Sympathy yes, but no excuse

Despite his confession, and despite what he meant for a generation of Bangladesh fans, Mohammad Ashraful has no place in cricket after what’s he’s done

Tasmia Tahia, UK07-Jun-2013Ashraful, the first love of Bangladesh Cricket, the first world-class player Bangladesh had produced, the youngest Test centurion, the poster boy of Bangladesh Cricket – if you have been a Bangladesh fan, you have already read or heard these words a thousand times in the last week, be it on the news or in some Facebook page.Now, having used up all the clichés, the rest of this piece is only my views, so feel free to disagree and question my limited wisdom on this topic.Personally, I don’t remember when I started watching or following cricket. I know it became a conscious obsession when I was about 14, when I started watching cricket matches between teams I had no connections to, and reading cricket literature and laughing at the silliest puns and jokes. But, I have watched Bangladesh play ever since I can remember, reportedly having woken up to celebrate that 1999 World Cup victory against Pakistan. I perhaps remember it so vividly thanks to the noise my family made, as I am not sure I even understood what winning meant, aged four.One thing I remember very well is that, as a child, Bangladesh cricket meant Mohammad Ashraful. I didn’t care who was batting, but all I saw was Ashraful was playing. Ashraful was synonymous with Bangladesh, with cricket itself.The events of the last few days have broken my heart. When the first accusations came, I commented with due diligence in his favour, and even the report didn’t convince me. Then came the confession.The confession hurts the most, as we rarely hear confessions. They are rare in our country, and in our neighbouring nations too. We are accustomed to seeing politicians and criminals travelling to prison holding up their fingers to signal victory – I am not referring to any cricketers here, only politicians. To hear someone confess is rarer than sighting a royal Bengal tiger walking into the local .I was actually very surprised by the concept of pleading guilty when I first came to the UK, as I never heard of someone actually admitting their fault in Bangladesh. More than 1500 people died in a recent tragedy in Bangladesh due to the flawed building construction. No one has confessed, apologised, or cried.But Ashraful did. He cried, asked for forgiveness and confessed. Ashraful’s admittance and tears perhaps prove that he does have some conscience left. He had the humility and humanity to accept his mistake, nay crime, which has led to a lot of public support for him. It is his confessions and ‘wish to protect the game from further harm’ that have made him the ‘good guy who made a mistake’ in people’s eyes.I am one of those who sympathise with him. However, I disagree with the people who say he shouldn’t be punished, and that he should get a second chance. I refuse to say that he shouldn’t be banned; he needs to be banned for the sake of cricket.Ashraful was the first world-renowned player from Bangladesh. Shakib, Mushfiqur, Tamim and Nasir might be big names today, but Ashraful showed the way. I still believe this, as does every other Bangladesh cricket fan from my generation. With his raw talent and consistent inconsistency, he was the embodiment of Bangladesh cricket’s story.Imagine the message that goes out to every young cricketer out there, Bangladeshi or not, if he was forgiven or given a lesser punishment. Bangladesh is already well known for this ability to forgive. Imagine this message going to young players, who come from economically worse off families, to those who will sacrifice education for the game, to those who get injured too often, and therefore know that the income from playing will dry up one day, and their whole lives are ahead of them, with no certainty of financial support. South Asian cricketers are already the most vulnerable to the dark grasp of fixing, as recent events have shown, due to the lack of education, guidance, and with corruption being institutionalized. Let Ashraful off easy, and the message will be: “Be good at your game, and the broken rules and laws wouldn’t matter.”Letting Ashraful off easy would make him bigger than the jersey he betrayed, bigger than the efforts of the whole team, bigger than even cricket probably. And no player can be bigger than cricket.Talent without judgment is useless, and talent without morals dangerous. Whether Ashraful was stupid or greedy, I don’t know. But, after years of getting out unnecessarily, to the utter frustration of fans everywhere, he has finally ‘played the shot’ which has gotten him ‘out’ for good, and there should be no DRS here. Ashraful the man can retain his place in the society, but Ashraful the cricketer must go. He has no place in the team or in cricket.If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line

Faf comes out of AB's shadow

He grew up being outdone by AB de Villiers, but now Faf du Plessis has made a name for himself with his limited-overs exploits and has his eyes on the five-day game

Firdose Moonda24-May-2012It’s a tradition at CSA’s annual awards dinner to sprinkle the nationally contracted players across a variety of tables, so they can mingle with the mere mortals. Last year Faf du Plessis was seated with the journalists.The most memorable thing he had done in South African colours at that stage was run out AB de Villiers in the 2011 World Cup quarter-final in Dhaka. He was still a rookie, filled with the right mix of arrogance and mischief. He had just returned from his first season in the IPL, with the Chennai Super Kings – he had not played a game but had plenty of stories to tell, which quickly took attention off his World Cup drama. He spoke about being part of a winning squad, meeting R Ashwin and thinking he was one of the best spinners in the world, and about learning all the time.He won one of the night’s smaller prizes, a domestic award for MTN40 Player of the Year for his 567 runs in ten matches. When he got back to the table with it, he was received with handshakes and congratulations, and spent a large chunk of the rest of the evening staring at it, almost in disbelief that it belonged to him.Not that du Plessis was a stranger to winning, having been part of the all-conquering Afrikaans Hoer Seunskool team that included AB de Villiers, Neil Wagner and Jacques Rudolph, and part of a Titans squad that had triumphed many times. It was that he was just not used to being personally heralded, having always had team-mates receive such accolades.In particular, it was de Villiers’ shadow that du Plessis had often found himself in. The pair are the same age, played in the same age-group sides, and seemed to be developing together, until de Villiers overtook du Plessis and became part of the national squad, leaving du Plessis to play franchise cricket. “It was a bit of an issue for me, for sure,” du Plessis told ESPNcricinfo. “I wanted it just as badly – too badly, maybe.”For six years du Plessis watched de Villiers, somewhat enviously, and waited. Somewhere along the way he decided he had no choice but to keep performing in domestic cricket until he got noticed. “I said that I would grow in my own time. I took pressure off myself and thought that when I did get selected for South Africa, I would know my game. I would have played a lot of cricket and I would understand my game better, and that’s exactly what happened,” he said.Du Plessis was picked for the ODI side in early 2011, having topped the rankings in the MTN40. “I got picked after having two or three great one-day seasons, so I understood what it took to do well in one-day cricket and I had that peace of mind there,” he said.

“Chennai is like putting your head into an oven and turning it to 200 degrees and baking yourself”

Now he is part of the core of South Africa’s revolving middle order. Du Plessis, de Villiers and JP Duminy share the No. 4 to 7 spots. It is a strategy that has puzzled some, but it has also worked, and du Plessis seems to have found his niche. “Gary [Kirsten] told us the reason we do it is because he wants us to become better players and be able to bat in every situation,” du Plessis explained. “And it seems to be working. The opposition can’t make set plans for us and they don’t know what’s coming next.”Being a certainty in the ODI side is a reflection of how dramatically things have changed for du Plessis in the past year. He has graduated from being a fringe player to one of those most talked-about by the national selectors, and is in line for other honours, such as a place in the T20 squad and perhaps even the Test one. Du Plessis believes the turnaround stemmed from being given greater opportunity, at all levels.According to him, it started when the Titans underwent a change in management and appointed Matthew Maynard as head coach. “In the two years before that, I was batting at No. 6 or 7 in first-class cricket and I started losing interest a little bit,” Du Plessis admitted. “When you bat in those positions, so often you find yourself batting with the tail in a couple of games and it can become frustrating. Matthew said he wanted me to bat at No. 4. I scored 157 [153] in the first game, so that helped, but I also got more chances.”Du Plessis’ international commitments meant he could only play four SuperSport Series matches, but he collected 599 runs from them, including three hundreds, which placed Test cricket in his sights. “A year ago maybe Test cricket was still out of my thinking but after the season I had, it’s made it clear to me that Test cricket is something I would really like to play,” he said.Those longer-format ambitions are being nurtured by CSA, who have asked du Plessis to play in two unofficial Tests for South Africa A, against Sri Lanka A in June. Du Plessis sacrificed the opportunity to play for Somerset in the Friends Life t20 to play in the matches because he thought it would help with his future plans. “It’s a big thing for your career if somebody wants to sign you as an overseas player because it means people are looking at you and its recognition for what you’ve done,” he said. “But I also want to focus on my four-day cricket. The nicest thing is that I am not being labelled as just a one-day cricketer. I’d like to be next in line for that No. 6 spot in Tests.”Before that will happen, he could find himself opening the batting with Richard Levi in South Africa’s Twenty20 side. Andrew Hudson, the national convenor of selectors, said du Plessis has made a strong case for himself with his batting in the IPL, and the man himself confessed he would be delighted if given the chance. “If you ask me where I’d want to bat in T20 format, I’d say I’d want to open. I think my batting is really suited for that.”Batting at the top of the order happened to du Plessis as a matter of accommodation, because there was nowhere else he would fit in the Chennai Super Kings starting XI. “We probably have the best of the Indian batters in our team, with [Suresh] Raina and Badrinath, and then you’ve got your allrounders like Albie [Morkel] and Dwayne Bravo, so to get in was always going to be tough to slot it,” du Plessis explained. “Stephen Fleming told me that because Mike Hussey was not going to be here for the first part of the tournament, I should open, and he really pushed it.”Having done the job a few times in emergency situations for the Titans, it was not a completely new thing for du Plessis but he still had a few adjustments to make. Fleming told him the team wanted to make use of his dual abilities to hit the ball over the inner ring and along the ground and his main role would be to provide aggressive starts. “It’s completely the opposite role I have with the Titans, where I am the guy who comes in at No. 4 four and tries to bat through,” du Plessis said. “Now I am one of the guys who can make a play at the beginning, and if I can get through the first six then I go back to trying to stay there for as long as possible. The more I played, the more I started understanding when was a good time to go and when was a good time to try and sit back.”Being part of a unit that has established itself as one of the most settled in the IPL has also helped. Du Plessis had benefitted from different brands of leadership, in Fleming and MS Dhoni. “Fleming plays a huge role – he is a really relaxed guy. That’s something all cricketers enjoy,” he said. “MS is very chilled. He is quite a quiet guy and he doesn’t say much. He just gets on, does his business and never panics. Overall we’re a very well balanced squad – that’s important to the owners, I think. They buy players that are not trouble-makers, in terms of their attitudes. So you get a bunch of guys where their main objective is the team.””The more I played, the more I started understanding when was a good time to go and when was a good time to try and sit back”•AFPThat philosophy is something du Plessis understands, having always been taught the importance of collective achievement over personal successes. Du Plessis is, in essence, a team man. When he played at Lancashire, he became a poster boy for fielding but far from dwelling on the standard he set there, he heaped praise on the county for teaching him more about his game. He has done the same with the Super Kings and has embraced Chennai, for better and for worse.”I’ll be honest – Chennai is like putting your head into an oven and turning it to 200 degrees and baking yourself,” he said. “It’s really, really warm. All the teams that play against us talk about the heat and humidity during the build-up because it’s such a huge factor. It feels like I lose ten litres every game just from sweat. But the IPL is a fantastic tournament. We meet people from different countries and cultures, and even though we play a lot of cricket, and it has felt long, there’s so much room to develop and improve.”

'People need to believe in Bangladesh'

Khaled Mahmud played a key role in Bangladesh’s ascent to the highest level. Now, a decade on, he’s looking to help his side take the ever-elusive next step

Andrew Miller09-Mar-2010Khaled Mahmud looks no different now, overseeing Bangladesh training ahead of the second ODI in Dhaka, to how he did throughout his international career. Short and squat, and possessed of a physique that is undeniably “cuddly”, Mahmud became a byword for underachievement in his six years at the top. At one stage he boasted a Test bowling average of 406 and a Test batting mark of 11.25, the worst combined figures for an allrounder in Test history, and his final appearance as his country’s captain, against England in 2003, was drowned out by a cacophony of boos.And yet, in the same instance, Mahmud is an untouchable hero to his people, a player who epitomises the paradox of Bangladesh cricket. Eleven years ago in Northampton, his wobbly seamers claimed 3 for 31 to follow up a hard-hitting 27, as Pakistan were sensationally toppled at the 1999 World Cup – a result that led directly to Bangladesh’s elevation to full Test status. And two years before that, he also played his part in the ICC Trophy victory over Kenya in Malaysia, a triumph that transformed the standing of the sport in his country, with upwards of 100,000 people mobbing the team on its return to Dhaka Airport.”Other players may get the same experience in their careers, or maybe not, but in those two years we saw without any doubt the people’s love for the game,” Mahmud told Cricinfo. “When the prime minister received us in the old airport in 1997, I’d never seen a gathering like it. It was fabulous. Our car moved at 5kph from the new airport to the old. After those two moments, cricket really took off. It was a real change in our game and our history.”Except, of course, it was not. The real change has yet to arrive, more than a decade on from the two matches that promised such a bright future for the country. A succession of captains and coaches, including Jamie Siddons and his predecessor, Dav Whatmore, have repeatedly appealed for their “inexperienced” charges to be given time to prove themselves, and yet in 64 Test encounters since November 2000, Bangladesh have lost 55, including 33 by an innings, and won a measly three – all against weak opponents: Zimbabwe and a strike-hit West Indies. How much longer can the excuse be expected to wash?Mahmud, however, is living proof of the distance that his sport has travelled in the past decade, and as Bangladesh embark on an era of apparent consolidation, the knowledge that he has gleaned starts to take on an added importance. After all, the one thing he has in abundance is experience – experience of exquisite highs, deep and depressing lows, and all the maddening expectations that get piled onto the shoulders of the lucky few who are chosen to represent their success-starved country. And as he stands at the back of the nets, watching the class of 2010 go through their paces, he is better placed than most to judge just how far the country has come.”This team, they are mentally tough, even though they are kids,” said Mahmud. “They don’t get bothered by what people say, in the way that we often did. They know what will happen if they don’t perform, and if they fail they feel the shame for themselves, but they don’t react that much. Our media has changed too. In the early days if you did something wrong it was big news, and it was all over the papers straightaway. Now things are much more healthy, and the crowds have changed as well. They now understand that international cricket is not that easy for the boys.”I was 26 when we won the ICC Trophy, and 30 when we played our first Test,” he added. “Media expectation was very high, but it was tough for us, because our structure was not up to standard. Our wickets were slow and low, so we weren’t prepared for proper fast bowling. We didn’t have a physio, so for small injuries we had to wait for weeks to make sure they had healed. And when we brought in Robert Hunt from Australia for the 1999 World Cup, it was the first time we had had a proper trainer.”Half of our lives for three or four years were spent at training camps at the BKSB [Bangladesh Institute of Sport], when we would get maybe one day a week to see our families, and though we tried our best and bonded well, our infrastructure simply wasn’t up to standard. It stopped us every time. On an early tour of USA and Canada, our daily allowance was $5 a day with no match fees, and even buying proper Kookaburra balls for practice was expensive.”Money is not so much of a problem anymore, with lucrative endorsements topping up the fees of the country’s elite players, while the game at grassroots level has significantly improved since Mahmud was accidentally discovered during a park tournament at the age of 12. Cricket has long since ousted football as the No. 1 sport in Bangladesh, so there is a much greater pool of talent from which to choose, while the gradual development of regional and age-group levels has taken the game beyond its traditional hub in Dhaka.

“It’s now 20 years that I’ve been in the Bangladesh national set-up, and it’s not just my bread and butter, it’s my love. I am always proud to say I’m a Bangladeshi player, but the board needs to believe in us more”

Nevertheless, when it comes to the top level, there remains a mental hurdle that the country seems incapable of overcoming, as demonstrated by the recent 3-0 whitewashing in the ODI series against England. Despite spirited individual performances in all three contests, the collective gameplan collapsed when put under pressure. The reason, in Mahmud’s opinion, lies in the team’s failure to identify a core of senior players and stick with them until they were battle-hardened.”There’s no way to teach a game sense without experience in the side,” he said. “These guys have played more in the past three years than I played in 12, which is a good sign, but their age is still a big factor, because they haven’t got any seniors to teach them the ropes. They haven’t learned what to do in a particular match situation, how to react quickly, what to do in the crunch times. A few of the players have found some level of consistency, but you still find them failing for maybe three or four matches after one big score.”The eternal boy wonder, Mohammad Ashraful, is the closest thing to an omnipresent player, having featured in 53 of his country’s 64 Tests to date, but for all manner of reasons, he stands out as an anomaly – Bangladesh’s flickering beacon of promise, if you like. The next most-capped member of the current set-up is the wicketkeeper, Mushfiqur Rahim, who made his debut as a 16-year-old at Lord’s in 2005, and has featured in 19 Tests since then. Somewhere between those two figures there is a yawning gulf of experience, and one that Mahmud believes could and should have been filled by the boys he played alongside at the tail-end of his own career.When England last toured Bangladesh in 2003, Rajin Saleh, Alok Kapali and Enamul Haque jnr were all still teenagers. All things being equal, those three ought to be approaching their prime right now – not least Rajin, who captained his country during the 2004 Champions Trophy and was talked up by the former coach, Dav Whatmore, as the most dedicated professional in his set-up. Instead, they have barely featured under the new regime of Siddons, whose focus has been every bit as youth-orientated as that of his predecessor.”Players like Rajin, Alok, even Hannan Sarkar, they were really raw talents, and they played but never settled,” said Mahmud. “None of them played for a long time, and why was that? Something is wrong, definitely. What are our foreign coaches doing to them? I was old when I started, I couldn’t take the changes they were imposing, and I couldn’t sustain my place, fair enough. But these are raw talents, so why couldn’t they come up to the mark? It’s a big question for us. These guys should be in the team right now. Instead they have been lost.”Since joining the Bangladesh set-up in October 2007, Siddons has been credited with instilling greater discipline to his squad, and when naturally free-flowing players such as Tamim Iqbal talk of adhering to “team rules” in the wake of a century as excellent as the one he scored against England in Dhaka last week, you know he’s making some progress. But Mahmud believes that the true extent of Siddons’ influence will only be judged in hindsight.”Jamie has been here for two-and-a-half years, and he is doing a fantastic job. But he’ll probably only be here for another year, maybe two, and after he has left, we need to see whether the players like Tamim, Shakib and Mushfiqur are all still around when he goes. He’s had them from the beginning, he’s helped them through their problems with techniques and the ups and downs of international cricket, but it’s important as a professional coach, and as a batting specialist, that he leaves us with five or six successes.”Mahmud is living proof of the distance that cricket in Bangladesh has travelled in the past decade•Farjana K Godhuly/AFPAs and when that time comes, Mahmud believes he is ready to step into the role . In September 2009, he stepped up to become Siddons’ official deputy, having achieved a Grade 3 coaching certificate from Cricket Australia, and while he is not angling to instigate a coup, he believes that the time is fast approaching when the Bangladeshi style – for better or for worse – needs to be allowed to re-emerge from the rigid structures that Whatmore and Siddons have put in place in recent times.”I feel very lucky and happy to have this new position as assistant coach, but people need to believe in us,” he said. “It’s now 20 years that I’ve been in the Bangladesh national set-up, and it’s not just my bread and butter, it’s my love. I am always proud to say I’m a Bangladeshi player, but the board needs to believe in us more, and as a local guy, I believe they would give me support.”From my childhood I’ve always loved coaching,” he said. “I talk a lot, and I love to help. People come from different places, and a lot of them are kids who are afraid to talk, so they don’t get the best benefits from the clubs. I’m not saying we don’t need help from outside – we need specialists, we need everything – but I believe I can make the changes because I know the attitude of our players. I can understand their feelings, which foreign coaches rarely understand.”I feel like I’m a parent of the team,” he added. “A lot of the boys have a lot of things to say, but they would never tell it to the coach, because they might think he would get upset if they said that. They come to me instead, because I’ve known a lot of these boys from childhood, and I know what their motives are. I can see it in their faces when they are confident, when they are not, and what they are thinking.”The bottom line, as far as Mahmud is concerned, is that Bangladesh has to be accepted for what it is, not what it should be. The chaos, the culture, the desperate political problems – none of these can be overcome with a purely textbook approach to the country’s cricket development, not least because it requires a personal touch to coax the best out of the often shy young men who enter the national set-up.”I’ve always believed that you cannot coach a boy, you have to motivate them and support them in what they are doing, that’s the main thing,” said Mahmud. “This is our culture and our system, and we cannot change it. We have to be like Australia or India, who develop their own cultures, and produce players in their own image.”Skill-wise we have a lot of good players, but strength-wise we cannot perform at highest level for long enough, because our everyday routine is not great. Whenever a boy comes to the national team, we have to look after him and tell him what to eat and when to sleep and when to go to the gym, whereas an Aussie boy will get that straight away.”Mahmud should know. He was that boy not so long ago.

Vanuatu stun Zimbabwe to kick off T20 World Cup Qualifier

Legspinner Navaika starred for Vanuatu, who, alongside Sri Lanka, Scotland and Ireland, started off with a win

Firdose Moonda25-Apr-2024

The Vanuatu players pose during their game against Zimbabwe•ICC via Getty Images

Vanuatu, ranked 30th, stunned Zimbabwe (12th) on the opening day of the Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifier by beating them by six wickets after bowling them out for their lowest T20I score of 61. The result will rank among the biggest sporting success stories of Vanuatu, a small island nation with a population of little more than 300,000, who are appearing at a World Cup – men’s or women’s – Qualifier for the first time.This was also the first time Vanuatu had played a match against a team outside of the East-Asia Pacific (EAP) region and they looked entirely at home in Abu Dhabi. Their spinners, Vanessa Vira and Nasimana Navaika, shared seven wickets between them against a Zimbabwean line-up that understandably appeared to be deer in the headlights. With floodlights only installed at Harare Sports Club last July, they have scant experience of playing day-night cricket, and struggled to negotiate Vanuatu’s slower bowlers.Related

Crowd-funding campaign raises funds for new kit and tour payments for Vanuatu women

Offspinner Vira made the first incision when she had Modester Mupachikwa caught behind in the second over but Zimbabwe’s problems really began three overs later. Medium-pacer Rachel Andrew bowled Chipo Mugeri-Tiripano and captain Mary-Anne Musonda with successive deliveries. Sharne Mayers looked good for her 12-ball 16 but fell in the last over of the powerplay, which Zimbabwe finished on 38 for 4.Legspinner Navaika then took four wickets in 10 balls to register career-best figures of 4 for 13 and leave Zimbabwe in tatters at 55 for 8 after 11 overs. They dragged themselves over 60 but only just and were bowled out in the 14th over.Nasimana Navaika wrecked Zimbabwe’s innings with four wickets•ICC via Getty Images

In response, Vanuatu lost their opening batters, Andrew and Valenta Langiatu, who was dropped at slip the ball before being caught, in the powerplay, which ended on a cautious 25 for 3. They almost lost their captain Selina Solman to what seemed a hamstring niggle in the ninth over but she batted on and shared in a 19-run stand with Navaika before top-edging Audrey Mazvishaya, who did not concede a run for her first 12 balls. Her third over cost seven runs and left Vanuatu on the brink of victory. But they did not get there without Mazvishaya having one more say on the game. She bowled Navaika at the start of the 16th over with Vanuatu four runs away. They got there in the 17th over with 21 balls to spare and earned a historic victory that blows open Group B of the qualifier and continues the rise and rise of Vanuatu.In the last seven months, Vanuatu have earned morale-boosting victories over teams much stronger than them on paper. In September, they beat regional rivals Papua New Guinea, who are ranked 11th, for the first time on their way to winning the EAP Qualifier to earn their place in Abu Dhabi.They were due to travel with borrowed or donated gear but a successful crowd-funding campaign launched by their operations manager Jamal Vira and marketing manager Hermione Vira raised the equivalent of USD 6,317 to ensure each squad member had their own, new kit for the tournament.Other results: Sri Lanka, Ireland, Scotland start with winsAilsa Lister’s third T20I half-century gave Scotland a strong score•ICC via Getty Images

Earlier in the day, favourites Sri Lanka successfully defended 122 against Thailand, who they bowled out for their third lowest T20I total – 55. Sri Lanka were hamstrung by two run-outs in an innings where no one scored more than 29. But left-arm seamer Udeshika Prabodhani and offspinner Inoshi Priyadharshani shared five wickets between them to earn Sri Lanka a comfortable win.In Group B, Ireland opened their campaign with a six-wicket win over UAE, who they kept to 105 for 9. Contributions from Ireland top three meant that even when they lost three wickets for seven runs, they were always in charge of the chase. Orla Prendergast, in her 49th T20I, saw them home in the 17th over.The evening’s other match saw Scotland dominate Uganda after half-centuries from Saskia Horley and Ailsa Lister took them to an imposing total of 161 for 3. Uganda had no answers against the left-arm seam of Rachel Slater (5 for 17) and went from 10 for 3 to 35 for 7 and 52 all out to suffer a 109-run loss.

Bucking bronco & pool party! Wrexham’s wild Las Vegas blowout continues as James McClean, Elliot Lee & Co soak up everything that Sin City has to offer

The Las Vegas celebrations continue for Wrexham’s promotion-winning squad, with pool parties and bucking bronco rides being enjoyed.

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  • Red Dragons living it up in Nevada
  • Trip funded by Hollywood co-owners
  • History made with three promotions
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Hollywood co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have funded another all-expenses-paid trip to Sin City for the Red Dragons. It is the third year in a row that the Welsh outfit have headed to Nevada.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    That is because they have made EFL history by becoming the first side to go back-to-back-to-back on the promotion front. Phil Parkinson is readying his side for life in the Championship.

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  • THE GOSSIP

    Plans for next season have been put on hold for now, with the Wrexham squad letting off serious steam in the United States. They have enjoyed some wild nights out, with James McClean taking to riding a mechanical rodeo bull during one of those.

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    Pool parties have also been taken in while soaking up the sunshine, with Elliot Lee among those to have posed in a Wrexham t-shirt with drink in hand. The plan is to enjoy every minute of the lavish excursion.

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CEO do São Bernardo admite Barletta próximo do Corinthians e dá detalhes sobre a negociação

MatériaMais Notícias

A negociação do Corinthians por Chrystian Barletta, atacante do São Bernardo, está cada vez mais próxima do seu desfecho. Após Roberto de Andrade, diretor de futebol do Timão, confirmar conversas pelo atleta de 21 anos, o CEO do Bernô, Lucas Andrino, deu mais detalhes do negócio.

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+ Defesa deixa a desejar, mas ataque se destaca em vitória do Corinthians

O dirigente explicou que o São Bernardo irá manter parte dos direitos do atleta, e a equipe terá uma porcentagem de uma futura venda. Segundo apurado pelo LANCE!, o clube alvinegro irá adquirir 50% dos direitos de Barletta, que assinará contrato por pelo menos três anos.

+ Veja as movimentações do mercado da bola no LANCE!

– É uma aquisição, não um empréstimo. Uma compra de parte dos direitos econômicos. O São Bernardo vai ficar com outra parte. Se não fosse assim nós não teríamos interesse na negociação. A gente acredita que existe um ‘repique’ de uma próxima venda. Está sendo negociado uma boa parte dos direitos econômicos – afirmou Andrino ao podcast “Rolou o Melão”, da ESPN.

Natural de Limeira, no interior de São Paulo, Barletta iniciou a sua trajetória no futebol pelo Renovicente, projeto focado na formação de atletas em Curitiba, no Paraná. Não demorou muito para que ele despertasse a atenção do Joinville, clube pelo qual se profissionalizou. Antes do empréstimo para o São Bernardo, ele também foi cedido para o Bahia, em 2021, e Chapecoense, no ano passado.

+ Veja tabela e simule os jogos do Campeonato Paulista

Na atual temporada, o atleta de 21 anos soma 11 jogos, com quatro gols marcados e uma assistência, sendo um dos principais responsáveis pela boa campanha do São Bernardo no Paulistão.

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Buttler backs ECB's decision to pull players out of IPL early

England captain believes no international cricket should clash with the world’s premier franchise league

Matt Roller21-May-2024

Buttler is one of eight members of England’s provisional T20 World Cup squad who left the IPL before the end of the group stage last week•BCCI

Jos Buttler has defended the ECB’s decision to pull players out of the IPL playoffs in order to feature in England’s T20I series against Pakistan – but believes that no international cricket should clash with the world’s premier franchise league.Buttler is one of eight members of England’s provisional T20 World Cup squad who left the IPL before the end of the group stage last week, and one of four – along with Will Jacks, Reece Topley and Phil Salt – whose franchises qualified for the knockouts. England’s players reported to Leeds on Saturday night ahead of Wednesday’s opening T20I.Rob Key, the managing director of England men’s cricket, said last month that Buttler had driven the decision to bring players home from India, and that it would be important for the squad to spend some time together before travelling to the Caribbean. “I said, ‘Look, as an England captain, my main priority is to be playing for England,'” Buttler said on Tuesday.Related

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“It’s my personal opinion that there shouldn’t be any international cricket that clashes with the IPL. I think that these games have been in the calendar for a long time. Of course, leading into a World Cup, your No. 1 priority is playing for England and performing for England. I feel like this is the best preparation.”Buttler is a key player at his franchise Rajasthan Royals, and has left a big hole in their side ahead of their Eliminator against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Wednesday. Tom Kohler-Cadmore was picked for their final two group games in Buttler’s absence, but made 18 off 23 balls in his only innings to date.Other national boards have taken the alternative view from the ECB, with West Indies and South Africa both missing players for their T20I series in Jamaica this week due to their franchise commitments. Ireland allowed Josh Little to stay in India during their recent series against Pakistan, who have been playing T20Is throughout the IPL since their players are not involved.Key said last month that he had tried to keep the situation “pretty fluid” with players before deciding they would come home and there has been some disquiet in India about their early return – albeit primarily within the media, rather than IPL franchises themselves.Sanjay Bangar, the head of cricket development at Punjab Kings, claimed on Sunday that the ECB had “made it clear that all the players are going to be available” before December’s auction. But as ESPNcricinfo reported at the time, this was always “subject to fitness and international duty and any periods of unavailability that players submitted on their auction applications”.The dates for England’s T20I series against Pakistan were announced in July 2023 and the series has been in the ICC’s Future Tours Programme since August 2022. By contrast, the BCCI only publicly finalised the IPL’s fixture list for the 2024 season once the tournament had started, with India’s general elections causing a delay.Sam Curran, who captained Punjab in eight of his 13 appearances this season, said on Monday that the ECB’s decision “makes great sense”. Curran said: “It was a decision that was made, that it was probably the right thing for us all to come back. It was only fair for all franchise to lose a player each or so… it would have been quite harsh if some franchises got to keep a couple of players and then some didn’t.”I think Jos, Motty [Matthew Mott] and Keysy wanted us all back together for this series. It makes great sense, because obviously we want to be playing as a team and get used to our roles. It’s quite hard when you go tournament to tournament, and then straight into a big tournament like [the World Cup] where you haven’t really played together.”The Federation of International Cricketers’ Association (FICA) will hold a global scheduling symposium for members later this year and the organisation’s CEO, Tom Moffat, told ESPNcricinfo that a recent player survey – which will be published imminently – shows widespread support for international and franchise ‘windows’, as Buttler proposed.”Our positions are guided by the players and in our latest global player survey completed this year, 84% support global scheduling windows so that domestic leagues and international cricket can co-exist,” Moffat said. “That’s not easy to achieve and would likely require a reduction in overall volume of international cricket and would also mean some leagues competing with other leagues.”

Lamine Yamal signs blockbuster new Barcelona contract & follows in Lionel Messi's footsteps by inheriting iconic shirt number & being crowned new No.10

Barcelona have confirmed that Lamine Yamal has signed a new long-term deal, as well as inheriting the iconic No.10 shirt that Lionel Messi once wore.

Yamal signs new Barcelona contractInherits iconic No.10 shirtFollows Messi's footstepsFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Catalan outfit have revealed that Yamal has signed a new contract until 2031 and he has taken the number 10 jersey for next season. The 18-year-old will now wear the shirt vacated by Ansu Fati, who joined Monaco on loan, and was previously worn by club legends Messi, Diego Maradona, and Ronaldinho.

AdvertisementWHAT YAMAL SAID

Following his contract extension, Yamal boldly proclaimed: "Messi has made his path, I will make my own."

He added: "Messi, [Diego] Maradona, and Ronaldinho are three football legends. They have been three incredible players, Messi still is. I’ll try to follow that legacy."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Yamal, who is already among the favourites to win this year's Ballon d'Or despite only just turning 18, has already been anointed the heir apparent to the great Messi after a stunning season in 2024-25. The teenager helped Barca win La Liga and the Copa del Rey, and it seems there is a lot more to come from the winger. To be given a shirt worn by some legendary figures at the club shows how important he is to the Blaugrana already. That is highlighted by reports that he will earn a whopping £325,000 a week, which equates to €15 million (£12.5m/$17m) per season as a base salary, potentially rising to €20m (£17m/$23m) with bonuses. 

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AFPWHAT NEXT?

Spain international Yamal, who is in the midst of a turbulent summer, has begun his pre-season preparations with Barcelona this week. Football fans across the world will be eagerly awaiting how he gets on in the 2025-26 campaign.

Em seu melhor momento na carreira, Igor Vinícius fala sobre a presença de 'espírito' no São Paulo

MatériaMais Notícias

Após o empate do São Paulo por 0 a 0 contra o Palmeiras, Igor Vinícius falou sobre a forte presença de ‘espírito’ no Tricolor paulista. O lateral-direito vive o que se pode considerar como seu melhor momento na carreira com a camisa da equipe.

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Saiba quem pode sair do São Paulo no final desta temporada

Veja tabela do Campeonato Brasileiro e simule os próximos jogos

Nesta temporada, o camisa 2 foi autor de quatro gols e conta com sete assistências – um dos maiores garçons do elenco de Rogério Ceni em 2022. Em comparação, em 2021 foram dois gols e seis assistências, e em 2020, não balançou as redes nenhuma vez, mas deu três assistências.

Neste último domingo (16), o jogador esteve presente no movimentado clássico entre Palmeiras e São Paulo, disputado no Allianz Parque no Campeonato Brasileiro.

A partida era de grande significado para o Tricolor: além de estar diante do atual líder da competição – fora de casa – a equipe segue na luta de buscar sua vaga na Copa Libertadores.

Mesmo sem gols em nenhum dos lados, o empate foi marcado por diversas polêmicas. Por parte do São Paulo, dois jogadores expulsos. Do Palmeiras, um pênalti convertido por Scarpa defendido por Felipe Alves – mais tarde eleito como craque da partida.

Durante os bastidores postados pelo São Paulo, Igor Vinícius falou sobre a dificuldade típica que carrega o Choque-Rei. Para o jogador, a equipe prezou por dois pontos essenciais: qualidade e espírito. Ainda em sua fala, destacou que a presença deste ‘espírito’ foi um dos quesitos mais fortes que acompanharam a partida.

– Clássico nunca é fácil, mas a gente sabe que além da qualidade, tem que por espírito. A equipe conseguiu por isso em campo, além da qualidade, impôs espírito – disse.

O São Paulo volta a campo na quinta-feira (20) contra o Coritiba, também pelo Brasileirão. O confronto acontece no estádio do Morumbi, às 20h.

قرار عاجل من فيفا بشأن حضور ترامب نهائي كأس العالم للأندية

كشفت تقارير صحفية عن قرار عاجل من الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم، فيفا، بسبب حضور دونالد ترامب، رئيس الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية، نهائي كأس العالم للأندية 2025 بين تشيلسي وباريس سان جيرمان.

ويواجه الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي باريس سان جيرمان نظيره تشيلسي مساء اليوم، الأحد، الموافق 13 يوليو، بالمباراة التي تجمعهما في إطار منافسات بطولة كأس العالم للأندية 2025، في تمام الساعة العاشرة مساءً بتوقيت القاهرة ومكة المكرمة.

وتأهل باريس سان جيرمان بقيادة الإسباني لويس إنريكي، على حساب ريال مدريد بعدما فاز عليه برباعية نظيفة، في المباراة التي جمعتهما مساء الأربعاء الماضي، في نصف نهائي مونديال الأندية.

فيما تأهل تشيلسي بقيادة الإيطالي إنزو ماريسكا، على حساب فلومينينسي البرازيلي بعدما تمكن من الانتصار بنتيجة 2/0، في المباراة التي جمعتهما مساء الثلاثاء الماضي.

اقرأ أيضًا | إنفانتينو يعلن موقف ترامب من حضور نهائي كأس العالم للأندية

وتقام بطولة كأس العالم للأندية 2025 في نسختها الجديدة لأول مرة تاريخيًا بمشاركة 32 فريقًا مقسمين على 8 مجموعات بالولايات المتحدة الأمريكية.

وكان جياني إنفانتينو، رئيس الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم قد أعلن حضور دونالد ترامب، رئيس الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية، مباراة النهائي التي تقام اليوم، الأحد، على ملعب “ميتلايف”.

ووفقًا لصحيفة “آس” الإسبانية، الإجراءات الأمنية ستكون صارمة، وقد اتخذ الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم والسلطات احتياطات أمنية مشددة، وتم توجيه جميع المشجعين بالتواجد في الملعب قبل 3 ساعات من انطلاق المباراة، وستكون هناك عمليات تفتيش أكثر صرامة من المباريات السابقة.

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