Tottenham: Lucas linked with exit after late Galatasaray offer

Tottenham Hotspur winger Lucas Moura has been linked with a move away from north London as reports from Turkey share some late exit news.

The Lowdown: Spurs exodus…

Left-back Sergio Reguilon and midfielder Harry Winks have become the latest Spurs players to move on during this transfer window as they complete loan moves to Atletico Madrid and Sampdoria respectively.

They join the likes of Giovani Lo Celso, Tanguy Ndombele, Joe Rodon and Steven Bergwijn as senior stars who have also departed Hotspur Way either on a temporary deal or permanently.

Very little time remains until the closure of the market, but despite their plethora of outgoings it appears yet another name could now be on the exit list.

The Latest: Galatasaray swoop for Lucas…

According to reports out of Turkey, Spurs’ speedster is attracting last-gasp interest.

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Super Lig giants Galatasaray, according to major Turkish outlet Takvim, have made an offer to sign the Brazilian on loan with an option to buy as their club chiefs start ‘attempts’ over a late deal.

It is believed they have also contacted Lucas’ camp and he is not in manager Antonio Conte’s plans this season.

The Verdict: One to keep?

The 30-year-old hasn’t featured much this season but could still come as a solid rotational option amid a long season.

Injuries can change the complexion of everything and Lucas can fill the right-wing-back void as a possible alternative to the likes of Matt Doherty and Emerson Royal.

On his day, the South American can prove a real handful, as evident by the fact he completed more successful take-ons per 90 than any Spurs player last year on average (WhoScored).

Called a ‘monster’ by international teammate Raphinha, a glowing endorsement from such a brilliant player, keeping Lucas on may be the right course of action for now.

Liverpool table an offer for Yeremy Pino

Liverpool have been linked with a move for Yeremy Pino this summer, and now a new update has emerged on the club’s pursuit of the player.

What’s the latest?

According to Spanish journalist Xavi Jorquera Márquez, Liverpool have put a €40m (£33.8m) bid “on the table” for Villarreal wonderkid Pino.

Márquez tweeted: “Villarreal have received two offers from two Premier League teams for Yeremy Pino.

“Those clubs are Arsenal and Liverpool.”

“Both have put €40m (£33.8m) on the table. Villarreal asks €60m (£50.7m).”

He could be Salah’s heir

Despite signing a contract extension this summer that will secure his future until 2025, Mohamed Salah is not a player that Liverpool will easily replace in just three years time, and preparing for the future should be something FSG will need to consider with many players in the squad in the latter stages of their career.

Six of the 11 players fielded against Fulham at Craven Cottage in the disappointing 2-2 draw this weekend were over 30 years old, so it would certainly not hurt Liverpool to start thinking about the future of the team to ensure the club’s success over the last six years won’t be short-lived.

As mentioned above, the Egyptian winger will not be an easy player to replace and his perfectly mastered position in the team will take some getting used to for any new forward intending to step into Salah’s shoes, but Pino has already shown glimpses that he is a talent worth paying attention to at Villarreal.

The 19-year-old who was hailed a “special talent” by Fabrizio Romano, made 31 appearances in the wide right position in Unai Emery’s side last season, scoring six goals, delivering four assists and creating six big chances, with the manager clearly trusting in the young player by deploying him in the position consistently.

In fact, Emery has lavished praise on his rising star, hailing Pino “brave” following his performance against Espanyol last season when the youngster scored four goals in just 53 minutes to become the youngest ever player to score a first-half hat-trick in La Liga:

“Yeremy is a 19-year-old boy who has a lot of maturity for certain things. He is competitive, brave and always wants more.”

Clearly incredibly competent in front of goal, as Salah is, the pair share more than just a prolific nature. Indeed. Pino is incredibly exciting with the ball at his feet, completing 1.6 dribbles per game last term. By comparison, Liverpool’s attacking sensation managed 1.5.

With that being said, the signing of Pino would be a great piece of business for Liverpool. Not only could they secure a young player that Klopp can develop into Salah’s heir but the club could also inject some more youth into their team in order to ensure they can compete at the highest level for years to come.

Can’t get enough of Liverpool? Get a live stream reminder for their next match: Liverpool vs Crystal Palace

Sunderland set to miss out on Archer

Sunderland are set to miss out on transfer target Cameron Archer after Aston Villa manager Steven Gerrard confirmed that he will be staying at the club this season.

The Lowdown: Sunderland’s Archer pursuit

The striker spent the second half of last season out on loan at Preston North End in the Championship, and his performances at Deepdale caught the attention of multiple suitors.

The Black Cats have been credited with an interest in the 20-year-old for the majority of the window, but were set to face competition from Middlesbrough and the Lilywhites, who were keen on bringing him back.

Following a fresh update though, it sounds as if the Wearside outfit won’t be able to secure their man, this summer at least…

The Latest: Gerrard confirms Archer plans

Speaking to Premier League Productions (as quoted by The Northern Echo), Gerrard revealed that Villa won’t be selling or loaning Archer out in the coming weeks.

“We’ve made a decision with Cameron Archer that he’ll be staying in the door. He will be part of the first team group and needs to be ready when called upon to contribute to the team.”

The Verdict: Blow for Neil

Sunderland have Ross Stewart and Ellis Simms as attacking options in the final third, alongside Jack Clarke who can also play up top, but Alex Neil will be keen to bolster his ranks even further.

After the 1-1 opening day draw against Coventry City last weekend, the boss insisted that he wanted to make at least ‘four or five’ new signings before the window closes to create plenty of squad depth.

The Black Cats have already missed out on Troy Parrott from Tottenham Hotspur and have now suffered the additional blow of failing to secure Archer, labelled a ‘bullish’ player by Preston manager Ryan Lowe, meaning that the search for their perfect bagsman continues.

Manchester United set to sign Martinez

Manchester United are closing in on their second summer signing of the transfer window, after a breakthrough in negotiations for Ajax defender Lisandro Martinez.

What’s the word?

The Argentina international has been heavily linked with a move to Old Trafford in recent weeks and it seems as if the Red Devils have finally reached an agreement with the Eredivisie champions.

Fabrizio Romano confirmed this morning that:

“Manchester United are closing on Lisandro Martinez deal: new round of talks scheduled today with Ajax to reach full agreement for €50m plus add-ons, after the meeting in Amsterdam. Payment terms, one of the final steps. Lisandro made his choice: Manchester United.”

Supporters will be buzzing

Erik ten Hag was clearly desperate to reunite with a player that was so vital to his Ajax side over the past two seasons, and supporters will be hoping that he can get the same performances out of Martinez at Old Trafford.

The 24-year-old, who can also play as a defensive midfielder, was one of the top performers for Ajax last season as they won the Eredivisie title.

Only Sebastien Haller and Dusan Tadic would better Martinez’s superb 7.60 average rating from WhoScored, which emphasises just how crucial he was in Ten Hag’s side.

Considering none of United’s centre-back options would average above a 6.8 rating last season, it was clear that Ten Hag needed to strengthen in that position and he is bringing in a player he knows he can trust.

United’s defensive performances were woeful at times last season, as they shipped 57 goals in the top flight, and signing Martinez could be a big way to amend that.

 

As the Ajax man can also play in midfield, he is extremely good on the ball, and will surely be better at building attacks from the back than the likes of Harry Maguire, which will benefit Ten Hag’s desired style of play.

Therefore, United fans will surely be delighted to hear that the deal for the Argentine is nearly completed.

AND, in other news: Ten Hag can finally axe £50m shocker as MUFC eye “amazing” £30m signing after de Jong

Man City: Fabrizio Romano shares Nathan Aké exit update

Manchester City and Chelsea will again be in contact with one another ‘in the coming days’ to negotiate a deal for defender Nathan Ake, reliable journalist Fabrizio Romano has claimed.

The Lowdown: Ake to Chelsea?

According to a report by Sky Sports, the west London club have held talks with Pep Guardiola’s side over a potential deal for their former academy graduate.

Chelsea are in need of defenders after Andreas Christensen joined Barcelona this summer, with Antonio Rudiger also making the switch to La Liga as he signed for Real Madrid.

The Manchester City centre-back left Stamford Bridge for Bournemouth in 2017 before making the move to the current Premier League champions two years ago for a £41m fee.

The Latest: Romano’s news on Ake

Romano has now shared the latest news on Ake’s proposed return to Chelsea.

Taking to Twitter, the journalist outlined: “Chelsea and Man City will be in contact again in the coming days to negotiate Nathan Aké deal after Sterling. Man City have been clear with Chelsea: they want almost same fee paid in August 2020, around £41m. #CFC

“Aké has full agreement with Chelsea on personal terms.”

The Verdict: Big loss

Whilst the Netherlands international has failed to secure a guaranteed starting spot in Guardiola’s favoured XI, starting just 25% of City’s league matches during his two years at the Etihad Stadium, the 27-year-old has still played an important part in the club’s domestic success since his arrival from Bournemouth.

When compared with positional peers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year, the defender ranks in the 99th percentile for non-penalty goals and non-penalty expected goals plus expected assists, and also in the 98th percentile for non-penalty expected goals and passes attempted (via FBRef).

Therefore, whilst Ake has never been a sure-fire starter under Guardiola, he still made 27 appearances for the club last season in a team full of superstars, with his manager describing him as “a joy to have” in the squad.

Furthermore, with Raheem Sterling’s move to Chelsea also likely to be completed imminently after a £47.5m fee was agreed, their two prospective departures to a fellow top-four Premier League club could come as a huge double blow for the Citizens.

Arsenal eye Man City striker Jesus

Journalist Freddie Paxton has now revealed the ‘feeling’ inside Arsenal regarding their pursuit of Gabriel Jesus.

The Lowdown: ‘Advanced’ talks

It has been reported that the Gunners are in ‘advanced’ talks to bring Jesus to the Emirates Stadium this summer after the departure of Alexandre Lacazette.

The Frenchman’s exit has left Mikel Arteta with only Eddie Nketiah and the returning Folarin Balogun as his striker options for next season, meaning that they are almost certain to sign another centre-forward this window.

The Latest: Jesus ‘feeling’

Taking to Twitter, Paxton, who also supports the North London club, has revealed that talks for them to sign Jesus are ‘progressing well’, and that discussions with his agents have been ‘positive’.

He added that there is a ‘feeling’ inside AFC that it is now a matter of ‘when’ and not ‘if’ for the deal to be done:

“Understand that negotiations for Arsenal to sign Gabriel Jesus are progressing well. Negotiations with agents around the overall package have been positive.

“There is a feeling from those around the club that it’s now a matter of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.”

The Verdict: Exciting

It is certainly exciting for the supporters to hear of Jesus’ expected arrival, with the saga dragging on long enough already for fans wanting to see him in a red and white shirt.

Despite being shifted out on the wing for most of last season by Pep Guardiola, the Brazil international still managed to score eight goals and make a further nine assists in 28 games in the Premier League (Transfermarkt).

His 17 goal contributions in the competition was only bettered in the Arsenal squad by Bukayo Saka (18), and the 25-year-old has shown consistently that he can make the difference at the final end of the pitch in the top flight.

Nonetheless, Jesus is a player Arteta knows very well from his time assisting Guardiola at City, and so this is a deal that makes a lot of sense for the Gunners.

Manchester United: Jurrien Timber move ‘practically closed’

Manchester United’s move for Ajax defender Jurrien Timber is ‘practically closed’, according to Portuguese journalist Pedro Almeida.

The Lowdown: Timber talks

Erik ten Hag has seemingly made the 20-year-old his first major target as United manager. The Red Devils first made contact over a possible move at the end of April, and a transfer has slowly gathered pace with the defender’s representatives in England last weekend.

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Timber, described as a ‘top talent’, as per the official UEFA Champions League Twitter channel, can play anywhere across the back four and is valued at a career-high £27m by Transfermarkt.

The Latest: Almeida’s update

Almeida took to Twitter on late on Friday evening to provide a Manchester United transfer update.

He revealed that a move for Timber is ‘practically’ done, adding that the club are now turning their attention to Villarreal’s Pau Torres.

The Verdict: New partnership?

Although Timber can play as a full-back, Ten Hag mainly used the Netherlands international at centre-back last season. He made 38 appearances at the heart of the defence and just five at right-back, helping Ajax to the Eredivisie title, conceding just 19 times in 34 games.

It looks as if he will become the club’s first major signing of the Ten Hag era, and with United now looking at a move for another centre-back in Torres, that could spell trouble for the likes of Harry Maguire, who was heavily criticised last season.

In other news: Reliable journalist leaks Man Utd talks as Ten Hag now eyes ‘terrific’ Englishman. 

Leeds enquire over Barcelona’s Ez Abde

Leeds United have reportedly enquired about the availability of Barcelona starlet Ez Abde, according to Spanish newspaper Sport (via Sport Witness). 

The lowdown: Top talent

Signed by Barcelona B in 2019 from Hercules, the 20-year-old winger progressed into Xavi’s first-team plans during the 2021/22 campaign.

Abde ended the season with 11 senior outings for the Catalan giants, having scored twice and provided seven assists in 20 appearances for the B team.

Despite seemingly having a bright future in Spain, it appears that Leeds are keen on bringing the Moroccan to the Premier League…

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The latest: Leeds interested in Abde

As per Sport, translated by Sport Witness, Leeds have ‘mentioned’ the name of Abde whilst discussing other deals with Barcelona – perhaps the widely-speculated transfer of Raphinha to Camp Nou.

It is suggested that Wolves – who loaned Adama Traore to the La Liga club in January – also enquired about the possibility of signing the 20-year-old.

Under contract at Camp Nou until 2024 (Transfermarkt), the report makes no mention of a desire from Barcelona to sell the youngster, who was hailed as ‘extraordinary’ by Xavi following a 2-2 draw against Osasuna in which the versatile attacker scored and also completed five successful dribbles in a 7.2-rated performance from Sofascore.

The verdict: Smart move

Equally adept on either wing, signing Abde amidst the possibility of either or both of Raphinha and Jack Harrison departing would be a smart piece of business from Jesse Marsch and Victor Orta.

The talented starlet completed 3.4 dribbles per game during 10 La Liga outings in his breakthrough season at that level, highlighting a penchant for beating defenders which would be welcomed with open arms at Elland Road, where nobody averaged more than two successful dribbles per match in 2021/22.

Boasting stylistic similarities with the likes of Crystal Palace star Wilfried Zaha, Sevilla ace Lucas Ocampos and the aforementioned Traore (Fbref), Abde is certainly one to watch as the next generation of talent comes through at Barcelona, and Leeds would be wise to remain attentive to the possibility of this capture.

In other news, Leeds are eyeing up another signing after Aaronson. Find out who it is here

Everton suffer injury blow to Pickford

Everton have had their fair share of injuries already this season with Ben Godfrey and Yerry Mina sidelined in the backline, and now a new update has emerged that could seriously impact the Toffees’ defensive set-up.

What’s the latest?

According to The Athletic’s David Ornstein, Jordan Pickford is set to be out for up to a month with a thigh injury sustained in the Merseyside Derby.

Ornstein wrote in his article for the publication that the Toffees’ number one is set to miss out on the clash with Arsenal and West Ham United as well as likely missing out on England’s fixtures during the international break.

Lampard will be frustrated

There is no doubt that Frank Lampard will be frustrated with the news that Pickford could be out for up to four weeks as he has arguably been Everton’s best player of the season so far.

The injury to the England ‘keeper comes as he put in a Man of the Match performance against Liverpool in the Merseyside Derby last weekend with eight phenomenal saves against the club’s bitter rivals to hold the visitors to a 0-0 draw, leaving the Toffees unbeaten in their last four games in the Premier League.

In fact, Pickford is second only to Newcastle United’s Nick Pope for saves this season (26), and has had a significant influence on their ability to hold their last four opponents to a draw in the league.

Over six appearances, the 28-year-old has saved 81% of the shots against him, with 1.3 clearances per game and 42 touches per match which has led to him being the highest-rated player (7.47) in the entire Everton squad for his contributions in the team so far, according to SofaScore.

Lampard was full of praise for his keeper after his display against Liverpool last weekend hailing Pickford in his post-match interview:

He said: “Superb, the save from Nunez in the first half when I think we were comfortable as you can be against Liverpool – it’s just a moment of quality and he gets a fingertip to it.

“When he delivers like he did today everyone understands why he’s England’s number one and why we appreciate him so much here.”

With that being said, it’s a huge blow that he’ll miss the next month of action and Lampard will need to hope that Asmir Begovic can remain fit to replace him over his recovery period as Andy Lonergan is currently injured until after the international break as well.

From legal battles to last-minute flights: Puducherry's cricketing journey

The story of a motley crew of industrialists, semi-pros, amateurs and professionals, who came together to build something special

Saurabh Somani22-Dec-2018At about 10am on September 20, 2018, six uncapped cricketers in Puducherry, the city that is the capital of the Puducherry Union Territory on the southern coast of India, received a call from a Cricket Association of Puducherry official to bring all necessary documents to be submitted to the BCCI as proof of their status as local players. And immediately.On the previous day, Puducherry had just made a long-awaited debut in senior men’s domestic cricket, against Manipur in Vadodara, in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.What the six players didn’t know was that immediately after Puducherry’s debut – which should have been a happy one, given an eight-wicket win in 25.3 overs – rumblings of protest had reached a crescendo. The thrust was that the team was ‘Puducherry’ in name only, with convenient hires hurriedly drafted in as locals. In fact, the BCCI had relaxed the eligibility norms for the CAP, given that it could get operational – due to legal tangles and not administrative incompetence – mere months earlier.Whether the CAP was right in using the relaxed criteria in the manner it did is a philosophical debate for another day. But the upshot was that the BCCI immediately revoked the allowance it had granted. Suddenly, after a historic first match, the possibility of a second was in doubt – because there weren’t XI members remaining in the squad. With eight of them disallowed, the team rallied around those who were forced to leave, while also trying to keep the remaining flock together and upbeat.Back home, the six uncapped cricketers prepared their documents. The players thought they were being asked to submit them for the Ranji Trophy, which was still two months away. Then, it dawned on them that they were expected to make their debuts , at a place more than 1,000 miles away.There is one flight from Puducherry to Bengaluru on six days of the week, which leaves at 12.50pm. The players had about an hour to arrange their affairs and get to the airport in time. Thus began a mad dash that would end in the wee hours of the morning.One of them was wicketkeeper Ranjit Baskaran, who asked for a couple of hours off from his workplace, Eaton Power Quality Pvt Ltd, when he got the call. When he got to know that he wouldn’t simply be submitting documents but also flying out even before his scheduled lunch break, he went back to his office instead of home because there wasn’t enough time. “I just asked my friend to bring my kitbag to the airport,” he tells ESPNcricinfo. “Meanwhile, I went to my office and informed my manager that I need leave, and will let him know about the exact situation once I reach Gujarat. From office, I went directly to the airport.”Opener AM Narayanan runs a taxi service with two cabs, one of which he drives himself. Fortunately, he was home. When he later told his wife that he was off to play cricket, she had a touching request. “She told me to take photos in the flight,” he says. “It’s the first time I was going in a flight.”Saiju Titus has a sports shop that is close to one of the venues that teams have used for practice in the Ranji Trophy, the Palmyra Cricket Ground. He was grocery-shopping when he got the call. “My life is cricket,” Saiju says. “I’ve played Under-16, Under-19, Under-23 at district level. My shop is not as important for me as my cricket is. After this season, I [will] focus a lot more on practicing than on the shop. My younger brothers will look after the shop.”AM Narayanan, Saiju Titus and Ranjit Baskaran were all called up at the last minute after several players had been disallowed•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoSaiju is a portly 37-year-old. He’s been in the Ranji Trophy squad but hasn’t played the long format yet. He’s among a group that is made to run timed sprints after a day’s play, all part of the reserves. You can see the effort, the strain, and the purpling of the face as the intensive training continues. When it ends, Saiju can barely catch his breath. But he’s run miles to be where he is today, part of the Puducherry team, playing at the highest level of domestic cricket. What’s a few sprints?All six players made the flight. From Bengaluru, they flew to Mumbai, then travelled by road to Vadodara. A day that began with a 10am phone call ended with the replacement players trooping into the team hotel at about 3 am.Six hours later, they were making List A debuts against Uttarakhand.

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In some ways, the mad dash that the six players made has been a microcosm of the CAP’s existence. It’s a mostly uninterrupted tale of waiting, and then there’s a final frenzy. Almost as if it’s an MS Dhoni innings in a successful chase of yore.Initially, cricket in the Union Territory was supposed to be run by the Pondicherry Cricket Association. They were happy to be counted as one of the districts under Tamil Nadu Cricket Association. The actual running of the cricket was lower on the priority list. You could grow up in Puducherry as a dedicated, passionate fan of the game, and never know there was any cricket that was played in town.Tourists came to Puducherry drawn by the prospect of relaxing on beaches, visiting the Aurobindo Ashram, taking in the French cuisine or visiting the international township of Auroville. Nobody came for cricket.You could be proficient enough at the game to be considered for call-ups from state teams that actually played in the Ranji Trophy. But you wouldn’t have played on a proper cricket ground in Puducherry. Mihir Ravikanti, who runs a health-care manufacturing business in the city now, was called up for tryouts with the Andhra and Odisha sides in 1987-1990. He never got to play Ranji cricket, because although he was successful in his tryouts, nobody had told him he needed a ‘No-Objection Certificate’ from the home association. This was much before the internet era when information wasn’t readily available. And there was no one from the PCA to ask. A medium-pace bowling allrounder, Ravikanti was considered by many to be the finest cricketer from Puducherry. His experiences of playing on the ground run by the PCA are of an outfield more brown than green, with a thatched shed as the pavilion. The ‘refreshments’ were one clay pot of water that would have been barely enough for four players.It was in this background that the CAP emerged to challenge the PCA as the body that should control cricket in Puducherry. Driven by Damodharen, industrialist and keen cricket fan, whose Siechem Technologies had a full-fledged factory in town, the CAP wanted to cut the umbilical cord that bound Puducherry to the TNCA. A legal battle inevitably followed. It’s still not over, and still tangled enough for anyone without a law degree to fully understand. But what had seemed for almost a decade-and-a-half like a fruitless battle, received a shot in the arm due to the Lodha recommendations that sought to fundamentally change the workings of the BCCI.The fencing and surroundings of the CAP Siechem Ground•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoThe BCCI sent a team to the city, of which Anshuman Gaekwad was a part. They looked at what both rival associations were doing, and in their report, recommended that the CAP be given charge of running cricket. “From what we saw, these guys (CAP) seemed to have better plans and energy in place to get things done,” Gaekwad told ESPNcricinfo. That favourable report, kickstarted by Lodha’s recommendation that there should be a Puducherry team, meant the dream of cricket in Puducherry took concrete shape for the first time.Whatever claims and counterclaims the PCA and CAP may fling at each other, the fact remains that until the CAP got the authority to do things, senior-level cricket in Puducherry remained a ghost’s dream.Not that everything is honey and sugar in the CAP. In clubs, there are stray angry mutterings about not enough ‘local’ players being part of the team, and Damodharen having got in people from outside merely to have a good first season, without regard for actually developing cricket in the city. Damodharen himself was the secretary of CAP, but stepped down – again as per the Lodha norms – because his son Rohit D was the captain of the team.Inevitably, there were mutterings about that too. Comparisons were drawn with the Niranjan Shah-Jaydev Shah situation in Saurashtra. Recently retired, Jaydev played 120 first-class matches, captaining in 110 of those, while having a sub-30 first-class average and still being an unquestioned part of the top order for more than 15 years. Where the story differs is that Rohit scored a century on first-class debut, both his and his team’s, and was the best non-professional batsman for the team in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.His formative years were difficult.Rohit faced that question when he was 13 years old, and all because he had stopped playing all of a sudden.”I went for a camp conducted by BCCI in Puducherry, and then an all-India Under-17 tournament conducted by BCCI again,” Rohit says. “A week later, I go back to my school in Chennai, Don Bosco. On July 16, I get a letter from TNCA saying ‘Rohit Damodharen, son of so and so, is banned from playing cricket in Tamil Nadu.’ I didn’t even know what being ‘banned’ was at that age. The next day, there was a new rule in the TNCA league book saying that ‘any player who has played in an unrecognised tournament is banned from playing cricket in Tamil Nadu’. The least they could have done is given me a warning. And they cannot call a BCCI tournament ‘unrecognised’. A 13-year-old boy doesn’t deserve that.”From there, to captaining his team in the Ranji Trophy has been a considerable leap for Rohit.

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Abhishek Nayar is waiting just outside the dressing room, on the morning of Puducherry’s first-ever Ranji Trophy match. It’s a historic occasion, made more special because it’s Nayar’s 100th first-class match. There’s going to be a ceremony to honour him, and as Nayar walks through a guard of honour, each player holds up a sort of candle-stick, and Nayar walks through a bower of sparks to be presented with a memento for the occasion.”It felt like the whole association cares about a cricketer, and I’ve not even played my cricket here, I’ve just come,” Nayar says of the moment. “It made me feel loved. I’m not someone who expects a lot because I’ve never really got that, but I was really emotional with the amount of love and respect I got. I might not have got that reception in Mumbai, because Mumbai already has a lot of cricketers who have been there, done that. Puducherry hasn’t.”Abhishek Nayar walks through a guard of honour ahead of his 100th first-class match•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoIt’s a minor miracle that the ceremony has taken place at the CAP Siechem Ground. Built 20 kms away from the city centre – which if you live in Pondicherry is like inter-city travel – the ground has been got ready just in time for the season. You wouldn’t know it by looking only at the playing surface, a billiards table lush green. The sightscreens in place are state of the art, and because of how they are built, require only one person to move them. Till a day before the first Ranji match though, the pavilion wasn’t fully ready. But come match-day, the facilities for players, umpires, official scorers and match referees are in place, and working just fine.True, there wasn’t any permanent arrangement for the media or spectators, though the CAP did make admirable temporary arrangements. That’s because apart from the pavilion and the playing area, the rest is varying states of dust and rubble, and beyond that open fields. Even that is being spruced up. From the first round to the fourth, the VIP box – open to the elements in the first match – already had glass doors and an air-conditioner fitted.The players’ dressing rooms are at either ends of the pavilion, and it is from here that Nayar emerges for the waiting fanfare.Nayar, alongwith Pankaj Singh and Paras Dogra form arguably the most pedigreed ‘professional’ trio of any team in the Ranji Trophy, and certainly among those of the Plate Group teams, Puducherry’s fellow rookies. But while the professionals have been carrying teams in the Plate Group to a large extent, Puducherry have been helped by a support staff made up of former cricketers as well. Aavishkar Salvi is the head coach, Omkar Salvi the assistant coach, and Dishant Yagnik is the fielding coach.ALSO READ: Go pro – the template to success in Ranji Trophy’s Plate GroupThe three professionals and the coaching group are the ones guiding the larger group, formally or informally. “I believe that if you change teams, you should go to one where you can give more, you can help your teammates, bowlers and give the right guidance,” says Pankaj.Aavishkar Salvi outlines his coaching goals thus: “Performances matter for everyone. But it also matters that people should be happy and feel that their games have developed. They should also feel that someone came and lifted our games, gave us knowledge.”Nayar’s decision to move to Puducherry – and Pankaj’s – was driven in large parts because of the coaching staff. And nor is that confidence misplaced. M Vikneshwaran was promoted to open in the Ranji Trophy, having batted in the middle order in Vijay Hazare, and has hit a century and a fifty while scoring at 44.66 at the top of the order. Fabid Ahmed, who has played for Kerala earlier but could move to Puducherry since he was born in Mahe, which is part of the union territory, has been an all-round force and credits the coaching staff and professionals for helping him.Puducherry took the first innings lead against Meghalaya in a rain-affected opening match, and saw their game against Bihar washed out without a ball bowled. Since then, they’ve gone on a winning spree. Whether it’s a story of the underdog fighting against the odds, or the poker player turning the odds in his favour, posterity will decide. But since the disastrous day on which eight players were told they couldn’t play for year, Puducherry finished third in the Plate Group in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, and have an outside chance of qualifying for the quarterfinals in the Ranji Trophy.”A lot of those cricketers made a big call to come and play here, and then to lose out on a year is disheartening as a fellow cricketer,” says Nayar. “It’s never easy to tell a cricketer that you’re going to lose out on a year. That was the toughest part.”In that game against Uttarakhand I didn’t have any expectations, but even then we stood up and fought well. That made me believe that this team can withstand difficulties, and very early in their career as a cricketing state.”

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Things aren’t perfect yet. There is plenty that could be tweaked or improved, on and off the field. The manual scoreboard wasn’t completely up to date at all times. The third umpire’s camera stands aren’t yet built, so there is no third umpire. If you place your chair in the wrong spot while settling down to watch a day’s play, you can feel it sinking in the mud when you sit. When it rained once, a herd of goats from a field beside wandered in and walked around the perimeter of the fenced ground to look for shelter.But none of it matters. Because it’s the Ranji Trophy, and it’s happening in Puducherry, with a team representing the city playing. It’s magical.

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