday, Mathews and Milinda Siriwardana hit three sixes each, making it the first such instance for Sri Lanka. However, there have been two instances of Sri Lanka batsmen doing it in different innings of a Test. At Lord’s in 1984, Duleep Mendis hit three sixes in each innings of the Test, and in Galle against England in 2011-12, Jayawardene hit three sixes in the first innings and Prasanna Jayawardene struck as many in the second.37 Sixes hit by Sri Lanka players in Tests in 2015 – their joint second-highest in a calendar year, with 2009. Most sixes they hit in a year were 54 in 2014.4.60 Mathews and Siriwardana’s partnership run rate in this innings; they added 138 runs in 180 balls for the fifth wicket. This is the second-highest run rate in a stand of 100 or more runs for Sri Lanka in Tests in New Zealand (where ball-by-ball information available). In the last Test in Dunedin, Dinesh Chandimal and Dimuth Karunaratne batted together for 293 balls in their 122-run partnership for the third wicket which was the longest stand in terms of balls played for Sri Lanka in New Zealand.2012 The last time Sri Lanka’s top six batsmen scored more than ten runs each in a Test innings outside Asia, before today, was in Hobart in 2012-13. Incidentally, before this, the last three instances had all come in Australia – Brisbane (2007-08) and Cairns (2004) being the two instances before Hobart (2012-13). Overall, this is the 13th such instance for Sri Lanka outside Asia and the second in New Zealand after Auckland (1990/91).

De Villiers and Steyn's decade at the top level

While the numbers are evidence of the successful service AB de Villiers and Dale Steyn have given South Africa over the last decade, for them, creating records seems secondary to leaving a legacy

Firdose Moonda15-Dec-2014Scores of 28 and 14 and match figures of 3 for 146 rank among the least notable for AB de Villiers and Dale Steyn except for one thing: those were the numbers they registered on Test debut on December 17, 2004. Exactly 10 years to the day, de Villiers and Steyn will play their 96th and 76th Test respectively, against West Indies, and will celebrate a decade in international cricket together at the ground they both call home. Neither could have asked for a better place to enjoy a special milestone.”This is where it started for me,” Steyn said, before de Villiers added: “I always get a very nice cheer from the crowd here.”Both de Villiers and Steyn are products of the Titans franchise, who are based at SuperSport Park. Although neither turns out for the domestic team regularly anymore because of international commitments, they have both thrilled fans with their performances for South Africa over the last decade.De Villiers has made a fifty in at least one innings in the last five Tests he has played at SuperSport Park while Steyn has taken five wickets in a match in all but one of the games he has featured in at the venue. Both are considered local legends, having also made their first-class debuts together at SuperSport Park in October 2003, and it is their faces predominantly, which adorn the giant photographs in the Titans’ offices. “We have special memories of playing together and playing here,” de Villiers said. “It’s a huge honour and a huge privilege to play here, to play together and to play for South Africa.”From the outset each knew the other had what it took to make it big. Steyn called de Villiers “without a doubt, the best batsman in the world,” who he hates bowling to. “There’s only two games a year I dread – it’s the two IPL games I play against this guy,” he said, while de Villiers said Steyn’s maiden Test revealed his potential. ” We started together domestically and internationally and I remember our first Test match together in Port Elizabeth, Dale steaming in and getting Michael Vaughan out and that’s when everyone realised he is going to be a special player for years to come.”

‘I’ll keep bowling bouncers’ – Steyn

Dale Steyn joined the chorus calling for cricket to move on, however difficult it may be, following the death of Phillip Hughes. Steyn, who played against Hughes as recently as the ODI triangular series in Zimbabwe, promised not to tone down his own aggression as a consequence of the tragedy.
“I really feel for Phillip Hughes and his family. I think everybody has come out and said that it’s a terrible accident. But cricket will continue. We’ve had one guy who has unfortunately passed away from a freak accident and that’s what it is,” Steyn said.
“I have to be careful how I answer this but I know cricket is not everything in my life. From the point when I leave the ground today to when I get to the hotel, somebody else will have died from something else like from a car accident or murder and the world will go on and people will still get into their cars and drive to work.
And I am still going to bowl a bouncer, and I am still going to run hard and try and take your head off, so to speak. Not to kill anybody but I will continue to do bowl that way. It’s a terrible thing. Nobody ever wants to see anyone die doing what they love doing but cricket will just continue. We carry on.”

While de Villiers enjoyed a sustained run in the South African side after his initial appearance, Steyn was dropped after three games and only returned more than a year later. He did not establish himself in the ODI team until four years into his international career, which caused him to miss out on an event in 2007 he was desperate to be part of. “What amazes me is that I have only been to one World Cup in 10 years. I wish I had the opportunity to make another one,” Steyn said.Steyn will definitely feature at the 2015 event and will know that strong performances could elevate him to the one honour he has yet to achieve in his career – being ranked the top ODI bowler in the world. He has occupied the top Test spot for significant periods of time since first achieving it in April 2008; he is 17 wickets away from 400 Test wickets and 39 adrift of leapfrogging Shaun Pollock to become South Africa’s leading wicket-taker. Whether he is eyeing any of that is unclear. “I don’t know what the next three or four years hold; what will happen with us or my career but it’s been a great 10 years” Steyn said. “I’ve loved every minute of it and am looking forward to what lies ahead. It’s not over yet, its sort of three-quarters of the way.”De Villiers echoed the sentiment that there is more to come. Unlike Steyn, he has occupied top spot on both the Test and ODI rankings in his discipline but de Villiers is further away than Steyn from becoming the flagbearer. De Villiers has 7296 Test runs, 5910 behind Jacques Kallis and 1957 fewer than Graeme Smith. He is also third on the ODI charts, where his 7090 runs have left him 1004 runs behind Herschelle Gibbs and 4460 less than Kallis’.While the numbers are evidence of the successful service the two have given South Africa over the last decade, for them, creating records seems secondary to leaving a legacy. Steyn explained that the culture they have built in the squad is more important than anything else and is what will ensure future generations of players can achieve something similar if not more than he and de Villiers have.”Having guys like AB, Hashim Amla, Vernon Philander, Jacques Kallis, Mark Boucher and Graeme Smith – guys who are at the top of their game in your squad – if you spend enough time with these guys, you will take these your game to the next level,” Steyn said. “It’s awesome to have someone like AB in the team and I’m sure that he feeds off other guys as we do off him. It’s such a great team to be a part of because everyone seems to build everyone and the next guy who steps into this team, whether its Kagiso Rabada or Temba Bavuma will become a world-class player within three or four years, because of the kind of players we have now.”

Sachin Tendulkar's ton of tons

From Pushkar Gupte, India

Cricinfo25-Feb-2013
Does it matter whether Sachin Tendulkar gets another hundred?•AFPThat elusive ton. Does it even matter if or when he gets it? The “If” is hypothetical, for get it he will. Maybe not at Wankhede, maybe not even at Melbourne. Get it he will – in due course of time.But for a moment – let’s indulge our pessimism and consider the thought that he does not in fact get there and remains stranded at 99 tons. Given the form he is in, given how sweetly he has been timing the ball, given the beauty with which he has been playing his drives – there seems no doubt that he will keep scoring runs. And like at the Kotla – his runs will contribute to wins. He might get run down by the pressure of expecting the 100th, might get out in the 90s or even before as he starts chasing a landmark that weighs on his mind.But if in this melee – he fails to convert his form into a ton – will it really matter? 33K international runs. 200 international wickets. 22 years of batting at the top of the pile. One world cup. An ODI double ton. When time passes by and we remember – will we even remember if he got his 100th?We will remember the moments. The sandstorm, the thwack over third man off Shoaib, the hook off Glenn McGrath in Nairobi, a pristine balanced cover drive, being lifted on their shoulders by his young team-mates, the wincing in pain but cruelly falling short 136, the pummelling of Olonga, the disintegration of Warne.His greatness – in numbers or more importantly in our minds – will not be enhanced by yet another ton. It won’t diminish if he does not get there. Let’s just let him be. The 100th will happen – hopefully a 300 will materialise along the way – but the last thing we need to do is pile on the pressure for a landmark that will be good to have but mean nothing.In the meantime, while he takes his own sweet time in getting there – let’s just enjoy the fact that we have a freak opener who can churn out runs in the blink of an eye, a No. 3 who – if it were not for the chronological fact of existing in the same era as our current No. 4 – would have been celebrated even more, a No. 5 whose batting is so elegant that it’s a dream to watch. The milestones will come during the journey, let’s lay off the pressure to make the milestones the journey.

The making of a marauder

Yusuf Pathan has turned himself from a bludgeoner into a world-class game-breaker, one who can make the opposition wish they had taken up a different sport

Tariq Engineer29-Jan-2011It’s easy to find Yusuf Pathan’s house in Vadodara. All you have to do is tell the nearest taxi or rickshaw driver to take you there. No address required, just his name is enough. Along the way the driver is also likely to let you know that Yusuf is the kind of player who can take any bowling attack apart, anywhere in the world – an assertion that those who have watched Yusuf’s last few innings would be hard-pressed to deny.I met Yusuf at his family home a couple days before he was due to leave for South Africa. He was dressed in a dark green and sat on a wooden swing in a small rectangular garden running alongside the driveway. He exuded a quiet confidence, and for a big man with a violent game, was very soft-spoken. He grew up playing cricket with his half-brother Irfan. The two boys would play in the mosque where their father is an , taking turns bowling and batting, but people complained they made too much noise. So they moved to the street, playing with a tennis ball, before they joined the Baroda Sports Club and found themselves under the tutelage of Mehendi Sheikh and Bashir Sheikh.From there they quickly moved on to age-group cricket and continued up the ladder to first-class cricket. Along the way they received plenty of encouragement from senior players such as Jacob Martin and Connor Williams. “They would keep telling us to keep practising hard, keep putting in the effort and that one day you will play for India,” Yusuf said. “So we kept working and now we are playing for India.”Bashir died in 2002, and to this day Mehendi remains one of the few people that Yusuf will listen to about cricket. Snehal Parekh, the secretary of the Baroda Cricket Association, says Yusuf is the kind of player who has his own inner circle and does not take kindly to anyone outside that trusted group giving him advice. “You can’t guide them,” he says. “You can’t tell them much. They have they have their own friends and one or two mentors.”Pinal Shah, Baroda’s 23-year-old captain, agrees with that assessment, saying, “Yusuf is very aggressive in his approach to the game and not only in his batting. He can lift the team with his performance. But you have to handle him well; he needs a lot of independence. But I can still go and tell him, ‘Yusuf , so-and-so needs to be done’.”One person with whom Yusuf does talk cricket all the time is Irfan. The brothers share a close bond and are constantly encouraging each other. “It is beneficial to both of us to share our thoughts on the game,” Yusuf said. He says Irfan always told him he would do well in South Africa and Australia “because the bounce is good and the ball comes on to the bat well. So there I can play my strokes”.He certainly did that in the recent ODI series against South Africa, making a match-winning 59 in third game before uncorking a vicious hundred in Centurion that almost stole the game and series from South Africa.”I never have any doubts,” Yusuf said that day in the garden. “I know what I can do. The team also knows that if I am still at the wicket, then I can win the game.”It is why he also dismisses those who question his ability to handle the short ball. Prior to the tour there were reservations about his ability to handle such deliveries on hard pitches outside the subcontinent, especially since he prefers to commit to the front foot to take advantage of anything pitched up. For the time being at least, Yusuf has answered those questions.His approach in South Africa was simple: wait for anything that was in his zone and then club it to the boundary. He was hit on the body twice in Cape Town and once in Centurion, but he didn’t let it bother him. Like a heavyweight boxer who doesn’t need a jab because he has a devastating knockout punch, he waited for his opening. It proved to be a singularly effective strategy, as poor Lonwabo Tsotsobe can testify. In that Centurion game Yusuf hit him for two fours and two sixes in the same over, including one that was effectively a flick off his toes, yet the ball sailed over the long-on boundary. It was a sign that he is beginning to make the most of his strengths, which reflects his growing maturity as a cricketer.”With experience, he is getting better,” Irfan said. “He is learning what to do and what not to do. He knows that even if he waits for two balls, the third ball will give him a chance to hit it. That is how he practises as well. He goes in the nets and makes sure to be aggressive.” That aggression is Yusuf’s hallmark, and the reason his aura will always be greater than his numbers. He may get out cheaply but he can also grab the game by the scruff of its neck and leave the opposition wishing they had taken up a different sport.”He knows his game very well,” Irfan said. “So even if he gets out playing a shot, he will continue to play his shots in the next game. Some batsmen play defensive shots and get out, but that doesn’t mean they don’t play defensive shots in the next game. If he [Yusuf] thinks he can hit the ball, he will hit the ball. And more often than not he is successful.”

“I never have any doubts. I know what I can do. The team also knows that if I am still at the wicket, then I can win the game”

While Yusuf can make decimating an attack look easy, what people don’t see is how hard he works on his craft. He often spends hours practising at the Baroda Sports Club. After Baroda had eliminated Railways in the quarter-final of the Ranji Trophy on the basis of a first-innings lead, Yusuf stayed on the field and asked the groundsmen to put the nets up on the same pitch. “He was taking batting practice for an hour,” Parekh said. “He is very focused.”Parekh, who is the only man to have made a first-class hundred on debut for Baroda, said three years ago the association decided Yusuf was ready for more responsibility and made him the vice-captain of the side. “What I told him was, ‘You should be ready for the match as if you were the captain, as Jacob Martin (then Baroda captain), could get injured and leave the ground and you have to be ready. Be involved in the game.'”He believes the leadership role has spurred Yusuf to mature and show a willingness to take responsibility for his team’s performance; a willingness that is reflected in Yusuf’s own comments about the season. “There was a need this year in the Baroda team because Irfan was not playing. As a senior player I needed to take more initiative. Everyone was watching. It is good that we have success and have gotten good results.”Another influence on Yusuf’s development has been Shane Warne, under whom he played for three years with the Rajasthan Royals. “He told me always when I am batting to play my shots,” Yusuf said. “He would say, ‘If you feel like the first ball is one you should hit, even if you get out on the first ball, if you feel you should play your shots from the first ball, play them. Don’t worry about getting out.'”His epic 37-ball hundred against the Mumbai Indians in their opening game of the 2010 IPL is the direct result of that philosophy – an innings that Warne called the best he had ever seen. “That innings told me that we can win from anywhere,” Yusuf said. “We lost that match, but the way I played – 100 from 37 balls – made it a contest. And I have played these kinds of knocks before. From positions of no hope, I have won matches.”Unfortunately I was run out. Otherwise we would have won that match. I guess the lesson is, when I have made a hundred and I’m batting well, I shouldn’t leave the crease.”The IPL turned out to be the perfect showcase for Yusuf’s talents and, in his opinion, hastened his rise to the international ranks. “The way I performed in the IPL, I got a good platform. Because I was playing well in Ranji Trophy before that also, so probably it would have taken me longer to get here. The IPL gave me a name. It gave me a new identity.” That identity was rewarded many times over when the Kolkata Knight Riders bought him for US$2.1 million in the 2011 player auction earlier this year.Success in the IPL, however, has not dimmed or muddled his ambitions one iota. Yusuf wants to play for India in all three forms of the game. “Everyone who plays cricket, their goals are to play the highest standard of cricket and all formats of cricket. Obviously those are my goals also. I want to play everything.”He says he is comfortable batting in whatever position in the order the team needs him to bat in, because “I have come to understand that whatever position I play, from there I can carry the innings or the team. I have won many matches that way.” It might sound arrogant to say, but for Yusuf it is merely a self-evident truth.Not that it has always been smooth sailing for him. He made his ODI debut in 2008, but lost his place in the side in late 2009 after some mediocre performances. Here too his innate self-belief stood him in good stead and helped him keep things in perspective. “These things happen. Sometimes people are dropped. Sometimes people are in the team. Sometimes you do well. Sometimes you don’t do so well. These things go on happening in a cricketer’s life, so you can’t think something is wrong. You just have to keep putting in the effort and things will take care of themselves.”Yusuf’s other advantage is his offspin. He has been working hard on his bowling, and this Ranji season took as many wickets, 24, as India offspinner R Ashwin did in the same number of matches, but with a significantly better average and strike rate: 17.75 and 37.70 to Ashwin’s 24.20 and 54.50. If Yusuf can continue to develop his bowling to the point where he is a genuine wicket-taking allrounder, he will be that much more valuable to the team, especially in the shorter versions of the game.Pathan’s offspin gives him an added advantage•AFPHe is eager to play in the World Cup, saying he “will go mad if we win”. He considers playing at home a big advantage and does not think the expectations of the fans will put added pressure on the team. “How can there be pressure when you are playing in front of your own people, who give you so much support?”I tell him what the rickshaw driver told me on the way over and for a moment he loosens up and lets out a big laugh. “Bring the driver in here. I’d like to meet him”. He is careful not to take his fans for granted.After the interview is over Yusuf heads for , but stops to take pictures with two teenage boys who had been waiting outside his house.Off the field, he likes to keep a low profile. The high life is not for him. He prefers to stay at home and spend time with his family and friends (“I like family time”). He is also grateful for all the support he has received from the people around him. “My father, my mother, my friends, everyone supported us. It can’t happen without family support. Nobody has ever said not to do this.”The way he is going, nobody ever will.

A spark of hope

Ashraful was determined, maybe even angry. He took it all out on what it was meant to be directed against in the first place: the ball

Sidharth Monga in Dhaka27-May-2007

In a Test full of gloom and embarrassment for Bangladesh, Ashraful alone shone, albeit briefly © Getty Images
For a while, the stadium felt like a morgue. One could push back a chair and hear it. Even the Indians did not celebrate it too much. They too had started enjoying it probably. Mohammad Ashraful tried to loft Anil Kumble over midwicket, got too close to the pitch of the ball, and gave an easy catch to Sachin Tendulkar.In a Test full of gloom and embarrassment for Bangladesh, Ashraful alone shone. That light was given to them all too briefly, 46 minutes to be exact. But for that brief while, it alleviated everything. Habibul Bashar’s decision to field first was forgotten, Javed Omar’s king pair, Bashar’s lame dismissals, the umpires’ mistakes, everything was forgiven. And then, Ashraful got too close to the pitch of the ball and that was that. It was unfair, cruel even. But that is cricket.The whole nation had been disappointed with Bangladesh’s performance. The newspapers had said that in sending Ashraful for the press conference on Saturday, Bashar had not even been man enough to face the questions. “Who exactly chose to field first?” he was asked, as if it were a court-martial. After years of hard work had gone in earning the respect Bangladesh had, it was all in danger of disappearing with a humiliating defeat. And Ashraful could do nothing; everyone else had let the team down badly. He was out to avoid a king pair much sooner than he would have expected.Ashraful was determined, maybe even angry. He took it all out on what it was meant to be directed against in the first place: the ball. The very first ball, when others in his state would be looking to play it out, his bat went high and he whipped it past square leg for one, and the intent was clear. The second ball he faced was defended solidly. From the third, he began an assault that was as breathtaking and delightful as it was hopeless. Zaheer Khan pitched up and was driven through mid-off. Zaheer bowled a yorker next, which was defended well. Another length ball was driven through extra cover, another boundary came through fine leg, and all of a sudden life had returned to Shere-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in the time span of one over. Everyone knew there was no chance of a contest, yet everyone was engaged. Some journalists had initiated the process of advancing their tickets; they couldn’t be blamed, the cricket was tepid. But with Ashraful firing they abandoned all that and became engrossed in the game. When they bowled length and full, they were driven through the covers; when they bowled short, they were pulled; when they strayed on the stumps, they were flicked. Soon, Ashraful had missed Jacques Kallis’s fastest Test fifty (24 balls) by two balls, and was seriously threatening the fastest ever century by Vivian Richards By his standards, Ashraful was well set when RP Singh decided to bowl him a short one. It must have been telepathy because Ashraful had rocked back even before the ball had pitched and hit the shot of the match for a six. The pitch became its slow, flat self and the Indian bowling reverted to type – unenergetic and unimaginative. When they bowled length and full, they were driven through the covers; when they bowled short, they were pulled; when they strayed on the stumps, they were flicked. Soon, Ashraful had missed Jacques Kallis’s fastest Test fifty (24 balls) by two balls, and was seriously threatening the fastest ever century by Vivian Richards.He went on to give debutant Ishant Sharma his baptism and India had no recourse but turn to their talisman, Kumble. His first ball to Ashraful was driven through extra cover for four, but he was given respect after that. In his second over, Ashraful got too close to the pitch of the ball. For about a minute, not many moved. The light given for too brief a while was gone, and although Ashraful left the rest of the batsmen inspired – half-centurion Mashrafe Mortaza one of them – normal service had largely resumed. The spectators went back to being sullen and the journalists started calling the airline offices once again.

Middlesex bring in Keshav Maharaj for Championship, Blast stint

Director of cricket Alan Coleman hails addition of “world-class talent”

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Feb-2023

Keshav Maharaj celebrates a wicket•AFP/Getty Images

Middlesex have recruited Keshav Maharaj as an overseas player for the first four months of the 2023 season.Maharaj, South Africa’s left-arm spinner, will arrive ahead of Middlesex’s third Championship game against Nottinghamshire on April 20 and will be available for eight four-day fixtures in total, as well as the entirety of the T20 Blast.Alan Coleman, Middlesex’s director of cricket, said that it was “essential” to bring in a “world-class talent” ahead of the club’s first season in the Championship’s top division since 2017, and that he would play a role mentoring Luke Hollman and Thilan Walallawita.”We are delighted that Keshav has signed for Middlesex this season and are really excited to have someone of his calibre and experience joining us for the first four months of the season,” Coleman said. “The young spinners we have in our squad will benefit enormously from having Keshav with us this year.”Related

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Maharaj will be playing for his third different county, after previous stints with Lancashire and Yorkshire. He has taken 72 wickets at 21.72 across his 13 games in the Championship.”I’m really excited to be linking up with such a professional and experienced county and am looking forward to wearing the Middlesex colours and calling the Home of Cricket my home,” he said.Middlesex previously announced that Pieter Malan would return as an overseas player after a successful stint last year.Elsewhere, Richard Gleeson has re-signed with Lancashire on a two-year, T20-only contract.

Recopa Sul-Americana: Ayrton Lucas é a boa notícia para Vítor Pereira em treino antes da viagem para Quito

MatériaMais Notícias

Antes de embarcar para Quito, onde enfrentará o Independiente Del Valle (EQU) na terça-feira, o elenco do Flamengo realizou uma última atividade no Ninho do Urubu nesta manhã. Diante da preocupação de Vítor Pereira com o lado esquerdo, a presença de Ayrton Lucas no trabalho foi a boa notícia do trabalho, e o lateral-esquerdo será relacionado para a ida da Recopa Sul-Americana.

+Flamengo x Independiente Del Valle pela Recopa Sul-Americana; datas, horários e onde assistir

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A delegação rubro-negra embarca para Quito nesta tarde, e o clube divulgará os relacionados em breve. A tendência é de que Vítor Pereira não tenha problemas de última hora e possa escalar um time próximo ao de quarta, quando os titulares atuaram pela última vez, contra o Volta Redonda.

As baixas certas para a viagem ficam por conta do zagueiro Léo Pereira, do lateral-esquerdo Filipe Luís, do meia Victor Hugo e do atacante Bruno Henrique, todos entregues ao departamento médico.

Desembarcando em Quito na noite deste domingo, o elenco rubro-negro tem uma atividade marcada para a tarde de segunda-feira, no Estádio Atahualpa, quando Vítor Pereira definirá a escalação. A principal dúvida está na formação do meio de campo. Na última quarta, o técnico testou o setor com o poder de marcação reforçado pela entrada de Vidal na vaga de Everton Ribeiro.

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