PSL's emerging talent – The future stars that franchises signed, and the ones that got away

All the playing XIs at the PSL are required to have an emerging player – that’s worked well for Pakistan cricket

Umar Farooq01-Feb-2022Islamabad UnitedPakistan Under-19 captain Qasim Akram, whose T20 strike rate is 152.04, even though he averages only 14.90 in 21 T20s. He was in Islamabad’s wishlist, and though they tried to get him on board, Karachi Kings used the right-to-match option to retain the allrounder. Qasim will be available only for the league this season, because of his engagements with the Under-19 team at the ongoing World Cup.Why: “He is a truly modern cricketer. He can bat across the batting order and can form a great combination with Shadab [Khan] as a legspinner. He is a gun fielder too, and basically an ideal T20 player.”In the squad: Islamabad went on to pick another emerging player, from Rawalpindi, the offspinning-allrounder Mubasir Khan. As their second pick, they got top-order batter Mohammad Huraira, the second-youngest to score a first-class triple century in Pakistan.Lahore QalandarsAbdul Wahid Bangalzai, who they targeted in the draft, but he went to Quetta Gladiators.Why? “He is exceptionally talented and one of the few technically correct batters in Pakistan at this level. Since he wasn’t meant to be available for the entire PSL, we didn’t go for him in our first pick, but we definitely wanted him. He scored a double-hundred in first-class cricket and is a proper batter who can go a long way. We wanted to be part of his development and help him grow.”In the squad: Zaman Khan, a right-arm fast bowler with a low-slung action, made a name last year in the Kashmir Premier League, playing for Rawalakot Hawks. Qalandars also have Maaz Khan, a legspinner, for the second successive season.Quetta GladiatorsThey got who they wanted – Bangalzai. It was a “pretty straightforward decision,” they said.”He was definitely our prime target. His performances in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and National T20 Cup were solid, his basics are strong, and even against pacer he is really strong. There is a strike-rate issue but that is something he can work on, as he is still young and developing. When a boy is coming up through a proper process and doing well, it’s an easy pick. Also, he belongs to Balochistan, and we definitely would like to elevate a talent from the region. So we have achieved what we wanted to and also picked up another emerging player, Khurram Shehzad, in the silver category.”In the squad: Abdul Wahid Bangalzai and Ashir Qureshi, a legspinner of promise.Multan SultansZaman Khan. Multan had him on their radar in 2018, and the quick bowler with a slingy action was later drafted into Pakistan’s Under-17 circuit, before making his way to the Kashmir Premier League last year.Why? “We got our targets but definitely we had one eye on him, given our past association with him. He is an exciting young boy who already has the skills at this early stage of his career and is improving with every game he plays.”In the squad: Two right-arm quicks, Abbas Afridi and Aamer Azmat.Karachi KingsZaman Khan and Muhammad Zeeshan, a six-foot-eight-inch quick from Faisalabad, who didn’t get a team. But Karachi had all their bases covered with a fast-bowling unit of Mohammad Amir, Chris Jordan, Aamer Yamin, Umaid Asif, Mohammad Imran Jnr and Mohammad Ilyas, from the top categories.”We were dead set about the player we had taken in draft,” they say, explaining why they didn’t make a dash for the youngsters.In the squad: Qasim Akram and offspinner Mohammad Taha.

Mets Sign Ex-Yankees Reliever Devin Williams to Three-Year Deal

The Mets are adding to the back end of the bullpen by making a major splash in free agency. New York has reportedly agreed to a three-year, $45 million contract with reliever Devin Williams, according to multiple reports.

The deal includes $5 million in deferred money each season ($15 million total) and a $6 million signing bonus that will be prorated across the three years, per MLB insider Jon Heyman of the New York Post.

Williams, 31, spent the 2025 season with the Yankees. He was a marquee offseason acquisition by the organization, who got him in a trade with the Brewers last winter. Williams failed to live up to his lofty expectations for the Yankees, recording a -0.3 bWAR with a 4.79 ERA, 90 strikeouts and 18 saves in 60 2/3 innings.

Prior to his down year in ‘25, Williams, a two-time All Star, had three consecutive seasons with a sub-2.00 ERA while dominating in a late-innings relief role in Milwaukee. In his career, he owns a 3.02 ERA with a 14.1 K/9 and 86 saves across 308 appearances.

The addition of Williams doesn’t take the Mets out of the running to re-sign Edwin Díaz, who hit free agency this offseason. New York remains interested in bringing Díaz back even after shoring up the bullpen with a three-year contract for Williams, per MLB.com’s Anthiny DiComo.

Headless chickens come home to roost in England's terminal batting failure

Top-order had bailed England out all tournament, but stunning collapse left nowhere to hide

Vishal Dikshit29-Oct-2025

Heather Knight was bowled for a duck as England slumped to 1 for 3•ICC via Getty Images

A round-robin exit in the 2024 T20 World Cup, a semi-final loss in the 2023 T20 World Cup, a medal-less finish in the 2022 Commonwealth Games at home, and a runners-up medal in the ODI World Cup months before that. Seizing the big moments in pressure situations is one of the aspects England head coach Charlotte Edwards wanted the team to get better at, when she took over in her role in April this year.Edwards doesn’t like losing, after all. Between her playing and coaching careers, she is the winner of five Ashes, two World Cups, five domestic titles, two WPLs and one Hundred. But the margin of this semi-final defeat to South Africa – 125 runs – once again turned the spotlight on their stuttering campaign with the bat, which had its weaknesses exposed right from the start, against some of the lower-ranked teams.The way Amy Jones missed an inducker from Marizanne Kapp for a duck evoked memories of her missing similar deliveries against Bangladesh and Pakistan. When Heather Knight chopped on for a duck with tentative footwork, the struggles of England’s top four against Pakistan’s pace bowlers came rushing back. As much as this would pose questions for Jones, Tammy Beaumont and Knight, who all fell for ducks in a knockout clash, it also served as a reminder of how England’s batters after No. 4 had barely made a mark in this World Cup.If it was the first time that England lost two wickets without a run on the board in an ODI, and when their top three all bagged ducks in a scoreline of 1 for 3 – the joint-lowest for three-down in the history of 1517 women’s ODIs – there was nowhere to hide for their misfiring middle- and lower-order. Until that point, the problems of those batters after Nat Sciver-Brunt at No. 4 had either been masked by five victories in the league stage or been made up for by the bulk of runs that were scored by the reliable hands of Sciver-Brunt and Knight.Bangladesh were the first to make inroads into that batting order, reducing them to 78 for 5, also at Guwahati. A loss there might have given England a harsher reality check, had it not been for Knight’s unbeaten 79 (and her large share of luck). Against Sri Lanka, England went past 250 despite being 168 for 6 after riding on Sciver-Brunt’s century, while no other batter went past 32. When Pakistan restricted England to 133 for 9 in a truncated game, rain saved them from their inevitable blushes as Pakistan were 34 for 0 when it got called off. Against India, England would have hoped to see some contributions at last from the lower order, having moved to a flatter track in Indore, but their Nos. 5 to 7 managed all of 28 runs combined. However, their batting woes were eclipsed in a four-run heist which posed more questions for India than England, who had booked a semis berth.Related

Edwards 'disappointed' but not 'concerned' by England's batting

Wolvaardt and Kapp power South Africa into the World Cup final

Marizanne Kapp becomes highest wicket-taker in World Cup history

Edwards 'looks to the future' after England's chastening semi-final exit

Wolvaardt and Kapp sing South Africa's song of ice and fire

By the time the league stage ended, however, England’s Nos. 5 to 7 had the worst average for any team, the second-worst strike rate (61.59) only behind Pakistan, and they had struck the fewest fours and no sixes, which was the same as Pakistan.”We do need to improve our batting, I don’t think it’s been consistent enough at times and equally with our bowling,” Edwards said at the press conference after the semi-final exit. “Our batting has to improve, certainly that middle order and playing against spin, certainly slow spin and obviously bowling across all phases. We’ve not put a whole game together as a team and that’s something we’ll be going away looking at.”Once she gets home, Edwards’ review of the lower-order is bound to put under the microscope the returns of Alice Capsey, who averaged 21 in the World Cup despite a half-century in the semi; Sophia Dunkley, who managed just 68 runs in 133 balls at 11.33, and Emma Lamb, who was dropped for Danni Wyatt-Hodge for the last league game, after she scored just 36 runs in five innings. When Wyatt-Hodge replaced Lamb against New Zealand with nothing for the team on the line, it started to raise questions whether England had drawn on the experience of Wyatt-Hodge a little too late, as it gave her the game-time of just seven balls before the knockouts.”I think Emma Lamb, Sophia Dunkley, Alice Capsey had performed brilliantly coming into this tournament and I’m not the type of coach who’s just going to keep swapping and changing,” Edwards said. “We knew Danni Wyatt has played 300 games for England, so we knew she could fit in and she showed today that she can just zip into that position. I mean, people will look at that and think maybe we should have brought her in earlier. But we got to this point in the tournament, and we’re really comfortable with the selections we’ve made throughout.”Capsey showed some signs of redemption at the end with a knock of 50 while stitching a century stand with Sciver-Brunt, while Wyatt-Hodge’s quick 34 also gave England hope. However, the fact is that it all came a bit too late. On the day their top three had failed to score a single run, Edwards said they weren’t at their “best” on Wednesday. They will need to find their best on home soil next summer, as the focus now shifts to the T20 World Cup which begins in just over six months’ time.

Captain Shanto moulds Bangladesh in his forthright image

He had only played 23 Tests before Sylhet, and was captaining for the first time in the format, but there was no hint of newbie about his leadership

Mohammad Isam03-Dec-2023There were four players more experienced than Najmul Hossain Shanto in the Bangladesh line-up against New Zealand in Sylhet. The BCB had made him captain after just 23 Tests. It was one of the earliest appointments for a Bangladesh Test captain among those given the job since 2010. Yet, it didn’t seem like the rest of the players found him a surprising element at the top. Nor did Shanto play or lead like a newbie.Shanto has been Bangladesh’s leading run-scorer in the last 12 months in Tests and ODIs. With his century in the second innings in Sylhet, he now has the most hundreds in a calendar year in all formats among Bangladesh’s batters. Most importantly, he has now led Bangladesh to a Test victory against a major team, and dragged the team out of the doom and gloom of their World Cup campaign.Related

Can Najmul Hossain Shanto pilot a successful World Cup campaign for Bangladesh?

Southee pleased to win Dhaka scrap on 'probably the worst wicket I've come across'

Southee expects spin to play a big role in 'hard-fought' series

Shanto's century puts Bangladesh in driver's seat

Calm and clinical Shanto brings back Bangladesh's smile

Shanto struck the decisive blow on the third day when he scored his fifth Test hundred at a pivotal time in the game. New Zealand had a seven-run lead, and Bangladesh have often wilted in the second innings. Shanto kept them going with a quickfire start and settled into a nice rhythm, putting together important partnerships and handing Bangladesh an important lead at stumps.Shanto was criticised for his all-out attack in the first innings, when he fell to a Glenn Philips full-toss after making a quick 37. He explained after the Sylhet Test that there was a method to his madness, and he knows when to stop.”It is important to understand that I was batting for my team,” Shanto said. “They set attacking fields so I had boundary options. It is not easy to defend for a long time on this wicket. When they had fielders in front of me, I attacked them. When they had in-and-out fields, I played defensively. I shifted back to my normal gameplan to avoid risky shots. When they attacked again, I went for the runs. Plans change according to the situation. They attacked in the first innings so I batted according to my plan.”I was quite clear about my approach. They set close-in fields so I played low-risk shots. Some may have thought those are high-risk shots. If I didn’t connect those shots, they would still go to the boundary over the fielder’s head. It was my gameplan. It seemed like I batted very responsibly in the second innings. I had similar plans. When they pushed the fielders back, I didn’t think it was necessary to hit fours and sixes over the fielders. I batted in a low-risk manner. A batter has to bat according to the situation. I had to keep my team’s needs in mind.”Najmul Hossain Shanto three Test hundreds in 2023•ESPNcricinfo LtdBefore the Test match, Shanto fired the first shot. He said in the pre-match press conference that Bangladesh expect to beat New Zealand in this Test series. A bold call from a stand-in captain, especially with a team under massive pressure following the World Cup debacle.Shanto explained that he understood the confidence within the playing group, which prompted him to sound out their plans for this Test series. “I was quite clear about my statement that we could win this Test series,” he said. “I didn’t say it just to motivate the players. I meant it. Plus, everyone had the same belief. I got the confidence to say this when I heard it from the players.”We were all on the same page. I considered our bowling attack and batting depth in these conditions before saying it. We have just done half of it though. We have to work hard for five days in Dhaka.”Shanto is slowly revealing himself as a strong character, something many believe is missing among the next crop of Bangladesh cricketers. When asked about the three-spinners-and-one-fast-bowler combination in the Sylhet Test, Shanto said what previous captains have shied away from explaining or even talking about with clarity. Shanto wondered why there’s a lot of fuss whenever Bangladesh play a lot of spinners.”If we played in different conditions and teams, we would have had more pace bowlers,” he said. “I find it strange why this question comes up when we only play more spinners. We don’t ask this question when we play more pacers and fewer spinners. Nobody asks why Taijul [Islam], [Mehidy Hasan] Miraz or Nayeem [Hasan] isn’t playing today. They are all bowlers so there’s need to separate them. It depends on the conditions and situations, which is how we form the team.”His tone was refreshing. He didn’t just defend the team’s tactics, but did it succinctly. He didn’t waste too much energy in being emotional, but articulated exactly why Bangladesh picked a three-man spin attack. Horses for courses, basically. You can debate the wider effects of packing the side with spinners on turning tracks at home. But the way he has said it speaks highly of his confidence and character.

Despite domestic trouble, Afghanistan have enough to bother the best on their day

They have endured a bumpy road on the way to the UAE and also haven’t played much T20I cricket due to the pandemic

Peter Della Penna18-Oct-2021

Big picture

In the last few months, Afghanistan – the country – has been beset by the chaos and upheaval triggered by the American military’s complete withdrawal of troops from the country and the return to government rule of the Taliban regime. Afghanistan – the cricket team – has not been immune to turmoil during the same period: the nascent women’s team – which has yet to play an ICC sanctioned match – has been told that for them to take the field would be in violation of Taliban policy. Other countries have taken note and decreed that for the Afghanistan women to be denied the opportunity to play is a violation of their own policies towards women’s equality, and in Australia that has meant the cancelation of the inaugural Test which Australia was due to host against Afghanistan.Though their participation in this World Cup was briefly under a cloud, the ICC gave them the green light to participate in the end. That does not mean that the national team has not endured a bumpy road on the way to the UAE. Government regime change sparked the ousting of the Afghanistan Cricket Board’s chairman. A series with Pakistan wound up being postponed while Rashid Khan resigned as T20I captain in protest – that too, before he even had a chance to lead the team in a game following his appointment to replace Asghar Afghan – after saying he was not consulted before the World Cup squad was picked.The one positive for them is that they no longer have to go through the opening round. Afghanistan’s cricket has improved to the point where they were included in the second round by virtue of being in the top eight on the T20I rankings table at the tournament cutoff date. It’s a sign of their evolution from Associate prey into Full Member predator.Related

  • Rashid Khan expects spinners to play 'huge role' at T20 World Cup

  • ICC confirms Afghanistan to be part of T20 World Cup

  • Rashid steps down as captain protesting against squad selection

  • Fazli returns as ACB chairman

Recent form

Afghanistan haven’t played much T20I cricket due to the pandemic, but they have been largely successful when they have been able to get on the field. Afghanistan have won their last three T20I series – a 2-1 win over West Indies in November 2019, another 2-1 win (the only loss came in a Super Over) against Ireland in March 2020, and a three-match sweep of Zimbabwe in March 2021.

Batting

Their inconsistency in this area is what has held them back from toppling higher-ranked teams on a more regular basis. But there are signs that this could be changing with the emergence of Rahmanullah Gurbaz at the top of the order. After being named player of the series against Ireland in March 2020, he blitzed 87 off 45 in the first T20I against Zimbabwe this past March, including seven sixes in Abu Dhabi. Any decent platform from him will give Najibullah Zadran the freedom to maintain his aggression in the middle overs heading into the death overs. Outside of them, the team still leans on Asghar and Mohammad Nabi to contribute runs regularly.Teenager Rahmanullah Gurbaz has a strike-rate of 143•Abu Dhabi Cricket

Bowling

Despite the lack of national-team cricket, their stars have gotten plenty of opportunity to stay in form through the world of franchise cricket. In particular their vaunted spin trio of Rashid, Mujeeb-uh-Rahman and Nabi remain in demand for their match-winning consistency.On the pace side, Naveen-ul-Haq and Karim Janat will likely bowl most of the seam overs. But Afghanistan selectors are pining for a bit of nostalgia with the inclusion of Hamid Hassan in the squad. Even by fast bowling standards, his 34-year-old body has had more wear and tear than most. It’s one reason he hasn’t played a T20I since Afghanistan’s win over West Indies at the 2016 T20 World Cup in Nagpur. But drawing from his inspiring comeback to compete in the 2019 World Cup, he’s giving it one more go to see if he can turn back the clock.Franchise cricket has kept Rashid and Nabi in touch with the sport despite very little cricket for the national side•AFP/Getty Images

Player to watch

He has never had the pace that Afghanistan’s more-heralded fast bowlers like Hamid and Dawlat Zadran were blessed with, but that hasn’t stopped Naveen-ul-Haq from sourcing far greater interest than they ever did on the T20 franchise circuit. His clever array of slower balls and accurate yorkers at the death have added a new dimension to Afghanistan’s bowling in recent times and transformed him from fringe squad member to automatic selection, one who can win matches and lessen the reliance on the mystery spinners to do all the dirty work.

Key question

How will the players perform considering all of the instability at home? Though the ICC confirmed Afghanistan’s participation in this event, that’s not a guarantee going forward if Australia’s decision to cancel a Test match is any indication. The best way to ensure this doesn’t turn into a last hurrah is to score a few victories.Afghanistan have made a swift habit of bullying teams beneath them in the rankings so a pair of victories against both teams who advance out of the opening round is highly likely. But they’ll need to spring at least two upsets against group opponents New Zealand, Pakistan and India to have any realistic chance of progressing to the semifinals and building a case for their continued inclusion in global events regardless of what happens off the field in Kabul.

Likely XI

1 Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), 2 Usman Ghani, 3 Karim Janat, 4 Najibullah Zadran, 5 Mohammad Nabi (capt), 6 Asghar Afghan, 7 Rashid Khan, 8 Naveen-ul-Haq, 9 Mujeeb-ur-Rahman, 10 Fareed Ahmad, 11 Hamid Hassan

Alex Rodriguez Calls Out One Dodgers Star for Not Helping Shohei Ohtani

Shohei Ohtani and the Dodgers hoped to seize control of the World Series in Game 4 but they weren't able to get it done at home, losing 6-2 to the Blue Jays. The series is now tied up at 2-2 and suddenly it looks like Los Angeles could be in trouble, partly because while Ohtani has done virtually everything he can thus far, some of his star teammates are not having the same kind of success.

The biggest name that hasn't stepped up enough in the World Series is Mookie Betts. The 2018 AL MVP is an eight-time All-Star but he hasn't been himself at the plate against the Blue Jays. He has just three hits in 19 at-bats and has yet to knock in a run.

Moments after Game 4, in which Betts went 1-for-4 with his only hit being a single in the eighth inning, Alex Rodriguez seemed to call out the Dodgers' star shortstop, saying his struggles could hurt Ohtani the rest of the series.

"When I look at that lineup, the one guy that you have to circle is the great, great Mookie Betts because if Mookie doesn’t get going that means that Shohei may not get one more at-bat for the rest of series and that’s something to watch," Rodriguez said.

David Ortiz then chimed in with what he thinks has gone wrong for the Dodgers and what the team's other stars need to do to pick up Ohtani.

"Shohei has a hard job to do because he has to pitch and he has to hit but he’s more critical because if he doesn’t hit [the Dodgers] don’t hit," Ortiz said. "It seems like every night when they get going it’s because of [Ohtani]. Now you have a lot of superstars on the ball club, you have a lot of professional hitters that until this point they haven’t been able to come through collectively."

Here's that complete conversation from Fox's postgame show.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts hinted there could be some lineup changes for Game 5, saying in his postgame press conference: “I’m going to think long and hard, and it might look a little bit different tomorrow.”

The Dodgers need their other stars to pick it up, and fast. The Blue Jays were resilient in Game 4 and if they can win Game 5 they will head home with a 3-2 lead and will only need to win one game at Rogers Centre to claim their first World Series title since 1993.

Game 5 is a crucial game for both teams. We'll have to wait and see what changes the Dodgers make, if any, and if Betts can finally get going at the plate.

"لم أقل هذا من قبل".. سلوت يتحدث من جديد عن أزمة محمد صلاح في ليفربول

نشرت شبكة “ليفربول إيكو” الإنجليزية جزءًا جديدًا من حديث المدرب آرني سلوت في مؤتمره الصحفي، مساء الجمعة، فيما يتعلق بالنجم المصري محمد صلاح، والأزمة التي نشبت بسبب تصريحاته القوية قبل أسبوع.

وصرّح آرني سلوت، في مؤتمره صباح الجمعة، أنه سيتحدث إلى محمد صلاح قبل اتخاذه أي قرار يتعلق بموقفه من خوض مباراة السبت ضد برايتون في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

وأكدت تقارير صحفية مختلفة أن سلوت استقر على إعادة محمد صلاح إلى قائمة ليفربول في مباراة برايتون، بعد جلسة محادثات بينهما اتسمت بالإيجابية.

من جهة أخرى، نشرت شبكة “ليفربول إيكو” الإنجليزية منذ قليل جزءًا جديدًا من حوار سلوت عن محمد صلاح، والذي كان في المؤتمر الصحفي قبل أي محادثات بينهما.

وقال سلوت: “العامل الأهم هو تقديم أفضل ما لدي للفريق والنادي، لم أقل هذا من قبل، لكن يمكنني القول إنني بالتأكيد لست سعيدًا بهذا الوضع، لا يعني هذا أنني راضٍ عن وجودنا في هذا الموقف على الإطلاق”.

اقرأ أيضًا.. ماكمانامان يدعو ثنائي ليفربول لحل أزمة محمد صلاح قبل كأس أمم إفريقيا

وأضاف: “لقد فزنا بلقب الدوري معًا، قدّم محمد صلاح الكثير للنادي، من الأفضل ألا يكون اللاعب في مثل هذا الموقف، أنا بعيد كل البعد عن الاستمتاع بهذا الوضع، لكن عليّ اختيار التشكيلة التي تصب في مصلحة النادي والفريق، حسب رأيي”.

وواصل: “لا يعني هذا أنني أؤيد هذا الوضع، بل هو مجرد رأيي، لا يمكنني القول إنني أحب هذا الوضع، كلا، لا أحبه ولا أستمتع به، إذا أمكنني ذلك، وكان ذلك في مصلحة الفريق والنادي، فسأفضل بالتأكيد تجنب أي فوضى أمام برايتون، لأنني لا أعتقد أن استمرارها لصالح الفريق والنادي”.

وشدد: “لا أعتبرها فوضى بالنسبة لي، ولكن إن كانت كذلك، فلن تفيد أحدًا، لذلك نحاول تجنبها ما دام ذلك في مصلحة الفريق، إذا أخبرتكم برد فعلي وما شعرت به، فلن يفيدنا ذلك في الوضع الحالي”.

واختتم الهولندي: “كل ما فعلته حتى الآن كان من أجل مصلحة النادي والفريق، لا أعتقد أن إخباركم بما شعرت به أو ما شابه سيفيدنا في هذا الموقف”.

بينما نشرت صحيفة “ديلي إكسبريس” الإنجليزية، جزءًا جديدًا من حديث سلوت، حيث قال: “ما قصدته في مؤتمر إنتر ميلان بقولي أننا لطيف ولكنني لست ضعيفًا، هو أنني لا أخشى اتخاذ القرارات التي أرى ضرورةً لاتخاذها، هل يستطيع اللاعبون استشعار الضعف؟ نعم، لكن ليس من الضروري إظهار القوة أو الضعف عندما لا يخدم ذلك مصلحة الفريق”.

وأوضح: “ليس من الحكمة أن أقول (أنا قوي جدًًا ولا أخشى اتخاذ القرارات الكبيرة)، إن لم يكن ذلك في مصلحة الفريق، ليست فكرتي أن أظهر قدرتي على اتخاذ القرارات، حتى لو كانت قوية أو صعبة، لكنني بالتأكيد كنت في غرف تبديل الملابس، وهم يراجعون قراراتي باستمرار”.

واستأنف: “أقول إنني أتخذ ما بين 40 و50 قرارًا يوميًا، إن لم يكن أكثر، لكن اللاعبين، مثل المحللين والصحفيين، نادرًا ما يعرفون كل ما يحدث، لقد سمعت الكثير عن هذا الوضع كله، ومن بين ما قاله المحللون أننا قد لا نعرف كل شيء، ومن يدري إن كان ذلك صحيحًا”.

وعن محمد صلاح من جديد، قال: “أعلم كم تحدثت معه، الأمر متروك للآخرين ليقرروا، إن كانوا على علم، ما إذا كان ذلك كافيًا، لو كانت 250 ساعة، فهل كانت كافية؟”.

وأنهى قائلًا: أعلم كم تحدثنا، ليس فقط في الأسبوع الذي سبق مباراة وست هام أو سندرلاند أو ليدز، بل أيضًا في الأسابيع والأشهر الأخيرة”.

England made to toil amid mishaps of their own making

Three inexperienced seamers tried their best to hold the line but England’s predicament felt like a failure of management

Vithushan Ehantharajah02-Aug-2025Who else but Ben Stokes?No seriously, who else? Any ideas? Anyone? Hello, is this thing on?That’s what it felt like on Saturday. England scrabbling around, looking for something, anything to save them. It was not just day three that was getting away from them, but this fifth Test and a series win.Their regular saviour, their usual captain, their standout bowler, was on the balcony, taking as well-earned a rest as you can have when your right shoulder is hanging by a thread. Meanwhile, Ollie Pope was out there on his home ground stuck in a bad dream.Related

India get caught up in the Tongue paradox

Butter-fingered England spill six chances at The Oval

Oval and out: Jaiswal's series comes a full circle with statement hundred

Jaiswal hundred, Siraj's late strike make India favourites

Akash Deep joins nightwatch lore with Oval knock to remember

There he was, sifting through bowling combinations without Chris Woakes, and fields with a cordon seemingly without the ability to catch. At times, it was like watching a man trying to eat soup with his hands, occasionally heading back up to the home dressing room to wash them and ask if anyone had found a spoon, or even a fork, only to be met with big sunnies, white trainers and blank stares.The best you could say of England’s bowlers is that they kept at it in a meaningful way. Not just toiling, but doing so with a degree of hate in their hearts. No one likes being dog-walked in Test cricket as they were for 70 overs. There was plenty of bark and bite to show as much. Reward, too. Or at least souvenirs from the grind. Cool stories for the scars.Josh Tongue bagged his second five-wicket haul in Tests – expensively (5 for 125 from 30 overs) but got them nonetheless. He finishes the series as England’s leading wicket-taker with 19 despite only playing three matches.Gus Atkinson’s 3 for 127 saw him reach into what, for now, are relatively shallow reserves after two months out with a hamstring injury. He came up with 27 overs more work and a few pearlers to add to the first innings five-for. He restated just how good he is by dismissing India skipper Shubman Gill with the first ball after lunch.Jamie Overton doubled his Test tally with two dismissals – as many County Championship wickets as he has for Surrey this season – while bowling at an average speed of 85mph on day two and three. The sprinkling of 89.5mph bolts offered vindication if it were needed (it was) that his inclusion had some merit.

“In seaming conditions, England committed the cardinal sin of being cut more than they were driven. Such a pitch looked prime for Sam Cook, even Matthew Potts. Both of whom have the hardwired game for these surfaces. And yet neither was even considered worthy of the squad”

It was tough not to feel sorry for them. The dichotomy between batting and bowling was felt keenly on a day like this: the former set 374, the latter dragged for 396. It felt like that most when Washington Sundar conducted the in the stands with his sixes in the final partnership. And across the six drops – two from Harry Brook, two from Zak Crawley, one from Ben Duckett and one from sub-fielder Liam Dawson – which cost 152 all in.”Going through from yesterday knowing we were going to bowl a few overs out there, it was obviously going to be a tough ask for us bowlers, but I thought we stuck at it really well,” Tongue said at stumps.Truthfully, though, the task of marshalling a series decider was always going to be tough on the three replacements. Particularly given the series had acquired so much feeling and narrative over the last two Tests, at Lord’s and Old Trafford, which featured none of them. You think jumping out of moving car is hard, try jumping a moving one.Atkinson and Overton were coming in cold. Tongue returning a month after being parked for Jofra Archer after two Tests. Each would have dealt with their own pressures, and here they were exacerbated as they were thrown in together.Even with Woakes available, there would have been struggle. The 36-year-old had bowled just 68 of his 161 overs across the first four Tests in the second innings. Slack would have had to been picked up.But his experience might have jolted them out of bad habits. The lack of game-time showed with their collective inconsistency, which was leapt upon by Yashasvi Jaiswal to the tune of 118.In seaming conditions, they committed the cardinal sin of being cut more than they were driven: Jaiswal sliced and diced 72 of his first 100 runs behind square on the off side. Such a pitch looked prime for Sam Cook. Even Matthew Potts. Both of whom have the hardwired game for these surfaces. And yet neither were even considered worthy of the squad.England’s careful planning fell apart ahead of the fifth Test•PA Photos/Getty ImagesBut more broadly, the gamest pitch of the series, certainly the one with the pace and bounce England have craved throughout the summer, has been used by the second string. And that, ultimately, feels like a failure of management.The plan at the very start of this five-match series was for enough changes of personnel to keep the prime quicks refreshed throughout. And even with injury to Mark Wood, Olly Stone and, initially, Atkinson, there was enough to shuffle through.Certainly, for instance, enough to not get to a stage where Brydon Carse, a superior hit-the-deck bowler to Tongue, was running on fumes in Manchester after four appearances on the bounce. Though Archer’s return was well-managed, it was hard not to wonder how much joy he would have got on this surface.Perhaps England could have kept a couple in the chamber? It is only this week that Manchester hosted its first positive result across six first-class matches this summer. Of the venues to protect your quicks, particularly having already established a 2-1 lead, maybe that was it? Understandably, the prospect of clutching an outright series win with a game to spare was too enticing.The pitches should get some of the ire. England have bowled on 19 of the 23 days of play so far, sending down at least 50 overs on 12 of them. But the batters haven’t helped. On day two, for instance, having made light work of India’s last four first innings wickets in the morning, the bowlers were back at it just 51.2 overs later.Rotating bowlers is never an exact science, though science does come into it. The ECB tracks overs bowled and bodies to manage their quicks, keeping tabs on things like “red zones” – when workloads reach a point that the likelihood of injury increases.The current era take on that information and are particularly meticulous when it comes to the real five-star pace merchants, like Archer and Wood. By and large, they have moved away from leaning heavily on those metrics in favour of a more personable approach.It gives players more agency over their fitness, which they prefer. What they can play through, what they know they should not.Though you wonder, in a series as big as this, ahead of an Ashes, if a player would wilfully pull themselves out of the firing line? Especially in a team moulded in the image of a captain who needed head coach Brendon McCullum and medical advice to sit out this one. Stepping aside would also risk losing that spot altogether. Ollie Pope almost found out when he handed the No. 3 position to Jacob Bethell for last year’s tour of New Zealand.There are different strands of the multiverse where Woakes does not damage his left shoulder. Or Brook holds onto Jaiswal for 20. Or even Dawson on 40. Or Crawley and Deep on 21 to nip a nightwatcher innings of 66 before it really ate away at the team’s souls.But the one strand of note, the one that got away well before this match begun, was a more considered plan with this attack. It is something they must get right come the Ashes this winter. Lessons should be learned from the last two months.Then again, they will also hope for some blind luck. Just look at India: they possess the one generational quick in the series, and have not won any of the three matches he has played. And they could not be happier with how things have panned out.

Incomplete Australia leave the door ajar as England fight to stay in the Ashes

Several starts hint at tricks in benign surface, but lack of ruthlessness may cost Australia

Andrew McGlashan19-Jul-20231:38

McGlashan: Australia missed the chance to hurt England

Australia are making it harder work than it might have been to clinch the Ashes. On the opening day at Old Trafford they had the chance of leaving England an enormous task, particularly if the poor weather forecast for the weekend proves correct. Instead, they kept leaving the door ajar.Although Pat Cummins said he would have followed Ben Stokes’ route and inserted – perhaps as much because Australia had left out their spinner – as the day unfolded it didn’t feel like a stand-out bowl-first day. Five of the visitors’ top six fell between 32 and 51 and everyone dismissed, bar Usman Khawaja, had reached double figures.Before the match, Khawaja had called it a series in which batters rarely felt completely settled at the crease. “That is England with Dukes balls and weather and conditions,” he said. “In Australia, sometimes you can kind of lock in and feel like I am in now. Whereas here it doesn’t feel like that. Because the ball is always doing enough, nibbling about.”The series runs tally does support that with only three batters – Khawaja, Travis Head and Stokes – having more than 300 now into the fourth Test. However, shortly before tea Australia were 183 for 3 with Marnus Labuschagne and Head building a productive fourth-wicket stand. Labuschagne had just gone to his first half-century of the series – ending his longest run (eight innings) without a fifty in Test cricket – when he managed to miss what was largely a straight delivery from Moeen Ali.A few moments after the break, Head took on Stuart Broad’s short ball and hooked down to long leg where Joe Root held on to an excellent catch. It was Broad’s 600th Test wicket and Australia were now 187 for 5. From there, the stumps total of 299 for 8 could be viewed as not being too bad, but equally it was a day of missed opportunity.Marnus Labuschagne walks off after his dismissal•Clive Mason/Getty Images “It felt like we were so close to turning it there, Heady and I, to getting a really big partnership together and [I was] probably a little bit lazy, trying to turn it to the leg side and Moeen got me,” Labuschagne said. “Think any [total] with a three in front of it is alright. [But] think where we were and how many guys got themselves in, we’d be slightly disappointed with no one getting a big score.”The wicket is a bit two-paced, it’s quite slow…some wickets I’ve played on here are quite quick on day one. Think [with] the thatchiness of the grass, the ball is sitting in the wicket a little bit so you are getting a bit of inconsistent bounce from that. They showed the ball was nipping for a fair bit of the day and Moeen got a few to spin.”The trend of starts not being converted began in the first session when David Warner edged behind against Chris Woakes after a punchy, if not entirely convincing, 32, slightly above his average of the last two-and-a-half years. The ball following Warner’s departure, Steven Smith might have fallen as well when he top-edged a hook, but Mark Wood was in off the rope at long leg and the ball went over his head.Related

Australia wait on misfiring engine-room as Steve Smith, Marnus Labuschagne seek return to normal service

Live Report: England vs Australia, 4th Test, Old Trafford

Woakes' four-for holds together the day for England

James Anderson nears his End-game with a rare point left to prove

After that Smith quickly settled and looked on course to make amends for his light returns at Headingley, which he had partly attributed to the focus on his 100th Test. However, not for the first time in the last couple of weeks, Wood’s pace made the difference when Smith was pinned lbw in the crease, working across a delivery that, against England’s bowlers of lesser speed, he may have played more comfortably into the leg side. A graphic from Sky Sports illustrated the difference the extra eight or nine miles per hour (12-14kph) of Wood made when it came to Smith connecting and missing.When Labuschagne and Head then departed in quick succession, it left Australia’s pair of allrounders – Mitchell Marsh and Cameron Green – needing to perform a repair job in which they were partly successful. The decision to omit offspinner Todd Murphy gave them a very long batting order, and one they may be grateful for.Green, who had struggled to find his best rhythm with the bat before missing Headingley with a niggle, was uncertain, especially against Broad who found movement both ways, but Marsh was as commanding as he had been in his comeback game. He punctured the off side with fierce power and was not afraid to go in the air down the ground against pace and spin. He dominated the sixth-wicket partnership of 65 before Woakes’ double-wicket over, and Jonny Bairstow’s brilliant catch, swung things back England’s way.However, Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc dug in for 18 overs against the old ball, a sign of the opportunity that had been squandered by the top order before Woakes struck again late in the day. As so often in this series, when the players walked off it was hard to know who was really on top. England are still the team that have to make all the moves, but Australia might have left them with an opening to do so.

How Ajaz Patel created history by bagging all 10 in an innings

Here is the ball-by-ball account, and the pictures, of all ten wickets

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Dec-20214:11

Daniel Vettori: ‘Rare’ Ajaz Patel 10-wicket haul is greatest individual feat in NZ Test cricket

Wicket No. 1: Shubman Gill c Ross Taylor b Ajaz Patel 44•BCCI27.3 to Shubman Gill, he’s caught at slip. One ball after a let-off, Gill goes. Ajaz gets a nice loop going on this one too, Gill tries to push-drive from the crease, gets an edge that settles into Ross Taylor’s extremely safe hands at slip. Important breakthrough for New Zealand with India having looked so comfortable. 80/1Wicket No. 2: Cheteshwar Pujara b Ajaz Patel 0•Associated Press29.2 to Cheteshwar Pujara, he’s got him bowled! One ball after a missed stumping he got Gill. One ball after a failed lbw review, he gets Pujara – who has to go for a duck. Pujara coming down the track – he’s rarely ever even beaten coming down the track to a spinner – but this one is flighted perfectly and dips below his bat, spins viciously away from leg stump to knock back off-stump. Pujara has a slightly stunned look as he walks off. 80/2Wicket No. 3: Virat Kohli lbw b Ajaz Patel 0•BCCI29.6 to Virat Kohli, massive appeal for lbw given and Kohli reviews. What an over this is turning out to be for Ajaz. What a spell. This is really close on whether he’s inside edged it or not. The ball is fitting perfectly between bat and pad as he’s on the front foot to defend. One half of the ball is near the inside edge, the other on the pad. And there’s a spike, but is it due to ball hitting bat first or only with ball hitting pad? There doesn’t seem to be conclusive evidence of bat first, though the seam does wobble a bit when it passes the bat. Third umpire says no conclusive evidence of bat first. Ball tracking has it hitting the stumps flush. And that means Kohli has to go for a duck on his return. He has a word with the umpire for a moment before walking off. This match has turned, and how. 80/3Wicket No. 4: Shreyas Iyer c Tom Blundell b Ajaz Patel 18•Associated Press47.4 to Shreyas Iyer, Ajaz provides NZ with another breakthrough. Full, slides in from left-arm around, as opposed to turning away. Ajaz finds some extra bounce to boot. Iyer has an uncertain prod at it, searching for turn, and ends up inside-edging it onto his thigh pad. The ball lobs up to Blundell who collects it cleanly, having fluffed a stumping earlier in the day 160/4Wicket No. 5 Wriddhiman Saha lbw b Ajaz Patel 27•Associated Press71.4 to Wriddhiman Saha, Ajaz has five. Strikes in the first over of the day. This was plumb enough that Saha opts not to review after a brief discussion with Agarwal. This one went with the arm, Saha misread the length and was moving back to cut, it skids on from a length on off and hits him on the knee roll. Replay show that was umpire’s call on impact but was hitting the stumps 224/5Wicket No. 6: R Ashwin b Ajaz Patel 0•Associated Press71.5 to R Ashwin, what a beauty. That is a peach to get first up and nothing much Ashwin can do about it. Ajaz turning things around for New Zealand within an over, once again. Perfectly geometric arc to the ball, Ashwin is a tall man, stretches forward to defend but the loop is perfect so he cant quite get to the pitch, it lands in front, spins just enough to beat bat, but not too much, so it shaves off-stump. Ashwin didn’t realise he was bowled, it was that fine a margin for the spin. Ajaz got it inch-perfect. Ashwin was actually making the signal to review because he thought he’d been given caught behind. 224/6Wicket No. 7: Mayank Agarwal c Tom Blundell b Ajaz Patel 150•BCCI99.5 to Mayank Agarwal, he’s got him. Ajaz on track for the magic ten. Crucial, crucial strike and a great ball to get it. A bit of a misjudgement in length perhaps from Agarwal after exemplary concentration throughout. Ajaz gets this to dip and drift again like he has all through, Agarwal goes on the back foot, but the grip and turn mean his hands follow the ball a bit, just enough to snaffle a thin edge that is well caught by the keeper standing up. The end of a fantastic knock. 291/7Wicket No. 8: Axar Patel lbw b Ajaz Patel 52•BCCI107.5 to Axar Patel, pads up to one outside off, turning in. Ajaz appeals. No shot offered so he can be given lbw. They take the review. He stretched his front leg out a fair way so that has to turn a bit to threaten the stumps. And it is! three reds on the review. Turning enough to take out off stump full. Stunning review from Ajaz, and he has eight now. He can smell that ten-for, as can everyone else. End of an important innings by Axar. 316/8Wicket No. 9: Jayant Yadav c Rachin Ravindra b Ajaz Patel 12•BCCI109.2 to Jayant Yadav, he’s holed out to long-off and Ajaz has nine! We are one step away from history. Jayant looking for quick runs, dances down the track, gets to the pitch too and was hitting with the turn. Right idea perhaps, but wrong execution. Can’t time it well and the ball goes flat. There’s a fielder right there and he gobbles it up. 321/9Wicket No. 10: Mohammed Siraj c Rachin Ravindra b Ajaz Patel 4•BCCI109.5 to Mohammed Siraj, history! Ajaz becomes the third bowler in Test cricket to take all ten. Ajaz Patel has joined Jim Laker and Anil Kumble. Stunning, stunning feat and even the Indian dressing room is applauding. Ajaz roars out and pumps his fist. A Mumbai-born boy, coming to Wankhede and making history. What a moment. This was tossed up on the stumps and Siraj slogged across the line, got a steepling top edge as he sliced it. Hearts in mouths moment as the ball swirls high, but mid-on calmly takes it. Rachin Ravindra the man. The duo that had denied India victory in Kanpur combines for another historic moment. 325/10

Game
Register
Service
Bonus