Pundit backs Keita to sign new LFC deal

Liverpool must tie down midfielder Naby Keita to a new contract this summer after some improved form, according to former England goalkeeper Paul Robinson.

The Lowdown: Keita much improved

The 27-year-old’s Reds career has been somewhat hit-and-miss over the past four years, with fitness issues and inconsistent performances holding him back at times.

That being said, Keita enjoyed a strong 2021/22 season for Liverpool, making 30 appearances in all competitions and averaging an 84.5% pass completion rate. As per WhoScored, his performance rating and number of Premier League starts were much higher than in the previous campaign.

The Guinean only has one year remaining on his current deal, but it looks as though he will extend his stay at Anfield this summer.

The Latest: Robinson calls for new Keita deal

Speaking to Football Insider, Robinson talked up the idea of Keita remaining at Liverpool beyond 2023.

The Sky Sports pundit said:

“It is important that they keep Keita. He had a lot of game time last season and he played well. I was really impressed by him.

“When you consider that [Sadio] Mane has gone and that [Mohamed] Salah and [Roberto] Firmino only have a year left it is important that you keep Keita. You don’t want too much upheaval in the squad.

“Keita played a lot better than people expected him to this year. I think he was excellent at times. It is very important that they keep him in my eyes. He has been much improved.

“You have to remember that they lost [Georginio] Wijnaldum last year and did not replace him. They can’t really afford to lose another.”

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The Verdict: Worth keeping

Keita is one of those players who could be divisive among the Liverpool fanbase, with some huge advocates of him and others feeling that he is overrated.

However, he showed last season what an effective cog in the machine he can be – Jurgen Klopp hailed him as ‘outstanding’ after the 5-0 demolition of Manchester United last autumn – and he can become a regular starter in a midfield which is starting to age.

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Keita could still do with going up another gear, both in terms of consistency and all-round influence, but at 27, he could be about to hit the peak years of his career, so losing him in a year’s time wouldn’t make sense for Liverpool.

Andy Appleby submits Derby takeover bid

According to The Telegraph, former Derby County chairman Andy Appleby has submitted an official offer to buy the club amid the ongoing takeover saga.

The Lowdown: Morgan in negotiations

It was confirmed earlier this week that the initial preferred bidder, Chris Kirchner, had taken the decision to withdraw from the deal as a result of failing to meet a financial deadline set by administrators Quantuma, meaning that the Rams are once again on the hunt to find their new owner.

Since this ordeal, Sky Sports News have revealed that former Wolves owner Steve Morgan has renewed his interest in buying the club and is currently in negotiations with the hierarchy, but it looks as if he’ll now face competition as another suitor arrives.

The Latest: Appleby submits takeover bid

In an article published by The Telegraph in the last 48 hours, it’s claimed that Appleby has ‘tabled a bid’ to buy Derby, which is understood to be ‘highly competitive’ and has been ‘submitted’ to Quantuma.

The source further states that the former chairman’s consortium, General Sports Worldwide, have ‘made a renewed move’ to ‘secure’ a takeover, and are ‘rivalling’ Morgan, alongside another potential buyer in Mike Ashley, in the race to save the Midlands outfit from liquidation.

It’s reported that the bid is ‘focusing on the acquisition of the club’, and is ‘separate’ to any kind of deal for Pride Park, with discussions with Mel Morris over the stadium ‘ongoing’.

The Verdict: Second time lucky

The 2022/23 League One fixtures are set to be released next week, so Derby are in a race against time to finalise a takeover of the club, with Wayne Rooney still uncertain about what the imminent future of his team holds.

It comes as no surprise to see that Appleby has come back for a second bite at the cherry, having already been close to striking a deal with the Rams back in January, before talks strangely broke down.

The fact that he has come back and wants to have another shot shows that he must be serious about wanting to be the new owner, seven years after his departure in 2015, and so hopefully this positive update will be a sign of things to come for County as they prepare to begin life in the third-tier come the start of August.

Nottingham Forest must sign Djed Spence

Nottingham Forest will take on Huddersfield Town in the Championship play-off final on Sunday, and if they are successful at Wembley it would be their first season back in the Premier League since 1999.

Steve Cooper has performed miracles at the City Ground, with the Welshman taking Forest from the bottom of the table, with just one point from seven games when he took over at the end of September, to a fourth-place finish just eight points shy of automatic promotion.

If Forest secure promotion back to the Premier League for next season, Cooper must do everything he can to strike a permanent deal for Middlesbrough loanee Djed Spence, who has been attracting attention from a number of clubs following his season at Nottingham Forest.

Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal have also been linked with interest in the defender, and it’s not hard to see why when you consider his standout performances this season in the Championship.

Spence has excelled on loan

As per SofaScore, the £20m-valjued ace –  who was dubbed “unbelievable” by Ian Wright – has scored two goals and contributed three assists this season, making 1.5 interceptions, 1.4 tackles and 1.1 clearances per game and winning the majority of his aerial duels (57%), proving that he is effective in defensive and attacking play.

Indeed, Cooper himself is a huge admirer of the 21-year-old, whose commitment to the Forest cause has been championed by his manager.

Despite interest from two massive clubs who compete regularly for Champions League qualification, it was reported earlier this month that Forest would have the chance to keep the 21-year-old right-back should they get promoted, which is a huge boost for the club if they can achieve it.

Earlier this month, TEAMtalk reported that Spence would turn down a move to the aforementioned London duo and commit his long-term future to Forest, should the club to whom he is currently loaned get the job done at Wembley this weekend.

With that being said, Cooper and the powerbrokers at the City Ground must work fast to seize that advantage on their competitors should they get back into the top flight on Sunday, and in that event, signing Spence permanently could be a major coup for the club in their attempts to compete in the Premier League.

AND in other news: Signed for nothing, now worth £13.5m: Forest struck gold with “wonderful” £2.5k-p/w livewire

Celtic must complete Christopher Scott deal

Celtic brought an end to their 2021/22 SPFL season in style on Saturday by beating Motherwell 6-0 at Parkhead.

The Hoops were officially announced as league champions after their 1-1 draw against Dundee United last week, leaving Ange Postecoglou with his first league title in his debut campaign in charge of the Hoops.

It was also revealed during the past week that Tom Rogic and Nir Bitton will be waving goodbye to the Parkhead club after nearly ten years of service together.

Rogic played a rather big part in Celtic’s latest title win by scoring six goals and delivering six assists in 27 league appearances.

Since arriving at Paradise back in January 2013, the Australian has gone on to make 272 appearances for the Hoops across all competitions.

In those appearances, the 29-year-old has scored 46 goals, delivered 49 assists and won numerous trophies in the process.

Taking all of this into account, the club will need to find a suitable replacement for their long-serving midfielder.

With that in mind, one figure that the Hoops have been linked with who could go on to become an ideal replacement for Rogic is Christopher Scott.

Earlier this year, it was claimed by Sky Sports journalist Florian Plettenberg on Twitter that the Bayern Munich youngster had been in talks with the Parkhead club over a potential summer transfer move.

After working his way through Bayer Leverkusen’s youth ranks, the midfielder joined Bayern’s U19 squad during the 2020 January transfer window.

Throughout his short career, the 19-year-old has scored 44 goals and provided 17 assists in 115 appearances.

This highlights how much of a knack for scoring and providing goals he has, in a similar vein to Rogic during his time at Celtic Park.

This is backed up by Bhoys Analytics on Twitter who said that Scott “generates a lot of threat from [his] finishing and creativity.”

With Scott’s current contract at Bayern set to expire at the end of June, this possibility of signing the 19-year-old on a free transfer is something that Celtic should be all over this summer.

From a financial point of view, it could be a great business deal for the hierarchy to complete as well as being a potentially great footballing investment if Postecoglou can form the Bayern youngster into a full-fledged senior player at Celtic.

In other news: Ange can save Celtic millions by unleashing “outstanding” 18 y/o, he’s Bitton’s heir

South Africa ponder selection issues after attempted Archer takedown

Quinton de Kock took on England’s pace spearhead after Rassie van der Dussen shone on debut

Firdose Moonda in Centurion28-Dec-2019Jofra Archer greeted Quinton de Kock with a warning, but a friendly one: a 141kph bouncer that waved at him as it went down leg. De Kock didn’t bother with pleasantries in response. He clubbed Archer’s next ball over square leg for six and then top-edged him over fine leg for six more. De Kock might as well have said, “Since you’re still bowling, you might as well have some of this.”There’s no doubt that South Africa were irritated that Archer had not been withdrawn from the attack after he sent down a beamer and a ball which closely resembled a beamer late on the second evening. Some in the South African camp voiced their concerns to match referee Andy Pycroft immediately after play, others made their disapproval known on the field; but Archer himself was unaffected by being in the naughty corner and continued with an aggressive, albeit sometimes ineffective, approach.He bowled quick and short and was in South Africa’s face, but grinned rather than snarled whenever they took him on. The overnight pair, Rassie van der Dussen and Anrich Nortje didn’t – understandably so for a man on a debut trying to make a name for himself and another the nighwatchman doing more than his job – but de Kock, as we know from the first innings, has no need for any of that. He had one message for Archer: we didn’t want you to bowl and now maybe you won’t want to.ALSO READ: Markram out of series with fractured fingerAfter de Kock’s opening assault, Archer held his length back. De Kock latched on and sent a third six over backward square before clobbering the next ball through mid-on. Archer refused to go fuller and his next ball was a bumper, and wide. He didn’t smile at that.De Kock scored 26 runs off the first 12 balls he faced and seemed in a hurry for South Africa to finalise their target, but he didn’t push the lead above 350. That was the job of Vernon Philander, who has put in a strong performance worthy the opening salvo of his final series. Philander won the cricketing duel with his opposite number, Ben Stokes, with two silken cover drives and a dismissive whack through midwicket. Stokes won the physical one. He hit Philander on the bottom hand and then in the unspeakables but could not stop the steady stream of runs.South Africa ended up setting England a target that is 125 runs more than the last successful chase at this ground – 251 for 8 by England in 2000. Only one captain was trying to win that “Test” so maybe the comparison is immaterial, but it illustrates how tough fourth innings are at the venue and how challenging a task England had been set – their efforts in getting to the close one down notwithstanding.It also speaks to how much better South Africa batted than they have throughout 2019. The last time South Africa’s batsmen set the opposition such a daunting target was in January, when Pakistan fell 107 runs short of 381 in Johannesburg. The last time they set the opposition a target that looked unchaseable was the 304 against Sri Lanka in Durban a month later, but it was not enough.Following that defeat, South Africa only posted totals over 200 three times in eight innings and their batting confidence looked shot. They regained some of it here, on a surface where the bounce became inconsistent and the bowlers remained aggressive.Though there are still problems – such as the malfunctioning opening partnership – there are also some solutions, particularly in the middle order. Van der Dussen became the first player to make half-centuries on his T20, ODI and Test debuts and showed he belongs in all formats. That may turn out to work against him, especially when the balance of the team is considered for the next Test.Rassie van der Dussen and Anrich Nortje frustrated England•Getty ImagesAiden Markram is out of the series after fracturing his finger. All things being equal, the reserve opener Pieter Malan should come into the XI for the New Year’s Test. But this is South Africa and all things are not equal. Temba Bavuma, who has been netting this week, may have recovered from his injury by the time 2020 dawns and there will be pressure to get him back into the team. Not only is Bavuma the Test vice-captain but he would significantly increase representation in the side, especially after South Africa missed their transformation target at SuperSport Park.Injuries to Bavuma and Lungi Ngidi (who may only be fit by the third Test, if at all) means team playing in this match includes only one black African (Kagiso Rabada) and three players of colour (Zubayr Hamza, Keshav Maharaj and Philander), two short of the target of two black African players and four others of colour. Although that target is only applied on average over the course of a season, missing it early on is ill-advised.The complication is how to fit Bavuma in, after van der Dussen’s fine debut. Usually, the team policy is that the incumbent always slots straight back in (that was why Kyle Abbott and Marchant de Lange were left out after their maiden outings, both in place of an injured Philander) but this time the man in possession in under pressure. Bavuma has not scored a century in four years and averages 31.24, so handing him back his place will cause debate, if nothing else. The option to keep both van der Dussen and Bavuma can only be considered at the expense of an allrounder, most likely Dwaine Pretorius, but South Africa have seen the worth of a fourth seamer.So the only alternative is to move one of Bavuma or van der Dussen into Markram’s opening spot. Both of them have done the job before – Bavuma in a Test, van der Dussen extensively at first-class level – but being thrust into the position now would seem unfair on everyone. For van der Dussen or Bavuma, it would only be a makeshift solution, because Markram will be back and the reality is that they are battling it out for a middle-order spot. And to ignore Malan would send all the wrong messages about whether domestic performances are rewarded.But for now, that is not something South Africa need to concern themselves with. There are still nine wickets to be taken, a series lead to secure and bragging rights over Archer, one of the two players South Africa were targeting, to earn.

Chittagong Vikings let down by Bangladesh stars

Luke Ronchi and Sikandar Raza were the only standouts for the Chittagong team that finished rock bottom on the points table, with only three wins in 12 games

Mohammad Isam07-Dec-2017Tournament reviewChittagong Vikings were the first team to be knocked out when they lost to Rajshahi Kings on November 29, seven days before the BPL’s league stage ended. They won only three matches, and in no stage did their squad’s combination look like a force.What has come out from their 12 matches is that their bowlers did not match up to their batsmen, and on the few days that they did bowl well, the batsmen failed. Luke Ronchi and Sikandar Raza were their best performers by a distance while Stiaan van Zyl was occasionally effective.Chittagong also suffered due to a lack of performances from most of the local players. Chief among them was Soumya Sarkar, who averaged 15.36 in 11 innings as a top-order batsman. Taskin Ahmed and Sunzamul Islam took 14 and 11 wickets respectively, though there were very times when they looked like match winners. Anamul Haque also struck two fifties but missed the back end through a hand injury. Fingers have also been pointed towards the capabilities of Chittagong’s team management. The owners too, perhaps, need to be better prepared for the next season.What didn’t workChittagong’s bowling attack. Taskin, Tanbir, Raza and Sunzamul bowled regularly but apart from Taskin, the others were not effective. Raza, an occasional offspinner, did better than his career average but looking at the team’s scatter-gun bowling, none of the other bowlers settled into their roles properly.What workedRonchi and Raza. They contributed regularly, with Ronchi applying pressure on the opposition bowlers in the Powerplay. He was their highest run-getter with 321 runs at an average of 29.18, scored two fifties in the process. His batting strike-rate finished at a shade under 170. Raza nearly made the season’s first hundred while also taking his career’s first four-wicket haul.Tips for 2018Chittagong have to focus their finances on building a stronger bowling attack, and if possible retain some of their in-form batsmen.

Tough tour ends in defeat for Sri Lanka

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Jul-2016Liam Plunkett made the first breakthrough when he removed Kusal Perera•Getty ImagesDanushka Gunathilaka attempts to scoop the ball over short fine leg•Getty ImagesLiam Dawson enjoyed a debut to remember as he claimed three wickets•Getty ImagesAngelo Mathews was one of Dawson’s wickets when he missed a sweep•AFPThere was plenty of pooring runn from Sri Lanka and Dasun Shanaka is caught short of the crease courtesy a direct hit•Getty ImagesJason Roy was bowled sweeping at Angelo Mathews in the first over•AFPJos Buttler opened for England and struck a half century after an early reprieve•Getty ImagesEoin Morgan found the middle of the bat despite dislocating a finger in the field•AFP

Sangakkara, Dilshan two good for Scotland

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2015But Tillakaratne Dilshan set about to ensure Scotland’s joy was short-lived•Getty ImagesPartnering him in the endeavour was the in-form Kumar Sangakkara. After easing themselves in, the duo began to unwrap their range•AFPThey brought up their hundreds off successive deliveries. Sangakkara became the first man in ODI history to score centuries in four consecutive innings, even as his partner completed his second ton of the tournament•Getty ImagesDilshan and Sangakkara put on 195 runs for the second wicket before Dilshan was removed by Josh Davey•AFPSangakkara, though, continued to assert himself, playing some audacious strokes•Getty ImagesBut a few quick wickets, including those of Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene, threatened to disrupt Sri Lanka’s momentum. Captain Angelo Mathews came to the rescue, however, and blasted the second-fastest 50 of this World Cup, of 20 balls, to help his team finish with 363•Getty ImagesScotland’s chase was dented right at the start after Kyle Coetzer was caught and bowled by Lasith Malinga off the second ball of the innings•Getty ImagesThen, in the eighth over, Nuwan Kulasekara went past Calum MacLeod’s defence•Getty ImagesWhen Matt Machan was lbw to Dilshan, Scotland had lost their third wicket for 44, and captain Preston Mommsen began the process of rebuilding•AFPMommsen found in Freddie Coleman – who had earlier taken three catches – the perfect ally•AFPBut after having added 118 runs together, Mommsen was dismissed by Thisara Perera. Coleman continued to battle it out along with Richie Berrington•AFPHowever, when Kulasekara sent Coleman back, the game decisively swung Sri Lanka’s way. The rest of the batsmen didn’t contribute much, and Sri Lanka sealed a 148-run win, with Kulasekara and debutant Dushmantha Chameera claiming three wickets apiece.•Getty Images

Incremental gains squandered by Zimbabwe

The final day was written off as nothing more than an exercise in time keeping and it became evident the clock had been speeded up as early as the eighth ball of the morning

Firdose Moonda in Harare07-Sep-2013Disappointment, like many things in life, comes in more than one form. There is the dark, foreboding type which like a bad smell or storm clouds, hangs in the air for too long and spoils a sunny day. And there is the lighter, less serious kind which can be dealt with by masking it in cynicism and humour. Zimbabwean fans’ acceptance of their loss to Pakistan was the latter.They gave each other knowing looks and managed wry smiles and jokes as they watched Zimbabwe’s resistance crumble quicker than a pillar of salt. The truth is that the match was considered lost on Friday evening when Younis Khan and Rahat Ali took the target beyond reach. The final day was written off as nothing more than an exercise in time keeping and it became evident the clock had been speeded up as early as the eighth ball of the morning.Hamilton Masakadza was dismissed before the first coffees had been sipped and when Vusi Sibanda followed nine balls later, Zimbabwe’s hopes of batting out a long period were all but stubbed out in those early exchanges.The possibility of an embarrassingly hefty loss became more real when two first-innings heroes, Malcolm Waller and Sikandar Raza, fell to Abdur Rehman. Both played shots they will, in hindsight, not be happy with – Waller sweeping a flighted ball and Raza pushing forward for turn to a straight one – and their departure underlined the feebleness of Zimbabwe’s challenge.Their preoccupation with the threat Saeed Ajmal would pose on a surface that was keeping low and taking more turn than Hamilton Masakadza seemed to suggest it would when he decided Zimbabwe would bat last, meant they almost forgot about the rest of the attack. Junaid Khan and Rehman had the advantage of surprise and used it well.Junaid bowled an incisive spell, moving the ball back into the batsmen and startling them with the occasional bouncer while Ajmal kept the batsmen guessing from the other end. By the time they were replaced with Rahat and Rehman, Zimbabwe made the mistake of thinking the pressure was off. Waller, having just hit Rehman for four, had no reason to take him on the very next ball. Similarly Raza, who had been confident against spin throughout, perhaps became overly so.With the middle order snuffed out, Zimbabwe’s quick end was being predicted by everyone including the television crew. They took a media sweepstake from 48 people, including cameramen, technicians and journalists, on when the last wicket would fall. Before lunch was the popular choice.There were some cheers when Elton Chigumbura played his natural, attacking game but that quickly turned to jeers when he gave Mohammad Hafeez catching practice at slip. Attention turned firmly to the South African rugby team’s match against Australia, which was being broadcast in the Centurion Pub at the end of the next over when Ajmal had accounted for both Prosper Utseya and Shingi Masakadza.Some took farcical solace in the fact that the interval – once considered cricket’s only immovable apart from Rahul Dravid – was extended to allow Pakistan to finish Zimbabwe off. At least Zimbabwe had lasted more than a session, they joked to each other. When Tendai Chatara had some fun at the end, with a couple of swipes over midwicket, the noise levels through clapping and whistling were the highest they had been all match.It was a pity they were tinged with such irony and an even greater pity that on the day more people were able to come to the ground than any other, by virtue of it being a weekend, they saw the home team at their worst. Some of those people have been keeping an eye on Zimbabwe’s progress over the match and although they did not want to get their hopes too high, were heartened by what they saw.For an hour short of four days, Zimbabwe had the better of Pakistan. They managed to shelve their off-field troubles and conjured up a performance with heart. Tinashe Panyangara, Chatara and Shingi Masakadza showed discipline Zimbabwe’s bowlers have lacked in the past, Utseya found some turn and there was a middle-order fightback that Zimbabwe have not had in recent times. All that unravelled in the time it took Younis to push on his accelerator pedal and made Zimbabwe’s second innings irrelevant.Long-suffering supporters will remember only that. Incremental gains don’t mean much to them because the end result is still the same. At the Centurion Pub, there is nothing to celebrate to. The usual drowning of sorrows will take place before many of them return again next week, hoping for a different outcome but not actually expecting one.They do not regard the incremental gains as small victories and, unless those can eventually add up to something, one can understand why they dismiss them that way. As far as people at Harare Sports Club are concerned, the only winner from this match apart from Pakistan was commentator Ed Rainsford, who correctly predicted the last man would troop back to the change room at 12:36. He has US$48 to show for it.

Ten months in Nairobi

Mike Hesson couldn’t stay as coach of Kenya for long enough to make enough of a difference, but he is confident the side has a bright future

Firdose Moonda11-May-2012Mike Hesson started driving around himself three days after he moved to Nairobi. It may not sound like a significant achievement but it was.Considering he had arrived from Dunedin, a place known as a ten-minute city because that is how long it takes to get from any one place to another, Kenyan traffic was, in Hesson’s own words, “a decent challenge”. The trip from his apartment to his workplace, a distance of around five kilometres, took almost two hours, mostly because of the slew of roadworks. But by the time Hesson resigned his post, ten months later, though, the drive took less than ten minutes.Hesson announced this week that he was stepping down as Kenya national coach, and said security concerns were the only reason for his decision. “I want to stress that this has absolutely nothing to do with any issues relating to my role as national coach and is not cricket related in any way,” his statement read. “This is purely a decision about the safety of my family and quality of life.”In recent years Kenya, known as one of Africa’s most stable democracies, has earned a reputation as unsafe. Two grenade attacks in as many months in Nairobi, one on a bus, the other in a church, resulted in seven deaths. Foreigners have been kidnapped and held for ransom. The United States embassy issued a warning that terror attacks on prominent government buildings and hotels in the capital could be imminent. The United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) had strict guidelines for travel, instructing people to stay away from the coastline along the Kenya-Somalia border.Kenya’s military has become increasingly involved in Somalia and mounting fears of more violence caused Hesson to make the difficult decision to leave. Kenya had become his home and in his time there, transport was not the only thing he saw change for the better. Having taken the job at a time when Kenya Cricket needed someone to usher in good fortune, he believed he “had just started something” and says he is sad that the situation made it impossible for him to continue.Hesson is not the typical Westerner who has had enough of deep, dark Africa. He is well travelled, having lived in Buenos Aires in 2004, when he coached Argentina, and put a lot of thought into his move to Kenya. He chose the country a year after resigning the position as head coach of Otago in New Zealand, where he had been for six seasons.”It was a good opportunity for the family to experience a different country and a different culture,” Hesson told ESPNcricinfo. “We travelled quite a lot as a couple but not with the kids. And professionally, with Kenya cricket not going so well, it was a real opportunity to push them forward.” In July last year, Hesson, his wife Kate and their two daughters, aged two and five, packed up their lives in relatively quiet Dunedin and moved to bustling Nairobi.The family was put up in a furnished apartment in a large, secured complex. Kate started work with a number of charity organizations, while the two girls went to school. “We lived in a good location. We had a gym, pool and playing ground for the kids, so it was really nice,” Hesson said. “Our girls went to a local school that they thoroughly enjoyed. They leant many valuable life lessons and quite a lot of Swahili.”Hesson went about trying to understand the ins and outs of Kenyan cricket, a task that would prove more complicated than merely getting to grips with another country’s sporting culture. “My initial ideas were to observe and see how they go about things, see how things were done in the past, what worked and what hasn’t, and try and put my own stamp on things,” he said.When he arrived, though, eight national players, including the much lauded batsman Alex Obanda and the experienced Maurice Ouma were on strike, demanding better pay and work conditions. A makeshift Kenya side played the UAE in an Intercontinental Cup match and lost by 66 runs. The immediate challenge Hesson faced was getting the core of the squad back.By the time of his first assignment, against Netherlands in September, the issue was still unresolved. Kenya were forced to name a fairly inexperienced side but came close in the first game, losing by only two wickets. It was only in October, when the players and the board agreed on a solution, that Hesson felt his job had actually started to take shape.”When we got our full squad back, it was like real coaching again. There was a larger group of players needing guidance tactically and technically, and that was why I was attracted to the job. It took about four months to get the whole squad together but we got there,” he said. Results, though, took longer to change. Kenya lost 6-2 in an eight-match Twenty20 series against Namibia in November, having at one stage been 5-0 down.It was only in February this year that a dramatic improvement could be seen. In Mombasa, Kenya came within ten runs of beating Ireland in an Intercontinental Cup game, a thrilling low-scorer that could have been one of the biggest upsets of the year.

“There’s a lot of skill, but what needs to be worked on is the experience. Things like decision-making under pressure is where Kenya have got a lot of work to do”

Hesson was pleasantly surprised, having thought Kenya would fare worse. “We were playing against the top Associate in the world, so the expectations were low,” he said. “We started the game so well and in such a low-scoring game to lose by nine runs was a top effort. But we we’re still very disappointed we didn’t win.” Kenya went on to beat Ireland in a World Cricket League one-dayer, becoming the first Associate to beat Ireland in a 50-over match in over a year.A respectable performance at the World T20 qualifiers followed. Kenya finished fourth in Group B, with four wins from their seven matches, and missed out on the next stage by 0.007 of a run. More heartening were the individual efforts, which highlighted some of the promise Kenya has within their ranks.”Alex Obanda had an extremely good tournament,” Hesson said. Obanda scored 298 runs at a strike rate of 146. “Duncan Allen is only 19 and he is a talented and determined cricketer. Rakep Patel is certainly a player to watch, especially in the shorter versions as he is an explosive strokeplayer. There are also a number of quality spin bowlers to choose from, like Hiren Varaiya, who took 12 wickets against Ireland, and the Ngoche brothers, Shem and James.”What’s keeping Kenya’s results from reflecting their talent, according to Hesson, is only a matter of time and more matches. “There’s a lot of skill, but what needs to be worked on is the experience,” he said. “Things like decision-making under pressure is where they have got a lot of work to do.”Having seen the team perform in a range of formats, Hesson had developed ideas on how they could improve. “In 2003, for example, none of the Associates played first-class cricket and now all of them do, within Test-playing nations’ programmes,” he said. All the sides we play against are under pressure every week. We are in a changing landscape now and we’ve got to try and get exposed to those playing programmes, whether that be in South Africa or Zimbabwe.”Hesson, his family and the Kenyan players are all disappointed that their time together had to end. While Hesson is going back to New Zealand without any firm arrangements on a job, he believes that the team he leaves behind in Kenya can be certain of a bright future.Far from being unrealistically optimistic, though, he said it is important that they build on the structures that have been put in place if they hope to see success. “It will take time and this group of players have only been together four months as a whole squad. They have to be allowed time to develop,” he said. “What I will say is that the players I am working with now are extremely proud of playing for Kenya and they work extremely hard. Unfortunately, we’ve just started.”

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