Morkel's misfortune, and an exchange lost in translation

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the third day of the second Test between South Africa and Sri Lanka at Durban

Firdose Moonda28-Dec-2011Misfortune of the day
Morne Morkel should have had a wicket with his fourth ball of the morning when he induced Kumar Sangakkara to drive. A healthy outside edge found its way to Graeme Smith at first slip who waited for Mark Boucher to dive to his right and attempt to grasp it from out of his range. The result was the two senior men looking at each other in horror as the ball went between them. Morkel was distraught and Sangakkara went on to score a fluent 108, which could well take the match out of South Africa’s hands.Shot of the day
Sangakkara made the most of his lifeline and played a series of sublime strokes, none more majestic than the upper cut off Marchant de Lange. He tried to butter Sangakkara up with a few short balls but then offered him too much width. Sangakkara accepted by stepping onto his tippy toes, arching his back and slapping the ball over the slip caudon, who could only watch and admire.Breakthrough of the day
Sri Lanka went about their business of building a sizeable lead in fairly quiet fashion. Sangakkara and Thilan Samaraweera had put on 94 runs together and both looked in control when Imran Tahir ended their stand. He slipped in a slider, which deceived Samaraweera – usually a confident and competent player of spin – and snuck off the inside edge onto his stumps. Tahir’s manic charge around the field that normally follows a wicket became a more subdued run towards Mark Boucher as short-lived relief passed through the South African camp. Words of the day
When Sri Lanka’s lead crossed the 400 mark and South Africa’s weary attack looked no closer to taking a wicket, one would have thought they would have had nothing to say. But Dale Steyn had something to get off his chest and he let Dinesh Chandimal know in the same over the young wicketkeeper had taken a boundary off him courtesy of AB de Villiers’ overthrows. Steyn bowled a few short balls and gave Chandimal a verbal working over. It turns out it may all have been wasted because Chandimal doesn’t speak much English.

Insouciant and insane

The ball may have gone for six, it may have gone to hand – King Kris cared not a bit

Ruchir Joshi25-Nov-2008

The mad Tamilian opener who seemed to enjoy facing Andy Roberts and Joel Garner, in action in the 1983 World Cup final© Getty Images
At lunch on the third day of the Karachi Test in January 2006, with India two down and staring down the barrel, I sent off a text message to some Indian and Pakistani friends: “Forty-two runs in nine overs. I don’t see a problem, do you?” [India were chasing 607 in the fourth innings]Though Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman were still batting, to imply not only that India would save the match – not such an outlandish possibility – but actually scoot up the vertical mountain-face and win it, was the equivalent of the grinning refusal of the blindfold before the firing squad. It was facetious, but only just so. Had the score at that point been 42 for 0, with Rahul Dravid playing bass to Virender Sehwag’s heavy lead guitar, even Pakistani supporters might have been a tad tense if not quite sending out their own pre-seppuku one-liners.I can trace being able to think like this at all to the doings of one man: Krishnamachari Srikkanth. It wasn’t as if there hadn’t been hard hitters before Srikkanth, even in the ranks of Indian batsmen, most of whom swore by the God called “Along the Ground”. MAK Pataudi had re-introduced to Indian batting the heretical art of deliberately lofting the ball; Farokh Engineer was always busy and burly; Brijesh Patel, Sandeep Patil, and the Palmolive , Kapil Dev, were all known to be able to hit a ball pretty hard; even SM Gavaskar (the most parsimonious of them all, especially with wasteful energy) had a square-cut with which you wanted to avoid anything close and personal. Outside India, you had thick-shouldered Pakistanis, beefy Englishmen and beefier Aussies, all of whom could send the ball a long way pretty damn quickly.And then you had those other guys. The other guys comprised a team in which a man called Gordon Greenidge was not the hardest hitter of the cricket ball, or even the second-hardest – that was Clive Lloyd – but the third. By the time I started paying attention to cricket after a five-year hiatus (things such as America and girls having obscured my true calling, which was to sit endlessly before a green-screened TV set) I had only heard of this demon called Viv Richards and how he had brought great fast bowlers to the point of tears. The moment I turned my attentions properly back to cricket was when this Richards fellow hit a high ball at Lord’s, and this Kapil Dev fellow sprinted around to pull off a pretty impossible catch. Among other things, the catch then allowed Kapil to replace the ball in his hands with the World Cup.I watched many replays of that final from the safe shore of victory, and it was then that I began paying attention to the “other things” that contributed to victory. One of them was this mad Tamilian opener who seemed to enjoy facing Andy Roberts and Joel Garner in a cauldron divided between roaring Afro-Caribs and . As I followed him on TV, I saw that he also found Australian quicks quite tasty, and Imran Khan and Mudassar Nazar downright yummy, whether on Australian tracks or a first-hour Eden pitch.With Srikkanth there was no sense that this was anything but a very enjoyable game he was playing; that, if it bored him, he was capable of turning from the stumps and just keeping on walking, past the square-leg umpire, past the boundary and out of the groundAs an Indian fan, watching King Kris gave me an exhilaration no batsman had before and few have since. I don’t remember statistics and I don’t even want to dwell on specific matches. What I still hold precious is the sheer, violent poetry of the moment KS hit the ball. The stance was one of the widest in world cricket: almost like a slip fielder standing with pads on, and holding, for some odd reason, a bat in his hand. The movement could be minimal or those feet could blur; he had footwork to go with the eye-hand, but he often didn’t need it. The bat did what for the time were very strange things: slashes, jabs, exhibition swordplay; a lot of the time it was kris-kross, but then it would suddenly become straight, scything down two cover fielders long-distance or turning long on into L-O-N-D-O-N statue!After the ball – hit, miss, or near-dismissal – the ritual would always be a long walk away from the stumps towards square leg, as if that was his invisible home base, just as the bowler’s is the starting marker. He would return to the crease, never with reluctance but always with the air that he was there only momentarily, to dispatch the silly distraction of a delivery before walking away again to whatever was really occupying him.With Srikkanth it is the memory of an attitude, a certain taste of confidence in the mouth, that stays. Of course, he got out in some terrible dismissals – first over with nothing on the board, or just when he looked like taking the team through to a sure win – but the chief trace he left behind for me was that of an unstoppable, cheerfully whirring energy turbine of optimism. No matter what the situation, at the start of the bowler’s run-up there was no question who this man backed – the bowler, unless he got very lucky, was basically . In this, King Kris was the first of a kind for India, but, simultaneously, in another sense, he was perhaps the last of a kind as well.When Tendulkar arrived, he came heavily mediated not only by television but also by advertising – the guy has been a ham actor for almost as long as he has been a great batsman, and when you see him you see all of that attaching itself to him, the Shahrukhs, the Pepsi bottles; tied to his back is the monster radial-belted tyre of his extra-cricketing persona. When you see Tendulkar, or Sehwag, you see a two-legged industry that also happens to bat beautifully. With Srikkanth there was no sense that this was anything but a very enjoyable game he was playing; that, if it bored him, he was capable of turning from the stumps and just keeping on walking, past the square-leg umpire, past the boundary and out of the ground. Even in those days it was not something you saw very often. As for now and the future, I doubt we’ll ever see that spirit again.

'Prepare your family' – Ian Wright reveals advice over racism after revealing he would still take a knee if playing today

Ian Wright has weighed in on the Lionesses' decision to no longer take the knee before matches, expressing that, had he still been an active player, he would consider continuing the act as a personal symbol of standing against racism. The former England and Arsenal striker emphasised that taking the knee should always have been an individual choice rather than a mandated team action.

  • Jess Carter suffered racial abuse
  • Received severe online hate
  • Lionesses will not take knee anymore
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Wright’s remarks came in light of recent events surrounding England defender Jess Carter, who became the target of racist abuse following her performance in the Lionesses' UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 quarter-final win over Sweden. The player disclosed that she had faced a surge of racist attacks on social media after the match and has since made the decision to step away from online platforms temporarily.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    In response to the abuse suffered by Carter and broader discussions within the squad, the England women's team confirmed they would no longer perform the symbolic kneel before games. The players released a collective statement, declaring that it was "clear we and football need to find another way to tackle racism." They stressed their intent to adopt a new approach, one that fosters genuine dialogue and actionable change.

  • WHAT WRIGHT SAID

    Ahead of England's semi-final win over Italy, Wright returned to ITV’s pundit panel and addressed the significance of the knee and how it had evolved since first gaining prominence in football after the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020.

    "Firstly I think the decision to take the knee should have been a person thing, if you want to take it," Wright said. "I think it was always forced on people, for me, if I was playing now, for everything the knee represents, if we think of justice and equality of everything that goes with it, I think I would still take the knee.

    "But in respects of Jess, the priority is she is ok and has the support around her but for me, I have said everything I can over the years in terms of racism and what it means and what it does and nothing gets any better. What I would say now is prepare your children, prepare your family, make them resilient because it is going to continue to come. People say that is negative, it isn't they are winning and have been winning and will continue to win, I would urge people to build resilience against it. We can't stop it, it is always going to happen."

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR ENGLAND?

    As Wright and others continue to advocate for awareness, respect, and resilience, the hope remains that football will evolve beyond symbolic gestures and toward real, lasting transformation. Meanwhile, Sarina Wiegman's troops are just a step away from successfully defending their Euro 2022 crown after they beat Italy 2-1 in the last four. They will now face the winners of Spain and Germany on Sunday at St. Jakob-Park.

Rohit, bowlers break SL's winning streak to put India in final

On a surface where India picked three frontline spinners and lost all ten of their wickets to spin for the first time in ODIs, it was the quality of their fast bowlers that made the telling difference. Defending 214, India had Sri Lanka three down before bowling a single ball of spin, and that had repercussions that rippled through the rest of the game.Dhananjaya de Silva and Dunith Wellalage brought Sri Lanka’s equation down to 52 from 82 balls with a partnership of brisk partnership of 63 but crucially in the context of this game the stand came with very little batting to follow. Even as their spinners struggled to exert control over this pair, India knew that one wicket would open up the lower order.When India did so, they wrapped up a 41-run win, a misleading margin in a contest full of tension, also sealing a place in the Asia Cup final while ending Bangladesh’s chances. Sri Lanka’s winning streak ended at 13 ODIs, but Wellalage, all of 20 and playing just his 13th ODI, remained proudly undefeated at the finish. He was unbeaten having top-scored with a fluent and precociously composed 42, and it was his less significant contribution to the match; he had looked unplayable at times while taking his maiden five-for earlier in the day, each of his victims a member of India’s top six.The match was played on a different pitch to the India-Pakistan game, with far less grass cover, and India altered their attack in the clear expectation of turn. But it took until the 12th over of the game for evidence of just how much – and how unpredictable – the turn would be, as India’s openers followed up back-to-back century stands with a brisk partnership of 80. Rohit Sharma dominated the stand, hitting a flurry of boundaries including four fours off Dasun Shanaka in the tenth over and a straight six off Kasun Rajitha in the seventh that took him past 10,000 ODI runs.Dunith Wellalage struck in each of his first three overs•AFP/Getty Images

Maheesh Theekshana had bowled inside the powerplay but it took the introduction of a traditional fingerspinner for the nature of the pitch to become clear. It was immediate, with Wellalage getting his first ball to dip on Shubman Gill and turn past his outside edge to hit off stump. By his third over, Wellalage had sent back all of India’s top three. The balls that got him his second and third wickets showed how challenging the surface was: the first stopped on Virat Kohli to have him caught off an uppish flick, and the second skidded through low, with the angle, to bowl Rohit for 53 off 48 balls.Ishan Kishan and KL Rahul steadied India with a fourth-wicket stand of 63, and it seemed, at 154 for 3 in the 30th over, that they were on course for at least 250. But Rahul fell to another ball that stuck in the pitch, followed by Kishan failing to get the desired elevation while looking to hit Charith Asalanka over short extra-cover. Wellalage then struck a critical blow with the last ball of his spell, finding sharp turn to have Hardik Pandya caught behind while defending, leaving India needing to squeeze every drop from their extra batting depth, with the inclusion of Axar Patel at No. 8.

Asia Cup final – India and… who?

India have reached the Asia Cup final with their fixture against Bangladesh left to play after registering back-to-back wins over Pakistan and Sri Lanka. They have thereby also knocked Bangladesh out of contention.

The winner of the Pakistan vs Sri Lanka game on Thursday will meet India in the final, and in case of an abandonment (there is no reserve day) or tie (in case there is no time for a Super Over following a tie), Sri Lanka, by virtue of a superior net run-rate, will qualify for the final ahead of Pakistan.

It wasn’t quite to be, even as Axar struck an important 26, with the part-time offspin of Asalanka claiming 4 for 18 in nine overs either side of a brief rain delay, in the clearest indication of how this pitch was playing.Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj took the new ball from each end in India’s defense, and the the difference in quality between these two and Sri Lanka’s injury-hit pace attack was quickly evident, with the scorecard reading 25 for 3 inside the eighth over. Both found swing, but more significant was the movement and bounce they extracted by hammering away on the shorter side of a good length.There was Bumrah’s genius too. To Kusal Mendis, he followed a searing, stump-bound yorker with a dipping slower delivery of similar length and wider line. With lbw in the back of his mind and his front leg wary of moving across his stumps, Mendis reached for the ball and spooned one to short cover.Asalanka and Sadeera Samarawickrama brought Sri Lanka back with a 43-run stand for the fourth wicket, before Kuldeep Yadav, fresh off a five-wicket haul against Pakistan, made his first incision. Having largely bowled his usual stump-to-stump line early on, he went wider and found sharp turn to stump a charging, flailing Samarawickrama.Kuldeep and wicketkeeper Rahul then combined again to have Asalanka caught off the glove while sweeping, before de Silva and Shanaka staged a minor recovery. Ravindra Jadeja ended that partnership, changing ends and finding extra turn to have Shanaka caught at slip, and that ball illustrated his threat perfectly: he was getting some balls to turn and others to go with the angle from roughly the same area, while delivering with more or less the same release.Axar, however, was struggling to replicate this two-way threat: he barely got anything to turn against his angle from wide of the crease, and de Silva in particular milked him. Axar finished with 0 for 29 in five overs.De Silva and Wellalage continued to score quickly even after Axar’s removal from the attack, and began to play shots that may have worried India considerably. De Silva punched Bumrah crisply off the back foot for four behind point, and in the next over Wellalage slog-swept Kuldeep for the first six of the innings. By the end of that over, the 33rd, the seventh-wicket pair had put on 49 in 47 balls.But after four quiet overs of only nine runs from Bumrah, Hardik and Jadeja, Wellalage stepped out to drill Jadeja past mid-off for four, however de Silva couldn’t execute the same over mid-on, and India had their opening. Hardik then sent Theekshana back with a slower ball, and the end followed swiftly. Kuldeep bowled Kasun Rajitha with a wrong’un that was too good for a No. 10 before Matheesha Pathirana missed a sweep two balls later.Wellalage remained stuck at the other end watching this unfold, a fate that can often befall No. 8s. On the evidence of his innings, though, he won’t be batting there for much longer, and when Wanindu Hasaranga returns from injury, Sri Lanka will have one hell of a selection headache.

بتحديد الأندية.. مواعيد مباريات الأهلي الودية في تونس

كشفت قناة النادي الأهلي، عن الأندية التي من المقرر مواجهة الفريق خلال معسكر المارد الأحمر المقبل في تونس، استعدادًا للموسم الجديد، ومواعيد المباريات.

واستقر النادي الأهلي على خوض معسكر إعدادي للموسم الجديد، بإقامته في تونس، وسيخوض 3 مباريات ودية.

وقال محمد سعيد مقدم برنامج “التريند” المذاع على قناة الأهلي”: “الفريق سيخوض في معسكر تونس، ويلعب ثلاثة مباريات ودية، يوم 21 و 25 و 28 يوليو من الشهر الجاري”.

وأضاف: “بنسبة 100% يوجد مبارتان تم الاستقرار عليهما، شباب قسنطينة يوم 21 والنجم الساحلي التونسي يوم 28 في ختام معسكر الاعدادي ستقام على ملعب سوسة”.

وتابع: “المباراة الثانية التي مقرر لها يوم 25 يوليو، لم يتم الاستقرار على اسم الفريق”.

طالع | لاعب الأهلي يحصل على الاستغناء ويرحل مجانًا مواعيد مباريات الأهلي الودية في تونس

الأهلي ضد شباب قسنطينة الجزائري، يوم 21 يوليو 2025.

الأهلي ضد النجم الساحلي، يوم 28 يوليو 2025.

فريق النادي الأهلي، مازال في فترة راحة سلبية منذ العودة بعد المشاركة في بطولة كأس العالم للأندية التي أنهى مشاركته فيها بعد الخروج من دور المجموعات باحتلاله المركز الرابع والأخير في المجموعة الأولى برصيد نقطتين.

ومن المقرر أن يستأنف الأهلي تدريباته بعد الراحة، يوم الأحد 13 يوليو، استعدادًا للموسم الجديد.

يذكر، أن الترجي والإفريقي التونسيين، أعلنا عدم وجود أي اتفاقيات لخوض مباريات ودية ضد النادي الأهلي خلال معسكر الفريق الأحمر بتونس.

SA20 teams given R39.1 million salary purse to build their squads

The second season of the SA20 will see one additional match – a mirror of the IPL’s knockout phase – and a salary purse increase of R5.1 million (USD 276,000 approx) – per team. That takes the total number of fixtures to 34, with each side playing the other five teams both home and away before the knockout stage. Instead of two semi-finals and a final, as was the case in the inaugural edition, the SA20 will have two qualifiers and an eliminator before the final.Each of the six teams can contract an additional player, bringing the total squad size to 19. The additional player must be a South African rookie, who is 22 or younger and has not played in the SA20 previously.These changes have been made after what league commissioner Graeme Smith told ESPNcricinfo was a debut season that “exceeded expectations across the board,” and with a view to growing the league “in a way that benefits South African cricket.”Related

  • SA20 2024 starts on January 10, will clash with Test series in NZ

  • SA20 2024 mini-auction to take place in Johannesburg on September 27

  • T20 leagues: ICC mulls hard cap of four overseas players in XI

  • Justin Ontong named head coach of Paarl Rocks

Smith envisages a “mini-auction” towards the end of September 2023 and no major changes to the franchises, most of whom contracted local players on two-year deals. “The position around that was that we wanted the fan base to get to know their teams,” Smith said. “And that was one of the major successes we had in season one – how fast fans got behind their teams. But with teams also getting to know South African cricket, you want a bit of space to manoeuvre and so we expect some South African players will move between franchises.”To accommodate that, an official trading window for South African players opened on June 1. Teams can pre-sign, trade, buy-out or retain players until the end of July when the SA20 will have a full audit of the squads and plan for the auction.There is a mixture of one and two-year deals for international players contracted to the SA20 and there is also expected to be some movement in that area, albeit likely before the auction. Teams will be allowed to pre-sign four overseas players in their squad, an increase by one from the last edition. This means that players who were unavailable previously can be contracted even before the auction. There will also be the opportunity to contract a wildcard player as was the case last season.The inaugural SA20 was a roaring success•SA 20

With some player movement likely, teams will need to dip into the extra salary allowance, which has gone up from R34 million (USD 1.84 million approx) last season to R39.1 million (USD 2.1 million approx) for the edition. The organisers feel the extra incentive will allow squads to “attract the best talent” and help assemble “powerhouse squads”. Smith foresees another big auction ahead of the third season.In total, each of the six teams is required to have a minimum of 11 South African players in their squads. On match day, the teams can field a maximum of four overseas players and a minimum of seven local players.The inaugural SA20 season was a roaring success in South Africa, which saw Sunrisers Eastern Cape crowned as champions. The second season will be played in the same January window in 2024 and could also see some changes to the playing conditions.After the SA20 became the first league to allow teams to name 13 players at the toss and whittle that down to 11 afterwards, it is now mulling whether to keep that or explore an IPL-style Impact Player Rule instead. “The committee will debate strategies on how we think the game can move forward,” Smith said. “The regulations today are related to squad composition and how teams can build their squads and we will look to other matters in the months to come.”

غياب لاعب الأهلي عن مباراة بورتو البرتغالي في كأس العالم للأندية

يخوض الفريق الأول بالنادي الأهلي مباراة حاسمة وفاصلة أمام فريق بورتو البرتغالي، وذلك في إطار مواجهات الجولة الثالثة من مرحلة المجموعات لبطولة كأس العالم للأندية.

والتقى الأهلي اليوم الخميس مع بالميراس، على أرضية ملعب “ميت لايف” بمدينة نيويورك الأمريكية، ضمن لقاءات الجولة الثانية من مرحلة المجموعات، وانتهت المواجهة بخسارة المارد الأحمر بهدفين دون مقابل.

طالع أيضاً.. فيديو | الأهلي يسقط أمام بالميراس بثنائية نظيفة في كأس العالم للأندية

ويغيب مروان عطية، لاعب الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالنادي الأهلي، عن المباراة المقبلة أمام بورتو البرتغالي، وذلك ضمن منافسات بطولة كأس العالم للأندية.

وجاء غياب مروان عطية، عن مواجهة بورتو القادمة، نظراً لتراكم الإنذارات، إذ حصل على إنذار في لقاء إنتر ميامي، والثاني أمام بالميراس البرازيلي.

ويحتل بالميراس صدارة ترتيب المجموعة الأولى برصيد 4 نقاط، بينما يتواجد بورتو في المركز الثاني بـ نقطة وحيدة، ويتساوى معه الأهلي في المركز الثالث، وفي المركز الرابع يأتي إنتر ميامي. 

ترتيب مجموعة قطر والإمارات في تصفيات كأس العالم

تلقى منتخب قطر خسارة قاسية أمام نظيره الأوزبكي، بثلاثة أهداف دون رد، في المباراة التي جمعتهما اليوم الثلاثاء على ملعب ميلي ستاديوم، ضمن منافسات الجولة العاشرة من التصفيات الآسيوية المؤهلة لكأس العالم 2026.

وسجل عزيزبك تورجونباييف الهدف الأول لأوزبكستان في الدقيقة 28، قبل أن يعزز إلدور شوموردوف النتيجة بهدف ثانٍ في الدقيقة 86، واختتم إيجور سيرجييف ثلاثية أصحاب الأرض بهدف ثالث في الدقيقة الثانية من الوقت المحتسب بدل الضائع.

وبهذه النتيجة، رفع منتخب أوزبكستان رصيده إلى 21 نقطة محتلاً المركز الثاني، بينما تجمد رصيد قطر عند 13 نقطة في المركز الرابع.

طالع.. المنتخبات المتأهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026 من قارة آسيا وفي مواجهة أخرى مثيرة ضمن نفس المرحلة، حسم التعادل الإيجابي بهدفٍ لمثله مواجهة الإمارات وقيرغيزستان، التي أقيمت على ملعب سبارتاك في قيرغيزستان. وسجل حارب عبدالله سهيل هدف التقدم للأبيض في الدقيقة 30، قبل أن يخطف كاي ميرك هدف التعادل لأصحاب الأرض في الدقيقة 95.

ورفع المنتخب الإماراتي رصيده إلى 15 نقطة في المركز الثالث، ليضمن التأهل إلى المرحلة الرابعة من التصفيات الآسيوية المؤهلة إلى المونديال، بينما توقف رصيد قيرغيزستان عند 8 نقاط في المركز الخامس.

وفي ختام مواجهات الجولة، حقق المنتخب الإيراني فوزاً كبيراً على كوريا الشمالية بثلاثية دون رد، لتتصدر إيران ترتيب المجموعة الاولى بـ 23 نقطة، وتأتي كوريا الشمالية في المركز السادس والأخير، بـ 3 نقاط.

وبحسب نظام التصفيات، يتأهل أول وثاني كل مجموعة مباشرة إلى كأس العالم، بينما تنتقل المنتخبات التي تحتل المركزين الثالث والرابع إلى الدور الرابع، حيث تتوزع على مجموعتين، ويتأهل المتصدران إلى المونديال، فيما يخوض وصيفا المجموعتين مباراة فاصلة لتحديد ممثل آسيا في الملحق العالمي. ترتيب مجموعة الإمارات وقطر في تصفيات كأس العالم 2026

1- إيران – 23 نقطة

2- أوزبكستان – 21 نقطة

2- الإمارات – 15 نقطة

4- قطر – 13 نقطة

5- قيرغيزستان – 8 نقاط

6- كوريا الشمالية – 3 نقاط

South Africa devise their plans to combat Smith

They are a side that has had success in keeping Smith quiet in the past

AAP12-Dec-20221:20

Rabada: Looking forward to playing at the MCG

South Africa have identified making Steven Smith play at the ball early as the key to keeping Australia’s most prolific batsman quiet in their three-Test series this summer.They are one of the few countries in the world who can claim to have found an answer for Smith through his career ahead of Saturday’s first Test at the Gabba.Smith made a century in his first Test against them in 2014, but has since endured a dry run. Besides Bangladesh, who he has played two Tests against, Smith’s average of 41.53 in nine games against South Africa is his lowest against any nation.Related

Back to the future: the remaking of Steven Smith

Smith hopes to 'get into a nice groove' for South Africa Tests

Smith has made changes in his technique since he last faced South Africa, but bowling coach Charl Langeveldt said his team had a clear plan for the right-hander.”The key to most of the top six is the first 20 balls and to make them play,” he said. “Steve has changed. He is not on the move anymore and he has got a good base now where he is not moving around the crease as much.”I think it is going to be a good challenge for our boys. The boys are up for the challenge but the key is going to be that first 20 balls where we need to really make him play more.”Steven Smith has tweaked his technique this year•Getty Images for Cricket Australia

The fuller approach to Smith marks a change to how teams have attacked him in recent years with shorter-pitched bowling aimed at his body. That had prompted Smith to alter his technique in a way that would allow him to duck the ball easier and open up the range of his pull shot on the leg side.South Africa made a point to bowl full in their tour match against a Cricket Australia XI in recent days, with opening bowlers Kagiso Rabada and Lungi Ngidi picking up seven wickets between them.Most of their wickets came caught behind or in the slips with fuller balls, in a similar plan to the one they want to execute on Smith.”The guys got the fuller lengths that we want. Conditions are different in Brisbane to anywhere else in the world really,” Langeveldt said.Smith is well aware of his history against the South Africa, raising it in a press conference on Sunday. But he has stated already this summer that he is back feeling at his best, with unbeaten scores of 200 and 20 in Perth against the West Indies less than a fortnight ago.”I feel in a good place, I feel like I am batting nicely,” Smith said. “I feel in good rhythm and I am looking forward to it.”

Daniele Rugani salary: How much does Ajax star earn per week and annually in Eredivisie?

Everything you need to know about Daniele Rugani's salary details playing for Ajax

Juventus defender Daniele Rugani moved to Dutch side Ajax on a season-long loan deal for the 2024-25 campaign. He has frequently been loaned out during his time with the Bianconeri, with his latest move taking him to the Eredivisie in the Netherlands.

So far, the Italian centre-back has not quite managed to live up to the high expectations, even if he has put in some solid performances for the Dutch side, showcasing his strong aerial presence at both ends of the pitch.

Under his current loan contract with Ajax, Rugani is rewarded handsomely and currently ranks as one of the highest earners across the league.

Exactly how much does the Italian earn, though?

GOAL delved into the numbers with Capology and found out!

*

Daniele Rugani's wages at Ajax in numbers

Under his loan agreement with the Eredivisie team, Rugani receives a weekly salary of €75,385, making him the second highest-paid player at the club after Jordan Henderson and the third highest in the league. His annual salary is €3.9 million

Player

Nationality

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Daniele Rugani

Italian

€75,385

€3,920,000

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTop earners at Ajax

Jordan Henderson is the highest-paid player at Ajax, with Daniele Rugani in second place.

Brian Brobbey and Steven Berghuis are third and fourth, while Josip Sutalo is fifth.

Player

Nationality

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Jordan Henderson

English

€90,000

€4,680,000

Daniele Rugani

Italian

€75,385

€3,920,000

Brian Brobbey

Dutch

€57,692

€3,000,000

Steven Berghuis

Dutch

€56,731

€2,950,000

Josip Sutalo

Croatian

€48,077

€2,500,000

Top earners in Eredivisie

Jordan Henderson is the highest-paid player at Ajax and in the Eredivisie, with Sergino Dest from PSV following. Daniele Rugani is third, while Brian Brobbey and Steven Berghuis are fourth and fifth.

Player

Club

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Jordan Henderson

Ajax

€90,000

€4,680,000

Sergino Dest

PSV

€75,385

€3,920,000

Daniele Rugani

Ajax

€75,385

€3,920,000

Brian Brobbey

Ajax

€57,692

€3,000,000

Steven Berghuis

Ajax

€56,731

€2,950,000

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

AFPHighest paid players in the world

The salaries of Eredivisie players are significant but are lower compared to top global football players, with none making the top list.

The top five earners are all from the Saudi Pro League. Cristiano Ronaldo leads with the highest salary at Al Nassr.

Karim Benzema, his former Real Madrid teammate, is second. Riyad Mahrez, formerly of Manchester City and now with Al-Ahli, is third.

Sadio Mane and Kalidou Koulibaly, both from Senegal, are in fourth and fifth positions, respectively.

Player

Club

Weekly wages Euros

Annual wages Euros

Cristiano Ronaldo

Al Nassr

€3,846,154

€200,000,000

Karim Benzema

Al Ittihad

€1,923,077

€100,000,000

Riyad Mahrez

Al Ahli

€1,003,846

€52,200,000

Sadio Mane

Al Nassr

€769,231

€40,000,000

Kalidou Koulibaly

Al Hilal

€667,308

€34,700,000

Game
Register
Service
Bonus