Rotherham vs Middlesbrough: Where to watch the match online, live stream, TV channels & kick-off time

How to watch Rotherham vs Middlesbrough in the Championship on TV and online in the United States, United Kingdom and India.

Rotherham are all set to lock horns against Middlesbrough in a Championshipgame at AESSEAL New York Stadium on Monday.

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Rotherham, who are winless in their last five matches in the Championship, will be desperate for three points as they are only two points above the relegation zone.

Meanwhile, Middlesbrough have already qualified for the Championship play-offs and will now hope to end the league stage on a high. Their three-match unbeaten run ended last week after they went down against Luton Town.

GOAL brings you everything you need to know about how to watch the Championship fixture between Rotherham and Middlesbrough, plus team news, recent form and more.

(C)Getty ImagesKick-off time

Date:

May 1, 2023

Kick-off time:

8am EDT

Venue:

AESSEAL New York Stadium

The game is scheduled for Monday, May 1, 2023, at AESSEAL New York Stadium. It will kick off at 8am ET in the USA.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesHow to watch Rotherham vs Middlesbrough online – TV channels & live streamsTV channels & streaming options

Country TV channel Live stream

U.S.N/AN/A

In the USA, the match is not being broadcast.

Getty ImagesTeam news & squadsMiddlesbrough team news

Michael Carrick confirmed that Middlesbrough will continue to miss the services of Tommy Smith, Dael Fry, Paddy McNair, Matt Clarke, Riley McGree, Aaron Ramsey and Marcus Forss due to injuries.

Forward Chupa Akpom is likely to return to the starting lineup after being rested against Luton Town last week.

Middlesbrough predicted XI: Steffen; Fisher, McNair, Lenihan, Giles; Howson, Hackney; Jones, Akpom, Forss; Archer

Position Players

Goalkeepers:Steffen, Roberts, DanielsDefenders:Lenihan, Giles, Bola, Dijksteel, FisherMidfielders:Mowatt, Barlaser, Hackney, Howson, Crooks, JonesForwards:Akpom, Walker, Archer, MunizRotherham team news

There are no injury concerns in the Rotherham squad ahead of their clash against Middlesbrough.

Ben Wiles, who is back in the squad after a long injury lay-off is likely to start from the bench.

Rotherham predicted XI: Horvath; Lockyer, Bradley, Bell; Drameh, Nakamba, Mpanzu, Doughty; Campbell; Morris, Adebayo

Position Players

Goalkeepers:Johansson, Vickers, HenfreyDefenders:Morrison, Hjelde, Hall, Humphreys. Wright, Wood, Blackett, Bramall, Harding, Kioso, PeltierMidfielders:Coventry, Odoffin, Wiles, Quina, Rathbone, Lindsay, FergusonForwards:Fosu, Ogbene, Hugill, Washington, Eaves, KellyHead-to-head record

Date Result Competition

18/9/2022Middlesbrough 0-0 RotherhamChampionship30/7/2021Rotherham 0-1 MiddlesbroughFriendly21/4/2021Rotherham 1-2 MiddlesbroughChampionship28/1/2021Middlesbrough 0-3 RotherhamChampionship5/5/2019Rotherham 1-2 Middlesbrough ChampionshipENJOYED THIS STORY?

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GettyUseful links

Middlesbrough team page

Rotherham team page

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Claudio Echeverri: Argentina's 'next Lionel Messi' destined for superstardom at Man City

The 18-year-old attacking midfielder is bound for the Etihad Stadium after a breakthrough year for club and country

In the modern age of social media, budding young footballers have the opportunity to make a name for themselves well before breaking into the professional game, with spectacular goals or moments of individual brilliance often caught on camera. Claudio Echeverri, for example, became a viral sensation at just 11 years of age while competing for a River Plate youth team in the 2017 Venice Champions Trophy – a seven-a-side tournament that also included Atletico Madrid, Ajax, Juventus and Chelsea.

Echeverri scored nine goals in six appearances as the Millonarios finished third, with four of those coming in a superb display against Juve, but he was far from satisfied. “The truth is that we aren’t happy because we wanted to win the tournament,” the youngster told reporters after his team's exit.

That will to win has since helped set Echeverri apart from other promising players in his orbit, and he is now set to complete a dream move to the Premier League, despite only turning 18 on January 2. Manchester City announced on Thursday that they have reached an agreement to sign the River and Argentina starlet for an initial £12.5 million ($16m) fee after fighting off competition from Barcelona.

City have a strong record when it comes to bringing the best out of Argentina's best exports, with the likes of Pablo Zabaleta, Carlos Tevez and Sergio Aguero helping them to emerge as the dominant force in the Premier League. Julian Alvarez is now flying the Argentine flag for the English champions, having also been snapped up from River, and there is no reason why Echeverri can't follow in his footsteps after a stunning start to his fledgling career.

Where it all began

Echeverri was born in Resistencia, the capital of the Chaco province located in north-east Argentina, and learned the basics of football from his father at an early age. He was also supported by his mother and two brothers, all of whom encouraged him to pursue his dreams after it became apparent that he had a natural aptitude for the beautiful game.

Local club Deportivo Lujan gave him the opportunity to hone his skills, and he did enough to catch the attention of River scouts, who offered him a trial at the age of 10. It didn't take long for Echeverri to make his mark, as former River recruitment director Daniel Brizuela recently told : "Beyond skill and technique, we look at decision-making, intelligence and character. Claudio was like a 10-year-old man."

River declared their intention to sign Echeverri, but family ties almost prevented their union. Brizuela added: “We were standing in front of the Monumental, and Echeverri said to me: ‘I am a River fan, and I love it here, but if my mother isn’t joining me, then I will head back to Chaco.’”

Former River manager Marcelo Gallardo and president Rodolfo D’Onofrio, however, were adamant that Echeverri couldn't slip through the net, and helped arrange accommodation for his mother at an apartment in Buenos Aires – which was an unprecedented move given his age.

Echeverri then rose through the River ranks at a rapid rate, with his star turn at the Venice Champions Trophy proving to be just the beginning. He made his debut for the club's reserve team in a clash with Patronato on October 2022 as a 16-year-old, and marked the occasion with a goal.

Two months later, River handed the teenage sensation his first professional contract. The nickname was also bestowed on Echeverri ('Little Devil' in English), which tells you everything you need to know about his unique talent given it was also a moniker for Marco Etcheverry – the flamboyant former MLS and Bolivia star widely considered to be one of the greatest players in South American history.

Advertisement@ArgentinaThe big break

In March last year, Echeverri made another important breakthrough. The River starlet was invited to train with Argentina's senior squad while he prepared for the Under-17 World Cup, which gave him the chance to work with a certain Lionel Messi.

Echeverri didn't look out of place either, as Angel Di Maria told reporters when quizzed on the teenager's abilities: "He looked sharp, we definitely watched him. He has a lot to give."

That experience led to River boss Martin Demichelis handing Echeverri his senior debut for the club, in a home fixture against Instituto AC Cordoba on June 23. He pitched in with an assist as River ran out 3-1 winners, and went on to feature in another three matches before the end of the 2023 season.

The stage was set for Echeverri to make a big impact at the U17 World Cup in Peru, and he didn't disappoint. He scored five goals across seven appearances as Argentina enjoyed a thrilling run through to the semi-finals, including a stunning hat-trick against Brazil in the last eight.

His third goal closely resembled a famous finish from Messi against the Selecao in 2021, as he had the composure and speed of thought to round the goalkeeper after being played through, before poking the ball into the back of the net.

Argentina ultimately exited the competition after a penalty shootout defeat to Germany, with Echeverri seeing his spot-kick saved to go from hero to zero after a dramatic equaliser in normal time, but Scott Christensen, area manager for Argentina and South America, was left in no doubt about his potential to become a top player.

“He is without a doubt the biggest talent in Argentina,” Christensen said. “He is a small player who plays as an attacking midfielder. He is skilful, a good dribbler, creative, difficult to anticipate, and has a very strong finish. He is a player who always wants the ball and the initiative.”

GettyHow it's going

Echeverri's performances in Peru put him on the map, with Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Man City, Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus, Inter, AC Milan and Benfica all subsequently credited with an interest in his services.

It was Barcelona who initially emerged as the frontrunners for his signature, though, and Xavi added fuel to the fire when pressed on a potential transfer. "The boy is a talent," the Barca boss told the media. "Beyond the hat-trick he scored against Brazil, he's a difference-maker, but it's something for the scouting department [to deal with]."

Before the World Cup, Echeverri had even admitted that he dreams of following in Messi's footsteps, saying: "As well as River, I would like to play for Barca. I’m a big fan of Messi and I used to watch him play for Barcelona, so I’ve had this team inside me since I was very young."

Realistically, though, Barca are not in a position to fork out on permanent transfers right now, as they continue to try and reduce their overall wage bill to fall in line with La Liga regulations. The reigning Spanish champions certainly cannot compete with the financial power of City.

The blockbuster transfer comes off the back of the Argentine teenager's brilliant performance in his first game as a starter for the River senior team. Echeverri dazzled as Demichelis' side stormed to a dominant 2-0 victory over Rosario Central in the Champions Trophy final on December 23.

Echeverri was visibly emotional after landing his first piece of silverware with the Millonarios, but dropped a bombshell on his future after the game, telling : "My representative spoke with the president, I am not going to renew but I am going to stay a year or six months."

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Getty ImagesBiggest strengths

So many players have been dubbed 'the next Messi' down the years, from his former Barcelona team-mate Bojan Krikic to Martin Odegaard in his early days at Real Madrid. No one has come close to living up to that billing, and the comparisons don't do Echeverri any favours, but he certainly does possess some of the attributes that set Argentina's talismanic captain apart from his peers.

Echeverri dribbles with a low centre of gravity and boasts excellent close control, along with an assured first touch and varied passing range. He's a tenacious, hard-working player with a keen eye for goal, and is versatile enough to operate as a traditional No.10, a winger or even as an out-and-out striker.

Messi and the very best players in the world have unerring confidence in their own abilities, and Echeverri is no different. He is just as humble as the Inter Miami superstar off the pitch, too, recognising that he is still only at the start of his journey with much work still to be done. “I always said that my idol was Messi, but I’m nowhere near Messi!" Echeverri said to FIFA's official website in November.

He added on what he sees as his biggest strength: "I think it could be my speed, because I'm very fast; I try to get on the ball quickly and I immediately get forward."

A flexible, big-game grafter: Jesus is the answer to Arsenal's prayers

The Angel Gabriel is a hard-working, versatile, big game player who can answer the Gunners' prayers…

Arsenal are set to land four-time Premier League winner Gabriel Jesus after agreeing a £45 million ($55m) deal with Manchester City.

The Brazilian was Mikel Arteta's priority attacking target and there is, quite rightly, plenty of excitement around his imminent arrival at the Emirates.

So, below, GOAL looks at what can the Gunners expect from a player that became a sensation when he joined City as a teenager and then dazzled, but occasionally frustrated, in the intervening years…

GettyFlexibility

Jesus has been deployed all across the front three during his time at the Etihad Stadium because of his excellent all-round game.

Whether tasked with being a ball-carrier, a battler or a box of tricks, Jesus has nearly always delivered exactly what Pep Guardiola has asked of him.

Even as a No.9 there was a malleability to his game, whether he was charged with primarily playing as a six-yard box predator, a spearhead against teams trying to press high or dropping deep as a false nine, creating space for midfielders.

Similarly, he has been effective in different roles when playing wide. He has delivered as an old-school winger, hugging the touchline, an inside forward playing off a central striker or as an attacker charged with supplementing the midfield.

His time at City can be characterised by an unselfishness that has always put the team ahead of any personal glory.

AdvertisementGettyWork-rate

Ever since his first start in a 3-0 victory over Crystal Palace in January 2017, Jesus' hard work has stood out as a key attribute.

Guardiola has wanted his team to press opponents high up the pitch and that starts with the striker putting central defenders under pressure.

Jesus, to his credit, instinctively knew what was required and that immediately put the place of legendary striker Sergio Aguero under threat.

The Argentinian came alive when City had the ball, but he was not always the most effective when the opponents were controlling possession.

Aguero learned from his young team-mate, though, and his increased work-rate, coupled with his incredible strike rate, meant that he remained City's first-choice centre forward, although Jesus still got the call when hard graft was essential, as in the stunning Champions League win over Real Madrid in 2020.

Getty ImagesBig-game player

Guardiola has often turned to Jesus for big games and has been rewarded with important performances and goals.

The victory over Madrid at the Santiago Bernabeu was a landmark moment for City's rise in the Champions League, beating one of the elite on their own patch, with Jesus instrumental, scoring an equaliser in a breathless performance.

Last season, he started the early double-header against Chelsea and Liverpool, scoring at Stamford Bridge and providing an assist for Phil Foden at Anfield.

Jesus didn't start a Premier League game for three months after New Year, partly because of injury, but was recalled for the crucial Premier League clash with Liverpool in April and scored the opener.

It's also telling that as City continued their pursuit of their Champions League dream, he started both semi-final legs against Real, scoring at the Etihad and leading the line in Spain.

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Getty ImagesPotential

Still only 25, Jesus is moving into his prime years and can get even better.

At City, he was always fighting to be in the starting line-up and was never able to truly convince fans that he belonged in the strongest XI.

The move to Arsenal could give him more freedom and the close attention of a coach like Arteta, who knows him well from his time at the Etihad as Guardiola's assistant, could make him feel even more loved.

Technically, Jesus has everything in his game to be a star: quick feet, pace, strength, good movement and the ability to play either side.

On top of that, he has the experience of working in a winning environment and he can bring some of that mentality to the Emirates and thrive in a hungry, young squad.

Mumbai Indians to face Pune in IPL 2016 opener

The 2016 edition of the IPL will begin on April 9, when defending champions Mumbai Indians will take on new entrants Rising Pune Supergiants at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2016The 2016 edition of the IPL will begin on April 9, when defending champions Mumbai Indians will take on new entrants Rising Pune Supergiants at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. The final, too, will be played at the Wankhede Stadium on May 29.The Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium in Pune will host the home games of new franchise Rising Pune Supergiants, while the Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium in Rajkot will be the home stadium of Gujarat Lions. This year’s edition will not see any afternoon games (1600 IST start) on weekdays.Apart from the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi, the Shaheed Veer Narayan Singh International Stadium in Raipur will host two home games of Delhi Daredevils. The VCA Stadium in Nagpur will host three home games for Kings XI Punjab, apart from their usual home ground in Mohali.

Mashrafe's record ton sets up Kalabagan Krira Chakra's win

A round-up of the Dhaka Premier League matches played on May 14, 2016

Mohammad Isam14-May-2016Mashrafe Mortaza slammed a 50-ball century, the fastest by a Bangladeshi in List A cricket, in Kalabagan Krira Chakra’s 21-run win over Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club in Fatullah.Shakib Al Hasan’s 63-ball century against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo in 2009 was the previous fastest List A century by a Bangladeshi. Mashrafe’s feat is now placed third among the fastest List A centuries hit in Bangladesh, behind Brain Lara’s 45-ball-effort against Bangladesh in Dhaka in 1999 and Brendan Taylor’s 46-ball effort for Prime Bank Cricket Club against Kalabagan Cricket Academy in Rajshahi in 2013.Mashrafe smashed 11 sixes, the second highest by a batsman in List A cricket in Bangladesh. A majority of his sixes came in the arc between deep midwicket and long-on. Shane Watson struck 15 sixes during his 185 not out off 96 balls in Mirpur in 2011. Mashrafe’s 11 sixes are the most by a batsman in the Dhaka Premier League, after the tournament was given List A status in 2013.Kalabagan were reduced to 169 for 4 by the 36th over when Mashrafe walked out to bat. He cracked four sixes by the time he reached 50 off 35 balls. Mashrafe kicked into higher gear when he hit seamer Muktar Ali for three sixes in the 46th over. He then crashed four sixes off left-arm spinner Wahidul Alam, including three on the trot, in the 48th over.Mashrafe needed only 15 balls to move from fifty to hundred before he was dismissed in the penultimate over of Kalabagan’s innings. Opener Jashimuddin, Hamilton Masakadza, and Tasamul Haque made useful contributions as their team surged to 316 for 7.Mashrafe then struck in the first over of the chase, having Mahbulul Karim caught by Abdur Razzak for a three-ball duck. Abdullah Al Mamun and Sohag Gazi added 71 runs for the second wicket but the partnership ended when Masakadza removed Abdullah for 40 in the 13th over. Masakadza went on to cut through Dhanmondi’s batting line-up with figures of 4 for 37. Late fifties from Zabid Hossain and Muktar to add to 49 off 27 balls from No.11 Alam gave Kalabagan a scare. But they eventually scraped to their second win in six games.Shahriar Nafees struck his first List A ton after nine years, as Brothers Union sent Cricket Coaching School to their sixth consecutive defeat. This time CCS lost by 38 runs.Having been inserted, Brothers, led by Nafees’ 134 off 147 balls, posted 253 for 6. Nafees struck 14 fours and five sixes, having reached 100 off 132 balls. He put on 108 for the first wicket with Imrul Kayes, who made 49, and 60 for the fourth wicket with Zakir Hasan. Nafees’ knock was ended by left-arm spinner Nasum Ahmed in the last over of Brothers’ innings.CCS then had a shaky start to the chase, losing both openers by the ninth over. Saif Hassan and Salman Hossain added 139 for the third wicket. However, both fell in quick succession and the lower-middle order crumbled. CCS were ultimately bowled out for 215 in 47.2 overs.Gazi Group Cricketers picked up their fourth win after beating Kalabagan Cricket Academy by eight wickets at the BKSP-3 ground.Batting first, KCA were shot out for 186 in 47.3 overs with legspinner Alok Kapali taking his maiden five-for in List A cricket. He finished with figures of 5 for 44, including a maiden. Jatin Saxena top-scored for KCA with 44 while Mahmudul Hasan contributed 41.Gazi Group then reached the target in 40.2 overs with Shamsur Rahman leading the way with an unbeaten 95 off 120 balls, including eight fours and three sixes. Anamul Haque, Mehedi Hasan, and Saeed Anwar jnr made cameos to assist Shamsur.

Hong Kong confront a bogey, Namibia target a first

ESPNcricinfo previews the playoff matches between Afghanistan and Hong Kong, and Namibia and Netherlands

Peter Della Penna in Malahide20-Jul-2015Afghanistan vs Hong KongAfghanistan waltzed into first place after the group stages in each of their first three appearances in the World T20 qualifier. They were undefeated in 2010 and 2012 and suffered only one loss in 2013 before moving on. This year, playing outside their operational base in the UAE for the first time, Afghanistan ended up at third.They did beat the teams sitting ahead of them – Scotland and Netherlands – and thumped UAE as well, but a banana peel loss to Oman sandwiched by two washouts against Canada and Kenya have proven costly. It means Afghanistan have to better Asian rivals Hong Kong to secure a berth in India next year.Meek top order displays in the 50-over World Cup led to Mohammad Shahzad’s recall. So far it seems a good move, he has muscled 74 off 37 and 75 off 36 in back-to-back games against UAE and Scotland. Pertinently, in five T20 matches against Hong Kong, he averages 68.33 with two half-centuries.On the bowling front, Afghanistan’s quicks have been upstaged by the offspin of Mohammad Nabi. With eight wickets so far, the former captain has been their most successful bowler. The pitch in Malahide has been conducive to spin and he will remain a threat. But more support is needed from Hamid Hassan and Dawlat Zadran to keep Hong Kong’s batting in check.Hong Kong are trying to recover from upsets themselves – they slipped up against Jersey and USA. That they still managed to finish in second place is a testament to team’s resilience. And they will require lots of it on Wednesday considering they have lost all six T20s played against Afghanistan. Besides one eight-run defeat, the others were by big margins: 120 runs in 2009, eight wickets, nine wickets, and seven wickets twice. The most recent of those was at last year’s World T20 in Bangladesh, where Afghanistan chased down 154 with ease.As far as key players are concerned, Irfan Ahmed has turned in two Man of the Match performances against Namibia and Ireland. But his record against Afghanistan is bleak. He averages 13.50 and only once has he made it to double-figures. His 98 against Namibia on Sunday was a good sign though, and it helped that he had a former captain in Jamie Atkinson as his opening partner. Anshuman Rath, the 17-year old, was demoted after struggling to take advantage of the Powerplay. Hong Kong’s best chance of a first win over Afghanistan in T20 cricket will rely on a solid foundation from the new opening pair.Namibia v NetherlandsBen Cooper has been one of the most consistent batsmen of the tournament•ICC/Donald MacLeodHad Netherlands completed their ferocious chase against Kenya on Saturday three balls quicker, they would have sealed passage to the World T20 and rested up for an entire week before the semi-finals here. That they still scored 98 in 8.3 overs is a reminder of how explosive they can be when pushed into a corner. It is hard to forget what they did to Ireland in the World T20 last year.Four of their batsmen – Ben Cooper, Wesley Barresi, Peter Borren and Stephan Myburgh – have tallied more than 100 runs from the group stages. Only Scotland, with five, are better off.Ahsan Malik has been suspended from bowling for the rest of the tournament due to a suspect action, but Timm van der Gugten has picked up the slack, picking up four wickets in his last two games. Spinners Roelof van der Merwe and Michael Rippon have taken nine and seven wickets respectively and will like the conditions in Malahide.Namibia, meanwhile, are aiming to qualify for their first World T20 after a disappointing exit from the qualifier tournament in 2012. They had been undefeated in the league phase and had two chances to confirm a spot in the World T20 in Sri Lanka. But they lost both times. Playing against Ireland and Afghanistan, they failed to reach a total of 100 in either game, after having been the most prolific batting line-up in the group stages.Namibia have two cracks at the prize this year as well courtesy openers Stephan Baard and Gerrie Snyman, who have led them into the playoffs. Baard is the leading run-scorer in the tournament with 243 runs at an average of 60.75 and Snyman is in fourth place with 192 runs at 32.00. They have two half-centuries each, but no one else has been consistent enough.Namibia possess one of the tournament’s most effective slow bowlers in Bernard Scholtz. He is tied for most wickets – 10 – by a spinner with USA’s Timil Patel and third overall behind John Mooney and Alisdair Evans. Snyman’s offspin has also claimed seven, but their pace-bowlers have not produced performances of substance. Namibia have already conceded 161 to Jersey and 197 to Hong Kong and a similar total against Netherlands is likely to leave them in trouble. But If Namibia lose, they will have one final chance, on Thursday, to secure that elusive berth in a World T20.

Compton driven by Ashes memories

Nick Compton was dropped midway through the last Ashes series in England. His chances of an Ashes recall are remote no matter how much he tries to prove otherwise

Tim Wigmore29-Jun-2015
ScorecardNick Compton would need an avalanche of runs and an Ashes crisis to regain an England place•Getty ImagesTwo years ago Nick Compton was dropped for the Ashes, only three games after he had made centuries in back-to-back Tests. The implication seemed clear: to the selectors, Compton did not fulfil their mind’s eye of what an England batsman looked like. Many thought his treatment shabby.Only industrial quantities of runs could persuade the selectors, with whom Compton has had “no dialogue”, to think again. While often exuding permanence at the crease, Compton has not quite managed them. He averaged 43.08 in what proved his last season at Somerset; so far his return to Middlesex has brought just one hundred.Hence Compton’s chagrin after his dismissal for a typically well-compiled 87: he held out his arm as if he could not believe that his edge from Danny Briggs had reached first slip on the full.”I just thought how on earth has it gone from there to there? It was more dismay really and disappointment,” he reflected.While he still bats in the assiduous style that has made him one of county cricket’s most prized wickets in the last five years, Compton is a man short of time in one sense. Three days after his 32nd birthday, he needs to embarrass the selectors into a rethink, something that even Mark Ramprakash was unable to do when he averaged 100 in consecutive summers. It is a task that calls for more than substantive innings of two figures.”Obviously I would have liked a big hundred. I think I’ve got ten scores between 80 and 100 in the last two years which hurts you a little bit when you’re trying to push for higher honours, realising that people don’t watch the innings. All they look at is a scoreboard and if you’ve got a hundred it seems to make them take notice. It’s quite hard to take because you feel you’ve worked your balls off for that and to fall so close to the landmark is not great.”It has been a familiar feeling recently: as he noted, Compton has a pair of 70s to go with this 87 since recording a century four games ago. “If I’d just batted a bit longer and with a bit more composure I’d have got four hundreds on the bounce. Now talk to me.”Unfortunately that’s the world we live in. It would be nice if the selectors and everyone was watching ball-by-ball and seeing some of the qualities even if it wasn’t a hundred but that’s just the way it is. And that’s why it hurts more.”For all his personal frustration, Compton’s innings has been the most influential of the first two days at Lord’s. It has established Middlesex with a lead of 122 with two first innings wickets still intact: though not necessarily decisive, it has put Hampshire’s batting under an unflattering light. In isolation taking eight wickets for 239 made this a commendable day’s work for Hampshire, even if the sight of James Vince and Will Smith sharing 16 overs suggests their attack is missing an allrounder.That Middlesex would still be batting at the close seemed unlikely when Hampshire took five wickets for 53 runs before lunch. While there was nothing surprising about the parsimony and movement generated by Jackson Bird and Gareth Berg, the performance of Bradley Wheal was notable. An 18-year-old lured from Cape Town by Dale Benkenstein, Wheal bowled with oomph in his third first-class game. As his mother hails from Scotland, the Saltires might soon be minded to ask about his international availability.In three balls Wheal snared two Test batsmen. Extra pace compelled Joe Burns to inside edge a delivery onto his middle stump. And then Eoin Morgan, seeking to translate the swagger of the recent ODI series to the first-class game, was enticed to flash his second ball to the slips while his feet lay unmoved.The day was no better for the other Middlesex batsmen with recent England Test experience: resuming on 17, Sam Robson was trapped in front by Bell’s incisive spell before adding a run. A year ago he was playing Test cricket for England; now he has made only one score over 50 in 16 first-class innings this season. Admittedly that was a hefty 178 against Durham: exactly the sort of score Compton is imploring himself to make.

Harris intrudes upon Taylor's debut ton

Father Time, in better repair than many imagined after a Lord’s April Fool, looked down on James Harris’s four-wicket burst after Notts had celebrated a century on Championship debut by Brendon Taylor

Alex Winter at Lord's12-Apr-2015
ScorecardA witty MCC April Fool declared a stiff breeze took out the Father Time weathervane two weeks ago. The breeze was back throughout the opening day of the season but there was no joke for Nottinghamshire at Lord’s as they lost a commanding position as quickly as losing a piece of paper in the wind.James Harris took four wickets in 11 deliveries shortly before tea to transform the day’s outlook after Brendan Taylor’s Championship-debut century, in his first innings at Lord’s, initially gave the visitors such a comfortable scoreline. In tandem with his namesake, James, the Taylors added 108 for the third wicket before Harris’s devastation from the Nursery End.The first wicket was a gift. James Taylor misjudged a pull and plunked a catch straight to midwicket but thereafter, Harris’s bowling became livelier than the orange heels on his boots to find movement up the slope and win three lbws from Nick Cook. A score of 180 for 2 became 183 for 6.James Harris discusses his winter

“Myself and Richard Johnson (bowling coach) decided to go back to go forward. I’ve had a disappointing two years. I’ve tried to be a different bowler in the past year, I probably gained pace but lost accuracy.
“We went back to both arms going up together, as opposed to one arm going up to try and bowl faster, which is what I do naturally. It feels more comfortable now and is coming out a bit quicker than when we started to make the change. It’s a huge season for me.”

How Taylor must have cursed his error. Samit Patel went third ball playing back; Riki Wessels after the same duration having been half-forward; and then Brendan Taylor also caught out by a delivery that held its line. Will Gidman then survived another leg before appeal as the day blew away from Notts.Harris might not have played had Toby Roland-Jones been fit but a shoulder injury meant there was no choice to be made between Harris and Tom Helm, a very promising 20-year-old right hander. And Harris recovered from two fruitless spells with two overs of madness having changed ends.Until then, the Notts management were warmly congratulating themselves on a signing to end their troubles at the top of the order. Brendan Taylor has sacrificed his Zimbabwe career to play county cricket and looked every measure a higher class of player as he compiled a chanceless 160-ball century. Middlesex did not bowl consistently well enough to create sustained pressure but still the Zimbabwean was far more comfortable than Steven Mullaney – dropped twice before he played on – or James Taylor.He drove very pleasantly. An early example was a stroke into the grandstand off Harris half an hour before lunch. He was prepared to drive in the air too, lofting Murtagh over mid-on in the third over after lunch. A nudge up the slope followed to raise fifty in 105 balls. He needed only 55 more deliveries to reach three figures. There was a better lofted boundary off Murtagh – a sweet strike straight over the bowler’s head; Taylor held the pose.Adam Voges was also taken down the ground and a delicate paddle sweep took him into the 90s. Rolling Harris towards the Tavern brought up a century that was good entertainment.James Harris’ devastating spell changed the outlook for Middlesex•Getty ImagesBut Taylor’s work was undone by the 11-ball rampage from Harris and it took captain Chris Read to gather a couple of batting points; almost three by the close. Read, very much used to firefighting, slumped his shoulders and let out a deep sigh once again to make an 80-ball half-century, going to fifty with consecutive boundaries. He would not have been impressed by Vernon Philander, a very capable batsman, running past a Voges delivery to be stumped.Without Read and Taylor, Notts may have been embarrassed having won the toss. As it is, with capable seamers themseleves and a Middlesex batting order that often proved flaky last season – and Dawid Malan suffering a suspected broken finger – they have a handy score.Taylor has now made centuries in his last four matches; two at the World Cup against Ireland and India and last week against Loughborough MCCU on his Notts first-class debut. With this latest hundred he became the first player in Notts history to make first-class centuries in their first two games for the county.For the first half of the day, he had Middlesex at his mercy. With a strong breeze and some swing, there was encouragement for the bowlers but the hosts could not find a consistent enough attack. Harris was perhaps the most frustrating, conceding 30 from his opening 11 overs, with five boundaries. There were too many escapes offered.Some of them self-inflicted by the hosts with a number of chances going down. Middlesex do not have the safest slips cordon, especially without Ollie Rayner’s big hands, and they allowed Notts to ease into the day with Malan and then Voges dropping regulation chances off Helm. At that stage, it looked far from being Middlesex’s day.

Middlebrook set for "surreal" Yorkshire return

Yorkshire have signed offspinner James Middlebrook to cover for Adil Rashid ahead of their Championship match with Warwickshire on Sunday.

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Apr-2015Yorkshire have signed James Middlebrook, the 37-year-old offspinner, to cover for Adil Rashid ahead of their Championship match with Warwickshire on Sunday.Yorkshire asked England to release Rashid from their tour of the Caribbean but the request was denied with the legspinning allrounder in contention to play the third Test in Barbados on May 1.Middlebrook, originally from Leeds, was released by Northamptonshire at the end of last season in a cost-cutting purge despite being one of their more effective players in a grim season.He has been playing for New Farnley in the Bradford League and has been included in the 12-man squad for the match at Headingley starting on Sunday. Head coach Jason Gillespie said he was likely to play.Middlebrook, who began his career at Yorkshire and last played for the White Rose In June 2001, described his unexpected comeback as “surreal”.Yorkshire feel they had fair reasons to request Rashid’s return, believing that he has no prospect of playing in the third Test in Barbados and that he is being used as little more than a glorified net bowler on a tour that, improperly, clashes with the start of the England season. Their request has been criticised by the BBC’s cricket correspondent, Jonathan Agnew.”Karl Carver has been in our squad this season and we have been pleased with his development over the past 12 months,” Gillespie said. “But at this point in time, we feel he is best served learning his trade in the second team.”We felt that James could come in and do a job for us in the short-term. He is an experienced campaigner and knows the county system inside out. I expect him to do well for us and add to our squad in the short-tem.”Middlebrook added: “It has been surreal. I wasn’t expecting a call to come and play first-class cricket again and to get the call from Yorkshire was a shock. It will be a big honour to walk out in front of the Yorkshire members on Sunday at Headingley.””Yorkshire are a talented side with some great players. I’ll do my job and hopefully help the lads get a win against Warwickshire.”

Gopal preserves Karnataka's unbeaten run

Set a daunting 288, Karnataka looked to be crashing towards their first defeat in 23 matches before an 85-run partnership between CM Gautam and Shreyas Gopal steered the team to safety

The Report by Alagappan Muthu in Mysore24-Jan-2015
ScorecardFile photo: Shreyas Gopal battled for more than three hours to steer Karnataka to safety•PTI Ninety-seven for 5, 69 for 5, 83 for 5 and 50 for 6 today. It was almost as if Karnataka wanted to go into every fight with one hand tied behind their back. Their batting coach J Arunkumar said the dressing room was never bogged down by scorelines. The next batsman shrugged, strapped up and slugged hard. More often than not, that man has been CM Gautam or Shreyas Gopal. The same story unfolded in Mysore as another knockout punch was defused.Amid screeches of either batsman’s name, Baroda threatened again when Yusuf Pathan had Gautam stumped with seven overs left in the day. Instantly there were four men around the bat and a tired bowling attack was making its final play. However, it wasn’t enough, as the hosts held on for a draw.Gopal battled the relentless Baroda bowlers, enhanced by variable bounce and chirping close-in fielders. He dismissed the threat of a concentration lapse with each forward defensive push – front leg lunging, back knee kissing the pitch and the bottom hand flying off the handle whenever necessary. Gautam dug in stubbornly as well and a 235-ball, seventh wicket partnership that had begun by blunting Baroda’s momentum, progressed to tire the bowlers and epitomised why Karnataka remain undefeated for 23 matches.A stiff 288 off 65 overs might have been tempting, but KL Rahul was run-out without facing a ball. Robin Uthappa, who had called for that fatal single, drove casually again and was caught behind to complete a pair. R Samarth was bowled by a grubber as Baroda exploited Karnataka’s handicap to perfection.The weapon of choice was Sagar Mangalorkar, a 24-year old right-arm seamer who has modeled his action on James Anderson but idolises Shoaib Akhtar. He certainly is aggressive enough. Playing only his fourth first-class match, he got in Uthappa’s face with double fist pumps and then provided the most arresting image of the day – him doing vigorous push-ups in the middle of the pitch after breaching Samarth’s defence.Baroda have been the better team, and have been rather quiet despite attracting a lot of lip from the locals. It was playful, of course. The Pathan brothers were constantly sought after and Yusuf and Irfan generously obliged, but when the largest crowd of the match raised their voices against the team, Baroda hollered back. Mangalorkar and Irfan Pathan, bowling 23 unchanged overs with only lunch in between, provided justification for that. Not to mention a stunning catch at short cover by Kedar Devdhar to ensure Abrar Kazi’s promotion to No. 5 did not amount to much.Manish Pandey, who had announced himself at this ground in the 2010 final, appeared comfortable. He concentrated on staying low and soldiered steadily on until he committed the mistake he strove quite hard not to. Poking away from his body and falling to a brilliant first spell from Mangalorkar – 12-3-29-4.That Gopal kept that impulse at bay for 196 minutes until the safety of stumps further cements his rise as one of the best young players in the domestic circuit. He averages 89.20 with the bat and 32.27 with the ball this season, and matched his captain block for block by opening up after tea with some crisp drives through the off side.Baroda’s batsmen, though, needed a very differed approach at the start of the day. Swapnil Singh leapt down the track at Abhimanyu Mithun’s first delivery with the second new ball and slammed it into the sightscreen. He manipulated the strike excellently with the tail and eased to his second first-class fifty. The momentum from that seeped into Baroda’s bowling early on and the defending champions were reeling on the ropes. But they wouldn’t fall.

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