Tottenham: Gold shares ‘big’ transfer update involving Jesus

Tottenham Hotspur correspondent Alasdair Gold of football.london has now shared a ‘big’ transfer update involving Man City star Gabriel Jesus.

The Lowdown: Conte eyes new striker…

Spurs boss Antonio Conte, currently relying on Harry Kane as his only world class out-and-out striker option, is looking to fix that hole in the Lilywhites squad.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-latest-developments-2/” title=”Tottenham latest developments!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Times say a new forward is on the agenda at Hotspur Way as Conte eyes at least six major summer signings – with there being no shortage of links to Europe’s finest.

The Premier League top-four chasers have even been linked with the likes of Victor Osimhen (Napoli) and Lautaro Martinez (Inter Milan) despite their potentially marquee price tags.

Conte and transfer chief Fabio Paratici have seemingly drawn up a list of prestigious targets for the forward area as news now surfaces involving Man City striker Jesus.

The Latest: Gold shares ‘big’ update involving Jesus…

The ever-reliable Gold, sharing a ‘big’ update on Tottenham’s transfer activity in the last 48 hours, now claims Conte and the club are ‘admire’ City’s bright attacker who has shone under Pep Guardiola recently (football.london).

Indeed, as the Lilywhites eye a possible move for Jesus, football.london also claim that he is ‘expected to leave’ the English champions this summer.

The Verdict: Make a move?

ESPN recently claimed City have slapped a £55 million price tag on the Brazil international’s head,  an arguable bargain fee given his obvious ability and age.

Still with plenty of years ahead in his career, Jesus has been on fire in recent weeks, racking up six goals and one assist in his last six league starts for Guardiola’s title-chasers.

Over 158 top flight appearances, the 25-year-old’s 58 goals and 32 assists back how he’s already proven in England with pundit Steve McManaman even raving over the ‘superstar’ for his recent Sky Blue form.

Taking all of this into account, it’s little wonder Conte and co have taken an interest.

In other news: Paratici now eyeing ‘world class’ player move tipped to ‘excite’ Spurs supporters! Find out more here.

The rise of the ‘over-the-top’ transfer announcement

Social media plays a larger role than ever in the lives of football fans around the world. Since social media’s initial breakout in the early 2000’s its reach and engagement have soared higher than ever expected. This rise in social media fandom in the sport has given footballers and fans alike the perfect opportunity to keep in a constant loop and feel connected to their favourite footballers and feel closer to players than ever before. In this day and age, social media is now the go-to if you want to try and communicate with your favourite footballers and vice versa. Football stars are well-followed celebrities in their own right and many of them tend to use Twitter and Instagram as a remote mobile press conference after each and every game to grow their influence. It’s often used as a means of gaining influence and making themselves a more attractive prospect, a handy tool at their disposal when it comes to contract negotiations. However, the rise of social media influence on football culture also offers an opportunity for football clubs to get creative with their marketing and perhaps the best example of this is their output during the transfer window. The days of the boring boardroom snapshot are over as football clubs try to outdo each other with high-drama videos. From City announcing Haaland to Arsenal’s welcome for Vieira, the player announcement video is commonplace now. Here’s our collection of cinematic masterpieces and PR clangers from over the years.ÂErling Haaland to Manchester City in 2022It’s fair to say Manchester City’s long-awaited unveiling of Norwegian striker Erling Haaland was well worth the wait for City fans after his lightning-quick start to life at the Etihad with City now 1/4 to win the title according to the best betting sites. While his play on the pitch is anything but ordinary, his announcement video was pretty route one. Recreating a photo of an adolescent Haaland donning a City shirt while perched on a sofa, the video racked up 10 million views on Twitter. City’s social media team captioned the post “HE’S HERE!”, showing a level of excitement that was certainly not replicated by Haaland’s expression. Nonetheless, it was a smart announcement, even if Manchester City’s attempts to convince a sceptical public that Erling Haaland is a lifelong Blues fan are becoming a little tedious.

Stuart Taylor to Southampton in 2017

Â

Deliberately spoofing the over-the-top transfer video, Saints brought the full Hollywood approach to the relatively mundane signing of a reserve goalkeeper on a 1-year contract. The resulting advert was something you’d expect to see at the cinema rather than on a football club’s twitter page. Southampton opted to use a movie trailer-style approach to unveil their new man, including action film staples such as yachts, helicopters and a car chase along with intense music to build up the suspense. It might have been deliberately over the top but with over two million views the widespread reaction was to commend the marketing department behind the stunt.

Gianluca Scamacca to West Ham United in 2022

Â

West Ham’s announcement of the signing of Italian international Gianluca Scamacca was notable for two reasons. Firstly, it was posted via a classy remake of the opening credits to Channel 4’s cult 90s highlights show, Gazzetta Football Italia. Secondly, they spelt his name wrong in a classic example of how there is a propensity with social media to see the positive hype surrounding a new signing backfire with a simple mistake. The video was promptly taken down and reposted, attracting more attention to the £30m signing than probably would’ve been generated by an ordinary, accurately-spelt post. Maybe that was the plan all along.

Â

Paul Pogba to Manchester United in 2016

Â

Part cult, part music video, part footballing news, Paul Pogba’s return to Manchester United for a then-world record £89million was the transfer that cemented social media’s role as the primary means of communicating transfer news with the world. Timed for maximum impact in the Far East and the USA, the news appeared just after midnight UK time, a clear nod to the commercial reality that shirt and merchandise sales are now as much a part of the ROI of a transfer as on-pitch performance. The #PogBack hashtag sought to build a homecoming narrative as the player returned to the club he left in 2012, while famous grime star Stormzy’s inclusion helped spread the news to audiences far beyond football. For Adidas, with trainer sales and other sports to appeal to, it was a canny move.

Matt Paterson to Oxford City in 2017

Â

With Premier League transfers usually seen as quite a big deal, it isn’t always the same story when you go down a few leagues. Due to the huge reduction in funds and revenue, Oxford City decided to unveil their man with a picture of him signing his contract in McDonald’s with a free Barclays pen. The unusual location generated significant buzz, with Oxford’s tweet retweeted over 1,000 times and picked up by several sporting publications. Even the McDonald’s UK Twitter page got in on the act, retweeting and helping Oxford City share their news with wider sports fans who follow the restaurant.

Andre Moreira to Aston Villa in 2018

Â

Love Island is a modern-day reality TV phenomenon, and Aston Villa struck while the iron was hot with this one theming a Twitter announcement of new signing Andre Moreira around the ITV show. Demonstrating a clear attempt to piggyback on popular culture, their tweet that focused on “a new boy entering the villa” drew mixed reactions, some in stitches while others understandably dubbed it “cringe-worthy” or “embarrassing”. That being said, nearly 500,000 people have now viewed the tweet which has racked up over 2000 retweets and 8000 likes. It might be an example of blatantly jumping on the bandwagon but in the social media age, it is clearly an effective tactic of drawing attention.

Wout Weghorst to Burnley in 2022

Â

Try to ignore Wout Weghorst’s disappointing form at Burnley, and instead drink in the marvellous cinema of his social media announcement video. Leaning heavily on the 6ft 6 in Dutch striker’s enormous stature, Burnley produced a Jurassic Park-inspired video that likened their new £12 million signing to a terrifying prehistoric creature. Torrential rain, a battered jeep, deafening roars; their Deadline Day repurposing of a classic Hollywood scene was clever. Sadly, he didn’t look quite as scary when up against Premier League defenders.

Photo by Unsplash

Mohammed Shami shows the Maestro in him to stop the music for West Indies

In a week, Shami went from back-up to match-winner. In six balls, he let West Indians know their World Cup was over

Sharda Ugra at Old Trafford27-Jun-20191:13

Hussey: India’s well-balanced bowling unit makes them extremely hard to beat

Television has its blessings but watching a craftsman live at work offers us an intangible and mighty beauty. No matter what the distance between the man and his audience at a stadium, the man in the middle always remains human scale. Height, weight, frame, physique. Always seen in proportion to someone you know. The guy next door, the man on the street, the teller at the bank, the owner of the gym. It is when that man does what he does, what he must, in a stadium full of people squealing, screaming, shouting that he becomes The Maestro. It is what Mohammed Shami did on a golden Manchester afternoon at a ground dappled by blue shirts and backlit flags. At Old Trafford, Mohammed Shami showed us his Maestro.In the space of a week, Shami has gone from backup option to hat-trick taking match-winner. In the space of six balls on Thursday, Shami was to let the West Indians know that their World Cup was over. And have the Indians take one more step towards a place in the final four, with one win required from their next three matches. He was to ensure that his delicious dismissal of Shai Hope could be entered in the ball of the World Cup contest or at least challenge his pace-bowling buddies to try and match its perfection. In only his second match in the World Cup, Shami has stepped in and stomped his name on the contest. He has bowled less than 17 overs in this World Cup, but he already has eight wickets; his economy rate of 3.46 is the best of all bowlers at the World Cup, currently, and his strike rate, 12.1, is the best among all frontline bowlers.Watch on Hotstar (India only): Mohammed Shami’s four-wicket haulThe numbers will always tell their own set of tales. But Shami’s unflustered and switched-on presence in the two matches when he has stepped into the XI, following injury to Bhuvaneshwar Kumar, has been impressive and looks for the moment irreplaceable. During the pre-match warm-up on Thursday, Bhuvaneshwar was seen running around Old Trafford and having a bit of a bowl, but is widely expected to sit out the game.It was Shami who turned up ready when West Indies openers Chris Gayle and Sunil Ambris came to the crease in pursuit of 269. The ball that everyone will remember and cite is the one that destroyed West Indies hopes, (yes, yawn, predictable but couldn’t resist) but it wasn’t just pulled out of his sleeve like a magical rabbit. It was in the planning from his many morning nets and from the first time Hope was to run into Shami.The Gayle wicket was the breakthrough that began the deluge, Shami giving Gayle little room to free his arms and outside of an inside-edge four, offering cramping width. The two play for the same IPL team, Kings XI, and Shami says he knew that if he kept Gayle quiet, “in a little while he would have a go at the ball and get out”. The first West Indian wicket in Gayle took away not only West Indies’ most dangerous batsman but also their most experienced. It was the short ball that rose far less quickly than Gayle had anticipated and when Hope came to the crease, the next bouncer took off towards MS Dhoni’s head. Christopher Henry gone, a considerable target to chase plus uneven bounce. Goodness.Mohammed Shami starred with four wickets in India’s dominant win•Getty ImagesFour dot balls and one cut for four was the next exchange between Hope and Shami before the peach arrived. Landing perfectly on an upright seam jagging back through the gap between an extended bat and Hope’s pad and clipping off stump. He practices these things, Shami was to say later. Bowling with the new ball in the nets, trying to land it on the seam, and looking for benefits like he did at Old Trafford on Thrusday: the cut, the seam movement and trying to exercise a grasp of what the new ball will do off the seam and what control can be exercised over it in a live situation.”In the morning the ball was moving, it was cutting in and out and the bounce was up and down. All you had to do was be careful with line and length,” Shami said, mischief in his smile, “after that 268 runs are enough.”WATCH on Hotstar (US only): Full highlights of India’s victoryCoiled within Shami’s regular unfussed run-up and a bustling delivery action is latent, unexpected and disconcerting pace. His last delivery of the day was to move faster than the umpire’s eyes could see. It flicked Oshane Thomas’ glove onto the keeper and Shami celebrating with a fist flung in the air, even before the batsman had been given out. It needed a referral to check before the game could be declared ended and Shami was grinning throughout.It is what Shami has done in his brief, brilliant 2019 World Cup: come running into the heat of the moment and leave wreckage lying in his wake. He was grateful for Jasprit Bumrah leaving him with 16 in the final over to defend versus Afghanistan without their most proficient batsmen, accepted. But the hat-trick had to be taken and Shami did so.He has handled sitting out three matches being pragmatic: “Fifteen of us have come to play for the country, so there is something in you that you are here, you have to be patient and stay positive. If you remember you are here to represent your country you don’t feel the pressure of whether they will play me or they won’t play me. There is only one thing: your mind has to be clever, alert and your execution has to be spot on.”What must be appreciated is that the Shami of 2019 is nothing like the ODI struggler and straggler whose 50-over career went into a tailspin after a blazing start as the fastest Indian to 50 ODI wickets after his 2013 debut. He only played sporadically after an impressive 2015 World Cup, and sat out an entire year of ODI cricket between July 2017 and October 2018. The attention he gave to his five-day cricket in that period, however, has given fresh impetus to his ODI game, according to former India wicketkeeper Deep Dasgupta. Shami was going through a multitude of professional and personal issues, but the focus on what mattered – cricket – cleared his mind. Increased fitness and conditioning to bowl long Test-match spells without breaking down has made Shami not merely quicker but consistently quicker, and added to his potency in the ODI game. “I have confidence in my skill, that I can bowl on any wicket in the world.”At Old Trafford today, a regular man in human scale showed us his exquisite, singular craft.

Parnell swings it as England give slip practice

Plays of the day from the third ODI between England and South Africa

George Dobell at Lord's29-May-2017Ball of the day
There has not been much evidence of swing from the white ball in English domestic cricket this season. But Wayne Parnell proved that, if the conditions are right, movement can still be found by a skilful bowler with a new white ball. He produced a beauty to account for Joe Root: full and swinging in late, it beat Root’s attempted flick to midwicket and trapped him leg before. Perhaps Root might have survived had he played it straighter but it was, by any standards, a fine ball. Eoin Morgan, who received one that demanded a stroke and left him to take the outside edge, was similarly dealt with.Catch of the day
South Africa’s catching has not, by their high standards, been at its best this series. So they will have been delighted by the reliability of the slip cordon here, with several sharp chances taken. Best of them all arguably was Faf du Plessis’ head-high take at second slip to account for Jos Buttler. The batsman, perhaps attempting to hit the ball too hard, managed a thick edge as the ball left him, meaning it flew to du Plessis’ left at great pace. But he clung on and England slipped to 20 for 5.Deja-vu moment of the day
Having seen Alex Hales and Buttler fall in the same manner – attempting lavish drives at deliveries that left them just a touch down the slope – you might have thought that Adil Rashid would take a slightly more cautious approach. But no, Rashid attempted an equally ambitious drive to his first delivery and, once again, was defeated by a fraction of movement and edged to the slip cordon. It left Kagiso Rabada on a hat-trick and England on 20 for 6 – the only time in the history of ODI cricket a side has lost six wickets within the first five overs. With England committed to an aggressive approach, which has served them well in recent times, it was probably the sort of incident that was bound to occur sooner or later. But it was a reminder that, when the ball moves, England remain a little vulnerable.Shot of the day
With both sides making a host of changes ahead of more important battles looming in the near future, Toby Roland-Jones won a maiden international cap for England. He had relatively little opportunity to impress with the ball – by the time he came on, South Africa had this game all but won, though he showed good pace, beat the bat a few times and claimed a memorable maiden wicket in Hashim Amla – but he impressed most with the bat. Scoring an unbeaten 37 – the second-highest of the England innings – he played one shot in particular that hinted at real class with the bat. It was not the pulled six off Chris Morris, impressive though that was, but an on-driven four off the same bowler that would have pleased any of the great batsmen who have played at this ground over the years. It was especially impressive coming from a No. 9 on debut. He was also the first man with a hyphen in his name to make an England debut since Mandy Mitchell-Innes in 1935.Record of the day
When Amla reached 23, he became the fastest man in the history of ODI cricket to achieve 7000 runs in terms of innings played. Amla reached the landmark in his 150th innings, beating the previous record of Virat Kohli, who took 161 innings. AB de Villiers is third in the table, having taken 166 innings. Amla is also the fastest man in ODI history to the landmarks of 2000, 3000, 4000, 5000 and 6000 runs.

The Agar error

A look at the Australian spinner’s struggle after his remarkable arrival as a teenager in the 2013 Ashes

Michael Hussey28-Feb-2016Ashton Agar is a terrific young man who I hope has a great future in the game as a left-arm orthodox bowler and decent lower-order batsman. But his remarkable experience of becoming a household name during the Ashes in 2013 was followed by a long period of treading water. And I was not the least bit surprised. His story is a striking example of how the glare of the spotlight can change the equation when you are trying to create a cricket career.Ashton had played hardly any first-class cricket when he was thrown into the Test team and caught the attention of the nation by scoring a record 98 as the No. 11 in the first Test at Trent Bridge. He said after the day’s play: ‘It’s a dream come true … Forever I’ve dreamed of playing Test cricket for Australia and for my debut to start the way it has, I’m over the moon.’ But what he did not realise and was totally unprepared for was that suddenly the expectation and demands, on the ground and off it, would become enormous.I captained Ashton in his first few games for Western Australia. He bowled beautifully. He was accurate, had variation and could operate both aggressively and defensively. His batting was similar. He performed like any young guy coming into a new level of the game, without fear and with genuine excitement.After just three first-class games the Australian selectors invited him on a national team tour to India to be a net bowler and gain experience from being around the team. It sounded like the right thing to do, but the alarm bells went off for me immediately. I knew he would bowl really well, I knew the selectors had doubts over Nathan Lyon, despite investing eighteen months of hard work in him, and I had a sneaking suspicion they would see Ashton as the bolter who could fix everything.Unsurprisingly Ashton turned heads while with the team in India. I remember getting a message from the assistant coach Steve Rixon saying, “How good is this Ashton Agar? I think he should play the first Test in India.” I thought to myself, “No way! Please don’t make this mistake!” Ashton was nowhere near ready. In my opinion he needed three or four seasons of first-class cricket to learn and grow and have some idea of what he would be in for if he was to play Test cricket.

While walking down Kensington High Street with his girlfriend to do some shopping they were set upon by paparazzi. The two of them ended up locking themselves in the hotel room

The selectors did not pick Ashton to play in India but he was thrown into the side for the first Ashes Test not long afterwards. I felt it was a huge mistake. Like in India, playing in the Ashes is akin to being in a cauldron. There are a multitude of distractions. There is so much hype and expectation. There are functions to go to, people to meet and huge interest from the media. There was no way this young fella could have been ready for that. For him to come out and score runs in his first match was a great achievement but it also created a perfect storm.It’s hard to comprehend how Ashton’s life was turned upside down in the space of one day. I talked to him about it when he came back to Perth afterwards. He said he could not believe the interest in him following that innings.While walking down Kensington High Street with his girlfriend to do some shopping they were set upon by paparazzi. He said his girlfriend tried to run away, only to be chased by the photographers. He said he had no idea what to do. The two of them ended up locking themselves in the hotel room. Even as an experienced cricketer, that kind of attention is extremely hard to handle. But Ashton was a nineteen-year-old with hardly any cricketing experience. Suddenly he was being pursued as though he was a movie star.Hardie Grant BooksBoth at the time and in the weeks and months that followed Ashton’s ill-timed entry into international cricket, his manager, Jason Bakker, did his best to try to protect him from the many distractions that could divert him from concentrating on cricket. Commercial offers and opportunities came flooding in, but Bakker was careful not to add to the already huge burden of trying to keep playing at the top level. It is a good illustration of the value of having a manager who has an understanding of life in the spotlight and the demands of first-class cricket.For some time after the Ashes, Ashton was on a high while the public raved and the media loved him. But the wickets began to dry up. The harder he tried the worse he performed. He became frustrated and had too little experience to draw from to help him to change course. Eventually he got suspended in a match for showing dissent to an umpire. Ashton went from Ashes superstar to possible has-been in an alarmingly short time.In my opinion the whole episode was very poorly handled. The duty of care to this young Australian cricketer was pretty much ignored. If everyone associated with making the decision to pick Ashton had just been patient and let him develop he would have held on to his youthful zeal, grown gradually in confidence, expanded his knowledge and been much better off in the long run.He could have made the regular mistakes that young guys do and worked his way through them away from the spotlight. He should have been given space to learn about bowling, learn about life and enjoy the maturing process. I believe Ashton will come through this chastening experience and become a fantastic player. But I worry it will happen a lot later than it otherwise would have.

I remember getting a message from Steve Rixon saying, “How good is this Ashton Agar? I think he should play the first Test in India.” I thought to myself, “No way! Please don’t make this mistake!”

Ashton has a good head on his shoulders. He is intelligent and has good people around him. But my concern for young guys finding their way so publicly like he did is that they do not carry mental scars for the rest of their careers or throughout life. With the right help it is possible to come out of such situations a better person and a better cricketer. But for some people the negative effects can be enduring. Psychological damage can be deep and your outlook on the game can be changed forever.Examples such as Ashton Agar and even Michael Clarke and others make me grateful for the path I travelled to get into international cricket. I have often said that I wished I had been picked earlier for Australia and learned on the job, making mistakes and progressing that way. But the more I have learned about life in the spotlight the more I feel lucky to have had the time to grow up at my own pace. Even after ten years of first-class cricket it was a very confronting adjustment to make when it all started to happen for me. by Michael Hussey, published by Hardie Grant Books

Phil's place

The weird and wonderful city that has made a hero out of a groundsman

Paul Ford04-Nov-2014Most days the jury is out as to whether Central Otago or the Hawke’s Bay is the fruit bowl of New Zealand. But for the 2015 cricket World Cup it is decided the mantle is claimed by the Bay because neither Molyneux Park (Alexandra), Queenstown Events Centre or Anderson Park (Cromwell) made the cut for the big games.Most cricketing roads in the Hawke’s Bay lead to McLean Park. The exceptions include Gordon Road, home of the magnificent Clifton County Cricket Club (“Keep driving along dusty roads and across paddocks until you reach a piece of lush turf surrounded by undulating hillside… and if you get lost, just follow someone else”).McLean Park has been around for more than 100 years, having been created as a 10-acre memorial to a bloke who used to be a VINZGP: a very important New Zealand government person. His name is Don McLean but he never wrote amazing folk songs with cryptic lyrics. Instead he was a Scottish farmer and was the ominously and imperiously named Minister of Native Affairs and Colonial Defence in the 1870s.Apparently – and weirdly – in the early years, Sir Donald McLean’s Park was mainly used by the Highland Society for eccentric and wonderful games like caber tossing, hammer throwing and maide leisg-ing.Now it is best known as the home of eccentric and wonderful sporting games like rugby and cricket.

****

McLean Park is the primary home ground for the Central Districts Cricket Association and base camp for the roving Central Stags. It is unusual in that you can see the sea from the park, so if you are watching on TV then expect to see epic montages of the glittering Pacific Ocean through the line of Norfolk pines along the Napier waterfront.Central Districts is an eclectic region that essentially ring-fences Wellington, and runs the game in Horowhenua Kapiti, Manawatu, Taranaki, Wairarapa and Wanganui in the North Island – and Marlborough and Nelson at the top of the south.Central Districts legends include the one and only Mathew “Skippy” Sinclair (the bloke responsible for the greatest catch I have ever seen live), who was on the dole but is now training to be a real estate agent in the Bay, and is coaching the local Hawke’s Bay provincial team. He has the most appearances for the province, followed by Mike Shrimpton, who went on from first-class cricket to be prominent as the coach of the White Ferns when they won the World Cup back in 2000.Other household cricketing names who have worn the Central Districts greens and whites many times over the years include Scott Briasco, Michael Mason, Mark Douglas, Glen Sulzberger, Gary Robertson and wicketkeeping stalwart Bevan Griggs. Golf nut and Hastings schoolteacher Stu Duff is also a Central Districts legend – his dulcet tones can often be heard when he parks up atop the Harris Stand at McLean Park to jabber on over the radio airwaves.And who can forget Cleckheaton’s only black-belted wicketkeeper-batsman, Tony “Chill” Blain (an irregular correspondent on the BYC podcast)? His sensible hats with the neck flap are an iconic cricketing memory for watchers of Kiwi cricket in the eighties and nineties.

****

The deck in Napier is notoriously as flat as a pancake, and most batsmen around the globe would be keen to pack it up and roll it out wherever they were plying their trade. In Tests, John Wright averages 201 there, VVS Laxman 200, BJ Watling 180, Imran Farhat 178 and Jesse Ryder 158. And in ODIs, MS Dhoni averages 124 there, ahead of Virat Kholi on 123 and Ricky Ponting on 107.5.The Tasmanian devil’s magnificent unbeaten 141 (off 127 balls) in an ODI in 2005 was a frighteningly good innings to watch as a local fan – “clean-hitting dominance” that ended the series from hell. It didn’t help that the same day Brett Lee unleashed a 99.9 mph thunderbolt and Adam Gilchrist monstered 91 from just 61 balls.

****

Napier groundsman Phil Stoyanoff with Kris Srikkanth and Anil Kumble in Bangalore•Associated PressThe Park’s road maker is Phil Stoyanoff, the Napier groundsman who has also carved out his own little niche in Kiwi cricketing folklore. I’ve often said there is a lucrative market waiting to happen if someone wants to start making “I Love Phil” t-shirts. Why? Because he’s as blunt as a trauma injury, with a delicious turn of phrase:

“Any of this mythical talk about slime outbreak on the wicket, or algae or the fungal attack, is a lot of rubbish.”
“My most endearing memory of Phil is when he turned up to a Saturday game, and Collegians were bowling first. Phil had obviously had a late – very late – Friday night, and it would have been optimistic to say he’d had more than a couple hours sleep. Phil slumped in the dressing shed, unshaven, eyes red-rimmed and with the breath of a brewery. When a team mate half-seriously suggested he wasn’t in a fit state to bowl, Phil had the perfect retort: ‘Mate – when I’m hungover it makes me bloody angry and I’ll take if out on the f***ken opening batsmen.’ And he did.”
“Depending on what the samples say I base my plan of attack for the day around that. I have to think about what roller I’m going to use and if I need to mow.”
“Yes, because both sides have such bad batsmen. That’s my honest opinion: they’re useless.”

Stoyanoff has cut an interesting path on the Kiwi cricketing scene. He played one first-class match for NZ Under-23s against Canterbury back in 1980, scoring 4 and taking 0 for 15 from five overs. Fellow first-class debutants in that match included Robbie Hart, Trevor Franklin, Alan Hunt and Rockin’ Roddy Latham.He was also flown to India to prepare the turf at Bangalore’s M Chinnaswamy Stadium for an Australia v India series using soil core samples, weather charts and mathematical equations. As he said at the time: “Preparing a pitch is science… We decide based on the data what type of roller to use. It is real artwork, which they don’t know about here. They don’t regard curators as professions, but we are as important as the cricketers.”I love Phil.

Ranchi, you beauty

A small town is infected by cricket fever and lives to tell the tale

Nikhil Jha13-May-2013Choice of game
In January 2013, Ranchi hosted its first international cricket match and praises were heaped from all over on the amazing new stadium and its state-of-the-art facilities. I watched on TV and felt extremely happy that finally Jharkhand, my state, could boast of a facility that could put it on the world map, and could complement MS Dhoni’s status as the sporting ambassador of the region.I had made a mental note to try to make a trip home whenever Ranchi hosted its next match. I was fortunate to get a few tickets for this game, courtesy my generous friends. The excitement level in the city for this game was huge.Taking into account the form of the two teams coming into this match, I backed Royal Challengers Bangalore to win easily. I was as wrong to predict the result as Virat Kohli was to judge the pitch!Team supported
A tough question. The IPL is still a long way away from forging dedicated, passionate fan bases a la its global cousins, say the NBA or EPL. It becomes increasingly difficult for people like me, who have confused regional identities (schooling in Jamshedpur, college in Mumbai, working in Delhi, in my case). To complicate matters further, cricket icons of a particular region play for franchises in other cities.My head starts to spin when I have to pick a team to support in the IPL. Over the years I have developed a couple of thumb rules. First, support teams of your favourite players – so Chennai Super Kings for Dhoni and Rajasthan Royals for Rahul Dravid become my choices (which seems like a good line-up to back this season). Considering Dhoni has won a lot of trophies over the years, I would love Dravid to lift one this season.Second, support the one team that matters, your fantasy team. After all, they are ones getting you points.Key performer
On a slow pitch, Kolkata Knight Riders captain Gautam Gambhir read the conditions perfectly, getting in an extra spinner, Sachithra Senanayake, at the cost of in-form Eoin Morgan.You can trust one man to make the most of such conditions – Sunil Narine came to the party, taking four wickets for just 22 runs in his spell. Some credit must go to the other bowlers who choked the stellar Royal Challengers batting line-up for runs.One thing you’d have changed about the day
The occasional light drizzle had made the weather perfect to watch the match. Unfortunately the action in the middle didn’t live up to the expectations. We had hoped for a high-scoring encounter, a Chris Gayle blitz or an AB de Villiers special, followed by a tight chase by Gambhir & Co. All we got was three sixes in the entire match – two from a team that had earlier hit a record number of sixes. I would most definitely have wanted a high-scoring encounter, or a Super Over, to make up for the low-scoring game.Face-off I relished
I was eagerly waiting to see how Gayle would approach his Windies team-mate Narine. It was an anti-climax, to say the least, as Narine dismissed Gayle in his second over. Gayle’s innings was a letdown since he took 36 balls to score 33, which was 1/3rd of what he usually notches up in a stay that long.Shot of the day
On a day when the boundaries were hard to come by, there was hardly a shot that stuck in memory. One that did matter though, was the last boundary of the match – a dead straight four that Ryan ten Doeschate hit over bowler Vinay Kumar to finish a tricky chase.Crowd meter
The town was infected by an anticipatory buzz for a week. There was a mad scramble for tickets – local papers had pictures of people camping overnight to get tickets, which reminded me of Wimbledon queues. It was refreshing to see since cricket matches hardly registers a blip on a metro’s event radar.
So considering all this, I expected a jam-packed stadium, but even at its peak, the stands were no more than 80% full. The guilty parties were mainly the VIP stands, where, I assume, the ease of getting tickets fails to motivate people to turn up and watch the game. It’s a shame.Although technically this was a Knight Riders’ home game, you wouldn’t know it if you had watched it on TV. People, especially the younger lot, were on the Gayle bandwagon, some even painting their faces with his name. Royal Challengers’ flags could be seen aplenty in spite complimentary Knight Rider’s flags being handed out by the organisers. Chants of “RCB… RCB” echoed through the stadium even when they were up against it. Only towards the end of the match, and that too on the prompting by the stadium emcee, did the crowd start shouting “KKR… KKR”. I suspect that had something to do with people backing the team that was winning.The (non)-hardship factor
The experience was near-perfect. We walked in without any hassles or long lines. The stadium infrastructure, including the seating arrangement, was really good and we chose seats with a good view. It was heartening to see such spectator-friendly arrangements in my backyard. The ghosts of my horrifying experience in Jamshedpur in 2002, when the crowd threw bottles to express unhappiness at West Indies’ win, were finally exorcised.The only letdown was the food. Expensive food stalls at stadiums is understandable, but below-par quality is unpardonable, that too from a reputed coffee chain that ran that stall. We were not the only ones who had to throw away the visibly stale sandwiches.Entertainment
I know expecting the Allman Brothers Band to be played over the PA system is unlikely and wishful since it’s the modern pop numbers that get the crowd on its feet. Still, I was horrified to hear Yo Yo Honey Singh numbers being blared here in Ranchi, an experience I thought would not haunt me outside Delhi. That’s pop-culture for you.The early entertainment was provided by a light Cessna aircraft – which I suspect was the same one used in the match in January – that performed low fly-bys across the stadium to cheers from the crowd.Twenty20 v ODIs
The age for instant gratification make Twenty20s a perfect fit – exciting, entertaining and brief.TV v stadium
I love watching Test matches from the stands, and was there to savour the 4-0 whitewash against the Aussies at Kotla.T20s are a fifty-fifty case since I have had more indifferent experiences than good ones. That said, the experience of this excellent new facility in my own hometown really tilted the balance in favour of watching at the stadium.Overall
The cricket was a departure from the usual T20 matches. The bowlers looked in control throughout, keeping the run rate in check. The Knight Riders’ slow bowlers spun a web around the Royal Challengers’ batsmen and the Royal Challengers’ bowlers gave little away when they bowled, except in a couple of overs when Jacques Kallis and Irfan Pathan broke the shackles. Since we end up judging a T20 solely by its entertainment value, I would say this one wasn’t fun to watch, though the close finish did manage to keep the crowd on its feet till the last over.The atmosphere was great since this match was the highlight of the season for Ranchi. People were really excited to see and root for their heroes – most of them for their first time. That enthusiasm showed in the vocal support they extended throughout.Marks on 10
7. 5 for the facilities and 2 for the match.

Dravid stops the clocks with magnificent defiance

At the very last gasp of a series that began with such expectation, we’re finally seeing the India that the crowds have flocked to witness

Andrew Miller at The Oval21-Aug-2011At the very last gasp of a series that began with such expectation, we’re finally seeing the India that the crowds have flocked to witness. On a day when England’s victory surge was slowed but never halted, Rahul Dravid stopped the clocks around The Oval with a performance to rival any of the ground’s great farewells of the past.He’s not gone yet, of course, but he’s going – just as Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman are heading over the brow of the hill, and just as Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble are already waiting in the pantheon of Indian cricket. At the age of 38, Dravid will not be returning to England as a player, the country where it all began for him 15 years and four tours ago, and poignantly his defiance on this fourth day might not make a jot of difference in the final analysis of a humbling series. However, for as long as it lasted – seven-and-a-quarter hours spread across two consecutive innings – it was arguably the most magnificent sight of the summer.Immense batting performances have been two-a-penny in an extraordinary season for statistics, but somehow the sheer weight of England’s numbers have numbed the senses a touch. We’ve had the dour from Alastair Cook and the delightful from Ian Bell; the crushing from Kevin Pietersen and the capable from Eoin Morgan. At too many moments, however, the accompanying air has been one of surrender, belched out from an Indian attack that has lacked the fitness, discipline and depth to remain threatening for more than a few isolated spells at a time.Dravid, on the other hand, has faced the real deal all summer long. The tenacity of England’s bowlers has been a central plank of their success, with India yet to make a score in excess of 300 in seven completed innings – the sort of figure that Sehwag used to rack up in a day. Dravid alone has held firm with a fearlessness that has both shamed those team-mates who have been incapable of carrying the fight, and reminded the series’ many onlookers of what could and should have been.Only seven batsmen in history have carried their bat through a completed Test innings and straight into the follow-on. The last man to do so was Desmond Haynes in 1991, also at The Oval, although his feat was something of a fait accompli, given the dramatic speed with which West Indies’ tail succumbed to Phil Tufnell – 6 for 4 in 33 deliveries all told. India fared considerably better than that, but to make Dravid’s innings even more extraordinary, he was only opening the batting because Gautam Gambhir was suffering from concussion. “I felt I was in the flow,” he said. “Mentally I was ready for it.”Dravid’s shots, when he chose to play them, simmered to the boundary with a defiance that harked back to a bygone era. It was as if the match had been rewound to the turn of the Millennium, to a time just before India’s great awakening, when such incredible feats of endurance were accompanied by the wonder of what might be possible, rather than the complacency of what’s since been accomplished.Rahul Dravid carried his bat through the first innings and straight into the follow-on, to give India a chance of saving the fourth Test•Getty Images”It’s sad for us that, collectively, we’ve all had a tough tour,” said Dravid. “That hasn’t happened to us for a long time, where all the batsmen have failed. People do have bad tours, but this time we haven’t clicked as a unit. No-one’s going out there trying not to succeed, everyone’s been working hard, but we’ve just been found wanting against a better team.”The last hurrah of India’s titans was never meant to be like this. “England v Dravid, the Wall,” was how one placard in the crowd chose to rebrand this contest, and in a summer in which his final average of 76.83 is more than double (and in most cases treble) that of any of his misfiring team-mates, the sentiment could not have been clearer.”There will be mixed feelings,” said Dravid. “There’s a sense of satisfaction at the quality of the way I’ve played, because I’ve always enjoyed batting and playing cricket, and competing and getting the best of myself. I continue to try to do that, irrespective of my age and the situation I’m in. I’m still hoping we will be able to draw the Test match, but when you get a hundred and don’t end up winning, it doesn’t feel nice. I hadn’t experienced it too much in my career [until this tour], so you experience something new all the time.”Instead of reaffirming their greatness in a tussle for the ages, India’s ageing side has been reduced to a slow, sad routine of standing ovations that have become more wistful at every new venue. Sachin Tendulkar, 35 not out overnight and frozen since the World Cup on 99 international hundreds, has one last opportunity in this series to tick off a landmark that has lingered like a gypsy’s curse. A rare fifth-day sell-out crowd will pile through the turnstiles expecting a dose of instant history, but the context of the achievement is in danger of being misplaced amid the chaos of India’s campaign. There are too many vital issues that need resolution once this series is over, and a misleading dose of euphoria would be unhelpful to say the least.For that reason, among others, Dravid’s fourth-day interjection was pitch-perfect. After all, he’s the man India’s fans have never fully appreciated, despite being the absolute bedrock of all the good times to which they’ve been treated. Therefore who better to deliver such a damning verdict on the status quo?He did so first in deed with his run-making but then in word at the end-of-day press conference. The coming generation has, he said, “a lot of talent and ball-striking ability”, a euphemism if ever there was one. But in terms of the skills, discipline and fitness levels that England brought to bear on the series, he added, “we were not up to scratch. This is a mental game; it is about the space of the mind.”Dravid’s four tours of England read like bullet points for the waxing and waning of India’s golden generation. On that first trip in 1996, India were the support act in every sense, overshadowed by the summer’s top billing, the Wasim-and-Waqar-powered Pakistan, and bumped aside by a Nasser Hussain century in their solitary defeat at Edgbaston. Six years later, they were under-rated but on the rise, and when England were routed by an innings on a seamer’s deck in Headingley, it was Dravid’s outstanding 148 that laid the foundations for everything that followed.In 2007, the context was markedly different. India expected, and duly delivered, with their first series win in England for 21 years. But Dravid, now captain, had a troubling personal tour which hit rock-bottom in the final Test at The Oval, where he made 12 from 96 balls to kill the contest stone-dead and so preserve a precious 1-0 lead. He was instantly vilified for his lack of ambition, but on the contrary, such bloodymindedness merely proved how much he cared. As this subsequent tour has demonstrated, overseas glory can be a rare and precious thing.On Sunday at The Oval, Dravid was at it once again. It was a transformed context, but that same unyielding resolve was firmly in situ. “The time I’ve spent away from the tour training, and the fitness work I’ve done has obviously paid off,” he said. “I’m tired, but obviously when you are doing well, you are not that tired. I’d rather have it this way than any other way.”How the game will miss him when he’s gone.

Little time but lots of action

A truncated first day’s play had more than its share of action and ended with the honours tantalisingly even

Sambit Bal in Galle31-Jul-2008

Virender Sehwag’s innings lit up a day that was blighted by rain in Galle
© AFP

How often does such a short day produce so much thrilling cricket? Less than a half a day’s play was possible today but a lover of Test cricket could have hardly asked for more. There was a gleaming, utterly insouciant hundred and plenty of skilful strokeplay that brought a torrent of boundaries, yet the bowlers were never out of the game. And when they eventually found an opening, they went about cutting down a mighty batting order in a manner that can be described as surgical. One way of looking at it would be to lament how rain ruined half of the day; the other would be to reflect on how the elements intervened to create a dramatic twist. Days such as this make watching Test cricket such a rewarding and fulfilling experience.Merely looking at the scorecard is likely to produce some bafflement. India scored at nearly five an over and didn’t lose a wicket till they had 167 on the board, which will point to a featherbed. Sri Lanka grabbed four wickets in four overs, which might point to some trickery from the surface. The truth is that neither was the pitch a batting paradise before lunch, nor was it a minefield after the rain break when India collapsed: it is merely that Virender Sehwag was exceptional all day, while Ajantha Mendis and Chaminda Vaas preyed on the nerves of a tentative middle-order after the breach was made.There is a thin line between audacity and bravado, and Sehwag blurs it with relish. His last three dismissals against these opponents bordered on foolishness. In the Asia Cup final, he survived a first-ball charge against Mendis only to get stumped off the next; in the first innings of the first Test, he ballooned a head-high bouncer from well outside the off stump and in the second, he fell in a most un-Sehwag- like way, padding up to Muttiah Muralitharan on the stroke of lunch. By his own standards, he was an object of moderation against Mendis today, not leaving his crease till the sixth ball though he did try to sweep him out of the ground off the second ball. By the sixth ball he had apparently seen enough to jump down the pitch and hoist Mendis over midwicket. And, as if to demonstrate he was reading the variations, two balls later he arched back to cut a googly past point.But Sehwag makes strokeplay so ridiculously easy that he perhaps fools others into a false sense of security, or plain intimidates them. Despite the economy of foot movement, his shots are mostly conventional. His adventurism often lies in the conception and he can keep belting boundaries without appearing rash. Today, he had a partner who was not willing to merely hustle singles with him but also to play a few bold shots of his own.

Chaminda Vaas struck twice in an over to dismiss Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly after the rain delay
© AFP

For someone who has always been an opener – Sehwag, in contrast, became one in international cricket – Gautam Gambhir is exceptionally quick on his feet against the spinners, and his inopportune dismissals in the first Test, suckered twice by Murali, didn’t dampen his enthusiasm. Till he misread Mendis after the break, he was assured and positive against the spinners.Not for the first time at this ground, though, the Indian middle order wasted the opening effort: in 2001, Sadagoppan Ramesh and SS Das had got India to 79 before Dilhara Fernando and Muralitharan bundled them out for 187. It’s a spinner-opening bowler combination that triggered a dramatic slide today.At the lunch break, Vaas’s future was a matter of animated speculation. He had gone wicketless at the SSC and Sehwag and Gambhir had treated him shabbily in the first session here, with Gambhir repeatedly walking down the pitch to him; that prompted Vaas to call the wicketkeeper up to the stumps, upon which Gambhir cut him for four. Had Lasith Malinga and Fernando been fit, it was unlikely that Vaas would have played this Test. But in damp conditions on a sweating pitch, it was Vaas who was most likely to produce a wicket. And he produced two in an over, both with his trademark ball, the one that straightens after pitching. After Sehwag carted a six and drilled a four off his first over, Mahela Jayawardene might have been persuaded to bring on Murali but he was rewarded for respecting Vaas’s ability to exploit the conditions. Sri Lanka are now within touching distance of bowling India out cheaply – a score of 500 had seemed possible when Sehwag and Gambhir were batting merrily – and India have a problem with their middle order.Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly have looked out of sorts on the tour so far, and Dravid’s career seems to have reached its lowest ebb. He has been dismissed by Mendis all three times in the series and there is no evidence yet that he is anywhere near reading him. A tame prod brought about his dismissal today and he didn’t bother waiting for the umpire’s decision, unlike in the previous innings when he had waited for a referral after an inside edge. He might have had a case today with the replay showing that the ball had bounced off the catcher’s helmet, but no one would grudge Mendis the wicket. He has now implanted a thousand ghosts in the mind of one of the most unflappable batsmen in contemporary cricket.These 45 overs have already produced enough for this Test to be on the edge. Two hours of Sehwag could yet tilt it India’s way, Sri Lanka are only a couple of magic balls away from nullifying India’s toss advantage. It was the sort of day that leaves you in anticipation for the next one. Tomorrow can’t come sooner.

Bangladesh to host Zimbabwe for five T20Is in May ahead of World Cup

The two-match Test series between these two teams which was originally scheduled for this year will now be played in 2025

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Mar-2024

The last time these two sides met in July 2022•AFP/Getty Images

Bangladesh will host Zimbabwe for a five-match T20I series in May, with one eye on the 2024 T20 World Cup. This comes days after the BCB announced that the team will be touring the USA for three T20Is in May, ahead of showpiece event that will be co-hosted by the USA and the West Indies from June 1.The first three T20Is, from May 3, will be played in Chattogram, while the last two matches will be held in Dhaka.The BCB also said in a release that the two-match Test series between Zimbabwe and Bangladesh which was originally scheduled for this year will now be played in 2025. It will be the first Test series between the sides since 2018.Related

Bangladesh set to tour USA for three T20Is ahead of World Cup

The last time the two teams played against each other in a bilateral T20I series was in July 2022 in Harare, when Zimbabwe defeated Bangladesh 2-1. Overall, Bangladesh hold a 13-7 win-loss ratio against Zimbabwe in the shortest format.Bangladesh will start their T20 World Cup campaign on June 8 against Sri Lanka scheduled in Dallas. They are part of Group D along with Nepal, Netherlands, South Africa and Sri Lanka.Bangladesh vs Zimbabwe fixtures

1st T20I: May 3
2nd T20I: May 5
3rd T20I: May 7 (first three games in Chattogram)
4th T20I: May 10
5th T20I: May 12 (last two games in Dhaka)

Zimbabwe failed to qualify for the 2024 T20 World Cup, with Uganda and Namibia advancing from the Africa leg of qualifiers for the 20-team event. They had also failed to make the cut for the 2019 and 2023 ODI World Cups, but will be part of the 2027 ODI World Cup as co-hosts.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus