Aston Villa close to two signings

Aston Villa are said to be close to signing Hearts’ Ewan Simpson as well as Rangers’ Rory Wilson. 

The lowdown

Gerrard is about to take an exciting prospect from the club he managed from May 2018 until last November, with a move for Wilson nearing completion.

Rangers are entitled to a £300,000 development fee for 16-year-old striker Wilson, who bagged a whopping 49 goals in the junior ranks last season.

Simpson is a year younger than his fellow Scotsman Wilson and plays in midfield.

Villa have already been extremely busy this summer, making four additions to their first-team.

The latest

Barry Anderson, a football journalist at The Scotsman/Edinburgh News, relayed the double update on Monday morning.

In addition to Wilson, he reported that ‘Villa [are] also close to signing’ Simpson in a transfer that will cost them £250,000.

The verdict

Based on his remarkable goal record, it wouldn’t be a surprise if the arrival of Wilson generated more excitement amongst the Villa fans.

But they should be very pleased with the capture of Simpson too, because he looks a superb talent.

According to The Daily Mail, he’s been delivering ‘outstanding performances’ despite the fact that he’s playing at Under-18 level as a 15-year-old.

Indeed, Villa have prevailed in a hotly-contested race, with Hearts allegedly fielding ‘a number of enquiries’ for Simpson.

It will of course be a while before he’s ready to compete for a first-team place at Villa Park, but it’s certainly a name worth remembering.

In other news, Aston Villa are eyeing a Champions League star Gerrard saw up close on a scouting trip. 

Tottenham: Lo Celso heading for Spurs exit

Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte is ready to sell Giovani Lo Celso this summer, according to a report from TNT Sports in Argentina. 

The lowdown: Struggle at Spurs

Signed from Real Betis for £27.2million in 2020 following an initial loan spell under Jose Mourinho (BBC), the attacking midfielder struggled to adapt to life in the Premier League before heading back to La Liga on loan.

Lo Celso made 84 appearances for the Lilywhites, directly contributing to just 14 goals before joining Villarreal on a loan deal until the end of the 2021/22 campaign in January.

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Due to return to N17 in the coming weeks, the Argentinian international may already be deemed surplus to requirements…

The latest: Conte cuts Lo Celso

As per TNT Sports, Tottenham boss Conte has informed the 26-year-old that he is not part of his plans for next season.

It’s claimed that Spurs ‘intend’ to let Lo Celso go on a permanent basis despite the man hailed as an ‘amazing player’ by Mourinho being under contract at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium until 2025.

This will be part of a big overhaul, with Steven Bergwijn and Tanguy Ndombele also likely to leave the club during the summer transfer window.

The verdict: The time has come

Clearly out of favour under Conte, selling Lo Celso appears to be the best option for all parties, particularly if there is a deal to be done with Villarreal that may involve sought after centre-back and reported Tottenham target Pau Torres.

Despite playing an integral part in Unai Emery’s plans with the unlikely Champions League semi-finalists, the 38-cap Argentina ace has still only managed two goals and three assists in 38 competitions this season, failing to complete 90 minutes in the Premier League prior to his loan switch.

Holding a market value of £19.8million – albeit down from £45m when he joined, a 56% decrease – and with three years remaining on his contract (Transfermarkt), Daniel Levy will be confident of cutting a lucrative deal for Lo Celso that could see Conte and transfer chief Fabio Paratici’s own transfer coffers boosted handsomely.

In other news: Conte admits one thing this season left him ‘very angry’, find out more here

Sourav Ganguly acknowledges 'tuff conditions' in pollution-hit T20I

The BCCI president’s tweet was the first time in three years the board had admitted the risks of scheduling matches in hazardous air conditions

Sidharth Monga in Delhi04-Nov-2019Moments after the end of the Delhi T20I between India and Bangladesh, Sourav Ganguly, the BCCI president, tweeted out his thanks to the two teams for playing “under tuff conditions”. It was a significant moment, Ganguly becoming the first person in Indian cricket administration over the last three years to openly acknowledge that the atmospheric conditions in Delhi in November are not ideal for cricket.

The match went on without apparent incident, but ESPNcricinfo can confirm that Soumya Sarkar and one other player vomitted on the field during Bangladesh’s chase. For his part, Bangladesh wicketkeeper Mushfiqur Rahim stayed true to what he had told BCB president Nazmul Hassan before the match: that it was difficult but the players were going to manage it.The match had been scheduled for the first weekend after Diwali, the festival of lights and firecrackers. Pollution in Delhi is at its worst in the week immediately following Diwali, thanks to the fireworks and crop-stubble burning in neighbouring states.With the new BCCI team taking over only ten days before the game – the scheduling for this game, as in recent years, had been handled by the Committee of Administrators and the board’s CEO – the match itself was never in serious doubt. Questions, though, persisted.There was no let-up in the pollution on Sunday. The air quality dipped to severe levels in the afternoon with the AQI index at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, eight kilometres from the venue, reading 912. The general acceptable reading for these particulate matters is 200, beyond which athletic activity is discouraged for fear of damage to the lungs and the heart. Thirty-seven flights had been diverted from the national capital. Schools and construction activity had already been shut until November 5. The Delhi state government’s medical department had put out an advisory on Sunday afternoon, saying the “severe level” of pollution “may result in morbidity among exposed people”.All this raised the possibility that the ICC match referee might step in for the safety of the players, with concerns over low visibility as well as the poor air quality.Almost miraculously, the air quality improved over the next three hours to 563 at 4pm, 492 at 5pm and 262 at 6pm. After that, the air quality deteriorated progressively but didn’t reach the alarming levels of the early afternoon. The stadium itself was almost sold out with crowds showing little concern and queuing up as early as 3.30pm.”Personally, this air pollution is nothing for me,” Mushfiqur said after his match-winning innings. “I was much more interested in which bowler I was facing. Playing against India in front of a big crowd isn’t something Bangladesh team gets every day. I think we have come to play our biggest bilateral series, so these things don’t matter.”The Firoz Shah Kotla was covered in smog ahead of the India-Bangladesh T20I•Associated PressNazmul Hasan had expressed his concern before the game. “I had no idea about it [Delhi’s pollution] until very recently,” he told reporters. “But when I saw the situation on the internet, I honestly got scared. Then I heard the schools were closed.”I spoke to the coach, captain and Mushfiq, and they told me it is an issue but they can play. This morning it looked quite bad. I wondered how they can see the ball. But from the very beginning they [BCCI] were saying it cannot be shifted. Apparently it is better than before.”In November 2016, Ranji Trophy matches were moved out of the city only for a Test match to be scheduled in similar conditions the following year. Bharat Arun, who as Hyderabad coach in 2016 spoke of the impossibility of stepping out or running in Delhi, spoke a year later, as part of the India set-up, of “unnecessary stoppages” and questioned the fitness levels of Sri Lanka’s players, who had fallen ill while playing a Test in Delhi in 2017. Lessons were not learnt as Railways were allowed to host Mumbai in the first week of November 2018, when Siddhesh Lad batted in a mask.If Ganguly’s tweet suggested relief and some show of concern and duty of care, his words leading up to the match presented the promise that the BCCI might finally have learnt a lesson. “In future, when we schedule, especially in the northern part of India during the winter, we will have to be a little bit more practical,” Ganguly had said a couple of days before the match. “I know post-Diwali it’s a bit tough in the north. I hope everything goes fine.”For now the BCCI, as Ganguly’s tweet acknowledged, has dodged a bullet, getting away with no big incident in a match organised on a day when the Delhi government issued a health advisory asking people to stay indoors and reschedule outdoor activities.

'My performances reflect why I've had a stop-start career'

Opener Shan Masood blames his inconsistent batting for the spells he has spent out of the Pakistan team

Interview by Umar Farooq03-Jul-2017You have played ten Tests so far. What’s your assessment of your career?
I don’t think I am satisfied with what I have achieved so far. My career has been stop-start, but I can make as many excuses as I like. A good player fights and gets out of adverse circumstances. Fine, I never got more than two Tests at a stretch, but it was up to me the way I got the start. I feel there were small mistakes I could have mended. That 40 I got against New Zealand could have been a fifty. The 75 against South Africa could have been converted into a century – a hundred on debut would have been a different story. At Old Trafford I was feeling my best and was unbeaten at 30. The next morning started well with two boundaries, but then I played a loose shot.Had all those 30s, 40s and 70s been converted, it would be a different record – two fifties and two hundreds. I could have been at ease. If you have two hundreds and six fifties in your first nine matches, it could have made a big difference.Even if I had scored 40s regularly, I might have been in a different position. I am working hard now and want to regain my place. It’s not just about scoring runs in domestic cricket but being a better and more reliable batsman for Pakistan.Your century in Pallekele in July 2015, after coming into the side for the third Test, had every ingredient that selectors look for in a batsman. But then you got dropped after playing the first two Tests against England in October that year.
I don’t want to make excuses. My performances are the true reflection of why I have had an inconsistent selection. That Pallekele Test I was playing after a gap of seven months, and it went well only because I had toured Sri Lanka with the A team before the national team went there. Even when I got only 13 in the first innings, I felt good. And then in the second innings, I got a chance to rectify my mistakes and it went well.But then there was a gap of three months before the next series against England. I didn’t really get any serious games to compete. I felt that even luck wasn’t with me during those freakish dismissals. Once, [in the first innings in Abu Dhabi] the ball went onto the stumps after hitting the helmet. Then [in the second innings] the bottom edge skidded onto the stumps.In the next game, I think I played a quality innings, scoring a fifty in the first session. It was a tough pitch to bat on, but I held on and scored 54 at a strike rate of 60 or so. If not for a lapse in concentration after lunch, I could have put pressure to play the third Test. But naturally Azhar Ali, the main opener, was set to return and I was not only dropped from the playing XI but also sent back home.I felt bad that I had played an extraordinary innings for Pakistan and now all of a sudden I was out. I pushed myself in domestic cricket to score runs. I think I was overthinking the whole thing and that’s why I wasn’t able to score in domestic cricket as well. If after Pallekele I had got an opportunity in a week or so, I could have scored more heavily because I had that momentum with me.James Anderson has dismissed Masood six times in three Tests, in the UAE and in England•Getty ImagesHow tough was it for you to adapt to Pakistan’s cricketing culture after spending six years living and playing in the UK?
It’s not like if you are educated then you are automatically intelligent. In my upbringing, I was taught to treat people on merit. My family achieved everything starting off as a middle-class family.See, it’s already not normal in our society for someone coming from a privileged background to take up cricket professionally. So it was my responsibility to adapt in every dressing room I go to, from junior level to national level. At the age of 13, I came from a very well protected environment to a different environment and interacted with a different set of players who came from different backgrounds. I was taking a break from school for the Under-15 trials, which was a completely different environment for me. But my education and upbringing helped me adapt.Your father is part of the PCB governing body and you come from an influential background. Did this help you in your cricket career?
People do say things like I am in the national team because of my influential background, but it’s not true. I never asked for shortcut and neither did my family. My path, if you follow it, started from youth cricket to now. I never got a head start through a jump. If I have strong backing, why have I been dropped and why has my career been so stop-start?Do you think it’s added pressure on you because you not only have to prove that you are a good batsman but you also have to prove that you have been selected without undue recommendation?
It discouraged me at the start of my career, but I have to shut these things out and focus on my cricket. When I look back, I see I worked hard to make it to the top. It’s painful to be called “sifarshi” [one who comes with a bureaucratic recommendation] because it’s not right. I should be judged on my cricket and as a cricketer.Where do you think it went wrong for you? Was it being dominated by James Anderson last summer in England?
I was playing Anderson just as a bowler who is the No. 1 bowler in the world. Like Dale Steyn troubled Mohammad Hafeez, Josh Hazlewood had Hashim Amla, Anderson had the world’s best batsmen in Virat Kohli and Sachin Tendulkar. You have to accept it and move on. If you look closely at the modes of dismissal, you can easily say that some of them actually went in favour of Anderson, especially in the UAE.”A good player fights and gets out of adverse circumstances. Fine, I never got more than two Tests at a stretch, but it was up to me the way I got the start”•AFPMisbah-ul-Haq said dropping you was to protect your career.
For me, Misbah was an exemplary role model. But I would say that the Anderson thing wouldn’t be fixed by dropping me. There was one solution: that I go back and score runs and do not get out against Anderson. I respect that Misbah bhai said that my career was to be protected because I was very young, but I had set my heart on playing the Birmingham Test because I was not defeated inside and I wanted to score.How did you adapt your game – you played school cricket in England and then went to first-class cricket in Pakistan.
If you look at the evolution of my career, I was very limited. I had two or three strokes, which actually helped because your discipline is good that way. That is what I learnt in England. But when I came to Pakistan, I had to increase my range to stay relevant in domestic cricket. I tried to score fast and went extreme with that. There were innings where I scored 97 off 99 balls in a four-day match. I pushed myself hard to remodel my game, but then I realised that it has to be a slow process and that I have to find a middle ground. So now I have not only enhanced my range of shots but have also become more productive. You have to be selective and mark your best scoring areas. I have finally found a mode where I feel comfortable. It might not be English anymore, but there are components I extracted from there, like discipline.I am working on learning to cut, trying to play with soft hands, rotating the strike. We in Pakistan either score in the first gear or sixth gear. The thing I learned from England is rotation. Sometimes it feels boring that they are scoring singles, but it’s a good symbol of a good batsman who knows how to drive a single. In Test cricket you have to learn it because the fielders are mainly at the back and there are a lot of scoring opportunities. In Pallekele, I remember I hit a boundary at 62 and then at 96 I hit a six. In between, I didn’t hit a boundary but kept rotating the strike.Why aren’t you playing other formats? You are being tagged as a long-form batsman.
I took a significant step last year and started scoring runs in the one-day format as well. To break a perception, I need to be doing something extraordinary. This tag will fade away when I have runs under my belt. I believe I can do it, otherwise I couldn’t be playing the format. What I am looking at is how I can be a better cricketer. Things will happen on their own when I start scoring runs. Do you believe you are talented or that it’s all about hard work?
I don’t think I am talented. In fact, I don’t believe in the word talent. All the sportsmen I have followed in my career, I see no substitute for hard work. I grew up watching players like Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq, who are the best examples of those who made themselves purely through hard work.I work on my fitness, my health, my mental strength and the time and work I put in the nets. Virat Kohli, yes, talent was there, but if you ask him, it all comes down to work ethic and the amount of hard work he put in to become the best batsman.

Saif Hassan, the patient run monger

Saif Hassan has received some flak from the crowd for his defensive approach, but he is simply fulfilling a role he is excellently suited for to give Bangladesh Under-19s a chance to win a World Cup at home

Mohammad Isam04-Feb-2016Two years ago, Saif Hassan was worried about the future of Bangladesh playing in Test cricket. The Big Three proposal had just come out and one of the stipulations was to make teams ranked Nos. 9 and 10 play in the Intercontinental Cup from 2015, which would have left Bangladesh, ranked No. 10 at the time, with very little room to play any more Tests against the top eight countries.”Will Test cricket be safe ?” Saif had asked me on Facebook a few hours after Mushfiqur Rahim, Bangladesh’s Test captain, had blasted the proposal.”Yeah, don’t worry,” I replied quickly, still filing that Mushfiqur report.”Thank you for the info. I was quite fearful since the morning,” he wrote back.Saif was fearful of Test cricket going away from Bangladesh. His inquiry was remarkable given he was only 16 at the time and had been raised on a diet of one-day matches in age-group competitions and the Dhaka League system. None of his peers had asked about it.Saif had spent a few years training among the under-11s at the Dhanmondi Cricket Academy. He used to grip the bat quite low on the handle, but on the advice of his coaches, raised it higher to counter the bounce of the rubber balls. He liked to drive, but at that tender age he wasn’t able to handle the weight of a cricket bat. The helmets always seemed too big for him, but he had no trouble seeing the ball. He had a ready smile, but was mostly shy.A 12-year old Saif Hassan (centre, in the striped shirt) at the Dhanmondi Cricket Academy•Mohammad Isam/ESPNcricinfoSaif took a couple of years to transition from playing with a rubber ball to the cricket ball and when he was 12, the Dhanmondi club decided to give him two games in the Dhaka Third Division Qualifying tournament, the lowest rung in the league structure.His parents were consulted and at the Residential Model High School ground, Saif, all of 12, held his own against bowlers twice his age and size though he didn’t get many with the bat. He didn’t bowl his medium-pace because it was deemed too slow, but he took to fielding gleefully and was quite tanned by the end of the game.Saif now opens the batting for the Bangladesh Under-19 team. There are no vestiges of his old grip but he still raises the bat up quite high just before the bowler gets into his stride. His role is to play as much of the 50 overs as possible, while the others go after the bowling. Nazmul Hossain Shanto is the team’s highest scorer, Pinak Ghosh, Joyraz Sheik and Mehedi Hasan Miraz have made crucial contributions but Saif has only got flak for his defense-first mindset.He bats out maiden overs with forward presses and backfoot blocks, while his opening partner Pinak and No. 3 Joyraz hunt for fours and sixes. In between scores of six (off 31 balls) and eight against South Africa and Namibia, Saif made 49 off 108 against Scotland. The small crowd in Cox’s Bazar would not stop goading him and social media burst with comments that he batted too slowly.And yet Saif’s patience was necessary because Scotland had taken two early wickets and Mohammad Ghaffar was generating movement at high pace. Bangladesh needed someone to stand firm. Saif added 101 for the third wicket with Shanto to lead the recovery which eventually culminated in victory.When asked of Saif’s approach, Bangladesh coach Mizanur Rahman, captain Miraz and batsman Shanto have repeatedly said that it was what the team wanted from him. The other batsmen were given the license to hit out and Saif would essentially bat for time.It’s not like Saif cannot find the boundary. He is one of the hardest hitters of the ball, according to Miraz, and his performance for Cricket Coaching School in the Dhaka First Division Cricket League in the 2014-15 season can vouch for that. In a match against Surjo Tarun, Saif struck eight sixes and eight fours in a 130-ball 136. He likes the cover drive, the flick off the pads, which he keeps grounded, and targets the straight boundaries for his sixes.He was roped in by Barisal Division to play first-class cricket and began building a reputation as an accumulator of runs. He has become a regular in the Bangladesh Under-19 team over the past year, making two centuries in 31 matches. In the 2015-16 first-class season, he scored three fifties and averaged 44.85 in five matches for Dhaka Division.The Bangladesh Under-19 team management is quite happy to let Saif bat in his way and take advantage of his patience. But if he indulges in a few cover drives or some delightful flicks in the quarter-final against Nepal on Friday, don’t be too surprised.

In-form New Zealand end prep in style

New Zealand have had a long build-up to the World Cup and they signed off with a demolition of one of the tournament favourites, South Africa

Andrew McGlashan at Hagley Oval11-Feb-2015That’s it. The preparation is over. And thank goodness, could well be New Zealand’s overriding emotion. The next time they score runs, take wickets and hold catches they will really matter.But what a way to sign off before the main event. Dominating a South Africa team rated as likely finalists at least. There was no Dale Steyn or Hashim Amla and, of course, it was only a warm-up but it is certainly a nice final, big tick in the box (or, no doubt, Mike Hesson’s notebook).In truth the New Zealand players have felt ready to go for at least a week now. Ross Taylor made that pretty clear when he spoke a few days ago. The batting performance against Zimbabwe, when apart from Martin Guptill’s 100 no one made more than 11, suggested these were matches they would rather not be playing.That thought was banished, though, on a blustery but beautiful day at Hagley Oval – a ground that is looking every inch a World Cup opening-day venue. Melbourne will have the grandeur, the intimidation factor, the gladiatorial atmosphere, but Hagley offers the perfect antidote with white picket fences, grass banks and its tree-lined park.New Zealand’s total of 331 was set up by the domineering Brendon McCullum and sublime Kane Williamson, then everyone else who came to the crease contributed to some extent. New Zealand’s recent success has been built on hundreds – down as far as No. 7 – but in this match it was probably more worthwhile for a volume of players to spend a final time in the middle before Saturday.However, it was with the ball during the first half of South Africa’s reply that the home side really stood out. It was almost as though McCullum had drilled into them the need for a final show of intensity – reducing South Africa to 62 for 6 was ample reward. “They were here to play today, no doubt about it. They had all cylinders firing,” JP Duminy said.Trent Boult led the way, reinforcing his standing as Tim Southee’s new-ball partner with white as well as red ball, as he trimmed through the top order before finishing with 5 for 51. The biggest fear for a player at this stage so close to a World Cup starting is an injury, but there was nothing half-hearted or held back about his display.Boult did, however, admit to a hint of relief at the prospect of starting the tournament. “A little bit,” he said. “I think everyone is just excited to get into it. It has been a long time coming. We are really looking forward to Saturday and are eager to get stuck in.”There is probably just one spot in the final XI being debated over the next two days, the identity of the third seamer behind Southee and Boult. The suggestion is that it comes down to the experience of Kyle Mills, who bowled four overs here, and the pace of Adam Milne, who was rested, with Mitchell McClenaghan viewed as the outsider despite being joint second fastest to 50 ODI wickets.”Everyone knows there’s a good amount of competition among us bowlers,” Boult said. “I enjoyed today but everyone came together nicely.Whoever makes the final XI on Saturday morning will be playing in front of a full house, with supporters flush with expectation having watched their team grow over the last two years. This generation of New Zealand players and, perhaps, even any before them have never had quite this experience.”We take it as a positive, it’s great to be playing at home,” Boult said. “We take it in our stride. It’s all we can do. We aren’t getting too wound up about it.”Pressure, what pressure, they might be saying, but not having a few nerves before that first ball would not be human.

Sehwag begins middle-order audition with quick fifty

A leaner Virender Sehwag came in at No. 4 for Delhi in their Challenger Trophy match against India Blue and produced a typically belligerent innings

Sidharth Monga26-Sep-2013A leaner Virender Sehwag emerged to play for Delhi in the Challenger Trophy, batted at No. 4, and scored only his second fifty since being dropped by India in March this year. The runs he scored – 59 off 38 balls, treating the likes of Bhuvneshwar Kumar, R Vinay Kumar and Piyush Chawla with scant respect – are incidental. Sehwag made two statements: like Zaheer Khan and Yuvraj Singh he has come back fitter, and more importantly he might have finally made his mind up to present himself as a middle-order Test candidate, something he said he wanted to do even when he was at the top of his powers as a Test opener.A big crowd built around noon at Holkar Stadium in Indore with the prospect of watching Virat Kohli and Sehwag batting. There was disappointment in store when Sehwag didn’t come out to open. Further disappointment arrived when Kohli went chasing a wide delivery in the third over, and edged it through.At 7 for 2 out came Sehwag, beginning what looks like a longish audition at No. 4. In attendance was chief selector Sandeep Patil, sporting the mo’ and rat-tail that is the trademark of Sehwag’s replacement as Test opener – Shikhar Dhawan. After this Challenger Trophy, the clean-shaven and follically less-blessed Sehwag has two first-class games against West Indies A and the start of the Ranji season before the selectors pick India’s next Test squad.Albeit against an average attack, Sehwag came out with most of his trademark strokes intact. The first three balls he faced – from Bhuvneshwar – were typical Sehwag: a driven four through cover to widish delivery, a cut to third man for two, and then a flick through midwicket. Then came Vinay for his dose: a cut for four and a loft over extra cover for six.The crowd in Indore was getting post-lunch delicacies, and it made its pleasure known through loud cheering. Sehwag pushed their vocal limits with shot after shot of authority. The run-out of Unmukt Chand didn’t slow him down, but a familiar foe soon turned up: spin. Sehwag decided Chawla and Iresh Saxena were not to fit to bowl to him, and fell to Saxena after taking 19 runs off 11 balls of spin.He was down the pitch, beaten slightly in the flight, but went ahead with the drive, and provided Saxena a return catch. It was an interesting end because he will have to face a lot of spin – at least in India – if he wishes to move down the order.Delhi lost by 18 runs with 13 balls still to go. Will Sehwag be thinking a little more discretion against spin might have won them the game? Will he be thinking a little more discretion against spin might help him in the future if he indeed wants to be an India middle-order batsman?

'The best bowling attack I've played with' – Sehwag

India’s bowling department has been over-reliant on Zaheer Khan in recent times, but Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav’s impressive performances in Melbourne have given the attack a sense of completeness

Sidharth Monga at the MCG28-Dec-2011At the end of the second day, R Ashwin, the India offspinner, set his bowling colleagues a lofty ambition. He spoke about the readiness of the Indian attack and how they would try to match the eagerness England’s bowlers showed during the Ashes in Australia last season. “We saw in the Ashes the England team seemed, through the series, as though they wanted the ball in hand,” Ashwin said. “That’s the kind of impression a good bowling attack can pose upon an opponent. It’s all about readiness and the belief that wickets will keep coming. If a couple of us can get five-wicket hauls early in the series then obviously you will see the effects on our team as well.”It is a good aspiration to have: to want to be constantly enthusiastic to bowl and take wickets. However, the Indian attack, hurt by injuries and lack of consistency over the past year, has had questions asked of the very durability Ashwin asked for. It seemed certain that a time would arrive during this tour when the bowlers would be asked to measure up to Ashwin’s aspiration. That it would arrive a little over two hours of play after his statements was slightly unexpected. The Indian batting had collapsed by lunch on the third day, losing eight wickets for 68, and India needed something special from their bowlers. By the end of the day, Ashwin & Co. had the approval of Virender Sehwag. He said: “This is the best Indian bowling attack I have played with.”That’s a tall claim, but perhaps Sehwag has seen something. The most striking aspect of this attack – albeit on the evidence of a small sample – has been that they have not been overly reliant on Zaheer Khan. Yes, Zaheer’s experience has counted in his final spells on the first and third days, but Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav have been ready, have been quick, and have improved as the game has progressed.Zaheer’s importance is not always a tangible quantity of course; it doesn’t always show in five-fors but only in the slump when he is missing. But you get the sense there is something to Yadav and Ishant’s games. Usually, when India win Tests abroad – and this is by no means won – there is a sense of happenstance to the composition of the attack. There is a deliberateness about this set of bowlers. Yadav is young, fit and quick, and was punted on at the right time. Ishant has been around for a while, and while he may have gambled by not going for ankle surgery, he has not held anything back in this Test. Unlucky to have not picked up a wicket in the first innings, he bowled consistently in the late 140s in his first spell in the second, and once crossed 152kph.It is rare for all three quicks of an Indian attack to look like they could take wickets in all of their spells. India desperately needed just that after the collapse in the morning. Helped in part by injudicious shot-making from the Australia batsmen, Yadav burst through the top order, and Zaheer and Ishant were not far behind. The trio showed they had learned from their first-innings mistake of bowling too short, and also from watching how the Australia quicks exploited the conditions.Then there is Ashwin, who has brought freshness to the spin department. He has not over-reached on a pitch that is not helping spinners, but he hasn’t been overly defensive either. He may have been guilty of bowling the odd short ball, but his opposition have acknowledged that he has made it difficult for them through changes of pace, angle and trajectory, and of course the carrom ball against the tail. Ricky Ponting said there was a lot Nathan Lyon, Australia’s offspinner, could learn from Ashwin. The way Ashwin bowled over after over, going at well under three an over, allowed the quicks to keep coming back fresh.The control Ashwin exerted meant Australia had not run away to a big lead by the time Zaheer came back for a final spell on the third day. On cue, he produced two wickets, reversing one away from Ponting, and then dismissing Brad Haddin from around the stumps. Ashwin then showed his effectiveness against the tail, and but for a drop off his bowling India might have been in an even better position by stumps. Zaheer, though, bowled only a four-over spell, feeling his hamstring during the fourth, walking off immediately, and then coming back to the field but not bowling. That was a reminder for Indians fans not to get too far ahead of themselves.This is a long Australian summer, and anything could happen when it comes to the bowlers’ fitness. One of the three fast bowlers might even need to be rested from a Test. In fact the MCG Test itself still has some way to go, but whatever happens here the bowlers can say they have done their job. Well, almost. There are still two wickets to get on the fourth morning.

League of local heroes

The KPL could change the process of talent-spotting in Indian cricket and spread more wealth to a larger section of cricketers

Siddarth Ravindran23-Sep-2009A couple of months ago, a group of cricket officials, businessmen, politicians and the odd impresario put the finishing touches to a Twenty20 tournament, the Karnataka Premier League. Like its inspiration, the IPL, it would be franchise-based, but there the similarities between the two ended. Where the IPL had the best global talent to choose from, and the country’s finest stadiums to stage the tournament in, the KPL seemed to have the makings of a dud: it lacked the stars from the national team (or even, following a BCCI diktat, any players from outside the state) and so would be seen primarily as domestic cricket; there was no fat television deal to bankroll it; and it was born in recessionary times, unlike the IPL, which was clearly a product of the boom days. Nor did it help that Anil Kumble and Javagal Srinath, two of Karnataka’s biggest names of recent times, came out against the way the idea was implemented.Yet, as the first season (if a fortnight can be called a season) winds down with the final on Tuesday night, there’s reason for optimism, if qualified. The fans have turned out (as many as 8000 for the game between the two Bangalore teams on a Sunday), sponsors have stumped up big bucks [Mantri Developers, the title sponsors, will plough in 11.11 crore ($2,306,400) over five years], and the ripples of interest have spread far beyond Karnataka’s borders.And so the stakeholders – those cricket officials, businessmen, politicians and the odd impresario (who are now also franchise owners, commentators and KPL organizers) and the players – have fairly satisfied smiles as their varied interests have been served.For Mohiuddin Bava, a member of the Congress party in the coastal city of Mangalore, buying the local KPL franchise instantly increased his profile in his constituency and helped him spread his message. You’d think his team, Mangalore United, is named after the more famous Man U; it isn’t. In the recent past, Mangalore has been riven by communal tension and violence, which Bava hopes to ease through the KPL. “Cricket will be a ladder to bring back harmony in the society,” he says, a point emphasised by his team’s slogan, “Cricket for unity.”It’s a different ball game for the Brigade Group, a Bangalore-based real-estate major. To begin with, the expenses involved are relatively small change – they shell out about Rs 1.4 crore (US$291,000) a year for the most expensive franchise, the Bangalore Brigadiers. Their campaign to promote their team includes billboards, a snazzy website, a Facebook group to connect with fans, and several big-name team sponsors. They’ve gone about it with a corporate thoroughness: The first day of the KPL saw groups of supporters sporting Bangalore Brigadiers T-shirts.”We did our math, we knew that it was not going to be a profit-making venture, we are fine with that,” says Anil Thomas, the franchise’s deputy CEO. “As of now it is the Bangalore Brigadiers that is building a fan base. At some point the association with the Brigade group will get stronger.”The Udaya network [the KPL’s broadcasters] have a big chunk of the state’s population watching them, and it is a good opportunity for us to use that as a brand vehicle to publicise our company’s work. It’s not the immediate objective, though, which is for the team to do well.”Money is probably not the motivation for Robin Uthappa either. He is the league’s most expensive player, but his Rs 325,000 ($6750) salary is a fraction of the US$800,000 he earns in the IPL. It is more a chance for him to tune-up his Twenty20 game before the Champions League. “I am just looking at it as an opportunity to work on my Twenty20 skills,” he says, “and to get more Twenty20 experience under my belt.”Twenty20 experience is something Indian players are short on, with opportunities restricted to the IPL or the ICL. Even Ranji players like batsman KB Pawan, a regular with the Karnataka side for the past two seasons, have played little Twenty20. “This is my first experience actually,” Pawan says. “There are some club-level matches, and if you play for institutions you may get to play two or three Twenty20 tournaments a year; otherwise you won’t get any Twenty20 matches.”Playing under floodlights with a crowd egging him on (or barracking him) is a novel experience for him. “Initially everybody felt the pressure because of the crowd watching them. It’s important for a player to learn to control himself and learn how to handle the pressure – that’s what I’m looking for from the KPL.”Further down the pecking order the returns can be more dramatic; the tournament, with 120 players involved, provides much-needed exposure to reach the next level. Mangalore’s R Jonathan’s big hits became a talking point, and left-arm spinner Narayanan Vinu Prasad, who played one match for Karnataka last season, has made a case for his re-selection by taking 10 wickets at a miserly economy-rate of 4.97.It could also be a springboard to the lucrative IPL, where a couple of good performances can take an unknown player higher up the ladder, as happened with Manish Pandey, the first Indian to score an IPL century. “Of course, we [franchises] all are [scouting],” says Joy Bhattacharya, team director of the Kolkata Knight Riders. “If anyone tells you they are not watching… well, they are looking at games, looking at opportunities, looking at anyone whom they think will make a difference.”Amrit Mathur, chief operating officer of Delhi Daredevils, is one of those who says he isn’t watching. “I don’t think we have made the effort to look at the performances, at least not this year,” he says. “Ideally, if players from outside the state are allowed to compete, the quality will be higher and one will get a better sense of a player’s quality.”

“About 90% of cricketers give up the game at the age of 18 because of family pressure or to pursue academics. Of the remainder another 90% drop off at 21, and 90% more at 24 because their hopes and aspirations aren’t met. The KPL intends to check that trend by giving a huge number of cricketers a reason to keep hoping, and to stay in the game.”Charu Sharma, TV anchor

That, though, is getting ahead of the game for Charu Sharma, the TV anchor who has brought his IPL experience – he was CEO of Royal Challengers Bangalore in the first season – to help set up the league. More important than being a supply line for either the IPL or the Ranji Trophy, he says, the KPL needs to be a “hopeline” for the state’s cricketers. “About 90% of cricketers give up the game at the age of 18 because of family pressure or to pursue academics. Of the remainder another 90% drop off at 21, and 90% more at 24 because their hopes and aspirations aren’t met. The KPL intends to check that trend by giving a huge number of cricketers a reason to keep hoping, and to stay in the game.”How the league was built
The KPL took shape when the sports-marketing firm Frontiers Group, which owns in-stadia advertising rights to most of India’s big stadiums, approached the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) with the idea. Once the KSCA was sold on it and went public with it, things moved at breakneck pace. Over the next 45 days the franchises were sold, an IPL-style auction of players was held, and sponsors came on board. On September 9 the first ball was bowled at Bangalore’s Chinnaswamy Stadium.Among the challenges in that period was getting a broadcast deal in place, which Sharma says was the “hardest nut to crack”. With interest in the tournament likely to be limited to Karnataka, regular sports channels that beam nationwide weren’t likely to be interested, and there were no local sports channels. “However good the cricket was, it was unlikely to be relevant to someone in, say, Guwahati,” he says. “So we needed a strong local television partner, and there was none dedicated to sports.”To solve the problem, the KSCA decided to produce the feed themselves and signed up with the Udaya network to telecast the matches on its news channel. Unlike the IPL, which was driven by the billion-dollar deal with Sony, there was little money involved here; instead, the franchises were compensated with 3500 seconds of free airtime each (called Franchise Commercial Time or FCT).The decision to go with the franchise system drew some flak, notably from Kumble and Srinath, who both wondered why the KSCA needed external financial support to run the league when it receives a grant from the BCCI. Kumble was typically blunt: “In its current form, it would allow a backdoor entry into the KSCA for people not passionate about cricket,” he said. Sharma, though, defends the concept. “Why not raise the same question about the IPL?” he asks. “What is the harm if the KSCA brings in eight partners who are interested in promoting cricket and unearthing talent?”One of the downsides of bringing in franchises is the need to manage them, and meet their expectations. “We are unable to sell the FCT because of the delay in getting the TV deal in place,” says Joseph Hoover, CEO of the Belagavi Panthers. “This has hit us badly, we are not even getting 50% of what we expected in terms of revenues. We are hoping the KSCA will be large-hearted and offer us a bigger portion of what they earn.”So what does the KSCA earn from the KPL? Its two main sources of income are from the sale of franchises (about Rs 7 crore [$1,450,500] a year), and from sponsors (the bulk of it, about Rs 2.22 cr [$461,000] a year, from the title sponsors, Mantri). Their biggest expenses include the marketing of the tournament, producing the TV visuals (about Rs 2 crore [$415,300]), and the actual running of the tournament (including a costly three days when the whole bandwagon moved to Mysore, the other venue).It costs something in the region of Rs 1.5 crores ($311,500) a year to run an average KPL franchise. While the KSCA will provide them some revenue, the franchises will have to recover most expenses on their own, by selling FCT (which, at most, will net them about Rs 10 lakh) and by bringing on board sponsors.Is such a model, with so much of the onus on the franchises, viable? Mathur thinks so. “Obviously if there is [big] TV money, it’s a huge, huge bonus, but I think even without that it can survive and do well,” he says. “The Twenty20 format is very strong, the product is terrific in terms of three hours of aggressive cricket, but what will differentiate between a successful and unsuccessful tournament will be the quality of cricket.”The KPL could well be a springboard for selection in the IPL, whose franchises have been observing the action with interest•ESPNcricinfo LtdThe cricket itself has been of a decent standard so far. Batsmen have been innovative – NC Aiyappa, one the quickest bowlers in the tournament, watched the Bijapur Bulls’ Praveen Kumar play a Dilshan-like scoop off him – and the bowlers are learning to deal with permanently aggressive batsmen. The big letdowns have been the fielding – boundary-fielders spilling skiers has been a common sight – and the players’ fitness.Bring on the next season
With the first season done, the KPL will look at building on it. One option is to take the game to the smaller cities in the state, given the success of the Mysore leg of the tournament. Mysore usually has to be content with one Ranji game a year, and fans there had never seen a high-profile Twenty20 match. Adding to the novelty factor was the IPL-style razzmatazz – foreign cheergirls and traditional folk dancers rooting for the home side, film songs and team anthems blaring at intervals, and a newly installed giant screen. A 3500-strong, vocal, partisan crowd packed Mysore’s Gangothri Glades stadium for the game between the home team and the Bangalore Brigadiers, creating an atmosphere rivalling – in decibel level and colour, for sure – an international match.While the lack of infrastructure in the districts remains a problem, the KSCA realises the need to move more of the tournament outside Bangalore, which hosted all but six of the 31 games this season. “We are planning to go, from the next edition onwards, to other locations in Karnataka,” Srikantadatta Wadiyar, a descendant of the Mysore royal family and current KSCA president, says. “The idea is to ultimately take it to the respective locations and zones [of the franchises].”He is also hopeful of getting some players from outside the state to feature next year. “This year it was not possible, but next year we shall plan in advance and try and get something organised, but the tournament basically has been marketed as an event ‘for Karnataka, by Karnataka, of Karnataka’.”The franchises are also looking ahead to the next season. Mangalore has announced its plans to start an academy to spot and groom talent. Belgaum is looking at providing equipment and forming teams within its catchment area, and holding intra-zone tournaments. “We are committed to four tournaments a year in Belgaum,” Hoover says. “We will club some areas together and make a team; we plan to have five or six such teams, who will then face off against each other.”If the franchises stick to their promises, it will go a long way towards achieving the KPL’s goal of expanding the game in the rural districts. The league has managed to get people to the grounds to watch domestic cricket ¬- uncommon in India: the Chinnaswamy Stadium wore a deserted look during the final of the Corporate Cup, which finished just days before the KPL, despite the presence of crowd-magnets like MS Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh. If other states decide to replicate the KPL, the KSCA’s gamble could end up revolutionising the manner in which talent is spotted in Indian domestic cricket, besides multiplying the number of players involved in the game at a high level.

'Crisis of performance' – Mexican media react to América’s 3-1 loss to Toluca in Campeón de Campeones

An early goal from Alejandro Zendejas wasn’t enough to stop the reigning Liga MX champions from winning at Dignity Health Sports Park

  • Romero, Méndez, and Días scored for Toluca
  • Diablos will face LA Galaxy in the Campeones Cup
  • Mohamed reaches 10 titles as manager, seven in Mexico
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Club América's downward spiral in 2025 continued, as they lost yet another title – this time falling 3-1 to reigning Liga MX champions Toluca in the Campeón de Campeones on Sunday. It was another missed chance for redemption after losing the Clausura 2025 Final, which denied them a historic four-peat.

    And that wasn’t the only failure of the year so far: América also fell short in the Champions Cup and failed to qualify for the Club World Cup, leaving them empty-handed in the first half of the year.

    Mexican media didn’t hold back in their criticism, especially for head coach André Jardine.

    “I don’t just think this is the worst moment of Jardine’s era – it’s the worst moment for the club in many years,” said Fox Sports Mexico analyst Rubén Rodríguez. “This isn’t just a results crisis, it’s a crisis of performance. The team isn’t playing well, they’re not generating the kind of football they should. Today, Toluca aren’t just celebrating the Campeón de Campeones – they’re celebrating that they’re clearly superior to América. This América side is good enough to compete, but not to win titles. It doesn’t give you the certainty it did in previous tournaments.”

    Former footballer Fabián Estay, also Fox Sports, defended Jardine and said América are still favorites.

    “They were the better team throughout the first half. When Toluca scored the 2-1, that was during América’s best spell,” he argued. “It’s very unfair to criticize Jardine now that things are going badly, because when he was on top, nobody said a word.”

    On ESPN’s Futbol Picante, the commentary panel praised Antonio Mohamed for Toluca’s dominant performance.

    “Once again, he proves he’s a master – a real coach. He analyzes opponents very well. After conceding early, he managed to contain América and outplayed them in every area,” said former player Ricardo Peláez. “América ran out of ideas after some substitutions that didn’t work.”

    Ricardo Puig added: “I didn’t understand Jardine’s subs. I think when the team is functioning and he tries to take control with changes, it backfires.”

    Commentary from Fox Sports' Raoul Ortiz and TUDN reporters shifted the tone. Ortiz claimed this loss might actually benefit América, saying, “This could be the best thing that happened to América – it will make them realize they need to go for a major signing. They have to go after Denis Bouanga.”

    The LAFC player recently opened the door to a possible exit from MLS, and Club América owner Emilio Azcárraga hinted that negotiations with the Gabonese forward could be in the works.

    “There are a couple of things we’re working on,” he said.

    Said Fox Sports Mexico analyst Carlos Hermosillo, “If they bring in Bouanga, watch out for América."

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    WHAT ANTONIO MOHAMED SAID

    Toluca’s head coach shared his thoughts after the victory over América.

    “I’m very happy," he said. "I’m grateful to the board for trusting us, and obviously, beating América always adds a little extra. We know they’re the biggest club in Mexico, so winning two finals against them in such a short time is a big deal.”

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Toluca and LA Galaxy will face off in the 2025 Campeones Cup at Dignity Health Sports Park. The date has not yet been announced.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CLUB AMÉRICA?

    Jardine’s team will face Necaxa next Saturday in Matchday 3 of the Apertura 2025.

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