Maguire discusses Everton takeover latest

Football finance expert Kieran Maguire has delivered his verdict on the ongoing takeover speculation surrounding Everton. 

The lowdown: Story so far

Earlier this summer, it was reported that a group spearheaded by former Manchester United and Chelsea CEO Peter Kenyon are interested in taking over from owner Farhad Moshiri at Goodison Park, sparking suggestions that the Iranian was ready to walk away from the Toffees.

However, despite holding conversations with Kenyon and Talon Real Estate chief executive Maciek Kaminski, Mohiri has insisted that the club wasn’t for sale, but instead the owner was open to the idea of ‘minority investment’ coming into Everton.

Following a fresh report from i News suggesting that the Kenyon-Kaminski group remain keen on striking a deal for the Merseyside outfit, one well-informed onlooker has had his say on the current state of play…

The latest: ‘Worst of both worlds’

Speaking to Football Insider, regular Sky Sports contributor Maguire has claimed that allowing outside parties to invest into the club would be the nightmare scenario for the Toffees.

He said: “They would only be attracted to minority investment if it is a gateway to an ultimate takeover.

“For a club like Everton that have lost so much cash under Moshiri and has shown a fairly wild west to financial prudence, why buy into, say, 30 per cent of that when you don’t have the ability to control the level of expenditure?

“To a certain extent, it’s the worst of both worlds. You’re putting money into an organisation but you’re not allowed to put your foot on the brakes when it comes to spending.”

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The verdict: No clarity

Heading steadfast towards the 2022/23 campaign, as things stand there is genuine unrest behind the scenes at Everton, manifesting itself in a protest at Goodison Park over the weekend.

That isn’t helping matters on the field either, as Frank Lampard and Kevin Thelwell seemingly struggle to acquire their top targets in the market, having only added the free agent capture of James Tarkowski so far this summer.

The Toffees have also lost talismanic forward Richarlison to Premier League rivals Tottenham, whilst a nightmarish 4-0 defeat at the hands of MLS outfit Minnesota United highlighted the problems remaining within the squad which need resolving during the ongoing transfer window.

Ultimately, with the new season now only two weeks away, a new stadium under construction and time remaining to do business in the market, Everton’s hierarchy needs to offer an outright solution to the off-field matters in order to focus fully on the issues in hand and give Lampard the tools to make progress on the pitch.

Leeds: Merlo drops Sinisterra update

Cesar Luis Merlo has dropped an update on reported Leeds United transfer target Luis Sinisterra.

What’s the latest?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Argentine journalist revealed that Victor Orta is now close to landing the Feyenoord winger in a deal worth around €30m (£26m) – a record-breaking fee for the Eredivisie side.

The transfer insider went on to state that negotiations between the two clubs regarding a deal for the 23-year-old progressed over the weekend, with the Colombia international said to have already agreed personal terms with the Whites.

In his tweet, Merlo said: “Leeds are close to signing Colombian winger Luis Sinisterra. With the contract already arranged with the footballer, during the weekend progress was made in the negotiations for a sale close to €25-30, the most expensive in the history of Feyenoord.”

Supporters will be elated

Considering just how exciting a prospect Sinisterra undoubtedly is, Merlo’s claim that Leeds look set to sign the South American forward in the coming days is sure to be news that will have left the Elland Road faithful elated.

Indeed, over his 30 Eredivisie appearances last season, the £22.5m-rated talent was in breathtaking form for Arne Slot’s side, scoring 12 goals, registering seven assists and creating nine big chances for his teammates, as well as taking an average of 2.6 shots, making 2.0 key passes and completing 3.6 dribbles per game.

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These returns saw the £10k-per-week winger average a simply sensational SofaScore match rating of 7.51, not only ranking him as Feyenoord’s second-best performer in the league but also as the joint fourth-best player in the division as a whole – bettering none other than Chelsea and Manchester United’s reported £68m transfer target Antony.

Furthermore, Sinisterra also stole the show for De club aan de Maas over his 12 appearances in the inaugural Europa Conference League, bagging six goals, providing four assists and creating five big chances for his teammates, in addition to taking an average of 2.4 shots, making 2.1 key passes and completing 2.6 dribbles per fixture.

These metrics saw the 23-year-old average an equally impressive SofaScore match rating of 7.47, ranking him as the seventh-best player to feature in the competition – playing a key role in Feyenoord’s extremely impressive run to the final of the tournament.

As such, with Raphinha looking all but certain to move onto pastures new this summer, should Orta go on to finalise a £26m deal for Sinisterra ahead of Leeds’ 2022/23 Premier League campaign, it would very much appear as if the Spanish director of football has landed something of a perfect replacement for the Brazilian forward.

AND in other news: Orta given green light to sign “extraordinary” £22m Leeds target, imagine & Sinisterra

Martinez: Spurs eye club-record swoop

Tottenham Hotspur could be about to break a club record this summer, according to emerging reports…

What’s the word?

Italian journalist Alfredo Pedulla has claimed that the Premier League side will attempt to try and lure Inter Milan striker Lautaro Martinez to north London by launching a ‘mega offer.’

It’s thought that it would take a fee in excess of €90m (£77m) to secure his signature and that’s before agreeing on terms with the player, who seems more than happy to remain at the San Siro heading into the 2022/23 campaign.

Inter are close to signing Paulo Dybala on a free and also Romelu Lukaku could return to the club from Chelsea, whilst it’s believed Spurs will ‘do the impossible’ to sign him this summer.

Conte’s favourite

If the Lilywhites can indeed do the unthinkable with Martinez, then you’d imagine that manager Antonio Conte would be a very happy man indeed, given his past work with the Argentina striker.

The pair secured the Nerazzurri’s first Serie A title in 11 years in 2020/21, when the 24-year-old frontman provided a whopping 17 goals and ten assists across 30 starts, via Transfermarkt.

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He has since continued that electric form, bagging 21 goals in 35 league appearances last term for Simeone Inzaghi, so it’s no wonder the Spurs boss has kept an invested interest in his career since.

The need for a new striker at Hotspur Way is certainly one of the priorities, whether that’s to provide cover for Harry Kane or to partner him, it doesn’t matter. Conte has often deployed two up-top systems and with the club in the Champions League next season, strength in depth will be paramount to their chances of contending on all fronts.

Martinez certainly fits the bill.

Described as a “machine” by reporter Roberto Rojas and a “special talent” by verified journalist Joshua Jones, the £67.5m-rated Inter star has been likened to both Robert Lewandowski of Bayern Munich as well as Liverpool’s Diogo Jota (FBRef).

Two very different types of player and that only goes to show why Martinez is a great fit, one capable of playing any role required up front.

He would surely be one of Conte’s dream signings this summer, though the Spurs hierarchy – namely sporting director Fabio Paratici and chairman Daniel Levy – will need to smash the £55m spent on Tanguy Ndombele.

A risk worth taking, that’s for sure.

AND in other news, Fabrizio Romano shares Giovani Lo Celso update…

Spurs insider tips Wilfried Zaha move

Tottenham Hotspur insider John Wenham has backed the club to make a move that ‘hasn’t been spoken about’ in Crystal Palace’s Wilfried Zaha.

The Lowdown: Previous Zaha links

Antonio Conte will be looking to strengthen his squad with multiple new additions ahead of the start of the new Premier League season as the Lilywhites prepare for a highly-anticipated return to the Champions League.

The Eagles forward meanwhile was an integral part of Patrick Vieira’s starting XI this campaign with 37 appearances across all competitions, but only has 12 months remaining on his contract at Selhurst Park.

With Spurs having previously tried to secure the 29-year-old’s signature, there’s always a chance that a club might go back in for one of their former transfer targets, and Football Insider’s Spurs source believes the Lilywhites could do just that.

The Latest: Wenham backs Spurs interest

Football Insider’s Wenham predicts that Zaha will leave Palace in the coming weeks and believes that Tottenham could be keen to make a move.

“I was going through a list of players with one year left on their contracts.

“Tottenham are looking for a wide forward, someone they have tried to sign on numerous occasions before is Wilfried Zaha.

“He has one year left at Palace. He scored 14 or 15 goals every season. He might want to push to get out and play Champions League football.

“I think he would be more likely of a signing than someone like Allan Saint-Maximin at Newcastle.

“It hasn’t been spoken about yet, this is just me looking at a list of players who have one year left on their current contracts.

“I think Zaha will leave Palace this summer. He has done his time there. I think he has promised them he will stay one more year for the past few seasons.

“With a year left on his contract, I just wonder if that will interest Tottenham.”

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The Verdict: Time for a new challenge?

Zaha has been with the Eagles for seven years now and so might feel like it’s time for a new challenge, and if he does, Spurs could prove to be an ideal destination in the next stage of his career.

The Ivory Coast international, who was once dubbed an “incredible” player by Palace chairman Steve Parish, not only bagged himself 14 top-flight goals this term, but generally was a major threat in the final third even when not hitting the back of the net, having averaged 2.3 dribbles, 2.1 shots and 1.4 key passes per game, via WhoScored.

With Conte crying out for a new attacking addition to provide competition and backup for Harry Kane and Son Heung-min, Zaha is a player who Tottenham should definitely keep an eye on as his contract ticks down.

In other news… Alasdair Gold has now shared a ‘positive update’ for Spurs supporters.

James Pearce drops LFC transfer update

Liverpool are set for some changes this summer when it comes to their squad with some players out of contract and a reliable source has given an update on one transfer that will divide the opinion of supporters.

What’s the latest?

According to Liverpool reporter for The Athletic James Pearce, Divock Origi has now agreed on terms with AC Milan ahead of his contract expiry at Anfield this summer.

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Pearce wrote in an article for The Athletic that although a contract has not been signed as of yet, the Liverpool striker has come to an agreement on personal terms in a deal that will see him join the Italian club.

It comes after Origi failed to make enough appearances to trigger an extension clause on Merseyside, which means he will be free to leave this summer and now AC Milan are looking like the most likely club to secure a move for the player.

Supporters will be gutted

There is no doubt that Origi has become a cult hero at Liverpool despite being a fringe player. He has provided some of the biggest and most iconic moments during his time at the club and supporters will surely be gutted to see him leave this summer after eight years.

For the Reds, the 27-year-old has scored 41 goals and contributed 18 assists in 175 appearances, but it’s not his tally of goal contributions that has put him in the hearts of the supporters with his influence in big moments stealing the spotlight.

Origi scored one of the most iconic goals in the club’s recent history when Trent Alexander-Arnold whipped in a fast corner to land on the end of the striker’s foot against Barcelona in the second leg of the Champions League semi-final at Anfield, scoring the fourth and final goal to send Liverpool through to the final where they went onto win the entire competition.

Another reason he is so adored by the red side of Merseyside is that in the Premier League, the Belgian goal machine has scored 27.27% of his league goals against their fierce local rivals Everton, with his most recent winning goal coincidentally coming from the Merseyside Derby last month.

With that being said, it is no wonder that supporters would be gutted to see him leave the club this summer with the striker offering important goals and important moments in one of Liverpool’s most victorious periods over the last few years.

AND in other news: Klopp eyeing £150m “wonderkid” who “suits Liverpool’s style”, it may be bye-bye Salah

Liverpool ‘really like’ Aurelien Tchouameni

Liverpool ‘really like’ rumoured transfer target Aurelien Tchouameni ahead of a potential summer move, according to journalist James Pearce.

The Lowdown: Tchouameni a primary target for LFC

The Reds will likely be looking to strengthen their midfield options next season, with several players now in their 30s and fresh blood perhaps required.

It looks as though Tchouameni is Liverpool’s primary target in that area of the pitch, with the 22-year-old looking like a player with enormous potential.

He scored twice in Monaco’s 2-1 win away to Lille on Friday night and has averaged 2.5 tackles and 2.9 interceptions per game in Ligue 1 this season. For context, no current Anfield player can match Tchouameni for either of those statistics in 2021/22.

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The Latest: Pearce makes Tchouameni claim

Speaking in a Q&A for The Athletic on Saturday, Pearce reaffirmed Liverpool’s interest in Tchouameni, although he warned that the Reds could be priced out of a move amid competition from elsewhere.

In response to a reader enquiring about the links with the Monaco gem, the journalist stated:

“Yeah Liverpool really like him. Big talent. But price tag could be an issue and Real Madrid also very keen. Be interesting to see what happens with that one.”

The Verdict: Perfect summer signing

Tchouameni really does look tailor-made to excel in this Liverpool side, possessing all the technical and physical attributes required to thrive under Jurgen Klopp, as suggested by his aforementioned performance figures.

Jordan Henderson is showing his age a little these days, while Naby Keita is still arguably a little hit-and-miss in terms of form, so finding a third regular starter alongside Fabinho and Thiago is crucial.

Tchouameni could be that man, already becoming such a force for Monaco and looking like he could take the Premier League by storm too.

In other news, one Liverpool player is likely to leave this summer. Find out who it is here.

Kusal Perera bats with body, heart and soul in innings of a lifetime

Against one of Test cricket’s most fearsome attacks on home soil, Sri Lanka’s No. 5 stood up for his embattled team

Andrew Fidel Fernando at Kingsmead16-Feb-20192:11

Perera follows in Laxman’s footsteps – greatest one-wicket wins in Tests

That vein.The vein on Dale Steyn’s forehead has come alive. He is mid-pitch, biceps taut, knees bent, fists clenched, face red, practically on fire, screaming.Mitchell Johnson had three furious seasons. James Anderson nicks entire top orders off. But let’s not kid around. If there is a sight that has struck fear into the heart of the planet’s batsmen in the last 15 years; if there is a vision that shakes them to their soul, it is this.Steyn. His vein. Mid-pitch. Screaming.He has just blasted Oshada Fernando out to claim South Africa’s fourth wicket, and two balls later he takes a return catch to send Niroshan Dickwella packing as well, so his team-mates are laughing, broad grins galore, but not Steyn. Steyn is an inferno. He is burning up mere metres from Kusal Perera. It is Kingsmead, but this – be in no doubt – is still Steyn’s patch. One of the most fearsome quicks in the history of the game. At home. In a state of almighty fury.While Steyn scorches up one end, Kagiso Rabada is lightning at the other. His partner is up over 140kph, but Rabada is touching 150, his outswingers whistling past another prod, the slip cordon’s hands all up in unison, before the ball has thwacked into the wicketkeeper’s gloves. But it is the Rabada bouncer that rears up into your ribs, and the Rabada bouncer that follows Perera like a mugger down an alley. It smacks him on the bottom hand, 65th over. The batsman collapses, a howl on his lips. His finger is already ballooning before the glove comes off.It has been only 13 days since Perera suffered a mild concussion in Canberra. (The ear guard of his helmet had disintegrated from the blow.) Only 14 overs since Duanne Olivier thudded a 142kph ball into his ribcage. Twenty minutes later, Olivier would crack him on the helmet, too.ALSO READ: Perera’s epic 153* leads SL to record-breaking victoryWhile Perera is getting punched, cutting, and counter-punching, at the other end, his team-mates are missing, nicking, and leaving the field. Dhananjaya de Silva, with whom Perera mounted a 96-run defiance, misses a sweep off Keshav Maharaj and is trapped in front. Suranga Lakmal, the only man in the tail who can reliably hang around, edges his first ball to slip.Kusal Perera and Vishwa Fernando celebrate a sensational Sri Lanka win•Getty ImagesFour wickets for 20 runs later, Perera still believes, but is he the only one? Would it be a surprise if he was? This is a team that has not won a match since October. No, not just in Tests. One-dayers, T20s, hopscotch, connect four, tic-tac-toe, Sri Lanka players have probably found ways to lose them all.But then finally, one wicket to go, 78 runs still to get, Perera encounters another believer. Vishwa Fernando tells him. Don’t you worry. I’ll hit the ball with my body, if nothing else.So two Sri Lanka batsmen – one playing his fourth Test, the other playing his second since being recalled – put their chests, arms, skulls, throats, hands, ribs and balls in danger, against the quickest attack going, for the sake of whatever it is they are fighting for. For their nation, sure, but also for a team that has just dumped its long-term captain, for a head coach convinced his bosses are trying to fire him, and for a system that has let both of them down in unfathomable ways over the whole of their professional careers.

In years to come, we might struggle to believe that this embattled and unfancied batsman, in this embattled and unfancied team, played an innings of such quality

So beautifully is Perera playing, that for South Africa, his wicket is almost irrelevant. This is the best bowling unit in home conditions on the planet – an attack that devoured Pakistan over the last two months, sent Australia squealing into epoch-defining disarray last season, defeated India, monstered Bangladesh, and clobbered New Zealand the season before – flat out refusing to even attempt taking Perera’s wicket on a fourth-innings pitch, their fielders all posted on the boundary when he is on strike.For Vishwa they bring the field in. But Vishwa, through fortune and great personal bravery, somehow misses the outswingers, ducks the bouncers, and clings to his wicket. Perera has already once dived to make his ground, dirtying the front of his whites. Vishwa gets himself in a running tangle as well, and has to make his own full-body, whites-muddying dive. He throws himself at the crease from so far out, he is horizontal, sliding, for what feels like half the length of the pitch.The runs required decreases. Forty-two now. Hearts thumping. Thirty-four now. Pulses racing.Then, this is where they come. The shots this match will forever be defined by. The jewels that stud this crown of an innings. A desperate Steyn, looking for swing with the second new ball, still running hot, pitching on off stump, every sinew in his body straining for movement. Perera, clear-headed, forearms rippling, thumping this all-time bowler over midwicket, high over the boundary, way up into the eastern bank.In years to come, we might still struggle to believe that this embattled and unfancied batsman, in this profoundly embattled and unfancied team, played an innings of such dazzling quality. Could it be the greatest ever?Overlooked might be the coincidences: that he finished on 153 not out, same as Lara, in 1999. Or that he sealed victory with that left-hander’s glide to the third man boundary, same as Ranatunga in 1996.But unforgettable are the odds he fought, the blows he took, the joy on his face and from his team when it was won.

Why doesn't cricket have proper metrics for fielding?

We now have a rudimentary fielding average in the BBL, but it’s a crying shame there aren’t any other, more meaningful, measures

Jarrod Kimber05-Jan-2017The ball rebounds off the pads towards point. The point fielder comes in as Inzi is confused about whether he should run, or maybe confused about whether he is running. As he decides to turn back, the point fielder picks up the ball. Inzi is about six metres from the crease, the point fielder is about 12 but has the momentum.The men are two different specimens – one a wounded buffalo trying to find a waterhole to hide in, the other a cheetah looking for an easy, quick kill. It seems, at least on first glance, that the cheetah is moving so fast that he starts flying. The still image shows him flying, hands and feet stretched out like a human torpedo sent to destroy the stumps. And Jonty Rhodes does kill them, he does run out Inzi, he does fly.It t is one of the most famous moments of fielding cricket has ever had. Up there with Joe Solomon’s run-out in the tied Test, Colin Bland running out Ken Barrington, and Kapil Dev taking the catch of Viv Richards.And while that fielding was incredible, there is also the other side we remember. The Fred Tate drop, Chris Scott’s 483-run Brian Lara drop, and Rhodes disciple Herschelle Gibbs dropping Steve Waugh (read World Cup). But how many run-outs did Rhodes complete in his career? Was it more than Ricky Ponting? Did Ponting have a better accuracy when he threw? Who fumbled more? Cricket doesn’t know, and neither do we.

Cricket says catches win matches, and they may, but we don’t count them well enough to check. And we certainly don’t count them at all when they aren’t taken

Chances are you have a favourite fielder, and not just a favourite fielder but probably favourite fielders for different positions. Bob Simpson at first slip, Mohammad Azharuddin at second, Geoff Marsh at gully, Rhodes at point, Clive Lloyd at cover, Brendon McCullum at mid-off, David Boon at short leg, Garfield Sobers at leg slip, and George Bonnor at fine leg. But for all the love they get from cricket fans, cricket doesn’t appreciate fielding, because if it did, it would measure it.Cricket says catches win matches, and they may, but we don’t count them well enough to check. And we certainly don’t count them at all when they aren’t taken. It is one reason why batsmen-wicketkeepers have replaced specialist wicketkeepers, because we count runs, we agonise over them, and if you are lucky, you will see the total catches of a keeper at the end of the column.Fielding stats just don’t exist. Not in any real way. Unless you are Rahul Dravid, the chances are no one will remember how many catches you took. Ponting and Rhodes were great fielders, but which one made more run-outs? While old cricket guys gushed about Bland’s phenomenal ability as a cover fielder, we don’t how many run-outs he was involved in. Before Charles Davis and ESPNcricinfo ball-by-ball, we didn’t even know what the catch-drop ratio of modern players was, or more importantly, have any way at all of tracking dropped catches in cricket.Cricket Australia is trying to change the way people think about fielding; they have developed a fielding average. For people looking for real information on what happens on a cricket field, and not lazy generalisations, this is an important development.A large part of the early sabermetrics revolution in baseball showed that fielding was an overrated skill, and getting on base was an underrated skill. Better athletes were chosen over players who could field better, in less spectacular ways. Baseball fielding has been more athletic and of a higher quality than cricket fielding, but weirdly, it might also be less important in the game.Paradoxically, though fielding is probably less important in baseball, it is also analysed far more•Getty ImagesHow many times have you heard it said of good fielders, “He’s worth 20 runs in the field”? It was something that was often said about Andrew Symonds – that his untold value in the field made him worth far more to his team than a normal player. A proper fielding metric could tell us how much.While batting averages are not a great way of looking at what a top-order player is worth in T20, let’s just say that a decent No. 4 batsman in T20 makes 30 runs a game. Then if you have two options, a player who makes 31 runs a game and another who makes 27, with proper fielding data, you might be able to tell that the 27-runs-a-game player might also bring you two run-outs and four catches more a season, and actively save extra runs in the field than the other player. Then you take the conversation from “He’s probably worth 20 runs in the field” to “He’s worth 8.3 runs and .35 more dismissals a game in the field than the other guy we could pick in the top order.”The ball is fielded far more often in cricket than in baseball, the catching percentages are far lower in cricket, the stakes on errors are presumably far higher, and therefore cricket analytics could prove that fielding is an undervalued skill. The only way we can know is by tracking it.That is what Tim Coyle, an assistant coach of Southern Stars, wants to do. On Cricket Australia’s website a few weeks back there was an article about giving all players in the BBL a public fielding average. “We went through quite a few different ideas on how we were going to present this, and at the end of the day we decided to try and keep this number as simple as possible,” Coyle, who is part of the Australian national fielding panel, said.They didn’t want an entirely accurate fielding-data system but one “that shows fielding performance in a simple way alongside batting and bowling”. What is interesting is that they went away from the traditional runs-based methods of working out a player’s worth and invented a new metric – which is less an average and more an error ratio.

If you have a player who averages 31 and another who makes 27, with proper fielding data, you might be able to tell that the second player might also bring you two run-outs and four catches more a season, and actively save extra runs in the field than the other player

According to the CA method, the fielding average is calculated by expressing the proportion of grade-one chances taken as a fraction between 0 (no chances taken) and 1 (all chances taken). A perfect fielder would be 1.0. A fielder who drops one out of ten would be 0.9; if they dropped two from ten, 0.80.The maths is, as Coyle and the team behind it wanted, simple, as is the basic error system behind it. A grade-one error is the most straightforward chance that no professional cricketer would be expected to miss: throwing from a small distance at three stumps, a catch every player would be expected to take. A grade-two error is marginally above expectations. Grade three is a one-handed blinder, hitting one stump from 25 metres, and fielding that ends up on YouTube.According to the CA data, Rob Quiney is a perfect fielder, at 1.0, and Glenn Maxwell is 0.93. Maxwell has had two grade-one errors, Quiney none. The first problem with this system is that it doesn’t tell us if Quiney has had three missed chances at grade two, and Maxwell hasn’t missed any; or maybe Maxwell has taken one grade-three chance and Quiney missed both his opportunities of that kind. That might make Maxwell a far better fielder than Quiney, but it wouldn’t change his fielding average.Then there is the fact you can’t be better than 1.0. If you take 68 chances from 68, and someone else takes 15 from 15, you will both be perfect. Even if your chances are at the toughest positions in fielding – slip and gully have far higher drop rates than mid-off or square leg – you won’t be rated any higher than someone with a perfect record at an easier position. And because you can’t be better than 1.0, it doesn’t matter how many one-hand blinders you take. If we used a system similar to this for batting, Bradman, Pollock and Headley might all have a perfect batting average, rather than one being 30-odd more than the others. There is also the fact that if you have taken 49 out of 50 chances, and another guy has taken his first 20, he will have a better record.But maybe the most jarring idea in this system is that it is an errors calculation. The same has been used in baseball for generations, but it has also been derided in that sport, where people are using proper data to try and map fielding worth. There is an entire chapter in about the failings of the error system. When you only track the errors, you take out a fielder who simply gets to more balls than others do through pace or desperation. Brendon McCullum might make more errors in the field than Inzamam, but he also stops a lot more.For all his spectacular efforts, Maxwell is rated below Quiney in CA’s fielding stat, which takes account only of “grade-one” chances•Getty ImagesWhen it comes down to it, you can’t have a proper fielding analytics system that doesn’t at least try to take all this into account. CA does have another system – that they keep privately – that looks at fielding impact, and in that, Maxwell is rated higher than Quiney. They are also looking at a fielding strike rate, “the number of dismissals a player gets divided by the number of matches they play”. And Maxwell ranks high there as well.The problem with the fielding average is that in trying to make it simple, “so people understand it” as Coyle says, they have made it almost pointless. I want to know who the best fielder is, not which one misses the most basic balls. What I want isn’t “a simple measure of fielding performance”; I want as close to a comprehensive system to work out what a fielder’s worth is, and that isn’t simple.Think about one of the most simple moments in a T20 match. A batsman gets a well-directed yorker from a bowler late in a T20 game, and all he can do is bunt it out to long-on. The non-striker has bolted and decides to take a two, the long-on fielder is just a bit slow to react, and this allows the non-striker to make it back just as the bowler takes the bails off. In traditional cricket that is two runs – both runs go against the bowler and go towards the batsman and total.But the reason there is an extra run wasn’t the bowler’s fault, and it had little to do with the striking batsman. It was the non-striker and the fielder who combined for the second run, and yet it goes against neither of their names. In a perfect world there would be a metric that allows us to work this out.With a SportVU camera, spatio-temporal pattern-recognition software, and cricket-specific algorithms, we could work out important and previously unanswerable cricket questions. How long it took the ball to get to the fielder, how far the ball was from the fielder, whether the fielder went straight at the ball, if the fielder took off slowly, how often a second run was successfully made in that situation, and the accuracy and speed of the throw. From that, once enough data is brought in, we could start to work out who played the biggest part in those two runs, and it could be used for everything from wicketkeeping dives to run-out chances. We could tell which fielders make plays, and which ones only execute grade-one chances that any player could make.But this is quite advanced, and while something of the kind might end up coming to be reality, we are a long way from a system of this sort.

I want to be able to prove a commentator wrong, or right, when he says Kohli is a good fielder. I want to know how often Martin Guptill gets to a ball quicker than most fielders, and how often he then fumbles it

Cricviz is a fielding data system that, considering Nathan Leamon (England Cricket performance analyst at the ECB) is involved, you can assume is similar to what the England team is using. Cricviz counts every incident that affects the score: catches, run-outs, missed chances, misfields and run-saving stops. Then every one of those incidents gets a plus or minus value, depending on how much it changes the team’s total. So at the end of a T20, a player could be given a sheet and told if he was plus or minus in the field.It’s still subjective – although it’s hard to see how any other system wouldn’t be – as there is still an operator who is making the calls of how hard the stop is, and how many runs should be put against the fielder. And Cricviz seems to be overly generous with players who routinely run around balls rather than straight at them, and is quite soft on what actions top-flight players should be able to perform. But their system, flawed as it may be, is still far better than the public CA model. And it is probably a good indication of what the smarter teams are using privately.Teams are already trying to work out if they are picking the right players.
Look at Melbourne Stars, who have kept Ben Hilfenhaus on their roster. Two balls into his season he looked the goods. Two full, swinging balls, two wickets. But despite Hilfenhaus removing the top of their order, Hurricanes recovered when Tim Paine and George Bailey got together.In their partnership, they faced Adam Zampa. It was coming out well for Zampa. His skiddy legbreaks and a long leg-side boundary meant that Paine and Bailey had to try to hit him through the off side. On the short off-side boundary, Hilfenhaus was patrolling at point. He had a lot of work to do. At one stage he let them steal the second run. One ball, he saved a boundary but couldn’t stop the second run again. There was the three he allowed, which, considering the size of the ground, seemed odd. And also a four that was hit very close to him that he couldn’t stop.There are many ways of explaining what happened with Hilfenhaus on the point boundary. Was he often out of place through bad captaincy, or because he wasn’t listening when he was being moved around the field? Should an older fast bowler – even one who is not a terrible fielder – be the man to field on the short off-side boundary when both batsmen are targeting it? Zampa had bowled well, and completely to his plan, but because of the quality of the batting, and the results of the fielding, his dot balls were wasted, given the batsmen could score easily off him later in the over. It meant that Zampa couldn’t keep the pressure on, that he didn’t get a breakthrough, and ultimately that Hobart was able to play him with complete confidence while smashing him in his last over.The decision to field Hilfenhaus at deep point and keep him there wouldn’t appear to be as important as his two wickets. But it could have been important. For most of cricket’s history, where he fielded, or even how he fielded, wouldn’t have been important, but now you know that someone was watching and trying to work out if that is a weakness of Hilfenhaus and his team.Hilfenhaus’ early wickets against Hobart Hurricanes were recorded for posterity, but his costly misfields should also have been quantified•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesIn making its system public, CA has taken a significant step forward. Even having a national fielding group at all is smart. They also have an interesting mix, with Coyle; Neil Buszard, a fielding coach with a baseball background; Andy Utting, a former baseballer; and Sunny Kaliyar, a performance analyst. But they are only four people.There are probably thousands of minds out there watching cricket who have brains equally or more impressive. Some with sports-analytics backgrounds, some with computer-coding backgrounds, and many more with free time and a cricket obsession. Thinking that a small group of people will be able to answer an equation as complicated as fielding is bizarre.Baseball’s big statistical evolution wasn’t from people in the front office; it was from people in their lounge rooms trawling through the stats and working out that commonly-held beliefs were wrong. Bill James started as a writer of a self-published book that virtually no one read, and then ended up as front-office staff with the Boston Red Sox.Cricket has its own Bill James out there. John Buchanan used Krishna Tunga in the early 2000s, for what Buchanan calls alternative cricket analysis. But while there are some data analysts in cricket, there are far more amateurs out there who would do amazing things if they had access to the modern cricket data. Four people, all of whom are not looking at the data full-time, trying to solve one of cricket’s great equations is nowhere near as good as a thousand or more doing it. And with the data that Fair Play, the data provider that CA has hired, generates, they could also find other ways to improve teams and learn new things about T20 cricket.Even now, without this data, people are poring over websites to prove theories or just find out things. Like the blog Right Arm Chuck, which spent quite a lot of time looking at the numbers of drops and catches by Indian slip fielders. It proves what many of us may have already thought, that Ajinkya Rahane is the best slip fielder in India, by a distance. But not just by eye, in numbers: his catch-drop ratio is 3.27; the closest Indian slipper is Murali Vijay, at 1.57. Most of the other slip fielders, even the oft-abused Ravindra Jadeja, are around the 1.5 mark.

While there are some data analysts in cricket, there are far more amateurs out there who would do amazing things if they had access to the modern cricket data

On the blog Declaration Game, there is a simple piece that looks at the drops in the series between England and India using ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball coverage. According to it, India took 50 of their 76 chances (66%) and England took 47 from 65 (72%). Meaning that, on their recent numbers, both had a poor series. Alastair Cook took four from seven and Virat Kohli five from ten.And then there is Charles Davis, whose blog, and work for other publications, has delved as deep into cricket’s data science as any amateur with a laptop can. He put up a blog post on teams’ missed-chances percentages in Tests between 2013-14 and 2014-15. It was the era when New Zealand, fired up by McCullum, the continued brilliance of Kane Williamson, and the partnership of Trent Boult and Tim Southee had one of their most successful runs ever. It was also when they only missed 20% and 19% of their chances. Go through all the articles on their rise, mine included, and you won’t find those incredibly important numbers. You might hear that they are a good, great, or even the best fielding side, but it’s subjective. Davis isn’t giving us subjectivity; he’s giving us facts and numbers.Not enough people have ever asked why throws in baseball have been better than in cricket for generations, despite the fact that cricketers throw more often. Or wondered why, if 47% of caught-and-bowleds at Test level are dropped according to Charles Davis, teams still almost never train their bowlers in them, though almost as many chances go there as to point. That is two major cricket inefficiencies that could provide teams with improvement straightaway.The fielding in the Big Bash so far has been abysmal. Sydney Thunder could point at dropped chances for two of their losses. When Brisbane Heat travelled to Adelaide, it seemed like both teams had made a pact to field poorly. The two best catches that night were Kieron Pollard’s Superman grab and the security guard’s pouching a six.The SportVU camera, which has featured prominently in the NBA, could also be used to revolutionise cricket fielding data collection•Getty ImagesAnd yet, for all the scorecards I can find online, there is still nothing regular telling me about how important fielding is in each game. It happens, is commented on and then forgotten. I want to know what percentage of the time David Warner hits the stumps. I want to be able to prove a commentator wrong, or right, when he says Kohli is a good fielder. I want to know how often Martin Guptill gets to a ball quicker than most fielders, and how often he then fumbles it. I want to know which players create wickets through their forgotten third skill. I want to know it all.And cricket tells me almost nothing. TV coverage doesn’t have simple catch-drop ratios. Newspapers do little more than mention important drops, and if you are lucky, the numbers of drops a game, day, or maybe a series. Even ESPNcricinfo’s profiles only mention the number of catches or stumpings by a player, with no mentions of run-outs. Even with the fielding average being made public, it has barely made it to any of the coverage of the Big Bash.”We need to walk before we run” is how Coyle described CA’s fielding average. Their system is a toddler in the world of fielding data, but it is the sort of thing that should have happened about a hundred years ago. This article itself is overdue. Cricket has spent many lifetimes ignoring fielding, and even if the fielding average might tell us almost nothing, almost nothing is so much more than we’ve ever had.Ponting completed 12 more international run-outs than Rhodes, Coyle told me. He’s probably right, but it’s not like I can go anywhere to check it. Rhodes could fly through the air, and while that is amazing, what he really should have taught us is not that he was superhuman but that fielding matters. And hopefully one day, we will know how much.

Punjab fail to shrug off bridesmaid tag

Punjab were bolstered by the presence of four members from the national squad in the Vijay Hazare trophy this season, but only managed to finish as contenders again. Instead of kicking on to secure the title

Shashank Kishore in Alur23-Dec-2015Punjab are high on the favourites list in the build up to every major domestic competition, but have somehow failed to shed the bridesmaid status. In the last three seasons alone, they had been pipped in the semifinals of the Ranji Trophy twice, while they couldn’t put it past Karnataka in the Vijay Hazare Trophy final last year. Punjab had attracted greater interest this season, largely due to the presence of four players from the national squad.Yuvraj Singh hit blistering form with the bat, while Harbhajan Singh’s presence gave a lift to an otherwise inexperienced attack that had been further depleted by the injury to Sandeep Sharma.On Wednesday, Punjab felt the pinch the most as an unheralded Himachal Pradesh side, devoid of big stars, stunned Punjab in the first quarter-final of the Vijay Hazare Trophy in Alur. Robin Bist, a domestic journeyman, played a key role in HP’s win, scoring his maiden List-A century in a manner few saw coming. It meant that Mandeep Singh’s well-crafted century ended in vain.Soon after the game, Harbhajan sat his team down in a circle on the field. An animated chat followed for the next 30 minutes, where most members of the team were left in rapt attention. While there wasn’t much to suggest stern words, there was some serious soul-searching. After they dispersed from the huddle, Harbhajan was back to his usual self.”More than the loss, I’m disappointed that we as a team didn’t give Mandeep another opportunity in that tournament,” Harbhajan lamented. “That kind of knock should have resulted in a win, but we didn’t take our chance. This was a defendable total by all means. We just didn’t convert our opportunities,” he said, hinting at the two missed run-outs of centurion Bist.Harbhajan expressed satisfaction at the progress of some of his younger colleagues, but stressed that a lot of ground work still had to be done if Punjab were to wear the champions tag, and not merely settle with the contenders tag.”Very honestly speaking, we have won games as individuals but there’s a lot to work on if we want to win championships,” he said. “I hope the boys will realise this. We have pulled through on individual performances, but haven’t been able to click as a unit even though we have come close a number of times. The team has to believe that we can win from any situation.”As the conversation wheeled towards Barinder Sran, Harbhajan put on the analyst’s hat. The left-arm pacer finished with figures of 1 for 55 in 10 overs, but the scorecard wouldn’t suggest the control he maintained in his first spell, which paved way for two breakthroughs from the other end.”His strength is his bounce,” Harbhajan said.”He is a strong lad and can bowl quick. He may look the 130 kph types, but believe me, having faced him in the nets, I can tell you that he can be a skiddy customer. He’s a lot sharper than he looks. He can swing the ball and has a good back-of-the-hand slower delivery which he executes well with the old ball.”It isn’t too often that Harbhajan isn’t asked about his own form, perhaps a good indication of where he is at the moment. Good returns in the ODIs against South Africa at home didn’t translate into an ODI call-up for Australia, but Harbhajan said the prospect of playing for India at the World T20 kept the fire burning, with the hope of adding to his two world titles being the motivating factor.”When you are out, you tend to try too many things. But the trick was to just keep it simple. It’s a funny game, you just need to have faith in your own abilities and back yourself,” Harbhajan said. “I’m happy with the way I’m bowling. I’m excited to share the dressing room once again with my good mates.”

SA need to be careful with the ball – Domingo

South Africa either need to become more discreet in their management of the match ball or stop trying to manipulate it to their advantage, was the message from Russell Domingo

Firdose Moonda in Galle19-Jul-2014South Africa either need to become more discreet in their management of the match ball or stop trying to manipulate it to their advantage. That was the message from coach Russell Domingo in the aftermath of the Vernon Philander ball-tampering episode.”I’m sure other sides are probably a little bit better at doing it than we are and it’s maybe something that we cut out completely,” Domingo said after play on day four. “It’s not something that we pride ourselves on; it’s not the way we want to play it.”Philander was fined 75% of his match fee after pleading guilty to breaching clause 42.1 of the ICC’s match playing conditions which relate to changing the condition of the ball. Footage, which was not broadcast but was viewed by the match officials after play on day three, showed Philander “scratching the ball with his fingers and thumb.”Although the on-field umpires had not noticed anything amiss with the ball during the day, the evidence was considered “compelling” enough for a CSA source to reveal that it prompted Philander not to contest the charge. Domingo confirmed that the threat of a greater sanction and the existence of video evidence was what prompted Philander to admit guilt.”If didn’t plead and was found guilty, he’d miss a Test match,” Domingo said. “Admitting guilt is almost as though we’re saying ‘lets just move on and focus on what we are going to do here,’ and put it behind us. If they’ve got footage, nine out of ten times the footage will find you guilty so I suppose so it’s difficult to argue if they can see something that they think you shouldn’t be doing. So it’s probably just an easier route to admit guilt and move on.”Domingo has not seen the video evidence and he will not request it but maintained that he regarded Philander’s as unintentional even though it comes just nine months after another South African, Faf du Plessis was fined for the same offence. “We always try and play the game in the spirit thats its intended to. Its not something that we try to do,” Domingo said.”I don’t know if we are getting a reputation. It’s something we don’t try and intentionally do. It’s not that the side says, ‘this is what we are going to go and do.’ Vernon claims to have cleaned the ball and he has been seen on television scratching the ball. The umpires said the ball’s state hadn’t been changed at all and that says it all. We haven’t the seen the footage but it’s done. I don’t think a big distraction at all. It’s unfortunate. We’ve got to move on and focus on the nine wickets we’ve got to get tomorrow.”Sri Lanka’s coach Marvan Atapattu also regarded the matter closed. “It has been taken care of,” he said. When asked what he would say if one of them was charged with the same offence as Philander, Atapattu cheekily replied: “I don’t even have to think about it because I’m sure they don’t do it.”Atapattu was similarly jovial about the task facing Sri Lanka on the final day – to go where no team has gone before in Galle in search of the highest fourth-innings score at this ground. A lead of 369 was considered enough by South Africa to declare with four sessions left in the game and Domingo explained that time, not a target, was foremost on their minds.”In the game where Pakistan batted against Sri Lanka they needed 114 overs to bowl them out. We felt we would need 110 to 120 overs in the last innings,” Domingo said.Sri Lanka have already seen off 32 of those overs and have lost only one wicket. Ideally, Domingo would have liked to have them “three down overnight” but said the squad would “reflect on our plans and come back and bowl better than we did
today.”Although Domingo did not say it, he would likely be expecting more of legspinner Imran Tahir, who has not yet come to the fore at this spinner-friendly venue. The presence of Tahir, JP Duminy and a third spin option in Dean Elgar in addition to their pace prowess gave South Africa the confidence to declare at a time that some have called earlier than expected.This match has already defied some expectations though and Atapattu was not surprised to see another assumption – that South Africa would opt for safety first – dismantled. “South Africa are renowned as a side that poses challenges to the opposition,” he said. “When you have almost everything in your attack – fast bowlers, swing, reverse-swing and a legspinner – it’s a fair declaration and it’s a challenge for us.”

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