Flintoff's fitness under the spotlight again

It was, on the face of it, a dull final day at Edgbaston – the least enthralling of the series so far, as England’s slim victory prospects were thwarted almost as early as the first hour. But in Ashes cricket, nothing takes place without subtext, and as Australia’s batsmen rumbled onwards against a toothless, swing-less attack, the state of Andrew Flintoff’s fitness became a significant cause for concern.A fortnight ago on the final day at Lord’s, Flintoff produced the finest spell of his career – a ten-over rampage to seize the second Test and push England into the ascendancy in the series. Today, he was a pillion passenger at best, with just 11 laboured overs in the entire day, and none at all in the drifty final session. While he has rarely got the rewards his wholehearted style deserves, it is almost unheard of for him to go an entire Test without a single wicket – the last time it happened was in Perth in December 2006 when England surrendered the Ashes, and before that you have to rewind to July 2003.Instead of one of the flamboyant celebrations that lit up Lord’s, the enduring image of Flintoff’s effort came when his left ankle crumpled in his delivery stride, midway through his second spell. Back-to-back contests are notoriously tough for fast bowlers at the best of times, but seeing as Flintoff endured two further injections in his ragged right knee just to take the field for this match, Friday’s fourth Test at Headingley cannot come along quickly enough for Ricky Ponting’s newly uplifted Australians.”You could see he went downhill pretty quickly during the course of this game,” said Ponting, “so his injury is probably taking more of an effect than we realise as well. But we’ll see what happens on the morning of the game. It’s been visible over the last couple of days, he’s been struggling more than he did during the Lord’s Test. When he bowled yesterday he was hobbling a bit and he only bowled 11 overs today. No doubt they protected him late this afternoon, knowing how big a figure he is for the team.””There wasn’t as much in this wicket for him as there has been on previous wickets,” countered Andrew Strauss. “It was one of those wickets where the more you hit the deck, the slower it came off, and at the back of my mind I’m conscious that when the conditions aren’t really helping him, there’s no point in tearing him to death. There’s obviously some soreness there, but I don’t think anything has deteriorated massively over the course of the game. But he needs to rest up well because back-to-back Tests are hard for any bowler. We’ll see how he is for Thursday.”The Flintoff factor is becoming a double-edged sword for England – Australia will continue to fear and respect him so long as he remains in the side, but it’s becoming increasingly hard for the selectors to know how best to deal with such a talismanic figure. Though Strauss suggested that his momentum-seizing innings of 74 had been a bonus, the reality is that it muddied the waters even further. Had Flintoff merely been performing as a pace man, then Steve Harmison could step in at Headingley as a like-for-like replacement. Instead, to rest Flintoff on Friday with the Ashes up for grabs would risk unsettling the entire balance of the current team.Andrew Flintoff had a rare, wicketless Test at Edgbaston•Getty Images

“If he’s fit to play then we want to play him, if he’s not, we won’t, because the Headingley Test is a massive Test,” said Strauss. “It’s an opportunity to win the Ashes, and we want to play our best team in every game we play. But we’ve got to be conscious that if he’s not fit enough to do his job, he won’t play.”He will be assessed tomorrow, and he knows what he needs to do with his injury,” Strauss added. “A lot of it comes down to how he feels with his own body – he’s got to be honest about that and he has been so far. He’s obviously desperate to play in the last two games, and we’re optimistic he’ll be fine, but I think he realises that if he’s not fit he won’t help us.”England did everything they could to force Flintoff onto centre stage for this final day at Edgbaston – even, arguably, to the detriment of their own match prospects. When play resumed with a 28-over-old ball, all eyes turned naturally to the man who wrecked Australia’s first innings, James Anderson who, like Ben Hilfenhaus, had found the best swing-bowling conditions around the 30-over mark, when the lacquer had started to come off the still-hard ball. Instead Flintoff galloped in for seven largely ineffectual overs, and when Anderson eventually struck with his sixth ball of the day, an hour into the session, the deficit had been written off and Australia were starting to feel comfortable at the crease.”We weren’t expecting it to swing straight away this morning, so we thought it important to set the tone and Fred’s obviously very good at that,” said Strauss, who felt that Graham Onions at the other end had served as a barometer for the moving ball. Ponting, however, expressed his surprise at the move. “The ball has started to swing at the exact time that England had [it] this morning,” he said. “Flintoff was their best bowler at Lord’s, but the wicket and conditions here, being slow, didn’t suit his bowling as much, it suited Anderson and Onions more.”All of which adds up to a curious conundrum for England, who have shown a worrying lack of penetration at three crucial moments of all three Tests. When the ball swings, as it has done in the first innings at Lord’s and on the second morning at Edgbaston, the bowlers – principally Anderson – have filled their boots with alacrity. But in Australia’s only innings at Cardiff, and then for long and untroubled spells in the second innings of the next two Tests, they have rumbled along with barely a moment’s alarm, as the series century count – currently 6-1 in their favour – amply testifies.”When a wicket’s flat, it’s flat, and it’s very hard to conjure something out of nothing,” said Strauss, which is why Flintoff’s bone-jarring performance at Lord’s stands out for the manner in which it bucked the trend. But for that very reason, there is simply no point in playing him if he is anything less than 100% fit. England, to give them their due, have said that all throughout this saga, but at the same time, it will take a gutsy call to withdraw him so close to the finishing line, with absolutely everything at stake – including his own legacy in Test retirement.”I think we can cope without him,” said Strauss. “We’ve had to do it a number of times in the last two years, so it wouldn’t be anything new to us. Generally the bowlers have stepped up when he hasn’t played, but at the moment he’s in great nick with both ball and bat, so we don’t want to play without him if we can help it. You have to swing with the punches you get, and if [he’s unfit] we’ve got a good enough squad to be able to deal with that.”

Newcastle transfer news on David

Newcastle United are reportedly now eyeing up a move to try and bring Jonathan David to St. James’ Park.

The Lowdown: Goal machine

With eight goals in 13 games in Ligue 1 so far this season for Lille, David is currently the league’s joint-top scorer, outscoring the likes of Kylian Mbappe at PSG, who only has six to his name so far (BBC).

His ability to score from different areas of the pitch has been likened to none other than Liverpool dynamo Mo Salah, who happens to be the Premier League’s top scorer with ten goals so far this campaign (BBC).

The really exciting thing is that David is still just 21 years of age, and so has the potential to become one of the best strikers in world football if he carries on this kind of trajectory – he has bagged 77 times for club and country already.

The Latest: David eyed

As per Le10sport, David is now being ‘closely watched’ by the St. James’ Park faithful ahead of a potential move to the North East.

The Tyneside outfit have ‘already made their intentions known’ for the coming months, although they may face competition from both Inter Milan and PSG for his services.

The chances of Lille selling David in the January transfer window are ‘low’, although there is a ‘good chance’ that a deal could be done in the summer.

The Lowdown: Get it done

Of course, the Magpies will have to ensure that they avoid relegation from the Premier League down to the Championship to have any chance here, but if they do, then David should be a player that they look to get through the door.

With 59 goals and 20 assists in 149 games in his club career, and 18 strikes in 23 senior matches for Canada at just 21 years old, he will no doubt be one of the hottest properties in European football, and there will be a whole host of top clubs looking to battle it out to sign him next summer if he continues his current form.

The Toon need to make sure that they fend off the competition, as David could be their starting centre-forward for years to come, and end up being the dominant face of their new project under the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) consortium.

In other news, find out which ‘champion’ has been ‘offered’ to NUFC in January here!

Rangers: Gerrard must axe McGregor v Hearts

Rangers boss Steven Gerrard will be hoping for another happy weekend as the Gers take on Hearts in the Premiership on Saturday.

The Jam Tarts travel to Ibrox this weekend as they aim to overtake Rangers at the summit after nine matches, as they currently sit one point behind the Glasgow giants.

A win for the Gers, though, would see them move four points clear at the top and in a comfortable position heading into the next few weeks.

In order to give Rangers the best possible chance of winning this weekend, Gerrard must get his starting XI selection spot-on. This means he could have some big decisions to make, one of which is regarding who starts between the sticks…

Allan McGregor started the 2-1 win over Hibernian, but the £13k-per-week dud has endured a difficult season in the league. He has a save percentage of just 50% in the Premiership for Rangers, which is the joint-lowest in the division.

Gabriel Agbonlahor recently claimed that such ropey form is to be expected at the age of 39 and that he will still be able to produce quality displays.

He told Football Insider: “At McGregor’s age, you’re going to get those moments when you’re in and out of the team.

“He’s been a great servant to the game, a great servant to Rangers. So, I’m sure that he’ll play his fair share of games for Rangers and they’ll still get some good performances out of him.”

Whilst McGregor may still be able to perform well at times, as Abgonlahor has said, his form so far this season suggests that he is a liability to the team. Gerrard cannot afford to have an inconsistent goalkeeper between the sticks as it could affect the confidence of the defence and cause issues at the back in key matches.

Jon McLaughlin has kept two clean sheets in four appearances and has a save percentage of 71.4%. This suggests that he has been superior in goal for the Gers in comparison to McGregor this season, which is why Gerrard must axe the veteran shot-stopper to play the former Sunderland man.

Therefore, the 34-year-old should be handed the gloves for this important match as he has shown he is a more in-form ‘keeper. Gerrard must axe McGregor in order to play McLaughlin as the 39-year-old has been a liability and Rangers need to maintain their place at the top of the table this weekend.

AND in other news, Wilson must avoid Rangers nightmare over “unique” beast compared to Yaya Toure…

Simmons century silences pitch concerns

ScorecardLendl Simmons didn’t have a great debut against England, but has started this tour in fine form•Getty Images

Lendl Simmons and Brendan Nash put any concerns about the Grace Road pitch out of their minds as they enjoyed valuable time in the middle on the second day against Leicestershire. Simmons hit the first hundred of the tour, while Nash made a composed 78, and to cap a promising day for the tourists Andrew Richardson struck early as Leicestershire batted again.John Dyson hit out at the surface after 14 wickets fell on the opening day, but progress was much more serene with Simmons and Nash in occupation. Both batsmen will have important roles to play in the Test series next month so the acclimatisation time will serve them well.Simmons made his Test debut against England in Trinidad and was promoted to open in the second innings after Chris Gayle was injured. However, his immediate future appears to be in the middle order where he will probably slot in at No. 4 between the trump players Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul.There is a strong Simmons connection with Grace Road after Phil Simmons, his uncle, spent five years at Leicestershire as an overseas player and played a key role in the 1996 and 1998 Championship titles. Lendl reached his century off 192 balls, to add to the one he scored on the same ground for West Indies A three years ago, before retiring three deliveries later with cramp, but that allowed others the chance to have a hit.”It was a pretty flat batting track and I enjoyed it,” Simmons said. “I know my uncle played here a few years ago and I also played here for the A team a few years ago and I enjoyed today – it was a good feeling. I haven’t had a chance to talk to him just yet because he’s been with the Ireland team in South Africa but hopefully when he gets back I’ll have a chat to him.”Simmons and Nash had batted throughout the morning session and the closest the home side came to a wicket was a run-out chance when Nash was on 27. Simmons’ cover-driving was a stand-out feature of his game as Leicestershire’s young attack struggled to make the same impact they did on the first evening.Nash, who proved a tough obstacle for England to shift during the recent series in West Indies, had collected 78 when he retired to give Darren Sammy the opportunity of an innings, but Sammy didn’t last long before providing Alex Wyatt a third wicket.However, stand-in captain Denesh Ramdin and left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn extended the West Indian lead with a stand of 54, which was ended when Ramdin gave Boeta Dippenaar a rare first-class wicket. That was also the signal for Ramdin to declare one ball short of the 100 overs permitted in these three-day games.Richardson then removed Tom New early and although Matthew Boyce and Josh Cobb survived the remaining overs Leicestershire still trail by 87 runs and will have to fight hard to save the match.

Man Utd linked to Florian Wirtz

Manchester United are reportedly monitoring the progress of Bayer Leverkusen midfielder Florian Wirtz ahead of a possible move.

What’s the story?

According to reliable journalist Christian Falk, who is the head of football for German outlet Sport Bild, the Red Devils have joined fellow Premier League sides Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal in tracking the versatile 18-year-old’s progress.

However, Falk also revealed that reigning German champions Bayern Munich are leading the race for Wirtz’s signature ahead of a possible move in 2023.

He tweeted: TRUE @ManCity scout Florian Witz (18) intensely. Also @ChelseaFC @LFC @ManUtd and @Arsenal are interested. But: @FCBayern is leading the race for a Transfer in 2023″.

Manchester United fans will be buzzing

Since making his first-team debut aged just 16, Wirtz has established himself as one of the Bundesliga’s most exciting young prospects, scoring 14 goals and providing 12 assists in 53 appearances for Leverkusen.

The youngster appears to have taken his already impressive game to another level this season, though. In just six outings for Gerardo Seoane’s charges, the attacking midfielder has bagged five goals, laying on a further four assists for his teammates.

United may currently be well-stocked in Wirtz’s preferred position, but with Juan Mata, Jesse Lingard and Paul Pogba all out of contract over the summer, they could need some reinforcements in the near future.

The Germany international is comfortable playing in an array of different positions having been fielded as a striker, left-winger, No.8 and No.10 in his short career, and his versatility may be an attractive asset to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

Although a defensive midfielder is likely to be the priority for the 20-time English champions over the next couple of transfer windows, it’s believed Wirtz sees his short-term future away the BayArena, meaning United should still be able to swoop for him once a holding player has been acquired.

Therefore, a large section of the club’s supporters are likely to be buzzing at this latest revelation. Wirtz has the potential to be a generational player, and United’s early interest could pay off in the future.

And, in other news…Forget Ronaldo: Man Utd gem who had a 100% passing accuracy was Ole’s real hero 

Cook desperate to regain lost ground

Various theories have been thrown around as to why England folded in such dramatic style, but Alastair Cook has rubbished one of them is the IPL

Andrew McGlashan in Kingston09-Feb-2009
Alastair Cook faces the media in Kingston: ‘Obviously at that time we didn’t perform well enough and you can’t hide away from that’ © Getty Images
Smiles were still a scarce commodity around the England team as they continued to try to absorb what happened in their second innings at Sabina Park. After having a spare day to brood over their failings they can at least now leave Jamaica behind, but the players still can’t get their heads around what took place on the fourth afternoon.”Momentum is an amazing thing and I can’t explain why it happened but if it happens again things have to change. That’s the way it is,” said Alastair Cook. “I don’t know the reason, but it’s happened before to other sides as well and hopefully it won’t happen again.”Various theories have been thrown around as to why England folded in such dramatic style, ranging from the captaincy-coach split in January, the IPL and a failure to handle pressure. “The IPL thing is a load of rubbish, when you are out in the middle you aren’t focused on anything else,” Cook insisted. “Obviously at that time we didn’t perform well enough and you can’t hide away from that.”In the last 18 months we have been in good positions and haven’t been able to finish it off. If you go back a few years to 2004 when they were winning and then you haven’t won a lot, it’s like not scoring hundreds, you lose the habit. We have to get back to where we were.”A lack of hundreds has been a feature of England’s batting line-up for a considerable period of time. Cook is as guilty of that as any of them, having passed 50 eight times in 2008 but not pushed past 76. His start to 2009 has been even worse, two poor shots – a pull to mid-on and a limp edge to slip – to collect scores of 4 and 0 in the first Test.”If I’d turned three of those fifties into hundreds I wouldn’t be sat here, it’s a monkey I want to get off my back,” Cook said. “There’s no one little thing, form for every player fluctuates and it’s how you come out the other end and it’s down to me to change that.”There’s no better feeling than scoring hundreds, and you’d do it every day if you could. You get to fifty and start thinking about it, and batting is such a mental game and it doesn’t help.”Cook has risen up the ranks of seniority in this team and is the vice-captain for the Test series, albeit in an unofficial capacity. Andrew Strauss has urged personal responsibility, but the lack of a head coach is suggesting a lack of a direction among the team.”The 11 on the field take responsibility and when things go wrong you hold your hands up,” Cook said. “You can’t hide behind that. But we are not really reinventing the wheel, it’s the way it’s always been. When there’s a focal point like a head coach and things don’t go well it goes onto other people. Here that responsibility goes to the players and they have to face up to that. At the moment we are under a lot of pressure.”The only batsman who seems able to respond to that pressure is Kevin Pietersen and Cook admitted the others need to take the strain. “It’s down to the batsmen to take responsibility, and over the last year I haven’t scored a hundred so am partly to blame.”Pressure and responsibility are two words the England team are going to have to face up to over the next leg of their tour in Antigua. The island has a beach for every day of the year, but this trip is anything but a holiday in the sun.

Sri Lanka claim consolation victory

Finally Sri Lanka showed up, prevented their first 5-0 series whitewash, and stopped India at nine ODI wins in a row

The Bulletin by Sidharth Monga08-Feb-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

The Man-of-the-Match Kumar Sangakkara continued his good series with a brisk 84 as Sri Lanka denied India a clean sweep © AFP
Finally Sri Lanka showed up, prevented their first 5-0 series whitewash, and stopped India at nine ODI wins in a row. A turnaround began at the first toss they won in the series, continued with near-centuries from Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara, and culminated in an energetic and smart show in the field.For 62 balls Yuvraj Singh played a dream knock, keeping India in the game despite wickets falling around him. When he became the fifth Indian to fall, for a dazzling 73 out of India’s 121 in the 22nd over, the 321-run target looked far away. But for that blitz from Yuvraj and a late-order collapse, Sri Lanka dominated the whole game, a feat that had looked unimaginable in the first four games.Perhaps the toss played a big part. This was only the second time Mahela Jayawardene beat Mahendra Singh Dhoni with the coin in the last 11 occasions. On a dry track, Sanath Jayasuriya and Dilshan provided Sri Lanka with the ideal start and feasted on the wayward trio of Irfan Pathan, Ishant Sharma, and L Balaji, making his ODI comeback after more than three years.It was Jayasuriya who provided Sri Lanka with the springboard. During his short stay at the crease he beat the bowlers into submission. By the team Jayasuriya departed in the 11th over, after having displayed his trademark clip over midwicket, cut through point, the short-arm pull, and the loft over mid-off, Sri Lanka had reached 66.The pyrotechnics may have stopped upon Jayasuriya’s dismissal, but the runs kept coming at a fair pace. Sangakkara picked up boundaries regularly, minus the flashy strokeplay. The second ball he faced, Sangakkara reached out for a fullish delivery and cut it off the front foot for four. He also benefited from some wayward bowling from Virender Sehwag, who gave him a gift down the leg side at least once in his three overs. The fine-leg fielder was a busy man when Sehwag bowled, but in vain. Sehwag was replaced by another part-timer – India used six such bowlers, making it nine in all – but Sangakkara’s paddle to fine leg kept yielding him rich results. In all, Sangakkara took 28 runs behind square on the leg side.India tried to hustle through the middle overs, using all their dibbly-dobbly part-time spinners to bowl 21 overs between the drinks breaks, but all they managed to hurry was the scoring. Sangakkara’s slog-sweeping over midwicket was effective. He hit three fours and a six there, taking 23 runs in the midwicket region. But his final slog-sweep denied him a century and ended a 143-run partnership.It was easy to miss Dilshan with Jayasuriya and Sangakkara going hard, and he chose to stay inconspicuous, running hard between the wickets and waiting for the loose deliveries. He was especially severe outside off, finding the gaps through the covers consistently. Seventy of his runs, and eight of his nine boundaries, came through the point and cover region. His running with Sangakkara was exemplary, both of them often running seconds on the throw. This was Dilshan’s first half-century of the series, and could very easily have been a century but Dilshan became part of a late collapse.In his comeback spell, Ishant took two wickets in an over during a period when four wickets fell in six deliveries. As a result only 65 came in the last nine overs, and India were upbeat going into the chase.But all such notions were put to rest in the first three overs through some smart cricket by Jayasuriya and Sangakkara. First Jayasuriya moved to his left to take a sharp catch from Sehwag off Thilan Thushara, in the second over of the innings. In the next over Sangakkara, who stood up to the seamers right from the start of the innings, hung on to a thick edge from Suresh Raina.Yuvraj, though, didn’t slow down even as India kept losing top-order wickets. Yuvraj picked his fifth delivery from outside off and flicked it over square leg for four. That was about the worst his timing would get, and this was divinely timed. Mere pushes split the field and sped off for boundaries, flicks and half-lofts reached the boundary on the bounce, and those hit straight to the fielders took some stopping. Neither Nuwan Kulasekara, Farveez Maharoof nor Thushara was spared as Yuvraj picked the slower balls and swept with ease; one of them off Maharoof went for a huge six. Yuvraj reached his 50 in 46 balls, hitting 10 boundaries.The trouble was that two more wickets fell quickly, and Yuvraj had to keep the scoring-rate up. In the 22nd over of the innings he top-edged a sweep off Muttiah Muralitharan to give Sri Lanka the final fillip. At that time India needed 200 more in 28 overs, and as they looked to consolidate the asking-rate kept creeping on them. Dhoni and Ravindra Jadeja, the debutant, got half-centuries, but they were always racing against time. And the latter had a head start.

Vascaínos comentam retorno de Ramon ao clube e dizem se perdoam

MatériaMais Notícias

Ramon voltou ao Vasco após polêmica em 2012, quando defendia as cores do Flamengo. Na época, chegou a dizer que era flamenguista e criticou a torcida cruz-maltina. No vídeo divulgado em seu anúncio pelo clube, pediu desculpas ao torcedor e prometeu empenho em campo para ajudar a equipe no Campeonato Brasileiro. O LANCE!, no perfil do Núcleo Vasco no Twitter, perguntou a opinião dos vascaínos sobre este retorno e se o lateral-esquerdo está perdoado. Confira a seguir os comentários!

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تشيلسي يراقب وضع رونالدو تحسبًا لضمه من مانشستر يونايتد

يدرس نادي تشيلسي التحرك للتعاقد مع النجم البرتغالي كريستيانو رونالدو وسط إبلاغ المهاجم مانشستر يونايتد بأنه يريد مغادرة النادي هذا الصيف إذا وصل عرض مناسب، حسبما ذكرت شبكة “ذا أثلتيك” الإنجليزية.

يصر يونايتد حاليًا على أن رونالدو ليس للبيع، وكرر أنه تعاقد معه حتى عام 2023.

لكن اللاعب البالغ من العمر 37 عامًا أوضح رغبته في المغادرة ولم يعد للتدريب قبل الموسم يوم الاثنين، كما كان مقررًا، مشيرًا إلى وجود أسباب عائلية.

وكشفت تقارير صحفية الشهر الماضي أن تود بويلي، المالك الجديد لنادي تشيلسي، عقد لقاءً مؤخرًا مع وكيل رونالدو خورخي مينديز، حيث كان الانتقال إلى تشيلسي من بين الموضوعات التي ناقشاها.

يُعتقد أن المحادثات بين الاثنين استمرت منذ ذلك الحين، حيث يُعتقد أن المُلاك الجدد لنادي تشيلسي مفتونون بإمكانية التعاقد مع رونالدو.

سيكون هناك العديد من العوامل التي يتعين على تشيلسي التفكير فيها إذا أصبحت الفكرة إمكانية حقيقية، وعلى الرغم من أن الموارد المالية ليست عائقًا محتملًا، إلا أن رغبات الرئيس توماس توخيل ستكون أساسية.

اقرأ أيضًا.. ذا صن: تشيلسي يكثف محادثاته مع مانشستر سيتي من أجل ستيرلينج

المدرب الرئيسي هو معجب طويل الأمد بـ رونالدو، ولكن أي قرار بشأن التوقيع معه يتطلب مباركة توخيل والحوار بين المدرب الألماني والبرتغالي الدولي، حول كيفية ملاءمته لنظام تشيلسي وأسلوبه.

من غير الواضح ما إذا كان موقف يونايتد سيتغير، إلى جانب مدى استعدادهم للقيام بأعمال تجارية مع منافس مباشر.

لكن لم يتم استبعاد هذا الاحتمال من قبل المسؤولين في ستامفورد بريدج، ويقال إنهم يراقبون الوضع.

Dravid fifty takes Karnataka close to win

Scorecard

Rahul Dravid’s polished 50 was the centrepiece of Karnataka’s secondinnings © AFP (file photo)
 

Seventeen wickets fell on a dramatic third day in Mysore, but there was nochange in the overall match situation, with Karnataka retaining a firm grip.Andhra fought back after falling 148 runs short in the first inningsthrough medium-pacer P Vijaykumar’s six-wicket haul. But their top order’sfailings, on a pitch with a hint of variable bounce, put Karnataka back incharge.Andhra mostly kept only two fielders on the leg side, and their bowlers’persistent outside-off line had most of the Karnataka batsmen feeling forthe ball. Vijaykumar reaped most of the benefits, five of his wicketscoming through catches to the keeper or slip. His other victim, RobinUthappa, squatted exaggeratedly after being bowled for 9 indicating thatthe ball kept lower than he had anticipated.Rahul Dravid’s polished 50 was the centrepiece of Karnataka’s secondinnings, but the youngsters in the line-up failed again. A big chunk ofDravid’s, and Karnataka’s, runs came in the region between third man and cover.He started cautiously, refusing to be tempted by the wide deliveriesoutside off stump, and it was only after getting his eye in that heemployed the cut. There were some soft-handed, controlled glides past slipand, some delicate leg glances when the bowling drifted onto his pads.The only blemish in another assured knock was an attempted upper-cut whichflew just above the hands of slip. He finally fell, nicking a widedelivery from D Kalyankrishna to the keeper; Karnataka slipped to 135 for6.Brief bursts of hitting followed from Thilak Naidu, Sunil Joshi and VinayKumar before the innings came to a close with NC Aiyappa giving astraightforward catch to Hemal Watekar at slip off Vijaykumar, who was soelated with his career-best performance that he tripped over ateam-mate’s foot as he set off on a celebratory run.Barring Dravid, the Karnataka batsmen frequently groped for theball outside off stump before finally getting an edge. G Satish’s inningstypifying their display: he edged past third slip, survived two massiveappeals for caught behind, and, in one period, was beatenin four of five deliveries, before finally being caught by wicketkeeper Manoj Sai.Andhra needed 320 off 120 overs to pull off a comeback victory, achallenging task but as good a position as they could have hoped for atthe start of the day. However their batsmen chose to follow the templateset by Karnataka’s batsmen. Loose away-from-the-body wafts led to threeAndhra wickets; those of their openers, Watekar and LNP Reddy, and theirfirst-innings top scorer Sai. Joshi chipped in with one more,trapping B Sumanth lbw on the back foot, and the visitors finished the day on 28for 4.Their tail-enders had responded better to the challenge of saving thefollow-on in the morning session. They were eight down after Joshi gotKalyankrishna in the fourth over of the day, but M Suresh and debutantSuresh Babu resisted. Suresh fell soon after bringing up his fifty, miscuing a pull to point. Andhra were nine down, and still needed 16 more runs.The inexperienced left-arm spinner KP Appanna was brought on at thatstage, a move which backfired as Babu slammed three fours in his firstover. A sweep for four in Appanna’s next over ensured Andhra avoided the follow-on. Karnataka were disappointed but their smiles were back by the end of the day.

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