SAFC need Ross Stewart amidst Rangers links

League One play-off finalists Sunderland face a summer battle to keep their Scottish sensation known as the “Loch Ness Drogba”.

As reported previously, Rangers are said to be “keeping tabs” on Stewart, who has had the most prosperous season of his life in what is his first full season in England’s third division.

Journalist Pete O’Rourke, revealed the latest last week when speaking to GIVEMESPORT, saying: “It looks like he’s obviously on their wanted list, Ross Stewart. It’s been talked about now for quite a few weeks that Rangers are keeping tabs on him.

“If Rangers do come calling, it’s going to be hard for somebody like Ross Stewart – a Scottish player – to turn down their advances.”

On the chalkboard

Stewart, whose goal against Sheffield Wednesday in the play-offs set off a “jumbo jet” in the words of Luke Edwards, has been an integral part in the Black Cats’ journey to the League One play-off final this season and has asserted himself as the second-highest goalscorer in the league, having notched 25 goals in 48 appearances for Alex Neil’s side.

At 25-years-old, he has finally had his breakout season and it has benefited Sunderland no-end. To the point where his presence in the squad is truly felt and if he was to leave, amidst the reported interest from Rangers, it would represent somewhat of a summer disaster for the Tyneside outfit.

The Scot, who could cost any suitor around £5m, has been so integral to Sunderland’s season that if he had not featured, they would go from League One’s third-highest goalscorers with 81 goals scored (just one goal behind both Oxford and Wigan who are tied in first place) to the sixteenth highest scorers with 56 goals scored.

With that in mind, it’s hardly surprising that his efforts have been dubbed “unbelievable” by Kris Boyd.

Stewart has proven himself as an out-and-out goal machine this season, and if Sunderland are to achieve their ambition of Championship promotion this season, then the need for the forward to stay will elevate that bit more.

Though, as O’Rourke said, if Rangers do come calling, it would be difficult for a Scottish player to turn them down. As a result, the club’s current boss will surely be scared over his star man’s future.

In other news: Neil already heading for big summer disaster on SAFC’s “major star” talent 

Five things on Lisa Keightley's to-do list as England head coach

Getting the most out of Danni Wyatt is among the tasks facing Keightley in her new role

Matt Roller30-Oct-2019Closing the gap on AustraliaIt’s hardly news that Australia are streets ahead of both England and the rest of the women’s game, both in terms of their first team and their depth, but after pledging an investment of £20 million over the next two years, the ECB are doing their best to change that.ALSO READ: Widening gulf in women’s game exposed by England’s Ashes thrashingOf course, that money is no silver bullet, and it will take several years for the national team to reap the benefits, but Keightley will be expected to put up a better showing in the next Ashes series than Mark Robinson’s side managed this summer. While Australia will inevitably go into both the T20 and 50-over World Cups as favourites, there is a certain expectation that England should reach the latter stages and be competitive.Finding a T20 formulaLisa Keightley joins England with the side at a critical juncture•Getty ImagesAfter clean sweeps in India and Sri Lanka and a win against West Indies, England had a 100 percent record in T20Is since their World T20 final defeat going into the Ashes this summer. But their shortcomings in the format were ruthlessly exposed by Australia in thrashings at Chelmsford and Hove: their batting looked rudderless against top-quality pace and spin, while their seam attack was one-dimensional.Most concerning was the lack of a clear blueprint in the format: allrounder Georgia Elwiss took the new ball to bowl her medium pace at Hove having missed the first game, while Amy Jones was shuffled down the order into a very different role after two failures opening.While she has only a limited period of time to do so, Keightley needs to find a formula in the short form before England’s World Cup campaign starts next spring. Robinson’s assistant Alistair Maiden will take charge of their series in Malaysia this winter, but Keightley would do well to sit down with him beforehand to work out how they want England to play.Getting the best out of WyattDanni Wyatt is a T20 superstar but has underwhelmed in ODIs•Getty ImagesThe benefits of Robinson’s time in charge were evident in no player more than Tammy Beaumont. Averaging 17.25 in ODIs and 8.31 in T20Is before his appointment, she then averaged 47.72 and 29.85 in the respective formats during his tenure, thanks in no small part to his backing despite all the evidence from her international record.While Beaumont is now a sufficiently complete player that she should have no concerns keeping that form up under a new coach, Keightley can hope to transform the fortunes of Danni Wyatt in a similar way. Wyatt, of course, is an accomplished T20 opener, with an average of 34.11 and a strike rate of 137.66 in the past two years, but she has struggled to translate that form into ODI cricket leaving her with an underwhelming record in 50-over cricket.Those struggles can in part be attributed to her role – she has generally had to bat at No. 6 or even No. 7 in ODIs – but she should be approaching her peak at 29 by the time the next 50-over World Cup comes round in 2021, and Keightley will be keen to make the most of Wyatt’s obvious talents.Succession planning for the seamersLauren Bell impressed in the KSL semi-final•Getty ImagesKatherine Brunt has been a near-constant presence in England’s seam attack over the past 15 years, but at 34 she may only have another two years of international cricket left in the tank. While Kate Cross impressed in the home summer, she is 28 herself, and Keightley would do well to make succession plans with the long term in mind.There are several talented young bowlers in the system: Tash Farrant and Freya Davies have both had a taste of international cricket, while the tall 18-year-old Lauren Bell impressed with the new ball in the Kia Super League semi-final, and tearaway teenager
Issy Wonghas been hotly tipped for a bright future. With the number of professionals in the game set to expand rapidly, there has never been a better time to be a young English fast bowler.Address nagging fitness problemsMark Robinson regularly bemoaned England’s fitness levels during his tenure•Getty ImagesRobinson’s tenure was bookended by his concerns about England’s fitness. “They out-ran us,” he said in the aftermath of the World T20 semi-final defeat to Australia in 2016. “Fitness is something we’ve got to get better at, because we missed out on twos.” Three years later, after the Ashes Test at Taunton, he reflected: “The only big difference between the two teams really is the athleticism. That’s not lack of effort from our team, that’s not lack of desire, they’ve just got better athletes.”While Robinson maintained that “God gives you physical attributes” and nothing could be done about Australia’s superiority in that area, Keightley will be keen to address any lingering concerns about her side’s fitness early on in her tenure; any post-match press conferences bemoaning England’s lack of athleticism will come with a certain sense of déjà vu.

Clark's lap of honour, Hockley's finest hour

Some of the biggest names in women’s cricket recount their standout experiences in past editions of the game’s premier event

Interviews by Shashank Kishore06-Jul-2017Lisa Sthalekar, former Australia allrounder
I fondly remember the 2013 campaign, not just for the win but for the emotional decision I took soon after our crowning glory. I had decided to quit the game before the World Cup. It was hard to keep all of it within, but I didn’t want to distract the team from our ultimate goal. We had just won the World T20 in Sri Lanka six months earlier, so to be part of a successful group gave me much pride. To achieve what we did and walk away in the country of my birth was special.What I also remember clearly of the campaign was the lack of buzz. When we landed in South Africa for the World Cup in 2005 – my first – all teams were housed at the High Performance Centre in Pretoria. There were flags, logos, banners and plenty of advertisement to suggest a big tournament was to start. In 2009 too, the ICC did a great job: there were plenty of posters and billboards around the main Sydney streets, all the teams were lined up for a function at the Sydney Harbour bridge. It was momentous. But the moment we landed in India for the 2013 edition, it seemed as if the message was simple: “Right, we’ll now split you teams into groups. One set pack up and head to Cuttack. Others stay back in Mumbai. Good luck.” The disconnect was glaring. Fortunately a lot of people had come in for the final and we had some kind of atmosphere. I think India’s early exit didn’t help matters.Goswami, the world’s leading wicket-taker, was inspired by Cathryn Fitzpatrick during the 1997 World Cup final: “Something about her action fascinated me”•Andy Campbell/UTPMEDIAJhulan Goswami, India fast bowler and former captain
Cricket had caught my fancy in 1992. Cable television had just entered India, and everyone in our neighbourhood used to get together to watch the World Cup matches on TV. Watching it with my brothers, who were fans of Imran Khan and Kapil Dev, got me hooked to the game. I would try to copy their actions during our street cricket matches. But it’s unbelievable, even today, how I didn’t watch a game in a stadium for the next five years. I had received complimentary passes from Hero Honda for the 1997 final. It was my first time at an international game. There were 45,000 people at Eden Gardens! The noise was unbelievable. I remember my academy friends saying someone called “Fitzy” was the fastest bowler. I had no clue who she was. I had never seen her before, but watching her bowl that day inspired me. Later I found out her name was Cathryn Fitzpatrick. Something about her action fascinated me. I tried to meet her but couldn’t. Years later when we played together and shared time together in the dressing room, she was surprised to know about how that was a turning point for me.New Zealand celebrate their World Cup win in 2000: “The joy of winning a World Cup and celebrating it with your mates is an unbelievable feeling,” says the captain then, Hockley•ESPNcricinfo LtdDebbie Hockley, former New Zealand captain
I played in five World Cups and have plenty of memories. We lost two successive finals – the 1997 one was particularly heartbreaking – but I can still imagine the buzz around Eden Gardens. But my favourite memory has to be our win in 2000 at home. To do it against Australia was extra special, especially given we lost our previous final to them. It was a nerve-racking experience. Defending five off the last over with one wicket in hand, a million thoughts went through my mind. I thought, “Oh dear, I can’t take a third successive loss in a World Cup final.” It was also to be my last game, so those final moments were emotional too. I knew I wouldn’t return to the field. But here I was the captain, and couldn’t let fear dictate me.I had positioned myself at long-off with fans screaming into my ear. Fortunately we got a wicket off the first ball, I don’t think I would have been able to hold my nerve for one more delivery beyond that. There was manic celebration around me, but all I remember was sitting right where I was fielding for a good two or three minutes with my head down, eyes closed and just soaking it all in. Someone had to push me to move from there and join the team celebration. Those last few moments in the dressing room were really special. We were hosted for a nice dinner reception that evening. The joy of winning a World Cup and celebrating it with your mates, many of whom have been an integral part of your journey, is an unbelievable feeling.Australia bask in the glory at Eden Gardens in 1997: “Our victory lap is still etched in my memory, because we were being cheered like a home team,” says Clark•Craig Prentis/Getty ImagesBelinda Clark, former Australia captain
Personally, it’s hard to look beyond our 1997 campaign. To this day, I don’t know how many people were there at Eden Gardens that day. I’ve heard different variations. One thing I can tell you, though, is my eardrums were buzzing; I hadn’t played in front of such a crowd ever before. Our victory lap is still etched in my memory, because we were being cheered like a home team. For us to win there was extremely special. It was also in 1997 where I hit that record 229, against Denmark. To bat right through to get to a world record was great but it didn’t quite sink in for a long time.Raj leads her troops out for the 2005 final. “We were overawed [in the final], but it was nevertheless a campaign to cherish in more ways than one,” she recalls•Getty ImagesMithali Raj, India captain
The 2005 campaign brings back so many memories. I was close to giving up the game. During the tournament I struggled to run because my knees had given up. They used to swell up like potatoes. I was spending plenty of time with the physio to get ready, but somehow it was very difficult. I phoned my mother to tell her I would quit, even before the tournament began. I also told her not to inform my father of this decision, but she dissuaded me. As it turned out, we finished runners-up. Just before the final, I remember receiving so many phone calls at the team hotel from back home. I had never given so many interviews up until then, but seeing the interest made me so happy that I thought to walk away would be stupid. The regret of not winning the final will always be there. We were overawed, but it was nevertheless a campaign to cherish in more ways than one.Maroof (right): “The seeds of what we are today were sown [during the 2009 World Cup]”•Getty ImagesBismah Maroof, Pakistan batter
The tournament in 2009 was our first World Cup since our appearance in 1997. As a team we were excited, but we knew we weren’t anywhere close to the top sides in terms of standards. We played just two tournaments after our qualification was confirmed in 2008. Our home series against West Indies would have given us a chance to see where we stood, but that was cancelled because of security reasons. Cricket-wise, it was always going to be too much for us to match up to the standards then. Our realistic goal was to compete.In terms of our build-up, there wasn’t much. Apart from our immediate families and friends, not many even knew what we were training for. The lack of coverage wasn’t entirely surprising. People would wonder why we would train in the hot sun for months together, and were equally baffled to hear there was a World Cup for women. But the moment we landed in Australia, all of us were so amazed at the sporting culture there. The seeds of what we are today were sown then. The following year, we went on to win Asian Games Gold. That is when people back home knew there was a women’s team too!

'If I had debuted in 2006, I wouldn't have lasted 20 years'

Shahid Afridi looks back on his two decades in international cricket, the burden of expectations, and battling coaches who tried to change his game

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi19-Mar-2016Thirty-four minutes with Shahid Afridi. A younger Afridi would have hit hundreds for fun in that kind of time.Sitting with both legs tucked under him on the leather sofa settee in the living room of his hotel suite in Dubai, he is still but not still. It is the day of the final of the inaugural Pakistan Super League. His room, on one of the higher floors of the hotel, overlooks the marina, and the soft light of the late afternoon sun gleams on his handsome, bearded face.Afridi’s youngest daughter paws around the room like a curious cat, while he talks about his 20 years in cricket. Among all the feats he has managed, surviving two decades in Pakistan cricket is the most incredible. There’s a strong feeling in Pakistan that this World T20 could really be his swansong. You get the feeling that Afridi wants to go, but he says he is being forced to rethink retirement.In this interview Afridi talks about his battles with coaches bent on changing him, why he never managed to become an established Test cricketer, and how Pakistan need to adapt to the changing demands of international cricket.When you made your debut 20 years ago, did you ever think you’d be playing 20 years later?
Playing for Pakistan was such a huge dream. I never thought I would play this long. At the time I thought, I’ve got an entry, a little more will be fine. But I kept going from there. Seniors like Wasim [Akram] and Moin [Khan] really pushed me. I needed that. I was performing at a young age, with all that fame, the world record. I got the strength slowly, got support from my seniors and elders, but I never thought I’d play this much.Back then many thought that you wouldn’t last, that you were just a slogger. Did you ever doubt yourself?
I began as a bowler and batting at No. 8 or 9 at Under-14, U-16 and U-19 levels, so to change myself was really difficult. At the start, the expectations people had was from my batting – that he will come and hit out. To change myself was really difficult. I couldn’t focus enough on my bowling, through which I had got into the team. People wanted to see my batting.I think, at that time I would have improved had the coaches worked on my skills rather than trying to change me. I would give credit to Bob Woolmer [the former Pakistan coach], because he didn’t try to change anything in me, unlike the Pakistan coaches, whose effort was to make me play the way they played in their time. That wasn’t possible, because everyone has a different kind of talent.

“The only talk I have with my team is that I want 100% effort on the field, so people say, ‘Pakistan today has really given it all, they have given their lives to this display'”

Can you give some examples of how they tried to change you?
In the first 15 overs of an ODI, with field restrictions, they would want me to run singles and doubles, to hit fours along the ground, and not go aerial and attempt sixes. I didn’t have that in me in the first place, so how was I going to bring it about?I was trying to become a batsman from a bowler – and maybe I’m still trying () – but if the coaches had given me more support, I might have been different. How difficult was it for you to make them understand that that was not your game?
I used to get very frustrated, and whenever I went in to bat, I was in two minds. Any shot I played, I would do with fear in my heart, that if I get out to this shot, the coach will ask me, “What kind of shot have you just played?” With that pressure, I batted for five to seven years. But eventually I took a call and said: if I play, I will play the way I want to, not how anyone else tells me to.Once I didn’t get the kind of consistency that I wanted, I switched my attention back to my bowling again. My elders said: what did you start cricket with – your bowling, right? Now make that a weapon.What was Woolmer’s effect on you? Did he work on you technically?
I don’t think in international cricket there is a need for coaching. The real coaching is to recognise your players’ strengths and weaknesses. You always remain positive with your players. In Pakistan, if you don’t score runs in two matches, the coach does not even respond to your . Woolmer was totally the opposite of that. He would go to the kid who didn’t perform and talk to him. He would remind him of his old innings. If you see my performances and that of the team in his era, they have been great.That was the real difference and key to Woolmer: he used to make me remember those great innings I had played and remind me that I played those without pressure, with freedom. He’d encourage me to play as often as possible like that, and say that he would never tell me off for it.”The real thing I have is drift. When I don’t bowl well, I can see I’m not getting that drift, because the body is not being put into it”•Getty ImagesAre you saying you don’t need a coach in all forms of cricket?
I think in international cricket, your management is about motivating players. You need coaches at the U-19, A team, U-14 or U-16 level. In international cricket you need to get a guy to perform.In these 20 years what challenges have you faced to evolve as a batsman and as an allrounder?
In our culture and in the west, there is [a huge difference]. They enjoy the day, then forget about it and think of a new day. Our problem is that we have media pressure, public pressure, your own individual performance pressure, pressure of making a place in the team – we focus on too much of these things in Asia.The real player is one who is strong inside, who can accept challenges. Allah gave me a little strength, I was strong inside to not fall apart in the face of some big challenges. I mean, if you don’t perform then even the people in your house, family sometimes, don’t support you. There have been many days when I thought I’ll stop playing cricket, it’s too much, it’s enough. I’ve cried in dressing rooms, have broken bats, have broken TV sets.But you find people who motivate you, who tell you that failure is an opportunity. There was one very difficult time I was going through when Shoaib Malik was captain and I wasn’t performing in bowling or batting. I went to a very respected elder I know and told him what was happening. He talked to me about our prophet and said the difficulties he faced in his entire life, your troubles are nothing compared to his. Once he said this, from top to bottom, I just completely relaxed. To hell with everything, I thought, I’m just going to enjoy my game and relax. This was in 2008.

“School cricket is dying. When we went to school, I had a passion and talent for the game, and in school there was opportunity, so I got into it”

Not many players have played for 20 years. Sachin Tendulkar said he did because of his dedication, discipline, focus on the game and priorities in life. What things did you focus on to survive?
When you start playing, cricket is a passion of yours. After you keep playing, you get to a stage where it becomes a business for you. Then it depends on you – many don’t do social work; as a player I started to do it. Then the responsibility increases. You need to manage family expectations.You get stronger. You are recognised, you have a fan following, so you want to keep those guys happy. Challenges come, but your own respect is very important. When you want to finish with cricket, you want to do it with respect.How do you survive Pakistan cricket with its controversies, not playing at home, corruption, captaincy issues, the board? You were even banned.
I went to court as well…()I’ll tell you something from the heart. My father and family have really given me a lot of support. They have never let me fall. Their prayers have been with me throughout. My real strength is my [public]. My , in every difficult time, has supported me, whether I took a [picked a fight] with the board or anyone. I’ve always stood for my players and the truth when I was captain, whether I had issues with Vicky [Waqar Younis] or Ijaz Butt [former PCB chairman].The has always given me such support that I can never forget them. They have been my strength. I think inside I have remained strong, even though people have been against me. I have had performances with which you can slap critics back on their faces.”Woolmer used to make me remember those great innings I had played and remind me that I played those without pressure. He’d encourage me to play as often as possible like that”•Hamish Blair/Getty ImagesThat support from the people can also be a burden, right?
That pressure of expectation is the thing. .In the past, when you’d get out, the stadium would empty. Did you feel disappointment at getting out and then watching the crowds disperse?
Until I hit a boundary, I feel restless. That pressure stays with me. Some players can feel confident taking singles and doubles. I spoke to a couple of others, like [Virender] Sehwag, who also said, “Until I hit a boundary I don’t feel settled”. The pressure from the , the pressure of expectation, is huge – that is international cricket, after all, because we play with the same bat and ball in domestic cricket.I think, batting or bowling or fielding, I don’t want to become a burden on the side, so that the doesn’t say: get rid of him, take him out. Before hearing that, I want to go myself.There have been two big captains in Pakistan recently – Misbah-ul-Haq in Tests, you in ODIs and T20s. Misbah is a cricket obsessive. He doesn’t switch off. Are you like that?
I can never get to the level of Misbah, ever. His talking, thinking is completely cricket – day and night. That is his personality. I am a little different, a little aggressive. The only talk I have with my team is that I want 100% effort on the field, so people say, “Pakistan today has really given it all, they have given their lives to this display.” As a captain, that is a big thing for me. You win and lose, sure. But when you leave the ground you don’t want to think that I could’ve done a little bit more today.An aspect of your captaincy not discussed often is your on-field tactical thinking.
My effort is to keep things as simple as possible and make plans according to situations. I take decisions by myself, but I always try to listen to the seniors around me, to be able to call on them during a match and ask: what do you reckon here, what should be done? They give me their plan and I decide from that. There are very few decisions I take by myself. It is a team game. My senior players have also been ex-captains.

“The has always given me such support that I can never forget them. They have been my strength”

How much has not playing Test cricket affected your career?
If I had played Test cricket right from the start, I would have had a chance to improve a lot. But I got a Test debut after 60-70 ODIs. I did well early on, but if I didn’t perform in one series, I would be dropped from the Test side. Then I used to come back, perform, not perform, get dropped. In two innings if I didn’t do anything I would be dropped. So I thought, better than this, side [step aside from Test cricket] and, in truth, I wasn’t enjoying Test cricket at the time.Did you look at yourself as a Test cricketer?
Yes, . But I don’t think I ever had a plan to play it for a long time. When I made a comeback [in 2010], that was only because of the chairman [Butt]. There was a lot of politics in the team at the time. The chairman knew I was doing well with the ODI and T20 sides, and the dressing room was good under me, so he thought of me.When he offered it to me, I said no, initially. Then he requested, along with two or three other people. I said, if I don’t enjoy it, I will leave. We went to England and the incident there [spot-fixing at Lord’s] – the management wasn’t listening to me when I said there are some people who need to stay away from the team, they are spoiling the atmosphere. We lost the match and when they didn’t listen, I decided I can’t play Test cricket if things stay like they are.Did you have an idea at that time of how bad the atmosphere was in the side?
Yes. I had spoken to the management at the time about some people trying to get close to the team and that I was not happy with them. I found out that these guys are involved in these things and I needed to be moved far away from them.If you had debuted in 2006, not 1996, in the age of T20, how different would you have been?
! If 2006, and I was 18 to 20 years old… I think I wouldn’t have lasted 20 years. And the stars, the big names I played with and in the opposition, in West Indies, India and Australia – that I would’ve missed.Now cricket has become difficult for cricketers. There is so much of it, and too many injuries because of that. In this age, playing 20 years is impossible, no way.”As captain, my effort is to keep things as simple as possible. I take decisions by myself, but I always try to listen to the seniors around me”•AFPAlso, I would’ve missed the freedom that was there [when I made my debut in the late 1990s]. No media, no social media. Now cricketers can’t enjoy cricket like that. That life has finished. That respect has gone. There were 15 to 16 stars then, now there are two to three.On the field, too, the game has changed so much. You held the record for the fastest one-day hundred for so long. Now AB de Villiers looks like he may score the fastest hundred in every game.
T20 has really changed cricket. If you take Test cricket, you get results in four days, three and a half days. It has changed a lot. It should too, with time. You enjoy that change – the crowd you get at a T20, you do not get that even in an ODI anymore.What mindset did you play your first innings with? Is it different to how batsmen feel now?
I went out there with the mindset of a No. 8 or 9, like a tailender. Now, skills are very important for a batsman. Talent everyone has, but the skills to play these crazy shots… even fast bowlers get reverse-swept, which didn’t happen in the past. It is difficult for bowlers but it’s entertaining for fans. What shots have you added to your game?
I still play [the straight path], . The sweep, I play sometimes, off a good yorker. A yorker is difficult to hit straight. I never thought about reverse-sweeping, not even against a spinner. I think the guy who hits a reverse shot, maybe isn’t able to hit straight. If you have the strength and power to hit a straight six, then if two fielders are standing back [behind square] why should I take such a chance? A lot of players play a lot of these shots – Misbah plays it as his opening shot and does it well. [Abdul] Razzaq never hit a sweep, let alone a reverse. So those guys who have the belief that if they can hit straight, why take a chance?How different is the first bat you used in an international match to the ones you use today?
That was Sachin’s [Tendulkar] bat. But if I look at that now, there is a huge difference between bats of today and those ones. They are longer now. Sachin’s bats have also changed. They are much stronger now. The wood they use is great and your Indian bats are very famous.

“There have been many days when I thought I’ll stop playing cricket, it’s too much, it’s enough. I’ve cried in dressing rooms, have broken bats, have broken TV sets”

Do you reckon the game favours batsmen?
Yes, too much.Is that good or bad?
It depends a lot on the pitches – if it is a fast bowler’s pitch, then the fast bowler survives. If you look at cricket, spinners and batsmen are surviving. For fast bowlers, especially because of the circle [field restrictions], it has become difficult. But the two new balls help, especially if the pitch is conducive. If not, then [they are not spared].If you saw the Australia-India matches [India’s ODI tour of Australia in January], even on the Perth pitch, there were 300-315 runs. Pitches everywhere are runs pitches.Have you brought a lot of change to your legspin over the years?
As such I haven’t tried to change too much with my legspin. The real thing I have is drift. When I don’t bowl well, I can see I’m not getting that drift, because the body is not being put into it.Where does the drift come from?
When your whole body is going to go into it [the action]. It comes from the hip, the side, the shoulder, the follow-through. Unless you are 100% with these, you will not get that kind of drift. You will get it, but not a consistent one.Is it something you have improved over the years, or did you always have it?
You can say that after playing lots, after watching a couple of series where I bowled outstandingly, seeing that the body was like this and it wasn’t in that game, and what is the difference, with our analysts, you look at yourself. A man can learn best from himself.”The PSL will make a difference to Pakistani cricket in three to four years. I am very happy with it, it was “•PSLYou’ve never bowled fast?
I started cricket by bowling fast.In that Faisalabad Test where you opened the bowling…
[VVS] Laxman helmet [I hit VVS and others on their helmets].I started as a fast bowler in street cricket. One day, we were practising, I was 11 or 12 maybe, the batsman was probably the same age. Mohtashim Rasheed [the former first-class left-arm spinner] saw me bowling fast. The ball hit the other kid pretty hard, so Mohtashim said: Why don’t you bowl spin? In those days, Abdul Qadir was pretty huge, so I bowled in his style. It was so good, Mohtashim said, “From today you should only bowl spin”. I used to chuck anyway as a fast bowler.Why don’t Pakistan have power-hitting modern batsmen?
One, cricket has become really modern. Our board, our management, they should be thinking about these things now. They have to get rid of these old-fashioned views, bring in new people, with new thinking, so that they can create something new with these kids.Until you have schools cricket, you will not produce that level of talent. School cricket is dying. When we went to school, my father thought I will be a doctor or an engineer, but I had a passion and talent for the game, and in school there was an opportunity, there was an atmosphere for it, so I got into it.There were grounds. Now schools are businesses. Sports have finished. In every neighbourhood there are one or two schools as businesses. If you want to become a player, you have to start from school. That is one place, if you have the facilities, to become a doctor or engineer, or a cricketer or footballer.

“If I had played Test cricket right from the start, I would have had a chance to improve a lot. But I got a Test debut after 60-70 ODIs. I did well early on, but if I didn’t perform in one series, I would be dropped”

We need to change our thinking and provide facilities. With just with one cricket academy we shouldn’t think that we can start beating Australia, New Zealand or England. Okay, fine, on a given day you can beat them, but overall, until your base is strong you cannot do it consistently.Look at Australia. Shane Warne, [Glenn] McGrath retired together. But they didn’t have problems, because their system, their base, is strong. Look at India – why has cricket improved so much, why has [MS] Dhoni been able to bring out new players? In every ground they have academies. The board has used their cricketers well and they have taken younger guys along.With us, our former guys only want to work with the Pakistan team coaching [set-up]. The PCB should get the top cricketers to U-14, U-16 level to share experiences with them in those academies.Not playing in the IPL and the Big Bash, does it make a difference?
Of course. Or you raise the standard of domestic cricket to such a high level that they play. Many guys who are here [in the PSL] right now, top cricketers from Pakistan’s domestic cricket, have struggled in a bigger crowd of players. They couldn’t perform.If you take the India [IPL] example, a new kid comes, he plays in front of such big crowds, in a dressing room with such big names, he faces no pressure in international cricket. And international cricket is all about the pressure and how to handle it.Do you reckon the PSL will make a difference to Pakistan cricket?
Of course it will. Not right now, but in three to four years. I am very happy with it, it was . The credit goes to the PCB for it. I would thank those overseas players who came and played with our younger kids. I would thank those franchises who took part for Pakistan cricket.What was your favourtite moment in the PSL?
Just that it happened was a big moment, given it was cancelled twice before this. Probably the biggest moment was our youngsters were coming out of Pakistan for the first time, sitting in a dressing room with such big stars. That was a huge thing for me. I didn’t worry about our results. I didn’t even hope to win so many matches.

Christchurch: Broken, resurgent

Damaged by an earthquake four years ago, the city is still recovering. The World Cup will allow it to show off what it has achieved so far

Firdose Moonda10-Feb-2015Global sporting events have the power to influence infrastructure development. Think the 1992 Olympic Games, which allowed Barcelona to turn the neglected neighbourhood of Poblenou into a swanky seaside district, the 2010 Soccer World Cup, which sped up the construction of a modern rail link between Johannesburg and Pretoria or the 2018 Commonwealth Games, which will see the suburb of Parklands in Queensland undergo a major urban renewal project. But the 2015 Cricket World Cup will serve a different purpose for Christchurch.”We may be a little bit broken but we’re still here and this is our chance to remind people of that,” Kelly Stock from Christchurch and Canterbury Tourism explained. “It’s about not forgetting Christchurch.”The city, which will host the opening match of the tournament and two other group games, was forced to begin rebuilding after a catastrophic earthquake in 2011 which claimed 185 lives and changed the face of the city. Eight days short of four years to the day that happened, Christchurch will be able to show how much it has recovered.Understanding the extent to which Christchurch was physically damaged is not difficult. Buildings stand broken, if they stand at all. Every street in the city centre is scarred with rubble, most have fenced off areas separating what was there from what will be there and cranes jut out into the skyline like band-aid. Really understanding how Christchurch was damaged, requires a much closer look.The first place you may see it is at , the poignant memorial to those killed, each of them immortalised by a piece of furniture, lined up opposite the Presbyterian Church, as though waiting for a service to begin. There’s a high-backed dinner chair, a comfortable couch, a regular desk chair and a baby’s car seat. The chills the last one will give you will not be the result of the Antarctic wind that can blow through these parts. It will be cold realisation.Diagonally across the road lies the vacant plot of the Canterbury Television building in which more than half the dead perished. Now dotted with flower boxes, it does not look like the scene of a tragedy but as a place for new life. Throughout the city, that is what Christchurch is trying to create.Conservative, not any more•ESPNcricinfo LtdA little further away was where they decided to , literally. That is the name of a temporary containerised shopping village, which was set-up to encourage people to keep living in the city; really living, not merely existing. For that, they needed a reason to want to be there and the brightly-coloured boxes which host everything from clothing stores to coffee shops provided that.The mobile mall is designed to move once a permanent structure is built; it has already done so twice since its inception and will continue relocating as the city redevelops. Christchurch is no longer afraid of shifting sand. “It used to be quite a conservative city, but now that has all changed. It was forced to,” Stock said.One of the most obvious examples of that is in the architectural styles. Because such a large number of the city’s older buildings were either too damaged or deemed too dangerous to continue standing, there has been a move to preserve the Gothic facades but rebuild the rest of the structure. Some of them even have a splash of public art adorning them such as the ballerina painted by local artist Owen Dippie, who pirouettes on the back of the Isaac Theatre.Not all of the change has been so easily embraced and the cathedral remains an issue of contention. The now 110-year-old building survived four earthquakes before 2011, but this was the only one which threatened its existence. The damage from four years ago ran from the spire into the structure itself and a demolition was seen as the only solution. But midway through that process, a court battle between the church and those who opposed the taking down ensued and all activity paused except for the opening of a new cathedral a few blocks away. The grand old lady lies faceless and exposed to the elements, which some fear will damage her further.The 110-year-old church lies faceless, exposed•ESPNcricinfo LtdLuckily, nature has not been too unkind to Christchurch and the Botanical Gardens serve as a reminder for that. The park, which received the Supreme Award at the Ellerslie International Flower Show last year, stretches across 21 hectares and has more than 250 varieties of roses among myriad other plants. It was untouched in the earthquake. Stock said it became an oasis to the people of the city in the aftermath. Next to it lies Hagley Park where the international cricket ground is nestled.Although the Oval was always there, it was not always the venue for big matches. Those went to Lancaster Park, which was also a rugby stadium, and was another of the earthquake’s victims. When it was destroyed, big sport was forced out of Christchurch.The Crusaders, southern hemisphere’s most successful regional rugby team, were temporarily moved out and more crushingly, the city was taken off the schedule for the 2011 Rugby World Cup. The tournament took place just seven months after the earthquake and it was logistically impossible for Christchurch to host the five pool matches and two quarterfinals it was due to stage.Rugby has since returned and cricket has followed, in the quaintest of ways. Because not everyone wanted the public space of Hagley park turned into a commercial cricket ground, it has retained the charm of old with sloping grass embankments and a small pavilion. Temporary stands have been brought in for the World Cup. They are expected to be full of life and so is the city itself.Concerts have been planned, a fan park and trail, and local establishments are preparing for swelling numbers. There’s a vibe of vitality around, zing in the air, a spring in the steps of people who know that the 2015 World Cup will not be the reason Christchurch continues on its long road to recovery but it will allow them to show off what they have achieved so far.

The modest Super King

Meet Mohit Sharma, one of the biggest surprises in the first half of this IPL

Nagraj Gollapudi04-May-2013Who has taken the most wickets in Powerplays during this IPL? A 24-year-old right-arm medium-pacer from Faridabad who plays for Haryana on the domestic circuit. His 11 victims include Virender Sehwag, David Warner, Yuvraj Singh, Brendon McCullum and Cameron White: all defeated by nagging accuracy.Mohit Sharma is unlikely to have been your top guess.”I feel really good if you look at the names. They are big players all of them,” Mohit said, a day after his three wickets helped Super Kings defeat Pune Warriors in Pune. “But when I charged in with the ball in hand, I never had in my mind who was in front of me.”It was his second three-wicket haul in the IPL. His first came against Delhi Daredevils at Feroz Shah Kotla, where he bowled a tight three-over spell, giving away just 10 runs. Two days after the Pune match, he played another influential hand, taking two wickets in the home encounter against Kings XI Punjab.He may be relatively unknown outside cricketing circles in north India but Mohit was one of the most consistent bowlers in this year’s Ranji Trophy, finishing the season as the fifth-highest wicket-taker. His 37 wickets came in just eight matches – his team, Haryana, semi-finalists in 2012, failed to make the knockouts this time.As news of his promise spread, talent-hungry franchises knocked on the door of Anirudh Chaudhary, the secretary of the Haryana Cricket Association. It is understood that three teams were keen to sign Mohit before Super Kings won the day.Sharma was one of five uncapped Indian domestic players Super Kings picked after a one-day bowling camp in Chennai in January. He was one of four fast bowlers – apart from Karnataka’s Ronit More, and Uttar Pradesh’s Imtiaz Ahmed and Ankit Rajpoot – shortlisted by Super Kings’ bowling coach, Andy Bichel.”Halfway into the Ranji season, I was told that there were chances that Super Kings might be interested,” Mohit said. “I was attending the fast-bowling camp at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore when I got a call from them.”About 5ft 11in tall, he has a smooth delivery stride and relies on the outswinger for his stock ball. He says Bichel, the former Australia fast bowler, has played an influential role, building his confidence from the outset. The biggest correction Bichel made – which is still a work in progress – was to Mohit’s body balance after he landed in his delivery stride; his body would be in an awkward position before he entered his follow-through.After Mohit’s match-winning spell against Warriors, his captain, MS Dhoni, spoke of how he was putting to use skills he had learned playing in Delhi’s competitive environment. A good example has been Mohit’s strategy against left-handers like David Warner and Yuvraj Singh on low and slow pitches like the ones at Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi and Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium in Pune.”Since both the pitches keep slightly low, my plan was to pitch the ball as close to the body of the batsman as possible,” he said. Warner played on, attempting a pull against the short ball, and Yuvraj was caught behind off a cut.Though he’s a newcomer, Mohit said he was under no pressure when he sat in the Super Kings dressing room for the first time. “No doubt I was excited, but I was only observing to begin with,” he said.Dhoni’s message to Mohit, at all times, has been clear: “The captain has always told me to keep things simple. The best method is to stick to a good line and not offer width, and bowl as many dot balls as possible, which would make things difficult for the batsman.”

“The biggest thing is: your attitude on the field is visible to everyone. So how you maintain your composure and perform in any situation is what matters”

Mohit hopes to use the lessons from the IPL to his benefit in domestic cricket. “The biggest thing is: your attitude on the field is visible to everyone. So how you maintain your composure and perform in any situation is what matters. Even off the field, I have learned that these big players are just normal and treat me as an equal. That is a very good feeling.”His grounded nature comes from the grooming he received at the Haryana Cricket Association. He is not the first Haryana medium-pacer to play in the IPL – Joginder Sharma played for Super Kings, and Harshal Patel was one of the architects of Royal Challengers Bangalore’s impressive 2011-12 season.What sets Mohit apart from his team-mates is his consistency, both in domestic cricket as well as in the IPL. For this, one must credit Haryana physiotherapist Amit Tyagi, who oversaw his fitness throughout the domestic season. Aware of Mohit’s stress-related issues with his shins, due to heavy workload, he managed the injury and recommended that Mohit be benched immediately after the Ranji season.The advice was taken, and Mohit travelled with the team for various tournaments but did not play any matches. The rest and constant monitoring by Tyagi were the two big factors that allowed him to report fit for the IPL.Ashwini Kumar, Haryana’s coach, believes that the two off-season camps in the cooler climes of Nainital have helped bowlers like Mohit a lot. He says Mohit’s strength has been his big heart, his ability to bowl according to match situations, and his ability to not get affected by what is happening around him – factors that have helped fast-track him into a strike bowler in a short period of time.Mohit played just three matches in his debut Ranji season in 2011-12, when Haryana entered the semi-finals. They followed that up with a terrible start to the season just finished – losing their first three home matches to Vidarbha, Orissa and Baroda, largely because of batting failures – but Mohit, who picked up 19 wickets in these matches, did his bit to force the opposition to work for their wins.”We were 55 and 66 all out in the first two matches and despite that Mohit made sure the opponents would not have an easy run to victory,” Kumar said. In Haryana’s fourth match against Delhi, again at home, Mohit claimed six wickets to help his team to an 83-run win.Mohit said his roles at Haryana and Super Kings, both in terms of motivation and responsibility, are similar. Bowling with the new ball has helped spare him the pressure in the IPL of coming on when teams have got going.He is not someone who experiments too much even when things are not going in his favour. “I try and stay within my limits,” he said. “The more you think about something, the more you will pile pressure. Do your job, listen to people, do your homework.”

Cricket Australia eye the wrong ball

By turning to other sports for inspiration and ideas, the board may be diluting cricket rather than enriching it. Why not get help from other cricketing nations?

Daniel Brettig04-Apr-2011As Michael Clarke marked his first day after his appointment as Australian Test captain with an appeal to reapply cricket’s fundamentals, his board’s national talent manager, Greg Chappell, and a quartet of minions were returning home from a trip to Boston and Texas to watch baseball and American football.This unfortunately timed mission was not billed as a holiday or an exercise in wish fulfillment. Instead it was trumpeted by Cricket Australia as a “reconnaissance exercise” designed to “explore best practice being used by two world-leading organisations, covering areas such as recruitment strategies, list management, player preparation, opposition analysis and team culture”. The exhaustive-sounding brief seemed to address areas that must be fine-tuned by administrators if they wish to hurry on the next generation, and at a time when cricket is bleeding talent to football, Australian Rules and general apathy at an alarming rate.Yet the fact that five senior officials would find the time to disappear to the United States before the season had actually ended said rather too much about the thinking of an organisation that still believes it does cricket coaching and management better than anywhere else in the world. It is a notion that has persisted despite a pronounced slide down the rankings at international level, and a noticeable drop in the standards of domestic cricket.Internal appointments are common – national coach Tim Nielsen, talent manager Chappell and new Centre of Excellence coach Troy Cooley have played their own version of musical chairs with management positions in recent years – and it would not surprise to see another promotion from within the ranks to replace Cooley as Australia’s pace bowling coach.Whoever is chosen, they are likely to be taken in by fashionable thinking about the value of other sports as a source of knowledge and ideas for the greater development of cricket. The American trip is of a kind commonly made by many sporting coaches in the early 21st century, as AFL mentors venture to London for primers on the ways of the English Premier League and rugby league bosses check in with the NFL for tips on kicking and injury treatment. A culture of cross pollination extends to the poaching of staff from one sport to another – fitness manager Darren Burgess jumped from Port Adelaide to Liverpool FC via the Socceroos.While this all sounds quite enlightened, it is arguable cricket in Australia is being diluted, rather than enriched, by ideas from outside the game. Clarke certainly would appear to think so, having this to say when asked on a national current affairs program what needed fixing in the Australian team: “To start, it’s about me being able to do things my way. The advantage is, after these three one-dayers in Bangladesh we have a couple of months at home where we can, as a group, Cricket Australia, selectors, board members, Shane Watson and myself, sit down and make a plan to build to the future. But the things that come to mind straight away are, I love the Australian cricket team playing that entertaining brand of cricket. I think it’s really important that we go back to some of the old-fashioned style basics of cricket, where we get better at our basic batting, bowling and fielding, which is going to mean doing more of it at training. These days in cricket there’s a lot of technology, there’s a lot of sports science, which I think is a big part of our game, but I think with a young group we need to get better at the basics.”

“I love the Australian cricket team playing that entertaining brand of cricket. I think it’s really important that we go back to some of the old-fashioned style basics of cricket, where we get better at our basic batting, bowling and fielding”Michael’s Clarke’s view of the way forward for Australia

Twenty20’s emergence is the highest-profile departure from said basics, but there are others ranging from the variance of opinions on how to manage the bodies of young fast bowlers to the fact that three of Cricket Australia’s highest office bearers – chief executive James Sutherland, head of cricket operations Michael Brown and head of marketing Mike McKenna – each cut their administrative teeth, with decidedly mixed results, in the AFL. Sutherland, Brown and McKenna are all commonly heard to spout the buzzwords about “world’s best practice”, “the pathway” and “development”, while advocating a wide search across all sports for the best of everything. Their apparently high-minded intentions, however, are clearly being lost when it comes to the results of the Australian team, and this is where pride in the country’s coaching system has become dangerous.Help is more readily sought from other sports than it is from other nations playing the same game. The only foreign-born mentor with the Australian team is the fielding coach, Mike Young, who has parlayed his long and decorated baseball career into a lengthy cricket tenure. But there is nary an Englishman, Pakistani, Indian, Sri Lankan or Kiwi in sight. Often an Australian coach will try his luck overseas if opportunity is scarce at home, a path trodden by Cooley and more recently David Saker with England. But there are precious few to have been welcomed in Australia from overseas backgrounds in coaching or development – brief stints with New South Wales for Waqar Younis and Graham Thorpe aside. The appointment of former South African coach Mickey Arthur to manage Western Australia was a welcome deviation from the trend.Much can be learned from the ways of other nations, particularly those who bore the brunt of Australia’s dominance between 1995 and 2008. Given their inability to tie down the hyperactive genius of Shane Warne for any protracted period, Cricket Australia’s eyes had to be cast across the seas for a quality spin bowling coach. Bishan Bedi and Saqlain Mushtaq worked wonders for Jason Krejza and Nathan Hauritz at various times, but their roles were confined to those of one-off consultants. On his last visit to India, Hauritz bemoaned his inability to see Erapalli Prasanna. At the same time Mushtaq Ahmed was helping Graeme Swann maintain the form of his breakout summer, something Hauritz was unable to do while taking advice from Ricky Ponting and the Centre of Excellence spin coach John Davison. An attempt to attract Muttiah Muralitharan to Brisbane for this year’s intake was unsuccessful, but would it have been different with the offer of longer-term employment?Spin bowling is just one of many disciplines unique to cricket, and all the research trips in the world to the Boston Red Sox will not improve Australia’s increasingly tenuous understanding of its subtleties.

Enter the tadpole

West Indies’ new spin hope in focus

Kanishkaa Balachandran01-Jun-2006


The Spin Doctor from Princes Town – Dave Mohammed proved his worth with a profitable season for Trinidad and Tobago
© Trinidad & Tobago Express

Watching Dave Mohammed go one-up against the Indians in the fifth ODI at Trinidad must have been especially pleasing for the locals and old-timers who lived through the era of Lance Gibbs and Sonny Ramadhin, better known as the halcyon days of West Indian spin bowling. But then 20 years ago, Clive Lloyd decided that he had had enough – ironically against India – and brought in the transition from spin to raw pace. In the years that followed, the rebirth of spin was reduced to a mere apparition.Spinners have only had brief moments in the sun since, with the likes of Roger Harper, Mahendra Nagamootoo, Neil McGarrell and Omari Banks, to name a few. But rising through the ranks all the while was a young left-armer from south Trinidad, nicknamed Tadpole by his team-mates, pegging away on the slow pitches in the domestic competitions.A bagful of wickets in the 2005-06 Carib Beer Cup was enough to convince Brian Lara to throw the ball to Mohammed – not at the eleventh hour – but in the eleventh over of India’s chase. The gamble started paying off when Mohammed kept beating the bat with almost fidgety regularity, disguising his googlies intelligently. Reputations against spin took a beating when Yuvraj Singh was squared up by another Mohammed special. His prowess as a fielder too has been well documented over the years, justified by his crucial one-handed fling at the stumps to send Rahul Dravid packing.The youngest of ten siblings, Mohammed endured a lot of hardship in his early years, hailing from a humble background. Cricket was his saviour, and his first crack at first-class cricket in 2001 was a sensational one. He sent the commentators into raptures with four wickets in his first 16 balls, rattling a bemused West Indies B lineup. A crucial 42 batting at No.4 and another four-wicket haul was enough to shut the opposition out of the match, and he deservedly bagged the Player-of-the-Match Award.Two games later, he got a feel of the West Indies dressing room atmosphere, fast-tracked into the squad for the third Test against the touring South Africans though he missed out on the final eleven. Two years later against the same opposition, an injury to Jerome Taylor paved the way for his Test debut at Cape Town. Lara sought out Mohammed midway through the tour to exploit South Africa’s weaknesses against spin, but his success at the domestic level didn’t translate into international success instantly.Back in the wilderness with Trinidad and Tobago, Mohammed announced his second coming with a roaring season in the 2005-06 Carib Beer Cup, and was instrumental in helping a resurgent T&T clinch the title. His selection for the one-dayers against Zimbabwe was expected and he used his strengths to good effect on debut, taking three wickets. However, the local media was still circumspect about his chances of succeeding against superior teams like India, but that spell at Trinidad was no fluke.With West Indies in search of a world-class spinner, a pre-requisite for every side, they can take the example of Daniel Vettori and nurture Mohammed as their next hope.TimelineFebruary 2001
First-class debut – Trinidad and Tobago v West Indies B
in the Busta CupMarch 2001
Plays for West Indies Board President’s XI
vs South AfricansAugust 2001
Tours Kenya
with West Indies. Plays in both warm-up matchesOctober 2001
List A debut
– vs Rest of Leeward Islands in the Red Stripe BowlJanuary 2004
Test debut –
vs South Africa at Cape Town. Takes 3 for 112July 2004
Tours England with West Indies. Selected for the Old Trafford TestJanuary – March 2005
Takes 25 wickets from eight matches in the Carib Beer CupJune – July 2005
Tours Sri Lanka
with West Indies A side. Emerges highest wicket-taker in the five limited-overs games with 11 wickets.May 2006
ODI debut –
vs Zimbabwe at St Lucia. Takes 3 for 37. At Trinidad
against India, he dismisses Yuvraj Singh and Rahul Dravid as West Indies romp home to a 4-1 series win.Vital Stat
Mohammed finished as the highest wicket-taker in the 2005-06 Carib Beer Cup with 45 wickets from seven games. This included four five-wicket hauls and a ten-wicket haul. His best effort was the 7 for 48 which sealed T&T a berth in the finals.What he says
“Since I came in to the Trinidad and Tobago side, I have been playing tough. I just take it on myself to play normal and be confident all the time. The run-up was long and I knew I had to change a few things to make it to a higher grade.”What you may not know
Mohammed is the first player from Princes Town in south Trinidad to play for West Indies. Another former resident, Robin Singh, could have done so but he decided to represent another country – India.

South Africa 'chuffed' as Ireland vs Bangladesh washout gives them ODI World Cup ticket

South Africa are “obviously chuffed” to have qualified directly for the men’s ODI World Cup, to be played in India later this year, after spending the bulk of the World Cup Super League outside of the top eight. And they have the weather in Chelmsford to thank for it.With the no-result in the first of three ODIs between Ireland and Bangladesh on Tuesday, even if Ireland go on to claim the series, they cannot surpass South Africa in eighth place on the Super League points table. Ireland are guaranteed a ninth-place finish, though, and will compete in the ten-team qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe, which runs from June 18 to July 9, and also includes former world champions West Indies and Sri Lanka.”We’re obviously chuffed to qualify directly because it makes life a lot simpler not having to go through the qualifying tournament,” Rob Walter, South Africa’s white-ball coach, told ESPNcricinfo. “But there would have been an upside to competing in the qualifier given the very quiet winter we have.”The men’s team last played ODI cricket against Netherlands on April 2 and have no matches scheduled until August 30, which amounts to almost five months of inaction after a redemptive summer, which ended with good results over England, West Indies and Netherlands, after chastening visits to Australia for the T20 World Cup and a Test series.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

South Africa returned empty-handed from both, but neither format mattered as much as ODIs. They started the year in 11th place on the Super League standings – well outside the automatic qualification zone – after series losses to Pakistan (2021 – home), Sri Lanka (2021 – away) and Bangladesh (2022 – home) and forfeiting a series in Australia (scheduled for January 2023) to allow their top cricketers to be available for the inaugural SA20 league.South Africa gave themselves the best chance of progressing to the World Cup with series wins over England and Netherlands, which lifted them into No. 8, but the final outcome was not in their hands, as they waited for the Ireland vs Bangladesh matches to take place.

Planning for World Cup already on, Rob Walter confirms

Walter confirmed that Cricket South Africa had put in place “two plans based on either eventuality” to execute: one if a trip to Zimbabwe was necessary, and another if South Africa held on to eighth place. The first of those would have necessitated Walter’s return from his home in New Zealand earlier than planned and seen a return to action for top players shortly after the end of the IPL on May 28. Now, they will only be called on later in the winter. The second plan has already begun, with a camp at the high-performance centre in Pretoria from Tuesday.Related

  • Bangladesh find a home away from home to breathe life into Ireland's series in exile

  • De Zorzi, Petersen among eight Test players in SA A squad

  • IPL teams and international stars in informal discussions

  • South Africa and Australia to contest five-match ODI series

“What we have now is the chance to spend some quality time outside of competition getting ourselves ready for a marquee event,” Walter said. “We have a number of camps planned throughout the winter in the lead up to the Australia series which obviously forms our final preparation for the World Cup. There is also the ‘A’ side tour to Sri Lanka, so we have tried to ensure significant skill development opportunities and time in the middle from a competitive point of view.”South Africa A, captained by Tony de Zorzi and with eight Test caps, will play three one-day matches and two four-day games against Sri Lanka A next month. The white-ball fixtures were pencilled in on Sri Lanka’s request, to ready themselves for the qualifying tournament in June. Gerald Coetzee and Tristan Stubbs, who earned ODI caps this year, are both in the touring party, and could put themselves into consideration for the World Cup squad.The bulk of players who will be involved in the ODI plans are involved at the IPL. Quinton de Kock, Kagiso Rabada, Marco Jansen, Aiden Markram, David Miller, Anrich Nortje, Heinrich Klaasen, Wayne Parnell and Sisanda Magala have all played, while Lungi Ngidi is also at the tournament, though he has not got a game. South Africa also have players at the Hundred and CPL over the winter and CSA will monitor their performances throughout this time.”All players have an individual analysis highlighting strengths and specific areas of focus in the period,” Walter said. “This is all planned alongside our players’ involvement in the different leagues that continue on through the winter.”

'He is very happy' – Enzo Maresca gives update on Wesley Fofana after defender removes all mention of Chelsea from his Instagram account

Enzo Maresca has squashed talk suggesting Wesley Fofana wants to leave Chelsea, despite the defender removing the Blues from his socials.

  • Fofana removed Chelsea from his Instagram
  • French star has struggled with injuries
  • Maresca says defender is happy
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Eagle-eyed social media watchers spotted Fofana had deleted all mention of Chelsea from his Instagram account, but the Blues boss has assured fans there's no issue with the defender. While Fofana has struggled with various injuries, he was on the bench for the season opener with Crystal Palace and is expected to feature against West Ham on Friday.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Fofana received abuse online after it was spotted his Insta profile had changed, some of it of a racist nature. Maresca addressed the issue, saying: "There is nothing good to add on that. If there was abuse on Instagram, it's never good for any human being in the world. But it is something we cannot control."

  • WHAT MARESCA SAID

    Maresca said: "I spoke with Wes yesterday. He is very, very happy. First of all because he is back from injury. He is joining all the sessions with us. He is very happy. He was on the bench against Palace. From tomorrow, he is also with us and he can also get some minutes. He is very happy and we are very happy. On Instagram, I don't have any idea."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR FOFANA?

    Fofana is still working his way back to full fitness but, as Maresca says, he featured on the bench against Palace and is in the frame for some minutes in Friday's London derby against West Ham. The Hammers have won four of their last eight home league games against the Blues.

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