Everton could land Oleksandr Zinchenko

Frank Lampard looks like he has been given the green light to sign Oleksandr Zinchenko for Everton this summer following an apparent recent admission from the Manchester City player.

What’s the word?

According to 90min, the 25-year-old is open to leaving the Etihad Stadium this summer, although any club aiming to sign him would need to promise him game-time in a midfield role.

According to The Athletic, the Ukrainian was offered to the Toffees last week as Lampard looks to refresh his squad this summer.

Having excelled at left-back during his time in Manchester, it is believed that Zinchenko wants to play in a midfield role going forward and this has plunged his future in doubt, with Everton looking to make a move.

Lampard could bolster his squad with Zinchenko move

Following Everton’s recent relegation dogfight in the Premier League, which saw them survive by the skin of their teeth, Lampard will be looking to refresh the squad that he inherited from Rafa Benitez.

Having conceded 66 goals last season in the top flight, there is no doubt where the priority ought to lie, although the addition of greater quality to the midfield should also be considered.

Zinchenko could add that extra bit of quality in the engine room at Goodison Park, and with the player being valued at £25m, the fee shouldn’t be a problem for Lampard. His Sofascore rating of 7.07 from the 2021/22 season was not only better than any Everton midfielder, but exceeded every single player in the Toffees’ squad, so it definitely seems like he would be an upgrade on what the 43-year-old already has.

He was dubbed “frightening” by Gregg Evans during City’s comeback win over Aston Villa last month which secured them the league title.

The 25-year-old excels in the centre of midfield for Ukraine, displaying his qualities with a fantastic performance against Scotland in the recent World Cup play-off semi-final victory. As per Sofascore, he was the highest-ranked player on the pitch with a rating of 8.0 as he made three key passes, had 86 touches and dictated the match in Ukraine’s favour.

At left-back for Man City this season, Zinchenko ranks in the top 1% compared to positional peers in the big five European leagues in both progressive passes (8.02 per 90) and progressive carries (9.3). These statistics suggest that he is at his best when moving forward and starting attacks.

Lampard could offer him this sought-after midfield role at Everton, and with the 25-year-old’s recent performances, especially for Ukraine, he would be an excellent signing for the Toffees.

AND in other news, Lampard must now brutally axe Everton’s £22m “walking red card”, he’s Klaassen 2.0

Liverpool offer rejected for Raphinha

Liverpool have reportedly held a long term interest in Raphinha and with Sadio Mane potentially leaving this summer the club were set to ramp up their interest in the player, but now a new update has emerged that would make the transfer a non-starter.

What’s the latest?

According to Spanish news outlet SPORT, Raphinha and his agent Deco have rejected an offer from Liverpool.

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As per the report, the Leeds United winger is said to favour a move to La Liga giants Barcelona this summer, with Raphinha specifically prioritising negotiating that deal over anything the Premier League club is willing to offer.

The Brazilian is said to be desperate for a leading role in Xavi Hernandez’s side next season, despite being the reported chosen replacement for Mane by Jurgen Klopp.

FSG surely fuming

If Raphinha was the chosen replacement for Mane this summer, FSG will surely be fuming that the winger does not see the move to Anfield as a priority or an option at this point and they will now need to reassess and identify another replacement.

The £60m wizard who was dubbed “phenomenal” by Rio Ferdinand, has been an undeniable force for Leeds finishing the season as the top goal-scorer and leading the side out of their relegation troubles with a goal on the final day of the season that helped the side remain in the Premier League.

In total, the Brazilian found the net on 11 occasions, showing how dangerous he can be in the final third.

The blow with Raphinha comes as Aurelien Tchouameni also turned down a move to Liverpool after agreeing terms with the club, but has since received a more tempting offer from another La Liga club, with Real Madrid now agreeing a deal with the midfielder according to Fabrizio Romano.

Not all is lost for Liverpool though as the transfer window is yet to open and they still have a while to find their replacement for Mane with Darwin Nunez and Christopher Nkunku two of many targets thought to be seen as players who could join the Merseyside club this summer.

With that being said, the Reds must move on fast and work quickly to make sure they are not caught short next season should the Senegalese winger leave in the coming weeks or months over the window, and FSG should have no trouble attracting talented players to the six-time Champions League winning club.

AND in other news: “Will go for…”: Fabrizio Romano drops LFC transfer update that’ll excite supporters

Rangers must complete Gilmour transfer

Rangers may have failed to regain their SPFL title this season, but Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s Gers still made it to the Europa League final and the Scottish Cup final.

In their 38 league games, the Ibrox club found the net 80 times in total, 26 more than their upcoming Cup final opponents in third place.

One figure that has played a big part in Rangers’ season is midfielder Joe Aribo, who has played in 56 games across all competitions.

In those appearances, the 25-year-old has scored nine goals and provided ten assists along the way.

While Van Bronckhorst’s side still have one more chance to get their hands on some silverware this weekend to end their season on a positive note, the club will then have the upcoming summer transfer window to make any changes to their squad that they see fit.

In terms of potential incomings, one player that has been linked with a move to Ibrox that could come in and form a scary duo in midfield with Aribo is Billy Gilmour.

Since leaving Rangers’ U17 squad back in 2017 to make his move to Chelsea, the midfielder has gone on to make 66 appearances for their U18 and U23 sides, scoring 16 goals and providing 13 assists in the process.

At senior level, the Scotsman has played in 22 games for Chelsea’s first team and 28 times for Norwich City during his loan spell there this season.

The former Rangers youth star found himself on the receiving end of some hefty praise from Roy Keane who described him as looking like a “world-class” player.

To highlight the 20-year-old’s strengths on the pitch, no other midfielder in Norwich’s squad attempted as many passes in the league this season as Gilmour did.

With that in mind, the Scotland international could give Aribo the chance to get into more goalscoring or goal-creating situations and ramp his numbers up in that regard.

This would surely give the Gers a better chance of being successful domestically and in Europe next season.

If the west London club are willing to let their midfield ace leave Stamford Bridge on another loan deal this summer, Rangers should definitely be in the mix to secure his signature.

In other news: Fewer touches than McGregor: Rangers dud who won just 33% duels let GvB down yesterday

Centurion Akshay Karnewar deconstructs Vidarbha's dazzling rearguard

Much like the Ranji Trophy final, Vidarbha’s top order wobbled in the first innings of the Irani Cup, but their No. 8 was there to save the day

Sreshth Shah in Nagpur14-Feb-2019For the past two years, if there’s any aspect of Vidarbha’s cricket that you could rely on, it was their top order. In a team that has two professionals who are batsmen – Wasim Jaffer and Ganesh Satish – and an India player in Faiz Fazal, getting runs on the board was never a concern. Vidarbha rode on the back of these three men, and young wicketkeeper Akshay Wadkar, to post above-par totals through the Ranji Trophy season.Yet, when it mattered the most, like in the Ranji Trophy final against Saurashtra, the Vidarbha top order wobbled heavily. It was left to their young lower-order batsmen to carry the load, and if it wasn’t for them, Vidarbha wouldn’t even have made the Irani Cup. And now that they’re in the Irani Cup, once again, it’s their lower-order resistance that has lifted them into an advantageous position against Rest of India [RoI] in Nagpur.Let’s rewind to February 3 – the first day of the Ranji Trophy final. At 139 for 6 against a Saurashtra attack led by Jaydev Unadkat and Dharmendrasinh Jadeja, Vidarbha had no business reaching 312, especially after none of their top six batsmen got to fifty. But a dogged rearguard effort ensured they had taken a tiny lead, having bowled Saurashtra out for 307 in their first innings.Then came their second innings, the match’s third. Starting off with a five-run lead, they were swiftly reduced to 73 for 5, with Jaffer, Fazal and Ganesh failing to make an impact once again – and looked destined to lose the Ranji Trophy final. But once again, their last five batsmen added 86 runs on a very difficult track to set Saurashtra a target that eventually was too big for them.The Irani Cup has followed the same template for Vidarbha. Yesterday, when they were struggling at 168 for 5 just after tea, not many would have wagered that Vidarbha’s lower order could go past RoI’s 330, let alone finish with a lead of 95. It all happened courtesy allrounder Akshay Karnewar, and his troupe of Vidarbha boys, who dug in deep.After the third day, Karnewar told ESPNcricinfo that the batting improvements in Vidarbha’s lower order wasn’t just by chance. It was a very conscious effort from their – for the lack of a kinder word – less-fancied batsmen to carry the team’s batting right down to No. 11.”Our lower-order batsmen have worked hard in the nets,” Karnewar said. “Because they weren’t contributing much up until the semis. It’s something that was pointed out by our coaches, and we have consciously worked on this.”In all, Vidarbha’s last five partnerships in the Irani Cup’s first innings stitched together three half-century stands. Even their last pair – whose combined first-class batting average is less than 10 – added 39 crucial runs. In their last three innings, Vidarbha’s last five batsmen, Nos 7 to 11, have made 40.3%, 43% and 41.9% of the team’s runs.A bit of that has come down to home advantage, as Karnewar himself admits, but he also says that as allrounders and bowlers, they understand exactly how the pitch at Nagpur’s VCA Ground behaves. It’s that skill, of reading the surface while batting – even though one’s not a front-line batter – that’s helped the team’s lower-order raise their game.Akshay Karnewar plays a shot•PTI “Firstly, it’s our home ground, so we have an idea of how to play here,” Karnewar said. “We need to play sensibly; just can’t come and start hitting on this ground. You saw how they [Mayank Agarwal and Anmolpreet Singh, of RoI] got out trying to attempt big shots.”It was a memorable day for Karnewar himself – who has shined through the Ranji season with both bat and his slow left-arm spin – but failed to reach three figures up until today. His 94 against Railways in the group-stage game and an arguably match-winning innings of 73 not-out in the final showed brief glimpses of his skill as a proper allrounder. But his 102 today against the best Indian bowlers of the season, took the cake for the 26-year-old from Wagholi.”Feeling very well right now, especially scoring my first hundred, that too in the Irani Trophy,” Karnewar said. “Doing good for the team gives me satisfaction.”The match is very open. The first plan for us today was to cross the lead, and I was happy we did that. But I was disappointed getting out to a loose shot. It’s left the match open.”Karnewar, though, felt his maiden first-class ton was still far away from being a match-winning hundred. What’s important on the fourth day, according to him, is the accuracy with which they bowl to RoI. In overnight batsmen, Ajinkya Rahane and Hanuma Vihari, and a star-studded middle order comprising Shreyas Iyer and Ishan Kishan to follow, Vidarbha have a massive challenge of ensuring that the target in the fourth innings doesn’t bloat up. He, in fact, even had a score in mind, after which the game might slip away from Vidarbha’s grasp.”The wicket is turning, and [there’s] a lot of bounce too,” Karnewar said. “So on this ground, it’s important to not bowl boundary balls, and the pitch will give you rewards. It’s not an easy wicket, it’s very challenging, but if we chase around 150, then we can definitely win this game.”

Elgar's productive run, South Africa's crawl

Stats highlights from the first day in Dunedin, where South Africa scored at just 2.54 runs an over – one of the slowest scoring rates on the first day in recent years

Shiva Jayaraman08-Mar-20172005 Last time before this an overseas opener hit a hundred in the first innings of a series in New Zealand. Marvan Atapattu had made 127 in the Napier Test in Sri Lanka’s first innings of that series. The previous South Africa opener to do this was Gary Kirsten who made 128 in Auckland in 1998-99.391 Runs made by Elgar in his last five Test innings including two hundreds and two fifties. Elgar had recently made his highest Test score of 129 in Cape Town, against Sri Lanka. Elgar has converted seven of his 12 fifty-plus scores to hundreds in Tests.2.54 South Africa’s scoring rate on the first day of the Test – the lowest on the first day of a Test in New Zealand in the last ten years when at least 40 overs have been bowled. Overall, there have been only 12 occasions when runs have been scored at a slower pace on the first day of any Test in the last ten years.2 Man-of-the-Match awards won by Tim Southee in New Zealand’s previous three Tests. He had taken 19 wickets at an average of 24.94 in New Zealand’s previous three Tests. The hosts chose to play an additional spinner in place of Southee in this Test. Southee has taken 13 wickets at an average of 42.69 at the University Oval in Dunedin and had figures of 0 for 140 from 36 overs in his previous Test against South Africa at this venue. In his previous match against the visitors in Centurion, Southee had returned figures of 4 for 160 from 51 overs.2011 Last time a team winning the toss chose to bat in Tests in New Zealand. Daniel Vettori had opted to bat against Pakistan in Wellington in the second Test of the 2010-11 series. Since then, this was the first time in 23 matches that the captain winning the toss has chosen to bat in Tests in New Zealand.42 Overs by New Zealand spinners on the first day of this Test – the most bowled by spinners on the first day of any Test in New Zealand since 2006. The most before this was the 39 overs sent down by Shane Shillingford and Narsingh Deonarine on the first day of the Wellington Test in 2013-14.22/3 South Africa’s score when Faf du Plessis joined Dean Elgar at the crease. This is the second-lowest score from which a fourth-wicket stand has added 100 or more runs in Tests in New Zealand. Adrian Griffith and Brian Lara had a century stand from 17 for 3 in Wellington in 1999, which is the only instance when a fourth-wicket century stand has come from a lower score in Tests in New Zealand.

De Villiers' comments should ring alarm bells

Good crowds and compelling cricket have been promised at the Wanderers, but the bigger picture for Tests is far from positive and English cricket should not think it is immune

George Dobell at the Wanderers13-Jan-2016At first glance, you could convince yourself that Test cricket is in rude health.The Gauteng Cricket Board hopes for a record crowd – maybe as many as 90,000 – over the five days at The Wanderers and, on the evidence of Cape Town, both these sides contain young players who can engage and inspire a new generation of supporters.But then you reflect on West Indies’ troubles in Australia. And you see the cream of Caribbean talent involved in the Big Bash. And you hear the new South African captain commit himself to no more than two more games of Test cricket and you look at the money on offer in T20 leagues and the money on offer from international cricket and you start to worry that the law of the market cannot be denied. Test cricket, as a business, is a sick, old man.How else can you interpret AB de Villiers’ pre-match comments? At a time he might be celebrating his promotion to captaincy, he was instead admitting that he will have to consider his future priorities given the demands of international cricket and his earning potential elsewhere. No-one could blame him if he walks away, but the uncomfortable thought remains that, once you take players like de Villiers and perhaps Dale Steyn out of the team, the entire spectacle is diminished. Test cricket is meant to be the pinnacle; not the best of the rest.But isn’t this the scenario the ICC’s ‘Big Three’ foresaw when they carved up world cricket for their own benefit? Did they not actually plan a scenario where they had gained a financial advantage over their opponents? Were they not actively pursuing a situation where they could pay their players enough to ward off the competing demands of the domestic T20 market and their rivals could not?If so, their plans are coming to fulfilment. And it is just the start. There is no reason why the divides will not widen.But it is a short-sighted ploy. Once South Africa, West Indies and Sri Lanka – unable to pay their players anywhere near the market rate – have lost their finest players, once youngsters growing up in India dream of representing, not their country, but Mumbai Indians or Kolkata Knight Riders, once you have Test series as one-sided and facile as the recent one between Australia and West Indies, you have the beginning of the end. You have a product that few will want.There are solutions. If the ICC – or at least the powerful trio key to running it – had, instead of rewarding their own boards for the money they earned, had the foresight to invest in the nations who needed the financial help, this situation could have been avoided. Had the WICB been able to match their players’ earnings from T20 leagues – as Allen Stanford, for all his faults, promised – they might have retained a potent Test team.If South Africa were helped to compensate for the weak rand and the competing demands of T20 leagues, they might be able to retain the likes of de Villiers and Steyn far more easily. And had the ICC nurtured non-Test nations and dared to consider promotion and relegation in Test cricket, instead of throwing scraps from the table, they could have developed a growing, global market.Alas, parochialism and self-interest prevailed. But if Test cricket dies in the next few years – and it seems more likely that it will wither – then Giles Clarke and co. will have its blood on their hands.Alastair Cook has sometimes been reluctant to be drawn on Test cricket’s bigger issues, but here he did gently nudge the administrators into action. He also gave his support to day-night Test cricket – England will almost certainly play their first day-night Test on the next Ashes tour – and a redrawn Future Tours Programme.”The people who run the game have to know the responsibility on their shoulders and push it forward the best way they can,” he said. “I don’t think Test cricket is going to die, but there are certainly elements of it you can improve. Day-night cricket looked a good success. I’m not sure it will work in England, but it can work.”The FTP always seems to be tied up six years before. But then you get three years into it and it seems to be extended before you can do anything about it. Rather than saying we can’t do anything about it until 2022, it needs to be addressed sooner if people think there is an issue.”England will not be unaffected by these issues now at South Africa’s door. While the value of ECB central contracts – more than £300,000 a year before match fees – provides some immunity, it is dwarfed by the possible rewards available elsewhere.Take the example of Jos Buttler. If he enjoys a successful IPL, he will start to earn sums which can never be replicated in international cricket. While there is no reason he wouldn’t continue to play white-ball cricket for England, he could be forgiven if he considers the challenge of red-ball cricket an unnecessary obstacle. And couldn’t Ben Stokes, for example, be forgiven for seeing that happen and wondering if his own future would not be better served as a T20 pro?That is not to say either will pick that route – both seem committed to Tests- but until the governing bodies can ensure that international cricket pays more than domestic cricket – or at least can co-exist better – the talent drain on Test cricket will continue.The shame of all this is that, given decent pitches, the format remains as entertaining as ever. To see Stokes or Temba Bavuma bat in Cape Town was to see sport at its best: brilliant and imbued with meaning beyond finance. This series, played between two fine sides, should be an advert for the game.It promises to provide an entertaining second half. On a Johannesburg surface on which there has only been one draw in 13 Tests -Cook called it “a result wicket” – South Africa are risking everything on an all-seam attack, though they will also have a couple of non-specialist spinners. England, by contrast, will retain a balanced team offering four seamers and a spin option, with men who have scored international centuries down to No. 9.Certainly Cook is content with the balance of his side. “I am very comfortable with this team playing in any conditions,” he said. “If the ball does fly through and seams around we have got a pretty good seam attack and if it does get warm and does spin a little bit we have a good spinner.”England do have a worry over the health of a few of their squad, though. Several of them have suffered with upset stomachs in recent days, with Alex Hales the latest to succumb with a sore throat. While he batted in the nets, he then returned to the team hotel to ensure he did not spread the problem with team-mates.”We’ll have to wait and see on him,” Cook said, “but he’s having a hit so he can’t be too bad.” Gary Ballance will come into the side if Hales – or Nick Compton, who has also recently been unwell – are unavailable. Ballance could bat at No. 3 or No. 5 , with James Taylor promoted instead.England’s other worry if with their catching. They had a long fielding session on Monday, but seem confident that the problems of Cape Town were no more than “a blip.”This is a talented, exciting England side. Maybe, over the next few years, they will have proved themselves the best in the world. But if they go to No.1 in the rankings as the result of playing second string teams, it will be as hollow as Ben Johnson’s Olympic gold medal. They deserve better. Test cricket deserves better.

The origins of sledging unearthed

A masterly quiz that tells you just why military medium is called what it is, and offers alternative names for IPL franchises

Andy Zaltzman29-Apr-20141. What should England offer Sri Lanka in exchange for coach Paul Farbrace, as a gesture of goodwill / apology / compensation / manners (delete according to preference)?(a) Kevin Pietersen
(b) Andy Flower
(c) Kevin Pietersen and Andy Flower
(d) A complimentary pair of tickets to the Lord’s Test, on the day of their choosing (excluding the Saturday)
(e) The newly released Paul Farbrace iPhone app, which recreates the former Kent gloveman’s highly regarded coaching in an easy-to-use interactive smartphone format
(f) Fifty bonus runs to be used at some point in the two-Test series this summer
(g) All of the above2. In the unlikely event that you had to make up some alternative names for IPL franchises, which of the following would you consider?(a) The Maharashtra Madams

(b) The Capital City Snutterbucks
(c) Jaipur Chicken-Slayers
(d) The Bouncing Bengal Bertrands

(e) The Karnataka Cat Attackers
(f) The Elvis Presley’s XI Punjab
(g) The New York Yankees
(h) All of the above3. Why is medium-paced bowling described as “military”?(a) If you were to force all members of an army to bowl, take speed-gun measurements of their deliveries, and calculate their average pace, it would probably work out as “medium”.(b) “Military medium” bowling was originally nothing to do with the pace of the ball. It was, in fact, named after the late-19th-century bowler Lt Col TBS Dobberson, who bowled gentle seamers for Gloucestershire, the MCC, the Gentlemen, and the Army, in a career spanning several decades. Lt Col Dobberson had a masterful control of line and length, but absolutely no interest in making the ball do anything in the air or off the pitch. His monotonous deliveries became known as “dobbers”, and his unvarying technique as “dobbing”. His primary role in the Army, however, was as a spiritual communicator with long-dead British military heroes, from whom he would coax valuable combat advice, which Dobberson’s superiors would then put into practice on the battlefield. Hence he became known as “the military medium”, a tag that subsequently became attached to his bowling style. “Dob” had particularly close working relationships with the spirits of Napoleon-vanquishing celeb the Duke of Wellington, Battle-of-Blenheim pin-up boy the Duke of Marlborough, and fiery Roman-smashing vixen Queen Boudicca. To maintain his focus when communing with these long-dead legends of the arts of war in the spiritual realm, Dobberson would mime his bowling action in slow motion.(c) In British inter-forces cricket throughout the early 20th century, all bowlers had to bowl rigidly at medium pace. The military hierarchy was insistent on fairness on the field, and considered both fast and slow bowling as being “cocky”, “deceitful” and “downright impertinent when directed at a senior officer”. Therefore, everything other than “military medium” was banned.(d) It is a misspelling of the original term “Miller Tree medium”, which dates back to the post-war Victory Tests of 1945. Australian heartthrob allrounder Keith Miller wowed the ecstatic crowds with his dashingly charismatic exploits with bat and ball, flaying opposing bowlers to all parts with a rare flamboyance and scattering stumps with his high-speed pacery. The exception was in a one-off match against St Enid’s Convent XI, in which, having lost a bet with his good friend Denis Compton about whether squirrels fall to the ground faster when drunk than sober, Miller had to play the entire match dressed as a horse chestnut tree. The limb-restricting costume considerably restricted his famous pace, and Miller took a disappointing 0 for 64 in 17 heavily foliaged overs (although it later transpired that the St Enid’s openers, Sister Beatrice and Sister Winifred, were in fact Compton and Bill Edrich in nun outfits). The term “Miller Tree medium” was concocted by commentator John Arlott, mistranscribed by legendary cricket writer EW Swanton, and soon became widely used to describe the bowling of anyone who looked like they might as well be wearing a pantomime tree costume.(e) All of the above.4. What is the origin of the term “sledging”, which refers to abusive pseudobanter by the fielding team, designed to make a batsman searchingly psychoanalyse himself, his relationship with his parents, and the point of existence, in the 0.4 seconds he has to react to a 90-mile-an-hour bouncer aimed at his gullet?(a) The first known instance of sledging was in the post-Packer non-Ashes Australia v England series of 1979-80. The Australian slip cordon attempted to distract England captain Mike Brearley by singing the chart-topping hits of the pop sensations Sister Sledge, assuming that the famously cerebral England skipper would be disco-discomforted and disco-discombobulated into playing rash strokes. If anything, the tactic backfired – Brearley had arguably his finest series, scoring two battling half-centuries against the fearsome Australiattack, later attributing his success to “finding a state of rare mental equilibrium, and a deliciously funky groove” to the Sisters’ smash hit singles “Lost In Music” and “We Are Family”. Nevertheless, the rest of England’s batting subsided, unable to focus amidst the irrepressible melodies and jive-inducing beat of “He’s The Greatest Dancer”, and “sledging” had become a part of international cricket.(b) Sledging crossed over to cricket in 1968, following the notorious men’s slalom skiing event at the Grenoble Winter Olympics that year. The race was won by French plummeting-down-a-mountain-on-two-long-thin-planks specialist Jean-Claude Killy, but not without controversy. In thick fog, his coach, Alphonse Oeureurheuroeur, disrupted Killy’s great Austrian rival Karl Schranz by tobogganing alongside the course, shouting personal abuse, and questioning Schranz’s mental and physical aptitude for top-level skiing in a fruitily languaged diatribe. The Austrian, distracted by his seemingly invisible assailant’s merciless verbal barrage, missed a gate, was disqualified, and handed Killy his third gold medal of the games. Oeureurheuroeur swiftly melted into the crowd, but his sled was later discovered with a copy of the and an empty bottle of cognac still inside it. “Sledging” had thus been born as a sporting tactic.(c) Sledging began as a ploy in medieval warfare. Nimble spies would clamber up the walls of castles at the dead of night, then perch precariously on the window ledge outside the enemy leader’s bedchamber, before whispering taunts, innuendo and invective towards the room’s occupants. Given the superstitions of the time, the insulted king or duke would awake thinking that he had experienced a visitation from an evil spirit, and consequently be completely off form in the next day’s battle. Due to the quietness required to climb onto the ledge and deliver the low-volume abuse without alerting the attention of guards, or waking the king’s wife and/or mistresses, the process became known as “ssshhh-ledging”, later conflated to “schledging”, then “sledging”.(d) None of the above
(e) All of the above5. In light of questions 1 to 4, have I watched any cricket in the last three weeks, since the World T20 final?(a) Yes
(b) NoWrite your answers on a papyrus scroll, then bury them in a hole in the ground. Winners will be notified in approximately 2000 years’ time.I will be performing my Cricket Versus the World stand-up show at The Udderbelly, on London’s South Bank, this Thursday, 1 May, at 9pm. Details here

First-drop flop and the captain's choice

Plays of the Day from the fifth one-day international between England and South Africa at Trent Bridge

Andrew McGlashan at Trent Bridge05-Sep-2012Duck of the Day

It was always going to be a tall order for Ravi Bopara to go in at No. 3 given his current batting issues. There was a sense of inevitability about how it would end and his second-ball edge against Dale Steyn was much like his dismissals at The Oval and Lord’s. Having looked as though it could be a breakthrough season for Bopara, he is now probably looking forward to it ending after finishing the series with an average of 5.50.Bowling change of the Day

AB de Villiers was proactive throughout England’s innings, with regular bowling changes, and he could not have been happier with how his introduction of JP Duminy for the 20th over worked out. Eoin Morgan has taken apart part-time spin for fun during his career but this time looking to stamp his authority on the bowler he tried to go over mid-on and could not clear the fielder. Morgan is England’s game-changer with the bat and it was a crucial moment.Gift of the Day

Morgan was not the only batsman to hand his wicket to South Africa. However, to fall to a gentle legspinner, sending down his first over, when the batsman has worked hard for a fifty is pretty hard to swallow. Alastair Cook was anchoring England’s innings – and, after losing Morgan, had to bat through – only to push a low full toss straight back to Faf du Plessis. It was an ugly way for Cook to sign off his international batting for the season.Feet issue of the Day

Wayne Parnell has bowled consistently during this series having, as he put it, worked on the “mental” aspect to his game more than the technical. Here, though, he had a few problems, particularly during one over where he overstepped with consecutive deliveries. However, Samit Patel could not take advantage of either free-hit as Parnell firstly got away with a low full toss then produced a full delivery that Patel could only drive to cover.Juggle of the Day

England’s catching has not been good this season so whenever an edge flies into the slips it is a heart-in-mouth moment for home supporters. James Tredwell shelled two at Lord’s on Sunday and his catch to remove Graeme Smith, when he flashed at Jade Dernbach, did not go cleanly into the hands. All that mattered, though, was it stayed in them.Drives of the day
De Villiers has not had the most productive tour with the bat – perhaps because of his increased workload in the Tests – but remains one of the most attractive strokemakers in the world. With his team in trouble at 14 for 3, and following his call for the senior batsmen to respond, he unfurled a string of crisp drives against England’s quicks to settle South Africa’s nerves.

From yarn to yawn

The blog was the sensation of the second season of the IPL. The book seems an unwieldy, long-winded cash-in

Jayaditya Gupta03-Apr-2010The problem with covering the IPL, as any journalist or blogger will tell you, is that events change so fast as to render the morning’s news redundant by lunchtime. And so , the (barely) fictionalised account of the 2009 IPL season, is hamstrung by the fact that, on publication, it has already been overtaken by events. Calcutta Cavalry is so 2009; this year it’s all about the Haryana Hurricanes, though the cast reads eerily similar: a franchise fronted by a Twittering Bollywood A-lister, coached by an Australian and featuring a temperamental left-handed Indian batsman ousted from the captaincy in favour of a foreigner wicketkeeper-batsman.That’s just one of the reasons why the FakeIPLPlayer (FIP) should have stuck to the blog. Another reason is the format – think Twenty-20 stretched into a Test match: short, sharp bursts welded into an unwieldy and long-winded narrative. The 2009 blog was an instant and smash success, with its wickedly sharp, eerily prescient take on life inside a franchise with the wheels blown off. Even as the questions grew – Who “FakeIPLPlayer”? Was any of it true? How did he/she/they come so close to reality? – the answers became irrelevant. The blog at once offered an instant connect with the tournament, being staged thousands of miles away, and the wit punctured a lot of the bombast that had grown around it (that season we didn’t have Navjot Sidhu in the studio). It helped in the suspension of reality, and after a point it didn’t really matter what was fact and what fiction. takes those blog posts and constructs a story around them – the story of FIP, the havoc his blogs cause to the paranoid franchise owner and his aides, the mistrust they sow within the Calcutta Cavalry, and the undercover search to find him. There are several parallel strands, chiefly the exploits of the Bangalore Bangers and their megalomaniac billionaire industrialist owner, who sacks their iconic, upright Indian captain, replaces him with an upstart Englishman, and reinstalls him when the season goes pear-shaped. There are the aforementioned Hurricanes, whose captain is having an affair with the Bollywood A-lister. And at every turn, pulling all the strings, is Lalu Parekh, the head of the Indian Bollywood League, who believes in “inclusive capitalism”.Then there’s the everyday working of a high-profile billion-dollar league: tantrums, contract issues, libellous newspaper articles and subsequent apologies, failed dope tests and how to get around them (I’d never heard of powdered urine before this!) and of course all the off-field nocturnal activity. Add to this the complex name changes – it’s a story within a story, remember, so each of the principals has at least two names, and a third if you connect him to real life – and you’re a little confused by the time you get to the humour.At the end of 401 pages, it’s tough to figure out whom this book is aimed at. The casual cricket fan will miss out on the in-jokes and, unable to connect many of the references to incidents real or imaginary, be left bemused by the minutiae of international cricket politics. The more informed fan will simply be too closely absorbed in IPL 2010 and wonder why FakeIPLPlayer hasn’t resumed his blog.The writer hasn’t yet disclosed his/her/their identity, it is still unclear whether this is fact, pure fiction or something in between. The sad fact, though, is that truth is often stranger than fiction. You get far more reading , the compilation of Cricket Australia’s uncensored, declassified documents, or , David Davies’ account of life at the helm of English football in the turbulent noughties. And far more laughs on Twitter feeds.The blog was a ripping yarn; the book turns it into a gaping yawn.The Gamechangers
by the Fake IPL Player
HarperCollins India, 401pp, Rs 199

Stokes: 'Definitely our greatest triumph since I've been captain'

Also calls Pope’s 196 “the greatest innings ever in the subcontinent by an English batsman”

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jan-20241:03

Stokes: ‘Our best victory since I’ve become captain’

Ben Stokes described England’s unlikely turnaround win against India in Hyderabad as their “greatest triumph” since he took over as captain, and labelled Ollie Pope’s second-innings 196 “the greatest innings that has ever been played in the subcontinent by an English batsman”.England have won 14 of their 19 Tests since Stokes took over as captain in May 2022, a streak that has included statement victories over New Zealand, South Africa, Pakistan and Australia. But Stokes believes that this 28-run win – away from home, against a side that has dominated in their own conditions for a decade – is the best of the lot.”Since I’ve taken the captaincy on, we’ve had a lot of fantastic moments as a team,” Stokes said. “We’ve had a lot of great victories, we’ve been involved in some amazing games. But I think [with] where we are and who we’re playing against, this victory is 100%, definitely our greatest triumph since I’ve been captain.”Related

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England’s match-winner on the fourth day was Tom Hartley, the debutant left-arm spinner, who added 34 in an 80-run partnership with Pope before running through India’s batting line-up with 7 for 62. It marked a significant transformation from the mauling he suffered on the first evening, when he bowled nine wicketless overs that cost 63.”The gameplan there is, we’re out here for a long tour and this is going to be a long game, so I was willing to give him the longer spell regardless of what had happened because I knew I was going to have to turn back to him at some point throughout this Test match,” Stokes said. “Allowing him to have the longer spell at the start was almost justification to say: ‘You know, what I was telling you before the game started is going to happen.'”Whether or not that was the reason to say he got seven wickets and won us the game this innings, who knows? But that was the thought process behind it and giving the people we select complete backing and not going back on the words that we speak.”Rohit Sharma congratulates Ollie Pope on his 196•AFP/Getty Images

“It’s unbelievable,” Hartley said. “It’s not going to sink in for a while. I’m just over the moon, to be honest.” Asked for his thoughts after England’s first innings, he joked: “‘This is hard work!’ It was really tough out there. It didn’t spin quite as much as we thought, but testament to the coaches, Stokesy, and Baz [Brendon McCullum]. They really got around me and I lost no confidence, really. And I was able to come out and do my best out here.”It’s fantastic in that dressing room. We can have a great day, we can have a really bad day: it is the same vibe in there. They’re always ultra-positive. There’s never a dull moment, to be honest. I’m always looking around and thinking, ‘Is there a fielder there? There was one there last ball.’ But that’s just the Stokes way and we’ve all bought into it. We’ve come out on top today, so it’s definitely working.”Stokes said that he had learned from England’s first innings by watching Rohit Sharma’s captaincy of India’s three spinners: R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel. “It’s my first time coming out here and being in charge of a team and being a captain in these conditions,” he said. “I’m not going to lie – I actually may not seem it – but I’m a great observer of the game. I learned a lot from our first innings in the field.”I watched a lot of how the Indian spinners operate in the field and the fields that Rohit set, and tried to take a lot of that into our innings here when we obviously had to bowl them out. I’m thrilled for everyone involved… it’s been an incredible effort by everyone, and even the people who might not necessarily have the rewards. I think everyone’s contributed to a great win.”Stokes reserved special praise for Pope, who had not played since July following shoulder surgery and managed 153 runs in eight innings on England’s 2021 tour of India. “I’ve been lucky enough to play a lot of Test matches in the subcontinent with a certain Joe Root, and I’ve seen some pretty special innings from himself.”But I think the situation we found ourselves in, coming in at No. 3, some of the shots that we’ve seen, just that whole innings, 190 on such a difficult wicket. He was able to manipulate the field with his sweep shots – reverse sweeps, normal sweeps – and the way he was able to rotate the strike… for me, I think that’s the greatest innings that’s ever been played in the subcontinent by an English batsman.”