India end winless spell against New Zealand

Stats highlights from the first ODI between India and New Zealand in Dharamsala, where the home team picked up a six-wicket win

Shiva Jayaraman16-Oct-2016 1 Tom Latham became the first New Zealand batsman to carry his bat through an ODI innings. Latham is only the tenth batsman in ODIs to do. This was Latham’s sixth fifty-plus score, and his first against India, in his first match against them. He has scored four fifties in seven international innings in this tour so far. No other New Zealand batsman has made more than one. 32 Number of fifty-plus scores by Virat Kohli while chasing in day-night ODIs – the second-highest, behind Sachin Tendulkar, who had 34 such scores from 107 innings. Kohli has scored 3801 runs at an average of 69.10 in 70 innings. In day matches, Kohli averages 40.70 while chasing, crossing fifty six times in 22 innings. This was also Kohli’s 38th fifty-plus score in the 92 innings in which he has chased. 5 Number of consecutive ODIs in which India had gone winless against New Zealand before this match. They lost a five-match bilateral series in New Zealand 4-0, with one match ending in a tie. At home, however, this is India’s seventh straight ODI win against New Zealand. Their last loss had come in Cuttack in 2003. 1 Number of batsmen to have got their maiden fifty-plus score in their 100th ODI before Tim Southee. Incidentally, the first one to so was also a New Zealand batsman and against the same opposition: Kyle Mills had got 54 against India in in Christchurch in 2009. Southee’s 55 in this match is the highest by a New Zealand batsman at No. 9 or lower, and only the fifth fifty by them. 3 Number of India players to have won the Man-of-the-Match award on debut before Hardik Pandya. The previous such instance came earlier this year when KL Rahul won the award for his unbeaten century against Zimbabwe. Mohit Sharma and Sandeep Patil are the others to have achieved this for India. 125 Runs added by New Zealand for their last three wickets – their highest in an ODI. They had added 118 for their last three wickets against India in Vadodara in 2010-11, which was their previous highest. 6 Number of lower scores at seven down from which a team has added 100 or more runs for its last hree wickets in an ODI. New Zealand were tottering at 65 for 7 in this match before adding 125 for the last three wickets. The lowest such score came in an ODI involving the same two teams, but on that occasion, India recovered from 43 for 7, only to be bowled for 164 in pursuit of 216. 6 Number of lower scores at which New Zealand have lost their seventh wicket before this match. Their lowest score at seven-down was 32, against Pakistan in Sharjah in 1986. They were eventually bowled out for 64. 3 Number of India bowlers to have taken fewer matches to complete 50 ODI wickets than Amit Mishra. Mishra, who was playing his 32nd ODI, is the quickest India spinner to the landmark, beating R Ashwin, who took 34 matches. Ajit Agarkar (23 ODIs), Mohammad Shami (29) and Irfan Pathan (31) are the bowlers to have taken fewer ODIs than Mishra. 3 Number of India bowlers to have returned better figures on debut than Hardik Pandya’s 3 for 31 in this match. Noel David took 3 for 21 against West Indies in 1997, which are the best. Varun Aaron, who took 3 for 24 against England in 2011-12, and Subroto Bannerjee, who claimed 3 for 30 against West Indies in Perth in 1991-92, are the others ahead of Pandya.

Royals dominate in front of sparse crowd

A small crowd at the Brabourne Stadium saw Rajasthan Royals enjoy conditions similar to Jaipur and Delhi Daredevils let themselves down in the field, time and time again

Amol Karhadkar03-May-2015Ever since the construction of Wankhede Stadium in the 1970s, the Cricket Club of India’s Brabourne Stadium has more or less found itself being sidelined when it comes to hosting top-flight cricket. As much as it has been due to the CCI’s feud with the Mumbai Cricket Association, as responsible has been the lax attitude of its very own members towards hosting big games.A majority of CCI members are in disdain when it comes to staging of major cricket matches since it disrupts their daily routine. They are deprived of their usually set socialising on the club’s greens. Naturally, when the quaint venue staged its first game of the season on Sunday night, it wasn’t a startling sight to see a majority of seats in the historical club house and the members’ stand, a temporary structure, lying vacant.What came as a bit of a surprise was the fact that the club house and members’ enclosure wasn’t an aberration. Almost half the seats in the whole stadium were unoccupied. Perhaps it had something to do with the absence of the home team from Mumbai. And with the match turning out to be yet another one-sided affair, one could virtually count the number of seats that were still occupied, at least in the North Stand.But Rajasthan Royals, who have adopted CCI as their second home for the season, had no reason to complain at the end of the day. The Royals were in fact relieved to have been able to return to winning ways after a drought of five games. Besides Ajinkya Rahane and Karun Nair’s 113-run partnership that set the tone for the night, the Royals had more reasons as well that eventually helped them put one foot in the playoffs.First and foremost, it was the green-top at the CCI. For Royals, it was the closest they could be to Jaipur, their original home. On a grassy and bouncy track at the SMS stadium, the Royals enjoyed an impeccable run.The pitch resulted in change of strategies for both the teams. While Rajasthan Royals went in without a specialist spinner, Delhi Daredevils’ quest to bolster the pace department with Gurinder Sandhu meant Imran Tahir, their highest wicket-taker this season, had to be benched. With the primary wicket-taker out of action, the onus was on the Daredevils pacers to strike early.Zaheer Khan appeared to do that in the third over but neither wicketkeeper Kedar Jadhav nor the umpire heard the nick off Shane Watson’s inside edge. Then on, to keep the pressure on the batsmen, Delhi Daredevils had to restrict the run flow. They couldn’t. As much because of Rahane’s ability to find gaps at will as with butter-fingered fielding.Fielding, they say, is the easiest of three primary skills in cricket. And in Twenty20 cricket, considering the usually low margin of victories, it is more important than in the longer formats. When you drop two regulation catches and continue to leak runs in the field as consistently as Daredevils did, you are bound to let the opposition have a field day.There is no doubt that the Daredevils have one of the lightest fielding units. As if Zaheer and Amit Mishra’s presence doesn’t make them a weak fielding lot, Saurabh Tiwary’s recent inclusion has meant Daredevils have three men who need to be hidden in the field – something that’s virtually impossible with the array of strokes of modern batsmen. All three of them resulted in gifting runs to Royals in the field, with Tiwary also dropping Karun Nair just when he was about to shift gears.But the syndrome wasn’t limited to them. Sandhu, making his IPL debut, misjudged a skier off Rahane’s willow, Jadhav, keeping with a swollen palm, failed to collect a couple that resulted in byes. The energy in the field had reached its nadir by the time Nathan Coulter-Nile, the best fielder, missed a regulation attempt in the deep to concede a boundary in the last over.Besides the two dropped catches in the deep, the Daredevils would have conceded 20 additional runs in the field. Considering the loss margin of 14 runs, the Daredevils would be cursing their butter-fingers for having put them in the soup. It was so bad that the IPL’s 500th match – notwithstanding the six abandoned games – would perhaps be remembered for possibly the worst fielding display ever in the tournament.If the Daredevils were to achieve their highest-ever run chase, they needed a quickfire start and wickets in hand for a late charge. They failed on both counts. In-form openers Mayank Agarwal and Shreyas Iyer couldn’t cope with the slight lateral movement that the Royals pacers managed to garner. And Stuart Binny added insult to the Daredevils’ fielding woes with an amazing catch on the run and timing his dive to perfection at deep square leg to see the back of Yuvraj Singh.This meant that JP Duminy was always going to run short of partners by the time the death overs, the weakest link in the Royals’ IPL 2015 campaign, began. Once he was caught by Dhawal Kulkarni at short fine leg off the last ball of an impressive spell by James Faulkner, while the Royals wore a relieved look, the scarce spectators started their charge towards the gates.Come Thursday and the Royals will be hoping for an equally good performance and a far better turnout.

The end had been coming for Smith

A picture on Instagram, Irish citizenship, a young family and a long time at the helm. There was plenty pointing towards Graeme Smith preparing to call time on his career. It has been an immense one.

Firdose Moonda03-Mar-2014In the next 48 hours, Graeme Smith will represent South Africa for the last time. Three days short of 12 years as an international cricketer – and on the ground where his career started in 2002 – South Africa’s most successful, longest-serving shepherd will leave his flock to tend to themselves.The news has come suddenly and surprisingly, but not entirely shockingly. Anyone who spent teenagehood and beyond doing something they cherished will want to grow up at some point. Smith has come of age through cricket and through captaincy. He has now come out the other side.Smith led South Africa through their most successful period in Test history. They have been on an unbeaten run away from home for almost eight years and have not lost at home in five years. He has been in charge of the top batsman, top bowler and leading all-rounder, all at the same time. He has taken them to No.1 in the world and kept there for 19 months. He has been their talisman and their frontman, a frontman in every way including the literal, opening the batting in difficult conditions and averaging almost 50 as he approaches the end.Many people will not understand why the end should come now but the truth is that it has been coming for some time. Almost a month before the day Smith announced his decision to walk away, he gave his first hint that he would do so. He posted a picture on Instagram of his wife and and two young children with the caption. “Always miss these guys when away!….. last one I promise.” Now we know what that meant.That was a firm sign and one that was discussed on these pages at the time but the indications had been building for a while. Two weeks before that, Smith traveled to Ireland to collect the certificate confirming his citizenship to that country. When it was reported, he assured fans he was not turning his back on South Africa. He tweeted: “I love my country and remain always a loyal South African. Half my family is Irish now and visiting them is easier with dual nationality.”Before that, in December 2013, a story sprouted that Smith had threatened to resign the captaincy over selection issues. He killed that suggestion too. In November 2012, Smith signed a three-year deal with Surrey which he could not fulfill in its first because of an ankle injury. He had to cut short his stay in London, where he had relocated with his young family, and expressed disappointment.Smith’s family is ultimately the reason he has reached this point and we would have known that as early as after the 2011 World Cup. That was his last assignment as ODI captain and he earned the wrath of the public when he did not return home from the tournament with the rest of the team but instead went to Ireland to propose to Morgan Deane. An over-sensitive public loathed her then but soon grew to love her as the woman who turned their captain into a softer, nicer and more laid-back person.With marriage and fatherhood, the other side of Smith emerged. Far from the bubblegum-chewing hard-arse that stared opponents down on the field, Smith allowed his gentle, loving side to come to the fore. The nation grew to adore him in his new role, even when he did not score the runs they wanted.But cricket is a results-driven game and eventually the lack of positive numbers will catch up. Smith has gone eight innings without a half-century, which is not that many especially considering that less than six months ago he scored a double-hundred against Pakistan in challenging conditions against a challenging attack in the UAE. Still, what Mitchell Johnson has done to him in this series has exposed old weaknesses and it seems Smith has had enough of scar tissue being exposed.Not for the first time in his career, Smith will exit in ungainly fashion. South Africa are two days away from the end of the series against Australia, a series which they will have to fight hard to draw. Should they manage that, they would extend their unbeaten run to 15 series. If they do not, it will be the first time since March 2009 that they have been defeated.Either way, it is the end of an era. An era that began and ended in August 2012 when Mark Boucher retired and South Africa became the No.1 ranked Test team. An era that looked more like ending when Jacques Kallis retired after the Boxing Day Test last year. But an era that can be rightly be called the Smith era. It belonged to him and now it’s over.

England played for Armageddon

Having plumbed new depth with a record-low T20 total, England had their supporters running for the hills

Jarrod Kimber23-Sep-2012Harbhajan Singh has been on the outside for a while. So long in fact that he found himself back in Division Two county cricket playing for Essex. His career was not over, but with R Ashwin taking the main job, and players like Pragyan Ojha as backups, it looked like the end for India’s fighter.Harbhajan played five first class games and five List A matches at Essex with varying success. It’s doubtful that in all ten of those games he’d ever seen as many bad shots played against spin as England’s debacle at the Presmadasa.The pitch was ok for spinners. OK. Not anything more. I’ve seen many pitches in Britain that spin far more than this. For England, it was nothing like what they got sliced and diced on in the UAE. And far from the one they fell over on in Galle. But England could barely handle the bat when the spinners came on.They devolved from sensible cricketers to the crazy families you see on the apocalypse preparation shows. Shooting at imaginary invaders and stocking up for the inevitable mushroom cloud or global financial crisis. It wasn’t even one of the obvious players that ended their world. Piyush Chawla is the player Indian fans abuse when they’re tired of abusing Rohit Sharma.To most of us, these looked like standard non-lethal spinners, to England they were the black plague, and they ran madly towards the hills with canned food and shot guns.It was as bad a batting performance as England have mustered, on a fairly benign surface against a new bowling attack without their oldest and most reliable bowler and their best T20 weapon.This is the same Indian bowling attack that has the Indian media in a permanent state of panic. Some wanting four bowlers, some five, some eleven. Tonight they dismissed England with three as easily as you like, a few nights back they couldn’t get close to Afghanistan.You need a research grant and a team of technicians to look into who played the worst shot. Alex Hales didn’t even wait for the spinners. Eoin Morgan’s cut shot was to a different ball on a different pitch. Craig Kieswetter’s flick-waft should be burned before any child gets a chance to see it. Jonny Bairstow’s slog against the wrong’un defied science. Jos Buttler backed away so far he was at the SSC when he missed his ball. Graeme Swann went for a wander. And Tim Bresnan brought back memories of England’s horror winter with a top-edged sweep.All this while Kevin Pietersen was stuck in a studio with a grin stapled to his face while Dermot Reeve threw a ball at him.It’s impossible to believe England played this badly, and yet we’ve seen it all before. In their minds, England seemed to be playing on a ghost pitch from their past and not the quicker-than-everyone-thought pitches that are actually being prepared.There are no dead rubbers for a while now and far bigger killers than Harbhajan and Chawla lurk around the corner. Unless England learn to swim against the spin, their fans are the ones who should be heading to the store to buy all the canned food they can carry.

An understated rivalry

An intriguing contest has built up between India and South Africa, with the intensity found on the field of play rather than in the stands

Dileep Premachandran05-Feb-2010With so few teams in the fray at the highest level, cricket suffers in comparison to other sports when it comes to rivalries. The Ashes, with more than a century of history and tradition, has retained its hallowed status, while other head-to-head contests have ebbed and flowed with the passage of time. For four decades, from the time that Sir Frank Worrell’s side captivated Australia in 1960-61, the tussle for the trophy that came to bear his name was often memorable and fiercely fought. Then, the West Indies went into decline, and the lustre was lost.There was never a shortage of spice when India or Pakistan played England, with those of subcontinental origin spectacularly failing the Tebbitt Test at venues like Headingley and The Oval. There was more than a bit of the coloniser-versus-colonised about those contests, and Indian and Pakistani victories (1986 and 1992, in particular) saw some chips drop off a few shoulders.The unlikeliest rivalry to take shape in recent times though has been that between India and Australia. Long before Monkeygate, Sydney, Steve Bucknor and alleged planes on the tarmac, there had been some needle. Australia’s golden generation of the 1970s never toured India, and the complaints of their predecessors about the hardships of touring are still raised each time there’s a flashpoint.At some point in the 1990s, around the time that the West Indies started to fade, India started figuring out how to play Australia. And while others continued to be swept away by the baggy-green tide, the Indians stood their ground. Apart from one disastrous tour in 1999-2000, ruined by appalling selection as much as anything else, India have fought Australia to a standstill on more than one occasion.There are intriguing facets to these Indo-Australian jousts. One country has produced the finest cricketers and teams, from the days of Spofforth, through Trumper, Armstrong, Bradman and the Chappells, to Ponting. The other has the world’s largest captive audience for the game. India’s fascination with Twenty20 cricket and the lack of passion for the longer version of the game is often overstated. There were capacity crowds for the Ranji Trophy final in Mysore, which suggests that the board needs to think again about where it schedules games in future.But what of India and South Africa? In the early days, there were no cricketing ties, with India playing a prominent role in the justified isolation of apartheid South Africa. After Nelson Mandela walked out of Victor Verster Prison in Paarl in February 1990, it was the Indian board that helped accelerate South African cricket’s return to the international fold. Without the BCCI championing the United Cricket Board’s cause, it’s unlikely that Kepler Wessels’ side would have played, and made such an impact, at the World Cup in 1992.The bilateral series that followed was characterised by some bland safety-first cricket, and decided by the pace and fury of Allan Donald at Port Elizabeth. Wessels’ bat made contact with Kapil Dev’s shin after the controversial “Mankaded” dismissal of Peter Kirsten, but even that incident created nothing like the sort of animosity seen after Sydney.India seldom did themselves justice in the southern cape, and it took a long time for the South African public to think of them as a half-decent side. Even when individuals dazzled, as Sachin Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin did in Cape Town (1996), the collective showing was dismal. That, of course, was the tour in which India made 100 and 66 in Durban.Even on Indian soil, the South Africans found ways to be competitive. But for a splendid spell from Javagal Srinath at Motera in the first Test of the ’96-’97 series, Cronje’s side might have walked away with series honours. Gary Kirsten’s resolute batting had set the stage for a mammoth win at the Eden Gardens and the visitors had shown that even without a great spinner in the ranks, their pace bowlers had the nous to adjust and even thrive on slow-and-low pitches.By their next tour, with Donald once again rampant, the pace men had perfected their subcontinent strategy. Having prevailed in a tense contest at the Wankhede in Mumbai – a pitch that was given the wire-brush treatment, no less – they were far too good for India in Bangalore. It should have gone down in the annals as one of South Africa’s greatest triumphs – no team had won in India since Pakistan edged a series by 16 runs in 1987 – but instead it was obscured by the match-fixing scandal that claimed prominent victims on both sides of the divide.The Mike Denness affair cast a pall over India’s subsequent tour of South Africa, though once again the hosts were far too good out on the field. It was only three years ago, on a Wanderers pitch that Mickey Arthur had reckoned would be tailor-made for his quicks, that India’s cricketers finally went some distance towards solving the puzzle. Sreesanth’s pelvic thrusts with bat-in-hand might be the memorable image from that game, but it was his outswing bowling that saw South Africa routed for just 84 in the first innings. It was a series that hung in the balance right up to the final session, when Jacques Kallis’ composure and poise saw the home side home in the shadow of Table Mountain.South Africa will be tested by Indian spin, but keeping the camp harmonious will be as much of a challenge•AFPZaheer Khan’s tussles with Graeme Smith formed a fascinating sub-text to that series, and Smith’s revival in the final three innings played a huge part in his team’s come-from-behind victory. The return series in India was shared, with both sides winning convincingly in contrasting conditions. South Africa bowled India out for 76 on a well-grassed pitch in Ahmedabad, and were then at the receiving end of a spin ambush in Kanpur. But while the matches were hard-fought and the South Africans were none too happy with the Green Park surface, there was an absence of the malice that had taken the sheen off India’s series in Australia.Even three years ago, neither of these sides would have imagined that they would leave Australia in the shade, at least as far as the rankings are concerned. South Africa came back from hopeless positions at both Perth and Melbourne to win the series, but then discovered that climbing to the top was a lot easier than staying there. Australia continued with their tradition of handing out beatings to South Africa in the Cape, and the ordinary run continued against England later in the year.India, in contrast, have built on the confidence engendered by a comprehensive home series win against the Australians. England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have been defeated since, and the manner in which they fought back to draw games at Napier and Ahmedabad was indicative of the belief that courses through the ranks. Already without Rahul Dravid, they might be deprived of VVS Laxman’s services as well, but those that take their places are unlikely to freeze in the face of a pace barrage.South Africa will be tested by Indian spin, but keeping the camp harmonious will be as much of a challenge. Makhaya Ntini, the team’s lone black icon, is fading, and it’ll be intriguing to see if politics plays much of a part in team selection over the next fortnight. Transformation certainly has provided benefits, with Hashim Amla, blooded on the tour here in 2004, now established as an integral part of the top order.These two teams spent more than a decade in Australia’s shadow, and it’ll be fascinating to see which of them is best equipped to try and cling to the top branches. Both have a battle-hardened core, and youngsters with huge potential. What neither has yet discovered is the ruthlessness that was the hallmark of the great West Indian and Australian sides. Natural allies less than two decades ago, and still great friends at board level, the players must now focus on a new rivalry. For decades now, the sight of the green Pakistani or Australian cap was enough to fire up those in India blue. Now the endeavour will be to be similarly aroused by a different shade of green.In recent times, clashes with Australia and Pakistan have been marred by distressing levels of jingoism. That’s unlikely to be the case here, with the intensity found on the field of play rather than in the stands. Given that the alternate appears to be monkey noises or chants of “Pakistan hai hai”, it’s perhaps better that way.

Rashid Khan set for comeback after back surgery

Rashid Khan has been named in Afghanistan’s squad for the upcoming Ireland T20Is, meaning he has now fully recovered from the back injury and subsequent surgery that has kept him out of action since the 2023 World Cup.Rashid had missed stints at the Big Bash League, the SA20, and Afghanistan’s assignments against UAE, India, Sri Lanka and now the Test and ODIs against Ireland due to the injury. He had travelled with the squad to India in January, but at that point was not yet good to go. His team-mate Ibrahim Zadran had said then: “He is not totally fit, but is travelling with the team. We hope that he gets fit as soon as we expect him to. He’s doing his rehab with the doctor, and we will miss him in the series.”Rashid had been Afghanistan’s leading wicket-taker at the ODI World Cup, with 11 wickets. If he can slot in here and hit the ground running, that will be good news for Afghanistan as they prepare for the next big global assignment: the T20 World Cup in the USA and West Indies in June. It will also be good news for Gujarat Titans, whom Rashid represents at the IPL. Titans open their IPL 2024 campaign on March 24.Getty Images

In another big boost to their spin attack, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who was recovering from a right phalanx sprain, also returns.Uncapped allrounder Ijaz Ahmad Ahmadzai features in the 15, as does Mohammad Ishaq, who debuted in the T20Is against Sri Lanka in February. Left-arm spinner Nangeyalia Kharote, who starred on debut in the third ODI of the ongoing tour, looks set for a T20I debut as well. Also in the squad is opening batter Sediqullah Atal, who last played for Afghanistan at the Asian Games in October.Afghanistan host Ireland for three T20Is in this series in Sharjah, on March 15, 17 and 18. Afghanistan had won the preceding ODIs 2-0, while Ireland had registered their maiden Test win in the one-off Test match.

Afghanistan squad for Ireland T20Is

Rashid Khan (capt), Ibrahim Zadran, Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), Sediqullah Atal, Ijaz Ahmad Ahmadzai, Mohammad Ishaq (wk), Mohammad Nabi, Nangeyalia Kharote, Azmatullah Omarzai, Noor Ahmad, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Wafadar Momand, Fareed Ahmad, Naveen-ul-Haq, Fazalhaq Farooqi

Bangladesh rest Mahmudullah for Ireland ODIs

The selectors have also dropped Shamim Hossain and Taijul Islam from the squad

Mohammad Isam12-Mar-2023The Bangladesh selectors have rested Mahmudullah for the first two ODIs against Ireland, saying that they want to see other players given a chance at the highest level. Mahmudullah, a veteran of 218 ODIs who has retired from Tests and is no longer part of Bangladesh’s T20I plans, scored 71 runs in the three ODIs against England earlier this month.”Mahmudullah is rested. We have given the others a platform to do well at the highest level. Zakir has been doing well. Shoriful is returning due to his full fitness. This is actually the easiest time to see everyone’s form in a World Cup year,” BCB chief selector Minhajul Abedin said.The selectors have also dropped Shamim Hossain and Taijul Islam from the squad, bringing in the batters Zakir Hasan and Yasir Ali, the left-arm spinner Nasum Ahmed and left-arm quick Shoriful Islam.Zakir made a debut Test hundred against India while Yasir has been in the white-ball setup since early 2022. Nasum is a like-for-like replacement for Taijul, while Shoriful Islam could be included to cover for a slightly off form Mustafizur Rahman.Tamim Iqbal will lead the side with Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim among the seniors. Litton Das and Najmul Hossain Shanto will bat in the top order with Tamim, but there’s competition for middle-order places. Afif Hossain, Towhid Hridoy and Yasir will all be competing for one or two spots.Taskin Ahmed will lead the pace attack with two out of Hasan Mahmud, Ebadot Hossain and Shoriful likely to be picked. Mehidy Hasan Miraz will be handly with his offspin and batting at No 8, leaving Nasum Ahmed as the backup spin option in his hometown Sylhet.Ireland have already arrived in Sylhet on Sunday. They will play a practice match on March 15, before the ODI series will be held in the same venue, Sylhet, on March 18, 20 and 23.IN: Yasir Ali, Nasum Ahmed, Shoriful Islam, Zakir HasanOUT: Shamim Hossain, Taijul Islam, MahmudullahBangladesh squad: Tamim Iqbal (capt), Litton Das, Najmul Hossain Shanto, Shakib Al Hasan, Mushfiqur Rahim, Afif Hossain, Yasir Ali, Towhid Hridoy, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Nasum Ahmed, Taskin Ahmed, Ebadot Hossain, Mustafizur Rahman, Hasan Mahmud, Shoriful Islam, Zakir Hasan

Jose Mourinho gets his man! West Ham star set to sign for Fenerbahce

Jose Mourinho's Fenerbahce are reportedly set to sign an out of favour West Ham star on loan with an option to buy.

Fenerbahce eye West Ham aceSet to sign for Mourinho's sideInitial loan with option to buyFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to Fabrizio Romano, Fenerbahce are set to recruit Edson Alvarez on loan for the season; plus, there is a buy option clause. He adds the West Ham midfielder will fly to Turkey today (Thursday) for medical tests.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

West Ham forked out £35 million ($47m) to sign the Mexican international just two years ago but it seems he is not part of head coach Graham Potter's plans. Romano adds that Fenerbahce manager Mourinho was keen on bringing him to the Super Lig outfit, and that has played a factor in the potential switch. The Hammers' midfield looked old and slow compared to Sunderland's in their 3-0 loss last weekend and it seems Alvarez is not the answer to those problems.

DID YOU KNOW?

Since swapping Ajax for West Ham, the 27-year-old has scored two goals and added three assists in 73 appearances in all competitions. He has predominantly played as a defensive midfielder but he has also been utilised in central midfield and once at centre-back.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

With Alvarez seemingly heading off to Turkey, it remains to be seen if Potter's West Ham will sign a new defensive midfielder, or another midfielder for that matter, before the summer transfer window shuts on September 1.

Rain threat looms over RCB-CSK clash in Bengaluru

The match between RCB and CSK in Bengaluru on Saturday will decide the final playoff spot

Ashish Pant17-May-2024The weather in Bengaluru could impact the crucial IPL 2024 match between Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) and Chennai Super Kings (CSK) on Saturday night.It’s a game that will likely decide the final qualifier for the playoffs, but it’s not impossible that the game could be affected by rain.The Indian Meteorological Department has said “heavy rain/thundershowers associated with gusty winds (40-50kph) are very likely” in some parts of Bengaluru on May 18.Related

What RCB did right after it began so horribly wrong

The RCB vs CSK virtual knockout could be the game of the season, weather permitting

Hussey hopes Dhoni keeps going for 'another couple of years'

IPL 2024 scenarios – RCB vs CSK for final playoff spot

The city has received consistent rainfall over the last couple of weeks after a spell of uncharacteristically hot weather. While it was relatively dry on May 15 and 16, central Bengaluru, where the M Chinnaswamy Stadium is located, had overnight rain that continued into the morning on Friday. It was cloudy all morning on the eve of the match and the forecast had rain and thunderstorms in the evening. But, as it turned out, the promised rain did not arrive with the clouds giving way to relatively clear skies in the evening. Both the teams had long nets sessions without any disruptions.The forecast for Saturday does not look promising either with accuweather.com saying there could be thunderstorms in parts of Bengaluru, accompanied by showers, in the evening. The temperature around 7.30pm, the match start time, is expected to be around 23°C with a 100% cloud cover.

“We don’t try to bring up things that we don’t have control over. It’s another game for us to push for a playoffs spot and we’re really looking ahead to the challenge against a very good team tomorrow”Dwayne Bravo

It should be noted that the Chinnaswamy Stadium has an excellent drainage system. It is one of the few grounds in India with a subsurface aeration system, which allows play to begin 30 minutes after rain stops.A washout will end RCB’s chances of making the playoffs. Having lost seven of their first eight games, they have won five matches in a row to remain in contention. They currently have 12 points and a net run-rate of 0.387, while CSK are on 14 with an NRR of 0.538. To go past CSK’s NRR and make it to the playoffs, assuming a score of 200, RCB need to beat CSK by 18 runs or chase down the target with about 11 balls to spare. A truncated game will make that task tougher.For CSK, the equation is simple: a win, a washout, or even a narrow defeat is enough for them to join Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR), Rajasthan Royals (RR) and Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) in the final four.”The weather and these kind of things we don’t have control over,” Dwayne Bravo, the CSK bowling coach, said on the eve of the game. “We don’t try to bring up things that we don’t have control over. It’s another game for us to push for a playoffs spot and we’re really looking ahead to the challenge against a very good team tomorrow.”

Rio Ferdinand's son signs first professional contract with Premier League side

Rio Ferdinand's son Lorenz has signed a professional deal with Brighton after spending time in non-league football with Havant & Waterlooville.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Lorenz signs contract with Brighton
  • Made Premier League 2 debut in January
  • Has progressed through Seagulls' academy
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Ferdinand's son Lorenz joined Brighton as an under-13 player and has risen through the ranks steadily, making his Premier League 2 debut in January before playing in a senior match for the first time while on loan with non-league outfit Havant & Waterlooville in April.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    A goalkeeper and Rio's eldest son, Lorenz kept two clean sheets in six appearances in the Southern League towards the backend of last season. He sits among a raft of promising shot-stoppers on the south coast, with European Under-21 Championship winner James Beadle on the Albion's books alongside Carl Rushworth, who has spent time on loan with Walsall, Lincoln, Swansea and Hull.

  • WHAT WAS SAID

    Speaking after 13 youngsters penned for first pro deals, Brighton academy manager Ian Buckman said: "We’re pleased to see this cohort of players sign their first professional contracts here, with a number of them at the club from a very young age.

    "All of them have already had some form of experience with the under-21s, while a few have been involved with the first team.

    "We look forward to them continuing their careers with us and helping them develop over the coming years."

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Rio is a six-time Premier League winner with United, also claiming the 2008 Champions League on his way to becoming a Red Devils legend.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus