'Leo is good' – Inter Miami's Javier Mascherano says Lionel Messi expected to return to lineup after injury absence

After missing the international break due to injury, the Herons' talisman is expected to be available for selection Saturday

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  • Lionel Messi missed international break due to injury
  • Miami star trained Friday, now expected to be available Saturday
  • Argentine has only played two MLS matches in 2025
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Lionel Messi is expected to return to the pitch for Inter Miami for the first time since March 16, coach Javier Mascherano said Friday. The Argentine suffered a muscle strain in a victory over Atlanta United that day, playing 90 minutes while scoring the opening goal in the match.

    He missed the international break with Argentina as a result of the knock, but trained fully on Friday, and is now available for selection Saturday night in Miami's MLS match against the Philadelphia Union.

    "Leo is good, God willing and if nothing weird happens, he will be named to the matchday roster," Mascherano said, adding that they've taken a progressive approach to his rehabilitation.

    "Well, we've been taking it progressively. Leo is a very special player in that sense, a player who, well, obviously sometimes needs to be restrained so he doesn't take risks, but he also knows his body very well, and the reality is that he's been training progressively more and more. He's been doing more training sessions with us, and today, god willing, he'll do the entire training session."

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    Midfielder Yannick Bright confirmed Messi has trained separately from the squad throughout the week, but hopes he will play with them against the Union.

    "He trained with us for the first 15 minutes but he didn't do much so that's up to the coaches and trainers," Bright said.

    Messi participated in the opening 15 minutes of Friday's session with the media in attendance.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The last time Miami played Philadelphia was in September 2024 – and Messi returned from a different injury in that game and scored the Goal of the Matchday.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    The clash with the Union Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ET on Apple TV in a match between the top two teams in the East heading into Matchday 6 of the season.

Tuba Hassan gets best figures for a Pakistan debutant and helps down Sri Lanka with ease

Nida Dar, Bismah Maroof see off chase with useful batting contributions

Danyal Rasool24-May-2022Legspinner Tuba Hassan enjoyed a fairtytale debut as she spearheaded Pakistan to a straightforward six-wicket win in the first T20I against Sri Lanka in Karachi.Brought on in the tenth over, her four-over stint blew through the Sri Lankan middle order, as she conceded just eight runs, bowling a maiden along the way and taking three wickets. A slightly conservative Sri Lanka were kept to 106 for 8. Pakistan started slowly and lost three early wickets of their own, but a 51-run stand between Bismah Maroof and Nida Dar put them back on track, with Dar’s unbeaten 27-ball 36 ensuring Pakistan got to the target with ten balls to spare.Choosing to bat first, Sri Lanka lost wickets in each of Anam Amin’s first two overs, including the all-important wicket of Chamari Athapaththu. Pakistan were keeping things tight, and even a 38-run third-wicket stand never quite threatened to take the game away from them. With Sri Lanka content to take singles instead of looking for boundaries, the spinners felt emboldened to flight the ball generously, getting into their rhythms from the outset. When Aiman Anwer rocked Nilakshi de Silva’s leg stump, Sri Lanka had lost their most dangerous batter, and any hopes of pushing the target to a run-a-ball faded.If the fans – and there was a sizeable contingent – thought Pakistan would make light work of the target, Sri Lanka’s bowlers disabused them of that notion fairly quickly. Keeping things tight, Pakistan were forced to retreat into their shell early on, with Sugandika Kumari removing Gull Feroza in the first over. Muneeba Ali and Iram Javed, who both fell for 18, spent much of the powerplay regrouping and trying to take the sting out of the early attack, and that meant the run scoring was somewhat staid.But Iram Javed, who had a penchant for skipping down the crease without quite getting to the pitch, paid the price upon trying that once too often, and finding herself stumped. Kavisha Dilhari struck to remove Muneeba as she tried to lap over fine leg, and by the halfway stage, Pakistan were behind Sri Lanka in the game.It was Dar who took control of the game decisively for Pakistan. With Maroof a reliable anchor at the other end, Dar was proactive in her search for runs, with regular ones and twos mixed in with the occasional boundary. Before you noticed, the asking rate and the runs required were both coming down, and Pakistan were suddenly coasting to a straightforward win. By the time Maroof holed out at mid-on, Pakistan required just 11 further runs. In the 19th over, it took Dar just two balls to get there with panache, smashing the innings’ only six off the first, before an easy single finished the job.

Arsenal open Leroy Sane talks! Mikel Arteta's side pounce as contract talks with Bayern Munich continue

Leroy Sane's future remains uncertain as contract talks with Bayern Munich continue, allowing Arsenal to pursue the star winger.

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Sane is out of contract this summerBayern will continue talks after the international breakArsenal have approached the 29-year-old's representativesFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The 29-year-old is willing to take a pay cut to stay in Bavaria, according to reporting by Sky Deutschland, but with his current deal ending in the summer, a window of opportunity has opened for suitors. It is believed that Arsenal have already made contact with Sane's representatives, with a view to completing a free transfer come season's end.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Sane's deal is next on the docket for sporting director Max Eberl who has recently finalised extensions for key players like Jamal Musiala, Alphonso Davies and Joshua Kimmich. Both parties plan to sit down after the international break, but there's no guarantee of a deal.

DID YOU KNOW?

Sane has fallen down the pecking order at Bayern following the signing of Michael Olise. The German winger has started just 12 matches in the Bundesliga, making nine appearances from the bench. He has scored six goals, and contributed four assists.

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR LEROY SANE?

Sane's attention turns to Saturday's fixture against away at Union Berlin, before he departs for international duty. He is part of a Germany squad that takes on Italy in the quarter-finals of the UEFA Nations League.

Joe Root praises England progress as Kraigg Brathwaite takes pride in resilience

Captain impressed by fight shown on tough pitch as West Indies shut door in emphatic style

Andrew Miller20-Mar-2022Joe Root praised both the fighting qualities of his England team, and the resilience shown by West Indies – in particular their indefatigable captain, Kraigg Brathwaite – as the second Test in Barbados finished in stalemate on the fifth and final evening.After a feisty declaration push in the morning session, led by another sparky cameo of 41 from 39 balls from Dan Lawrence, England briefly held out hopes of bowling West Indies out as they slipped to 65 for 3 at tea, in pursuit of a nominal target of 282.However, Brathwaite picked up where he had left off in his first-innings 160 with another unyielding innings of 56 not out from 184 balls. In so doing, he finished the match with a tally of 216 runs from 673 balls – eclipsing the 582 balls that Brian Lara faced in making 400 not out in 2004 as the longest any West Indian has ever spent at the crease in a single Test match.”It was annoying how good he was,” Root said. “He played brilliantly in both innings and didn’t give us many opportunities. He ground us down. He’s an ideal player for a pitch like that. He takes it deep time and time again. He had a clear game-plan and stuck to it very well. It’s frustrating but there’s a lot of respect for the way he went about it.”It did feel like a new-ball wicket, you needed to really make an impact while the ball was harder, but after three brilliant breakthroughs, we unfortunately couldn’t quite kick on,” Root added. “Credit to West Indies, they fought very hard in two brilliant Test matches, and it should be a brilliant final one of the series.”Brathwaite, the player of the match, admitted he had not been aware of the scale of his achievement until he returned to the West Indies dressing-room at the end of the match, having batted for a total of 15 hours and 45 minutes across his two innings, and been on the field of play for all but 21 overs.”I heard it when I went in, that’s amazing to hear,” he said. “Obviously I’ve put in a lot of work over the years, and to do it at home is a quite pleasant feeling, especially having family here, so I’m very happy and thankful.”However, when asked if West Indies might have taken a more proactive approach to their first innings, having kept England in the field for 187.5 overs, Brathwaite insisted that his team was focused on “learning on the job”, having not won a Test in ten attempts since February 2021, and that they would not necessarily look to up their tempo for next week’s series decider in Grenada.Kraigg Brathwaite extended his marathon contribution with the bat•AFP/Getty Images”It was good that, after England put up 500, we as a team could fight and put 400 back,” Brathwaite said. “That’s the attitude we want, and the fans want to see. Once you continuously have the right attitude, our Test [results] will go up.”In periods we could [be more attacking], but spending time at the crease and batting through three new balls is a great start for us. We need to just learn as quick as possible on the job, and improve at different periods of the game.”Much the same could be said for England, who have themselves won just one Test out of their last 16. However, Root believes that the team has laid down a series of markers in the last two matches, and singled out Lawrence – who starred with the bat in both innings, as well as with the ball and in the field – as a particular example of the strides the team has made.”I think he’s been wonderful,” Root said. “One of the most pleasing things is how selfless he’s been throughout this series. He’s always tried to put the team first – again this morning, really making sure we tried to get as many as we could as quickly as we could, to give ourselves the best chance taking 10 wickets this afternoon.”England have now made five centuries in the series, with Root making his second of the series in Barbados alongside Ben Stokes’ first for 18 months. Lawrence, however, might have added three figures of his own in this match, had he not had a rush of blood in the final over of the first day, when he holed out to cover for 91.”I don’t think it will be long if he keeps playing like that, that’s for sure,” Root said. “He’s obviously a very talented player. He seems to be growing in confidence all the time, and the more and more he puts himself in those positions, I’m sure it won’t be long.”It was just really pleasing to see us make a substantial first-innings total for the first time in a long time,” Root added, after England had declared on 507 for 9. “So long may that continue. The guys have gained a lot of confidence from it and hopefully we can replicate it again, and again, and again.”Root also had a word of praise for England’s two debutant seamers, Matt Fisher and Saqib Mahmood, who stuck to their tasks well across both innings. In the first, Fisher had the euphoria of a wicket with his second ball when John Campbell edged to the keeper, and though Mahmood missed out on his moment due to a costly no-ball, he atoned with four in the match, including two in the second innings to lift England’s victory hopes.Related

Brathwaite's hard yards cannot disguise futility of Barbados grind

Brathwaite thwarts England bid for victory

Branderson absence a chance to grow leadership options – Strauss

Oh, no-ball! Mahmood joins list of England's unfortunate debutants

England's rookies learn the lessons of a hard day in the dirt

“I think they were brilliant,” Root said. “The two wickets that we’ve played on have not been the most receptive for seam bowlers, but the two lads have shown great commitment, great dedication, great skill levels – and a different kind of skill level to what they are used to in England, to hold a game and create pressure. It was great to see the delight on their faces when they both picked those first wickets up.”The unresponsive nature of the surfaces could tempt England into a fourth debutant of the series, if the legspinner Matt Parkinson comes into the side in Grenada. Root, however, insisted that their incumbent spinner, Jack Leach, had done everything asked of him in ploughing through for the remarkable match figures of 94.5-40-154-5, the heaviest workload by an England bowler in 60 years.”We’ll have to see what kind of wicket we get, and weigh what we think is the best way to take 20 wickets,” Root said. “But it’s really pleasing to see Jack play the way he has. You can see how much he’s enjoying himself out there, bowling with great control, looking very threatening all the time. And it’s great to see him really start to find his feet and look very comfortable at this level.”After consecutive declarations, England have twice run out of overs in which to turn the screw on West Indies. And Root conceded he “could have been braver” about the equation he left in Barbados, of 282 runs in 65 overs.”It’s always a tricky one isn’t it?” he said. “You’re always trying to weigh that up, but I think with how small this ground is, and how strong the wind was, you don’t want to make it too close. It’s easy to look back in hindsight and say, you know, could we have pulled out 10 overs earlier, but in the end, would it have made much difference?”

Tamim Iqbal steps away from T20Is for next six months

Tamim Iqbal has made himself unavailable from T20Is for the next six months, effectively staying out of contention for the T20 World Cup later this year. Tamim, however, said that he could reconsider this decision if the BCB asks him again before the World Cup, although he doesn’t believe it will be required.The announcement follows recent discussions between Tamim and top BCB officials including president Nazmul Hassan, who tried to dissuade him from taking the decision. Tamim had been mostly away from Bangladesh’s T20I side for the past 12 months.In a press conference in Chattogram on Thursday, Tamim insisted that it was a cricketing decision, and that his focus is on Tests and ODIs this year, but he will only reconsider T20Is if circumstances get difficult for the team.”There have been discussions about my T20I future,” Tamim said. “In the last few days, I have been doing meetings with the BCB president (Nazmul Hassan) and Jalal (Yunus) and Kazi Inam (Ahmed). They wanted me to continue T20Is till the World Cup (this year). I had a different sort of thinking. I will not be considering T20Is for the next six months. My full focus will be on Tests and ODIs. We are preparing for the World Test Championship and qualification for the 2023 World Cup. I will not be thinking about T20Is in the next six months. I hope that those playing will do so well, that the team won’t need me in T20Is. But if God forbid the team or cricket board needs me, and I am ready, I will possibly think about it.”Related

  • Tamim Iqbal announces retirement from T20Is

  • BPL draft: Dhaka sign Mashrafe, Tamim and Mahmudullah

  • Tamim drops out, says other players deserve a chance

Ahead of last year’s T20 World Cup, Tamim voluntarily pulled out of the tournament in order to give the other openers like Litton Das, Soumya Sarkar and Mohammad Naim opportunities. Tamim said at the time that since he missed the lead-up to the T20 World Cup, it was only fair for him to skip the tournament.His last T20I was against Zimbabwe in 2020, after which he missed the rest of the three-match series due to a knee injury.Tamim is Bangladesh’s third highest run-getter in T20Is. He has played 74 T20Is for Bangladesh and four for World XI teams – three in Pakistan in 2017 and one against West Indies at Lord’s in 2018. He has 1701 runs for Bangladesh, at an average of 24.65 and a strike-rate of 117.47, while his overall T20I record is 1758 runs at 24.08 and a strike-rate of 116.96. He is Bangladesh’s only centurion in the format.Till the end of 2018, Tamim was one of the most regular members of the T20I side, having played 75 out of 84 T20Is (89.3%) that Bangladesh played. But in the last three years, he has only played three out of 38 matches.Tamim will continue to play in domestic T20 leagues, having already made two half-centuries for Minister Group Dhaka in the ongoing BPL.Tamim insisted that the new players who will be tried in his place should be given a long rope. He drew an example from his, and other senior Bangladesh cricketers’ early days, to compare the situation for the likes of Naim, Sarkar and Saif Hassan.”We handed chances to a number of youngsters in the last (T20I) series. We cannot lose hope in them quickly. We have to give them time. I think six months is a good enough time. I am pretty confident that I won’t be needed in T20Is. Even then, if the team management or cricket board feels otherwise, I will be open for discussion.”The team has to go forward. You know my stand ahead of the last T20 World Cup (of giving the young openers more opportunities), so it won’t be wise to judge anyone after one or two series. Many of us seniors went through three or four bad series, and then bounced back with maybe three good series on the trot. Considering those who will play in my place, I am sure they will find their feet and do well,” he said.

Liverpool player ratings vs Aston Villa: Darwin Nunez blows chance to go 10 points clear in Premier League title race as Mohamed Salah and Trent Alexander-Arnold earn Reds a draw

The Uruguay international missed big chances off the bench as Arne Slot's side were forced to settle for a point on the road on Wednesday

Liverpool moved eight points clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier League after coming from behind to earn a 2-2 draw away at Aston Villa.

A lively first half at Villa Park saw the Reds take the lead on the half-hour mark after an awful mistake from January signing Alvaro Garcia. The full-back gifted the ball to Diogo Jota, allowing the Portugal international the simple task of laying the ball off to Mohamed Salah to fire home.

Yet Villa had been causing Liverpool problems and were level within 10 minutes as the visitors failed to clear a Marcus Rashford free-kick into the box and it eventually fell to Youri Tielemans to fire home at the far post.

The hosts then stunned Liverpool in first-half stoppage time as Lucas Digne was allowed to whip the ball in for Ollie Watkins to power home a fine header and make it 2-1 heading into the break.

Liverpool hit back in the second half with Salah involved again. Trent Alexander-Arnold kicked things off with a surging run, swapped passes with Salah, and then scored with a low shot that took a big deflection off Tyrone Mings.

Slot opted to make changes and threw on Conor Bradley and Darwin Nunez in search of a winner, and Nunez was involved almost immediately but could only blaze a fine chance off-target after being teed up by Dominik Szoboszlai. The Uruguayan was then sent through again but was denied by a quick-thinking Emi Martinez, who came flying off his line to win the tackle.

But Villa remained a threat at the other end and did have the ball in the back of the net through Jacob Ramsey, only to see it ruled out for offside. Morgan Rogers and Donyell Malen also had chances late on as Liverpool ended up hanging on for a point

GOAL rates Liverpool's players from Villa Park…

AFPGoalkeeper & Defence

Alisson Becker (5/10):

Some really shaky moments with his passing and also in the second half when he came racing out of his goal and was beaten by Rashford.

Trent Alexander-Arnold (7/10):

Was tested by Rashford but did OK and had some dangerous moments going forward. Scored the second via a deflection after a surging run forwards.

Ibrahima Konate (6/10):

Rescued Alisson at the start of the second half and was fairly solid. Made some important interceptions.

Virgil van Dijk (5/10):

Failed to sense the danger from Watkins for the goal and didn't look completely convincing against a lively Villa side.

Andy Robertson (7/10):

Put some good deliveries into the box for Jota and Salah which deserved better.

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Ryan Gravenberch (5/10):

A really tired showing from the Dutchman. Didn't seem to know what to do or where to be for the second goal.

Alexis Mac Allister (6/10):

Seemed to relish the physical battle and got Liverpool moving in the build-up to the second goal.

Curtis Jones (6/10):

Some good moments, including a good surging run and shot, but not involved enough.

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Mohamed Salah (7/10):

Not his best game, but still scored the opener and set up Alexander-Arnold for the equaliser.

Diogo Jota (5/10):

Set up Salah's goal but a really poor miss after Villa had equalised. Hit the crossbar in the second half.

Dominik Szoboszlai (6/10):

An energetic showing, had a shot saved and teed up Nunez for a glorious chance that was wasted.

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Darwin Nunez (3/10):

A dismal display off the bench. Missed a glorious chance from seven yards straight after coming on, beaten by Martinez in another opportunity and then wasted an attack by passing the ball straight out of play

Conor Bradley (6/10):

Tough night for the substitute who was forced off before the end with an injury.

Luis Diaz (6/10):

Given the last 10 minutes but couldn't conjure a winner.

Jarell Quansah (N/A):

Late sub to replace Bradley.

Arne Slot (6/10):

Will be disappointed his team missed the chance to fully extend their lead at the top of the table, but may be relieved to come away with a point after Villa's strong finish.

'Best young player to ever go to Saudi' – Jhon Duran hailed after scoring incredible solo goal for Al-Nassr as €77m signing outshines Cristiano Ronaldo with four goals in first two games

Jhon Duran has been hailed as the "best young player to ever go to Saudi" after outshining Cristiano Ronaldo in Al-Nassr's 3-2 win at Al-Ahli.

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Duran has red-hot start at Al-NassrScores stunning brace against Al-AhliPraise floods in for young strikerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The 10 men of Al-Nassr secured a hard-fought win at Al-Ahli in the Saudi Pro League on Thursday, thanks in no small part to Duran's brace. The second, in particular, was a beauty as he beat two players before slotting home late on. As a result, the 21-year-old was lauded by many on social media.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

Alongside a video of Duran's brilliant goal, @Piquelme21 posted on X: "Jhon Duran might be the best young player to ever go to Saudi."

@SamiRmcf15 tweeted: "Duran is the best forward Cristiano played with in last 6-7 years. It's crazy man. Crazy crazy baller."

@CFC_Janty commented: "Ronaldo finally has another attacker who steps up when he doesn’t score. Thank you Jhon Duran."

@totalcristiano put: "WHAT A F*CKING PLAYER," and @UniqueRiggers added: "That leagues too easy for Duran."

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Duran swapped Aston Villa for Al-Nassr in a €77million (£64.5m/$80m) transfer and so far he is proving to be an excellent purchase. He now has four goals in two games and is currently outshining team-mate Ronaldo. The Colombian may also be the missing piece for Al-Nassr in their bid for trophies.

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

Al-Nassr are back in AFC Champions League action on Monday when they face Persepolis. Duran will hope to be amongst the goals again for that away trip.

Jordan Henderson calls out 'disrespectful lies' over Monaco transfer as raging Ajax midfielder is drawn into 'heated 10-minute argument' with reporters after win against Feyenoord

Jordan Henderson slammed "disrespectful" reporters as the Ajax midfielder hit back at reports about his proposed transfer to Monaco.

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  • Henderson linked with Ajax exit
  • Midfielder decided to stay
  • Hit out at media over reports
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Henderson had been strongly linked with a move to Monaco ahead of his team's Europa League win against Galatasaray, but has since agreed to stay at the Dutch side until the end of the season.

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    Due to the uncertainty about his future sparked, Henderson gave his captain's armband to Ajax goalkeeper Remko Pasveer ahead of Thursday's European clash, sparking accusations of unprofessional behaviour. However, Henderson defended himself in a heated press conference that lasted almost 10 minutes after starring in Ajax's 2-1 win league win over Feyenoord on Sunday.

    "I think 99% of people, if they knew the inside information, wouldn't have played the game [on Thursday]," he said. "But yet, people in this room have questioned my professionalism and me as a person. I think it's bang out of order. I've got a family, wife, kids, mum, dad, who read nonsense in the media from you guys."

  • WHAT HENDERSON SAID

    Henderson added to : "Everyone knows the club's financial situation. Money has to be created and that can be done by letting big earners leave. I am one of the big earners. It's often about my salary in the media. The situation was that we had to decide whether it was worth pivoting or keeping my salary in this case. Those were difficult conversations. I said what I thought, but we jointly came to the conclusion that I should stay. I am happy with that. I will give everything for the club and the team. Of course I am happy to stay.

    "My plan was to stay here at least until the end of the season and then re-evaluate. A lot of things were taken out of context in the press. That was disrespectful, they were lies. Untruths were told about me as a person. I tried to focus, but it feels painful. People may criticise me because of my game, but when it gets personal… I am a human being with family, parents, a wife and children. If they read things in the press that are not true, that is going too far. I don't know what their sources are, but it is not true."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR HENDERSON?

    With his future cleared up, Henderson will hope to help Ajax to the Eredivisie title this season, with the Amsterdam club now two points behind PSV with a game in hand.

Warwickshire seal Championship glory as Somerset are overwhelmed

Victory vindicates savvy recruitment, not least that of head coach Mark Robinson

George Dobell24-Sep-2021

Warwickshire begin their celebrations after sealing the County Championship•PA Images/Getty

It was, as Mark Robinson put it, “one of those days you live for”. Certainly from a Warwickshire perspective.Robinson, the Warwickshire head coach, has been this way before, of course. He’s won a World Cup. And every domestic trophy during his spell at Sussex.But, having been sacked as England women’s head coach in 2019, less than a year after leading the side to the World T20 final, this one will have felt a bit special. This was his first year in the job, after all. And he’s taken a side that have been also-rans and turned them into champions. “It’s makes you think you must be all right,” Robinson said without a hint of arrogance afterwards. “When you’ve had a year out, it’s nice to be reminded you know a bit.”The fact that a crowd was present was a reminder of better days, too. There were only around 2,000 in by the end of this game but, buoyed by the unlikely title challenge, they produced an atmosphere to be savoured in the final hours. Championship cricket still matters to many of us. It’s nice to be reminded of that sometimes.It was pleasing, too, to see the trophy presented by Warwickshire’s cricket operations manager, Keith Cook. Ian Watmore, the ECB chair, was in attendance. But, with various Covid protocols prohibiting his ability to interact with players, the decision was made to allow Cook, who has spent 48 years working for the club and is adored and respected in equal measure round these parts, to make the presentation. It was a nice touch. It is Warwickshire’s eighth Championship title in all. Only Yorkshire, Surrey, Middlesex and Lancashire have won the title more often.To have turned this Warwickshire side into LV= Insurance County Champions is an achievement as significant as it is surprising. Warwickshire, it might be remembered, didn’t win a first-class game in the abbreviated 2020 first-class season. And they only won three in 2019 when, but for a change of criteria, they would have been relegated. They were nobody’s favourite after failing to win the first match of the season against a modest Derbyshire side.The title looked unlikely far more recently than that, though. Having won neither of their first two games once this tournament split into divisions, they needed to win both their last two to be in with a shout. Even over the last couple of days, that has looked unlikely.Having performed brilliantly to claim a fourth batting bonus point on the second day, they failed to gain a third bowling bonus point on the third and so no longer had their fate entirely in their own hands. They then had to watch on as Hampshire and Lancashire contested the tightest of matches, with Lancashire’s eventual victory opening the door for them once more.Even on the final day, this result looked unlikely. While they performed admirably in adding 115 in the first 15 overs to set up a declaration, there was nothing in the surface to hint at the drama that was to follow. Indeed, a target of 273 in 79 overs looked generous. The pitch was flat and Somerset’s run-rate of 3.46 looked achievable.Chris Woakes made the key breakthroughs on the final day•PA Images/Getty

But it proved an astute decision. Lured into a few strokes that a more demanding target may have discouraged, Somerset collapsed from 31 without loss to 106 for 8 before Lewis Gregory led some late resistance. Azhar Ali, Tom Abell and Lewis Goldworthy all edged catches to the slips as they poked at balls away from their body while Ben Green was perhaps unfortunate to be caught down the leg-side. Steve Davies was then beaten by a searing yorker from Liam Norwell, who deserved more rewards for an outstanding spell of bowling, before Craig Overton received the ball of the match – a wobble-seam delivery that pitched on middle and hit off – from Chris Woakes.It was probably fitting that victory was achieved deep inside the final session on the final day, though. It was the fourth time this season Warwickshire have won a game in such fashion and it reflects a side who play a slightly old-school style of cricket.That’s not to say there’s anything wrong with it. Quite the opposite, really. But whereas there has been a tendency in the county game for sides to produce result pitches and hope they win the resulting shoot-out, Edgbaston has generally produced flat, true surfaces where bowlers have to graft for their wickets but are rewarded with some carry. These are precisely the surfaces we need to see throughout the county game if a new generation of players are to be produced for Test cricket. Warwickshire deserve more credit than they may receive for persevering with such methods when it sometimes seems the rest of the world has been sucked into a get-rich-quick scheme.”The ECB need to look at the wickets,” Robinson said afterwards. “I had a couple of years out of the county game and they’ve have gone downhill in that time. Medium-pacers dominate and teams try to fast-track results. But we’re trying to produce England players and win games and I like to think we’re doing things properly.”Despite those flat wickets, Warwickshire failed to score 400 in a single innings throughout the campaign. Not one of their batters scored as many as 850 runs and not one of their bowlers claimed 50 wickets.But they pay tough, relentless cricket. They have a squad, led by a young captain, Will Rhodes, whose lack of eye-catching personal contributions has been offset by his calm authority as leader. They bat deep, possess a formidable battery of seam bowlers and have, in Danny Briggs, a spinner who can contain in the first innings, attack in the second and is increasingly able to contribute with the bat.Related

Dane Vilas seals one-wicket win to leave Lancashire sweating on Edgbaston result

Daryl Mitchell signs off with win after Leicestershire subside

Ollie Robinson's 112 sets up tantalising final-day title race in Division Three

Ben Slater seals five-wicket win over Yorkshire but Notts fall short of Bob Willis final

And it’s all complemented by some outstanding catching behind the wicket, not least from Tim Bresnan, who pulled off the sharpest of slip catches to make the initial breakthrough on the brink of lunch. With a top score of 63 and just 12 wickets in the campaign, Bresnan may be a declining force as a player but his experience and knowledge mean he retains much value to a side with little experience of such moments. All in all, it’s a decent package which probably amounts to a bit more than the sum of its parts.They have been blessed, in these last couple of matches, by the inclusion of Woakes, the only survivor of the Warwickshire side which last won this title in 2012. He could have been at the IPL, of course. And he had asked for permission from the England management to play in these final two games. He won’t be appearing in the Bob Willis Trophy match at Lord’s next week. Increasingly that game looks like an unnecessary dessert at the end of a satisfying meal.The development of Rob Yates will bring particular pleasure at Edgbaston. The club has not produced a home-grown specialist batter who has gone on to win their county cap since Ian Westwood in 2008. But in making four centuries in this campaign (nobody from any side made more), Yates, who only celebrated his 22nd birthday last week, demonstrated the potential that marks him out as a possible future Test cricketer. While it is true his record at home (he averages more than 45 at Edgbaston) is substantially better than his record elsewhere (he averages 18.53 away), it might also be remembered he is still a part-time cricketer. If he is picked for a Lions spot this winter – and his record suggests he should be – Birmingham University will have to agree to give him time off.It was with another home-grown player – Matt Lamb – that Yates set up the declaration. Bought time by the aggression of Dom Sibley and Rhodes the previous night, the pair thrashed 63 in seven overs, demonstrating the sort of selfless cricket which has become a hallmark of the side. In a perfect world, you may like more than four home-grown players in a side, Warwickshire do deserve praise for the blossoming of Norwell, who might just be a bolter for the Lions, Craig Miles and Briggs, who was unwanted in a Sussex first-class side. You wonder how they are reflecting on the wisdom of that policy now.The structure of this season might lead some to underplay this success. But, over the course of the campaign, Warwickshire have beaten Essex and Somerset, who have proven the strongest sides of the last few years, with other victories coming against Yorkshire (away), Nottinghamshire (home and away) and Derbyshire (away). There is no doubt this is a deserved success. And there’s no doubt Robinson is a terrific head coach.

Disillusioned Angelo Mathews considers international retirement

Angelo Mathews has informed Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) he is considering retirement, after turning down the tour contract for the forthcoming series against India.Mathews, 34, in understood to be disillusioned at the treatment he and fellow senior players have received during the contracts standoff with the board. He was also unhappy to be dropped from the limited-overs sides earlier this year, though he has since been offered a place in the white-ball squads.Although SLC said his decision to pull out from the India series was down to “personal reasons”, Mathews is believed to have conveyed to the board that he is unhappy with the environment in which he is expected to play. Under the central contracts offered by the board, Mathews was set to take a pay cut in the range of US$ 50,000 (approx. 99,50,000 LKR). This is despite his batting output over the last three years having largely been good, in both Tests and ODIs. Mathews had also raised his fitness levels in early 2020.Related

  • Angelo Mathews willing to return to Sri Lanka fold

  • Karunaratne, Hasaranga among 18 players to sign SLC contracts as months-long standoff ends

  • Dinesh Chandimal seeks clarity from Sri Lanka Cricket about international future

  • SL batting coach Grant Flower tests positive for Covid-19 after returning from England

  • SLC forms five-member panel to probe Durham bubble breach

Mathews is now expected to take several weeks to consider his future as an international cricketer.Earlier this year, Thisara Perera retired from international cricket soon after it was revealed that he would be dropped from the ODI and T20 teams.Over the past few months, Sri Lanka’s selectors and coach have jettisoned several senior players in favour of younger cricketers, with an eye on the 2023 ODI World Cup. Sri Lanka have, however, won only one ODI of their last five completed matches. They were also whitewashed 3-0 in the recent T20Is by top-ranked England.

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