'Stop booing Trent' – Ex-Liverpool star defends Alexander-Arnold after homegrown hero jeered by fans over Real Madrid move

Stephen Warnock has begged Liverpool fans to stop booing Trent Alexander-Arnold despite his impending move to Real Madrid.

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Alexander-Arnold booed at AnfieldMoving to Real Madrid in the summerWarnock believes he deserves respectFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Alexander-Arnold was booed by supporters when he came on as a substitute against Arsenal at the weekend. The reaction appeared to visibly upset the right-back, who has announced his exit ahead of a pending move to Real Madrid.

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His exit has led to plenty of fallout at Anfield, with fans seemingly feeling betrayed that one of their own has decided to head to Spain. Now, Warnock insists the England international, who has won everything there is to win at the club, deserves more respect, even if he does not expect him to receive the send-off that he perhaps deserves. Mohamed Salah has also called on supporters to cease their booing.

WHAT WARNOCK SAID

Warnock told : "I’m of the opinion that the Liverpool fans shouldn’t be booing Trent Alexander-Arnold. He’s a local lad; he’s one of their own and has made a decision – the fans need to move on. Yes, it’s not ideal, I know I’d love to see him stay but I don’t understand the booing, I couldn’t believe it. There were fights breaking out between fans about their opinions on the matter, it’s disappointing to see.

“I don’t think Trent will get the send-off that he wants, but who knows, maybe on the last day if it’s an emotional moment. When he was booed coming on the other day, it’s as if the fans then saw what they were going to be missing as he was playing passes around the park and the Liverpool fans couldn’t help but cheer. You can’t help but appreciate the kind of player he is. He may not get the send off he’d like but at the end of the day the fans will have to appreciate what he’s done for the club.”

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Liverpool play Brighton and Crystal Palace in their last two games of the season. It is unclear if Alexander-Arnold will play.

Jesse Lingard goes full Lamine Yamal! Ex-Man Utd joins bleached blonde hair craze after taking inspiration from Barcelona wonderkid

Jesse Lingard appears to have taken inspiration from Lamine Yamal in his new look, with the ex-Manchester United star joining the blonde hair craze.

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Barca starlet embracing bold styleNot the first to sport peroxide lookLingard enjoying life in South KoreaFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱GettyWHAT HAPPENED?

Barcelona wonderkid Yamal opted to get the dye out as he showcased a bold style for the closing stages of 2024-25. His bleached do was sported while helping to get Barca over the line in a La Liga title-winning campaign.

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Manchester United winger Alejandro Garnacho, who often opts for highlights in his hair, is another to have gone full peroxide over recent weeks. He was unable to prevent the Red Devils from suffering a Europa League final defeat to Tottenham.

THE GOSSIP

Lingard would, given his strong ties to Old Trafford, have been an interested observer of that contest in Bilbao. The former England international is currently a long way from home as he represents South Korean outfit FC Seoul.

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WHAT NEXT?

The 32-year-old playmaker has a new look of his own after being given the blonde hair treatment during a photo and interview shoot for fashion magazine Men Noblesse. Lingard was initially surprised to learn of the transformation planned for him, but was soon fully on board.

How Royal Challengers and UP Warriorz can qualify for the playoffs

Also, do Gujarat Giants still have a realistic chance?

S Rajesh19-Mar-20237:14

Devine scores the best knock of WPL and Mumbai finally get beaten

How can Royal Challengers overcome their net-run-rate deficit and take third spot?
Currently, Royal Challengers have an NRR of -1.044 after seven games and Gujarat Giants have -2.511 after the same number of games, while UP Warriorz have -0.117 after six. Given that Warriorz already have six points, Royal Challengers only have a chance if they win their last game and move to six, and if Warriorz lose their last two, against Giants and Delhi Capitals.If the three results pan out in that fashion, then three teams will be level on six points, bringing net run rates into play. For simplicity’s sake, let’s assume a 40-run margin in each of those three games, with the winning team scoring 160. Then, the NRRs will look like this: Warriorz -0.612, Royal Challengers -0.628, and Giants -1.893.That means Royal Challengers will need a slightly bigger margin in one of those games – a win by 43 runs for example, instead of 40 – to go past Warriorz’s NRR.Thus, Royal Challengers still have a shot at qualification, but they need several things to go their way, both in terms of results and their margins.Gujarat Giants’ NRR is -2.511•BCCIDo Gujarat Giants have a realistic chance?
Giants are so far behind on run rate that they might as well start planning for next year. Even if they score 160 and beat Warriorz by 100 runs, they will still need Warriorz to lose to Capitals by 112 runs to move ahead of them on NRR. Apart from these improbable results, they’ll also need Royal Challengers to lose their last game to Mumbai.What do UP Warriorz need to do to qualify?
Warriorz will be through if they win one of their last two games. They might even make it with two defeats, if they lose by narrow margins (as mentioned above).Do Delhi Capitals have a chance of taking the top spot away from Mumbai?
If Capitals beat Mumbai on Monday, then both teams will be level on 10 points with their last game coming up on Tuesday: Mumbai against Royal Challengers and Capitals against Warriorz. Thus, Capitals have a shot at the top spot, though their NRR is poorer (1.431 compared to 2.670 for Mumbai).However, if Capitals lose on Monday, then Mumbai Indians will be assured of the top spot.

Tottenham plot new Mathys Tel offer but won't trigger €50m option as Bayern Munich prepare to sell French forward

Tottenham would like to extend Mathys Tel's loan by another year, but Bayern Munich are adamant on selling the French forward this summer.

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Tottenham want Tel on loan for another yearBayern remain firm on selling the FrenchmanSpurs have €50m option to buy the forwardFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to a report from in Germany, Tottenham are eager to keep the forward but would prefer to extend his loan deal. However, Bayern hope to offload Tel in a permanent transfer this summer, with the hopes of recouping a reasonable transfer fee.

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Tel arrived on loan in the January transfer window, having failed to make an impact at the Allianz Arena in two-and-a-half seasons after his arrival from Rennes in 2022. In 20 appearances for Spurs, the 20-year-old accumulated under 1,300 minutes and scored just three goals. Despite failing to impress head coach Ange Postecoglou, Spurs are preparing a new offer to keep him.

TELL ME MORE…

Tottenham spent €10 million (£8m/$11m) in loan fees to acquire Tel's services, with a €50m (£42m/$57m) option to sign him permanently, but that figure is too high for them. Faced with high costs, the London club are exploring alternatives, including a loan deal with a big fee and an obligation to buy at the end of next season.

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Postecoglou's men are set to return to Champions League football next season, having defeated Manchester United in the Europa League final. They are currently linked with Brentford winger Bryan Mbeumo, who is inching closer to a move to Old Trafford. Spurs are also looking at defensive reinforcements and have shortlisted Everton star Jarrad Branthwaite.

Suryakumar takes down the Titans with first IPL ton

Rashid Khan took four wickets and smashed 79 off 32 balls but it wasn’t enough to beat Mumbai Indians

Alagappan Muthu12-May-20232:54

Moody: ‘Genius’ the only word to describe Suryakumar

For a little while, it looked like Suryakumar Yadav would actually finish a T20 without playing that one shot that made people’s jaws drop. And then he hit the most incredible six. It propelled him to his first IPL century and Mumbai Indians to a comfortable victory over the defending champions Gujarat Titans.You know how Kane Williamson dabs to third man to get singles? Well, Suryakumar accessed the same area, except he cleared the boundary. He saw a ball on off stump. He knew he could get under it. At the point where he made contact, he opened the face, just as Williamson does, and then the strength in his forearms and his wrists did the rest.This is Suryakumar. He sees T20 cricket the way nobody else sees it.Rashid ends up a footnoteTitans came into this game knowing a win would not only secure a spot in the playoffs but give them two shots at making the final.And they turned to their main man to make it happen. Rashid Khan produced four wickets for 30 runs in a format that continues to be hostile to his kind. Even today, Suryakumar spent 49 balls proving that bowlers and their plans exist just so batters could come in and rip them all to shreds.But Rashid wouldn’t buy that. He had Rohit Sharma caught at slip with a gorgeous legbreak. He upended Ishan Kishan by a simple change in length, the premeditated sweep shot failing against a ball that was too full for it. Titans saved the last six balls they had from Rashid for the match up against Tim David. Those are high stakes. It was the 17th over. This is the time David comes to life. Except he couldn’t because Rashid took him out for 5 off 3.Very few are capable of producing wickets on demand like this. Even fewer are able to do so when the opposition comes hard at them.Hardik Pandya gave Suryakumar Yadav a hug after he brought up his hundred off the final ball•AFP/Getty ImagesSuryakumar turns it onWhen Mumbai lost their third wicket in the ninth over, they spent a little while scoring just a run a ball. 15 off 15. And then all of a sudden, they crashed 32 in 10.It was during this time that Vishnu Vinod, the Kerala wicketkeeper making his Mumbai debut, carved Mohammed Shami for a scarcely believable six. A ball ending up on top of off stump scythed over point thanks to his fast hands and wicked wrists.That would have been shot of the game if not for SKY doing SKY things.He needed 32 balls to get to his fifty. That’s slow by his standards, and he was building his innings with orthodox shots. The only luxury he afforded himself were those straight sixes, where his weight is usually on the back foot, right up to the point where he meets the ball, and then he hops, lifting both himself and the ball up off the ground. That’s how he creates leverage. It’s his own unique thing.Then Rashid took David out and something snapped. Suryakumar was 53 off 34 at the start of the 18th over. He hit Mohit Sharma for three fours and a six to move to 73 off 40. Then he met Shami in the 19th over and played a front-foot drive for six over third man, just by opening the face of the bat. Finally, on 97, with only one ball left in the innings, he did what he has done to fast bowlers all over the world, sweeping Alzarri Joseph from way outside off into the crowd past the square leg boundary.Rashid Khan smashed 10 sixes in his innings of 79 off 32 balls•BCCIRashid or bust for Titans As good as Titans are in a chase, they were up against it very quickly when all of their top three batters fell for single digits. Shubman Gill, Hardik Pandya and Wriddhiman Saha totalled 12 runs between them.Vijay Shankar kept hopes of the improbable alive with a sweet little cameo. But he fell to Piyush Chawla’s first ball of the match, this IPL legend having the best season of his career at 34 years of age.Way on the other end of the spectrum is Akash Madhwal. He came into the tournament because Mumbai were having so much trouble with their bowling attack. This was only his fourth game of the IPL and the 26th of his T20 career. And already he has shown an appetite for the tough job. Bowling at the death, bowling to big hitters, bowling with games on the line.Madhwal has a lovely yorker. And now, it appears his other balls are just as deadly, because when he hits a hard length, they keep skidding through. He bowled Gill with one that stayed lower than the batter expected. And he had David Miller lbw in just the same way.Rashid carried the Titans with the bat as well, making his highest score in T20s, 79 off 32 with 10 sixes. A total of 103 for 8 in 14 overs rose to 191 for 8 in 20. But it was not enough. Imagine going three-fourth of the way to a century after picking up one short of five wickets and still losing the game.

WATCH: Damion Downs scores for Southampton in preseason debut with USMNT boss Mauricio Pochettino in attendance

The striker impressed in his first game for his new club, scoring in front of his national team coach

Downs nets first Southampton goalPochettino in attendanceStriker joined Saints from Koln this summerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱Getty Images SportWHAT HAPPENED?

Damion Downs scored his first preseason goal for new club Southampton, and it just so happened to come with U.S. men's national team boss Mauricio Pochettino watching on.

With his side down 2-0 to another of Pochettino's former clubs, Espanyol, Downs netted in the 92nd minute, pulling one back in the final moments of Southampton's eventual 2-1 defeat. With time waning, Downs broke through down the right-hand side to get onto the end of a through-ball, rifling a first-time finish into the back of the net to start life with his new club with a bang.

"It was a nice experience," Downs said after the match. "Obviously, scoring as a striker is the nicest thing you can do…It's been very nice. The staff are great, my teammates are great. Everyone around the whole team is great. It's been very welcoming so far, so I'm looking forward to more."

Downs joined Southampton this summer after a breakthrough with Koln in the 2. Bundesliga last season, seeing him score 11 goals to fire the team to promotion. The Saints, who will play in the Championship this season, paid $9.5 million to acquire his services shortly after his run through the Gold Cup with the USMNT.

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The goal came in front of Pochettino, who just had a summer-long look at Downs throughout the Gold Cup. Downs dealt with a few injuries, limiting him a bit during his first camp with the USMNT, but he did still have one major moment as he netted the winning penalty in the quarterfinal shootout win over Costa Rica. In total, Downs earned five caps this summer, coming off the bench in each of them.

Saturday's goal, then, will surely have made an impression on Pochettino and his staff as they now look ahead to September camp, with Downs one of the candidates to be involved at the striker position. Pochettino had previously coached both clubs, getting his start at Espanyol before breaking through in England with a single season with Southampton.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR SOUTHAMPTON?

Downs and Southampton will have a week before their next friendly, which comes on Aug. 2 against Brighton. After that, they'll kick off their Championship campaign on Aug. 9 against newly-promoted Wrexham.

Pat Cummins named Sunrisers Hyderabad captain

The Australia captain replaces South Africa’s Aiden Markram in the role

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Mar-2024Pat Cummins has been appointed captain of Sunrisers Hyderabad for IPL 2024, replacing Aiden Markram who had led the team in the 2023 season.Cummins has not led a side in the IPL before – in fact, he has not led a team in top-flight T20 cricket before – but his appointment comes after a successful period as captain of Australia, during which he led them to victory in the World Test Championship and the 2023 ODI World Cup, with both wins in the finals coming against India.The move means that SRH will have the flexibility of playing their new signings – Australian batter Travis Head and Sri Lankan legspinner Wanindu Hasaranga – in addition to finisher Heinrich Klaasen instead of Markram if they want to do so, while Cummins slots in as the overseas fast bowler. Afghanistan’s Fazalhaq Farooqi and South Africa’s Marco Jansen are the other overseas quicks in the squad, while New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips rounds off their roster of eight overseas players.Related

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Sears called up for O'Rourke, Conway to miss start of IPL due to thumb surgery

Cummins had withdrawn from IPL 2023 to focus on international cricket but entered the auction for the 2024 season, where he became the first player in IPL history to get a bid of INR 20 crore (USD 2.4 million approximately). SRH’s record bid of INR 20.50 crore (USD 2.47 million approximately) for Cummins was shortly broken by Kolkata Knight Riders, who bid INR 24.75 crores (USD 2.98 million approximately) for Mitchell Starc. Cummins, coincidentally, had been part of the KKR squad from 2020 to 2022.

Cummins will be SRH’s third captain in three seasons. Kane Williamson led them to an eighth-place finish in 2022 before he was released ahead of the 2023 season, in which SRH finished last under Markram’s captaincy with only four wins in 14 league games. Markram scored only 248 runs at a strike rate of 129 in IPL 2023, and he remains in the SRH squad for the upcoming season. In the SA20, Cricket South Africa’s T20 league, Markram had led the Sunrisers Eastern Cape franchise to back-to-back titles in 2022 and 2023.In addition to the latest captaincy change, SRH had also named a new head coach ahead of the 2024 IPL season, with former New Zealand left-arm spinner and captain Daniel Vettori taking over from Brian Lara, who had in turn replaced Tom Moody as coach for IPL 2023.SRH also replaced Dale Steyn with former New Zealand allrounder James Franklin as their bowling coach.SRH begin their IPL 2024 campaign against Kolkata Knight Riders at Eden Gardens on March 23, and then play Mumbai Indians in Hyderabad on March 27.

Out Of My Comfort Zone

A review of Steve Waugh’s latest book, Out Of My Comfort Zone

Peter English24-Nov-2005
Steve Waugh, Viking, A$49.95Steve Waugh’s career was an epic so it’s not surprising he produced a doorstop that dwarfs the Almanack. Waugh’s cover is a shade of baggy green and his devotion to it is a theme throughout the 800 pages of memories. However, the big statements delivered by his batting and in captaincy press conferences are replaced by brief judgments as he records the key moments of his career as studiously as he compiled his popular diaries.Unfortunately, the tour books are part of the problem. Through the diaries most details were recorded in satisfying, if sometimes repetitive, detail; in the life story the events from him being kicked out of the nets as an aggressive 12-year-old by Barry Richards to his farewell a year later are dutifully reported but not pored over, making it a great resource tool instead of a thrilling, moving and thought-provoking experience. The match-fixing and betting scandals that so affected his brother are covered in less than a chapter and the famous SCG century, an experience which was the subject of the book , is dusted in three pages.Waugh is at his best when discussing his great innings and his feelings, which were usually masked by the Iceman glare. The twin hundreds at Old Trafford in 1997 and the series-sealing double-century against West Indies in 1995 are compulsive but short reading, and his re-telling of the vulnerability at the start of his career, when he felt isolated as a new player, and at the end as he debated the merits of family life and retirement is also impressive. The variety of coverage is strong enough to hold interest but if finishing it is a mission you want to accept then be prepared for hands that ached as much as Waugh’s during his Old Trafford double.

Fade to grey

A reality check on Brain Lara and Sachin Tendulkar, two legends at the sunset of their careers

Peter Roebuck20-May-2006

Lara’s inconsistency has been a burden as his brilliance has been an inspiration © Getty Images
Sportsmen are a breed apart. Elsewhere, youthful genius may mature into withering mastery. Playwrights, composers, sculptors, thinkers and artists may pass through various stages, exploring their gift, challenging orthodoxy, reaching high, sinking low and then emerging with something gained and the world still at their feet. Although suffering from a sense of impending doom, as all such talents must, they know that the future spreads out before them and that they can continue to pursue their gift till they breathe their last. It is a privilege unknown in sport.Among novelists and musicians, the later work may be their finest, a culmination of everything they have gathered along the way. Age smiles upon them. Passing years add weight to the light touch of youth. Although the rhymes and tunes may not come so easily, still they are awaiting discovery. Hope springs eternal. Often the mature artist is more satisfying than the promising nouveau because he or she does not try so hard to impress.In their early incarnations, gifted writers may try farce, comedy, tragedy, drama. Knowing no containment, resisting all restraint, they express themselves in various forms. Later they start to contemplate their legacy, and before it is too late, before they go the way of all flesh, they set out to tell the world the things they know. Age’s authority allows them to unleash their hidden power. Sportsmen cannot take these steps. It must all happen at once, and so every career moves along at a pace that permits no reflection. There is no final word, just an ending that not even genius can resist. was a profound statement of Shakespeare’s acquired understanding. Arguably, he cast himself in the play, speaking as the bereft philosopher, the sagacious observer, passing on his experiences, conveying his insights while time permitted. But then he was a man of the mind. Maturity was his friend. The thickening of the body was an irrelevance.Tomorrow does not exist in athletic endeavours. Sportsmen must find their truest expression at once. They are exposed and then eliminated before life’s taxes have been paid. Sportsmen miss much through not being able to grow old gracefully, on the field at any rate. Always they must be young. When the search begins for the contemplated form, their days are almost over. Sportsmen envy other performers this precious gift of time. Sportsmen miss much through not being able to grow old gracefully, on the field at any rate. Always they must be young Brian Lara and Sachin Tendulkar enjoy no such luxury. To them, the mastery that they have known, the glorious feeling of the game flowing through them without encumbrance, the sensation they want to capture and know forever, the feeling others seek and find only in teasing acquaintance, must these days seem as fleeting as a thought. Most sportsmen resemble the cicada, some species of which stay underground for 15 years and then emerge for six weeks of loud and glorious life before passing into the night.Nothing lasts long in sport. Always there is today and, for the lucky ones, tomorrow, and then it is over. Not even the batting geniuses of the age can turn back the clock. And it all happens in a flash. A sporting day can seem to last forever; a career can pass like a child’s frown. Only records last forever. That is why sportsmen take them so seriously. They prove they existed, mattered, could play a bit. They prove it was worth all that damn trouble.Never mind that it has been 15 years since Lara and Tendulkar started to mesmerise the world. Never mind that it has been a long time and many extraordinary deeds have been done. No one is ready for the end. Always the player yearns for more. That is why they come back, the boxers and the tennis players, those who can because the decision belongs to them. It is not money, or not just the money, it is yearning. But the feeling does not come back because it depends upon things that change, muscles that deteriorate, eyes that deceive. Sportsmen do not often lose the desire. They slow down or fall apart.But the ageing player may not sense any difference. In a way, that is the devil of it. Age creeps up on sportsmen. It is not that a curtain comes down upon a career. Sport is not as sudden or as gentle as that. Rather it is a slow process, a gradual fading. Nor can the player tell that the slide has begun. After all, he has known bad patches before, heard a thousand concerned whispers, and has learned not to panic but instead to withdraw into himself in search of the old powers. Great sportsmen listen to themselves.Age brings understanding to the thinker, the craftsman, the artist. To most sportsmen, it brings defeat. To them, time is not a friend bestowing gifts, bringing wisdom and providing an opportunity to hone skills, but a reminder that the eternal present of athletic life is the merest illusion. Almost from the start, their clock is ticking. Children may deem themselves immortal. Once whiskers start to grow, the sportsman knows that already time is running out.

To expect Sachin Tendulkar to bat the same way, the fearless way, as he did in Perth all those years ago, is to undertake an exercise in futility © Getty Images
Now Lara and Tendulkar find themselves battering their brains in an attempt to goad renewal from tired minds and weary limbs. Everyone talks about lost genius, in Lara’s case even squandered genius, but this is neither right nor fair. Although the sporting gift is not to be trifled with, it is not immutable. Like beauty, it is transient for it lasts as long as youth itself.It is strange that so much is expected of sporting genius, as if God has transposed not an astonishing talent but his entire self. Sportsmen are not alone in trying to prolong the youth whose passing signals the end of their most joyous period. Supporters, too, expect their champions to stay the same, like cartoon characters, a requirement that is not imposed upon sons and daughters. Perhaps, they think sportsmen live on another planet.Lara could not advance unchanged into adulthood let alone eternity. He could not forever be the imp slashing misbegotten Australians around Sydney. It is not easy to score runs or bat brilliantly for days. He just made it look easy and then was blamed when his powers deserted him. Nor is Tendulkar a machine or still the tousled boy who used to arrive at Shivaji Park every dawn. He is a fully grown man with much on his mind. To expect him to bat the same way, the fearless way, as he did in Perth all those years ago, is to undertake an exercise in futility. In between, he has discovered the perils of life and the pressures of expectation. His body is heavier, his eyes are not as sharp, his nerve is less reliable. He is human, a fact that ought to provoke not regret but a greater appreciation of his feats and carriage.Of course, the genius of Lara and Tendulkar has passed. Arguably it happened several years ago and was camouflaged by occasional rallies from the quixotic Lara, and the sound technique and devotion to duty of the Indian. Their exceptional gifts were sustained by alert eyes, unfailing judgment, fresh minds, bold decisions and swift responses. Until recently, most of Test cricket’s mightiest innings had been played by young men. Don Bradman, Len Hutton, Hanif Mohammad, Garry Sobers, and Lara himself were in their early twenties when they constructed their masterpieces.Nothing lasts forever. As they enter their last phase, Lara and Tendulkar try to accommodate both their particular talent and their reduced selves. Lesser players passed this way long ago. Greatness demands intensity. Mediocrity requires endless scrutiny. Struggling players know about nuts and bolts. For them, it is not just a matter of switching on the engine. Long before, they had to take their games apart and rebuild them into a proper working order. They are better prepared for decline than geniuses. Throughout, they have been battling to keep failure at bay. They know how to do it, know what is involved. Geniuses don’t need to think along these lines. Of course, they must work and fight, but the discovery of vulnerability comes as a shock, to them and their admirers.Not that Lara and Tendulkar are the same. The Trinidadian is a deeply flawed, though eminently plausible, man, with a strong will and an extraordinary ability to rouse himself when all appears lost. All through, he has played in bursts, and his inconsistency has been a burden as his brilliance has been an inspiration. He has won Test matches, and sometimes even series, off his own bat. Goliaths have been slain. Between times he has failed miserably, and his team has gone down with him.Now Lara is enduring another slump. It is nothing new. Doubtless, his reflexes have slowed somewhat and certainly, he has put on weight, but he has always batted in patches. He can seem frustratingly flighty. Perhaps, he has one more surge in him, at the 2007 World Cup. He has a sense of history, relishes the roar, and may yet be able to bend a few more matches to his will. Meanwhile, he will bide his time. Instinctively he knows that he has only a few more great innings left in him. He will not waste them. Genius does not serve. It is served.Tendulkar is another case. Apart from anything else, he is several years younger. Yet it is not merely a matter of age. Tendulkar has been at the forefront of cricket and Indian life since he was a slip of a lad. He has survived the expectations of millions, has scored incomparably more hundreds in international cricket than anyone else, has played so many matches, and always with all eyes upon him. Is it not possible that he is worn out?Soldiers, firemen, doctors, policemen and so forth can suffer from overexposure. Tendulkar, too, has never had the chance to unwind. Eventually, the soul must cry enough. It is easily forgotten that Bradman himself, the smiling Don, endured terrible illnesses during his career. Easily forgotten, too, that players of previous generations enjoyed winter breaks and hardly batted at all when the blight of war fell upon the world.To the dismay of some observers, Tendulkar has responded to his travails by playing a more cautious game. What was he supposed to do? He is not a fool or an innocent but a seasoned campaigner, a professional sportsman, who knows full well the value of runs on the board. EvenLara has made some concessions to age by reducing and straightening his back-lift and by taking a longer look at the bowling. Admittedly, he waited till Sobers proferred this advice but that is the nature of the man. Arguably, Tendulkar also needs to rethink his game. His habit of leaving his back foot on leg stump widens his range but it means that the stumps are not fully covered.Tendulkar was bound to take a more measured approach. Anything less was a denial of the mind, a rejection of the maturity all must embrace. Denied the majesty available in other walks of life, sporting genius must recognise and respond to its slow and inevitable loss. The older dancer does not attempt the pirouettes of uncompromised youth; the batsman cannot attack with the same bravado. The odds have changed. And the brain demands results.Neither Lara or Tendulkar can ever be quite the same again. Sportsmen fade away. Talent dwindles. Everything is temporary in sport. Nor will they be permitted a Tempest because sport encourages competition not contemplation. But there is no reason to regret anything. Both players have illuminated the game. And both may stir again as experience pulls its weight. Although there can be no going back, Tendulkar, especially, has more runs in him. Revival is impossible but the master of Mumbai knows a thing or two, and might yet overcome the heaviness in his mind.

The test arena

Plenty of athletes come to the School of Human Movement at the University of Western Australia. Only cricketers do so with their hearts skipping a beat

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan08-Feb-2008

Daryl Foster: in the business of studying injuries Siddhartha Vaidyanathan
The School of Human Movement is at the southern tip of the University of Western Australia campus, beside the Swan river. Footballers, rugby players, athletes, swimmers and even ballet dancers have approached the school but it’s cricketers whose hearts skip a beat when they come here.For it is cricketers alone who walk in needing a certificate, one that confirms them as legitimate participants in the game. Other sportsmen are only interested in studying their body movements to enhance performance. Footballers are usually interested in the movement of the ankle and knee, athletes want to test the dynamics of their run, and swimmers try to calibrate the movement of their shoulders and feet. Ballet artists try to study their position, to gauge the angles that will help them perform.We’re standing outside the famous laboratory where bowlers are tested for the legality of their actions. “I still remember the day Murali was here,” says Martin Anderson, one of the members of the staff. “The whole international media were stationed outside the laboratory. That was probably the first time I have seen such a frenzy here.”Daryl Foster, the former Western Australia coach and a specialist in the science of body movements, has lectured at the university for a number of years. He talks about the department and tells us how its genesis had nothing to do with testing the extension of the elbow.”It all began in 1973, when Dennis Lillee was the first recorded bowler to break down with stress fractures,” he says. “Dennis was rehabilitated in the Department of Human Movement, where his action was refined. Because Dennis broke down and received publicity, we got a lot of calls from parents saying, ‘My little boy has broken down, can you help?'”And it all developed from there. Our first emphasis was lower-back injuries from fast bowling. We initially went by the MCC coaching book, which basically said, ‘Thou shalt bowl with a side-on action’. But in the early ’80s you had a number of West Indian fast bowlers bowling with a front-on action. We then slowly realised that side-on was fine and front-on was fine but when you mixed it you were likely to get stress fractures in the lower back. Most of the research in the university concerns mixed actions and lower-back injuries.”Studying injuries still forms a large part of the research at the School of Human Movement, but in the mid-90s the focus shifted to bowling actions. “I was coaching Kent in 1995, and met Murali through Aravinda de Silva, our overseas player then,” Foster says. “Later that year Murali was called by [Darrell] Hair and [Ross] Emerson. I got in touch with him then and brought him to Perth to take a look at his action. We’ve tested Murali in 1995, 1999-00, 2004-05, and every time his offspinner has been fine. The had a considerable degree of extension but the ICC changed the law and it’s within the limits now. I think we’ve tested a dozen bowlers since.”Since the whole testing procedure takes just two or three hours, bowlers can afford to fly in, be tested, and fly out again. Amity Campbell, a PhD student at the university, remembers Johan Botha, the most recent visitor, coming in jet-lagged, bowling, and leaving immediately. She goes on to show us a crack in the door, when a ball from Jermaine Lawson hit it.The lab is the size of an indoor badminton court, and contains equipment straight out of a film. The bowler, markers stuck to his body, is analysed at the time of delivery, with his action simulated on a computer screen for analysis. “We have 12 cameras here and each can capture five times the number of frames that you see on television,” Campbell says. “We also have gauges for ball velocity, ensuring that the bowlers stick to their actual pace in the lab conditions too.”Spin bowlers have it easy but the fast men need to run in from the field and into the lab. “We needed to open up both the gates for Shoaib Akhtar,” Campbell smiles, pointing to the distant horizon to indicate from where he ran in. “But we only need to do the testing when he actually delivers the ball, so how much he ran didn’t matter.”

A graphic representation of Murali’s bowling action for his doosra, as analysed at the UWA Siddhartha Vaidyanathan
Until May 2004 the ICC’s tolerance level for bowlers straightening their arms read: five degrees for slow bowlers, 7.5 degrees for medium-fast bowlers and ten degrees for fast bowlers. “It was ludicrous,” says Foster. “It’s not the type of bowler but the amount of acceleration he generates during the point of delivery. Murali generated as much as acceleration as some of the quicks.Also, what about a fast bowler bowling a slower ball? What about a spinner firing one in? “A research of many bowlers around the world showed 15 degrees will encompass most bowlers around the world breaking the law,” says Foster. “It’s a common misconception that the rule was changed because of one bowler (Murali). That’s not right. All bowlers around the world extend their arms to some degree.”We’re shown the graph for Murali’s . The flex-angle is plotted against the distance moved by the arm and it’s clear that the angle goes from a maximum of 61 to a minimum of 50. “That’s only 11 degrees,” says Foster, “and I think we found a few cases when it was 10.5 even.”What of Shoaib? “I can remember Shoaib didn’t use an up-and-down motion for his front arm but opened himself up and generated all the speed through the chest. Looking at him initially, all we could say was, ‘You need to get your arm a lot higher.’ Lillee said it would take a long time to adjust to this change but I was confident he would manage – simply because he had begun to bowl fast only when he was 17 or 18. And he’s mainly tried to keep that action since 2001.”I was with the team as a consultant in the World Cup in 2003. I still remember Shoaib saying to me, ‘In the sixth ball of the fourth over, I’ll bowl 100 mph’. I laughed. Stunningly, he actually did it.”

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