Celtic must seal Matthew Sorinola transfer

Celtic showed during the previous summer and winter transfer windows that they are not averse to signing players from England’s top four divisions.

One of their most recent ventures south of the border saw the Hoops secure a four-and-a-half-year deal for midfielder Matt O’Riley from MK Dons worth a reported £1.5m in January.

After just one year with the League One club, O’Riley scored 10 goals and delivered eight assists in 54 appearances before taking the next step in his career.

After arriving at Parkhead, the 21-year-old – who has represented England and Denmark at youth international level – went on to make 20 appearances for the Hoops across all competitions. In that time, the winter recruit chipped in with four goals and two assists, all of which came in the Premiership.

While it’s still early days in his Celtic career, the midfielder ended the season as the fifth-highest rated player still in Ange Postecoglou’s squad according to WhoScored, with a performance rating of 7.2/10.

Now that the summer transfer window is around the corner, this could give Celtic the chance to potentially replicate a similar sort of coup that they pulled off with O’Riley, this time for another young player with connections to the Buckinghamshire club.

Celtic interested in Sorinola

Last month, it was mentioned in an article from Wales Online that Celtic are keeping tabs on former MK Dons full-back Matthew Sorinola.

After working his way through the club’s youth ranks and making 46 senior appearances for them, during which he scored two goals and supplied six assists, the defender joined Belgian outfit Royale Union Saint Gilloise last summer.

However, despite making 14 league appearances for his new club, the 21-year-old didn’t start a single top-flight game.

Last season saw the left-back rack up the joint-highest number of crosses (106) at his previous club in League One alongside O’Riley, highlighting the danger that he can pose on the pitch.

Described as a player who is “technically right up there with anyone” at his former club, according to former MK Dons manager Russell Martin, Sorinola could have the chance to put a rather disappointing season in Belgium behind him and start a new chapter at Celtic, just as his former team-mate did in January.

If the Hoops see an opportunity to negotiate a deal for the youngster this summer, this is something they should definitely pounce upon, as he could be an impressive and exciting long-term figure in Postecoglou’s squad for the foreseeable future.

In other news: Celtic eyeing swoop for £810k-rated “thing of beauty”, it could be bye-bye Soro

Spurs: Romano drops Conte update

Fabrizio Romano has dropped an update on the future of Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte.

What’s the talk?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Italian journalist revealed that, following Tottenham securing a top-four finish in the Premier League on the final day of the season, Antonio Conte is now set to meet with Daniel Levy and Fabio Paratici in order to discuss his future in north London in the coming days, with talks between the two parties expected to progress quickly.

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In his tweet, the transfer insider said: “One to mention: what incredible work by Antonio Conte. Tottenham are now back to Champions League thanks to their manager, masterpiece by Fabio Paratici to convince him 6 months ago. Antonio will meet with Spurs board in the coming days. Talks will progress soon.”

Supporters will love Romano’s update

Considering just how impressive Conte has been since his arrival at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last November, Romano’s update revealing that Levy and Paratici are set to meet with the 52-year-old in the next few days in order to discuss his future at the club is sure to be news supporters will love.

Indeed, taking over a team who were languishing down in ninth place in the Premier League standings, the Italian turned Tottenham’s form on its head, with the club picking up 56 points from a possible 84 over their last 28 league fixtures – results which saw the Lilywhites secure fourth place and, subsequently, Champions League football in 2022/23.

Furthermore, Tottenham’s Conte-inspired January signings of Dejan Kulusevski and Rodrigo Bentancur both proved to be huge hits, with the former scoring five goals and registering eight assists over his 18 top-flight appearances, while the latter provided four assists and created six big chances over his 17 league fixtures – returns that saw the duo rank as Spurs’ fourth and third-best performers respectively this season.

As such, the prospect of the 52-year-old having a summer transfer window and full pre-season in order to mould his squad into one fit for his extremely high standards will undoubtedly be an incredibly exciting thought for everyone involved with the north London club.

AND in other news: Conte can finally axe “shocking” £32m dud as Spurs eye “extraordinary” £43k-p/w target

Newcastle: Luke Edwards drops summer claim

A big Newcastle United claim has been made on their transfer plans for the summer…

What’s the talk?

Telegraph reporter Luke Edwards has revealed that the club will be looking to cash in on a number of players in the upcoming window.

Ahead of the Magpies’ 5-0 loss to Manchester City in the Premier League, Edwards Tweeted: “Think Howe will be looking very closely at players today. Man City is another barometer test Several came up short against Liverpool. They are all playing for futures in some respect, either to stay at club or to keep first team place. There’s going to be a summer clear out.”

After the match, he added: “Most of the starting XI will survive in terms of still being at the club next season but three or four of them will become back up not first choice. The main clear out is players who can’t get a game or haven’t even made squad. The money – or lack of it – they bring in is crucial.”

Supporters will be excited

The Toon faithful will surely be excited by these claims from Edwards as they suggest that the club are set for a busy summer of ins and outs.

They will be buzzing to learn that PIF and Howe are willing to axe the players who are not good enough for the team, whether that comes in the form of them being dropped from the XI or from them being sold or loaned out to another side.

Against Manchester City, Jamaal Lascelles, Emil Krafth, Martin Dubravka and Sean Longstaff all recorded SofaScore ratings of 6.3 or lower and were all at the club prior to the takeover from PIF. If they cannot prove that they are capable of putting in strong performances against the top teams in the division then they may be among the players axed in the upcoming window.

Fans will want to see underperforming individuals punished for their poor displays by being dropped or sold and that is why they will be buzzing and excited by Edwards’ claim. Not only will it mean that they will see duds move away from St. James’ Park but it will also mean that they have the prospect of new arrivals bringing fresh promise to the squad.

It is now down to Howe to decide on the players he wants to replace and who he wants to replace them with, as the Toon supporters look forward to the coming months with excitement.

AND in other news, Major blow: Howe hit with big NUFC injury setback that’ll leave supporters gutted…

Bigger than ever, with a dash of uncertainty

Will franchises retain the old core set of players or invest in a new group? How will the presence of uncapped players affect teams’ auction strategies?

Nagraj Gollapudi26-Jan-20188:38

Five big names who will grab attention – even if not big bids

The IPL has always been about making a deafening noise. This weekend, the two-day player auction in Bengaluru will raise the volume by a few more decibels, with more than 150 players going under the hammer.In the inaugural auction in 2008 the eight franchises spent USD 40 million to assemble their squads. A decade later the eight franchises will have spent close to USD 100 million to assemble squads. About USD 60 million will quite likely be spent over this weekend in addition to the USD 40 million the franchises have already spent on retaining 18 players.Naturally the headlines will capture the millions spent and the millionaires that emerge. Yet it is not just about teams flashing their purses and indulging. The challenge for them, at least the ones that have already retained two or three players, is to spend wisely while trying to reassemble as best as they can their core group of players from past seasons.Old core, new coreThe aim for every franchise is to get a core group of eight to ten players in place and build the rest of the squad around them. Barring Kings XI Punjab, Rajasthan Royals and to an extent Delhi Daredevils, the other franchises, through retentions, will have half that core in place. But with player contracts lasting for the next three years (2020), is it worth investing in emerging talent rather than falling back on old hands who might be in their twilight years?”Ideally you will say you want everybody,” the head of a successful franchise said. “But you will aim to get about 10-11 players from the old group because you trust this group as they have played a role in winning matches and titles in some franchises’ case.”A franchise analyst, who has sat at the auction table for a decade, said teams will need to balance the old and the new. “Some of the players will be from the old core and some you are looking forward. It does not really make sense for a franchise to invest in a young player who will be with you for three years and next auction somebody else will buy him.”‘Highest-paid player will be an overseas player’The best route for a franchise to retain one half of the core was through retentions. According to the rules a franchise can retain a maximum of five players with not more than two overseas players and three capped Indian players. The IPL reasoned that since it was an Indian domestic tournament the franchises should be allowed to retain as many Indian players as possible. Out of the 18 players the franchises have retained, 14 are Indian.However, some of the franchises felt the retention rule was restrictive. The franchise head said the retention rule could actually harm the Indian players as it could end up inflating the price of overseas players. “All the value players among the Indian lot have been retained,” the CEO said. “What the IPL actually has done is this is going to drive the prices of the overseas players up because more teams are likely to chase fewer quality players.”The franchise head reasoned why he felt overseas players stand to gain the most from the retention cap. “If you are allowed eight overseas players, it is fair to say then that the franchise would be interested in retaining at least three (from the previous squad) if the players are worthy. Now due to the retention cap, you can only get the third overseas player by participating in a bid. Now if other franchises, too, are interested in that player, his worth is going to obviously go through the roof. The highest paid player after the auction will be an overseas player. I have no doubt in my mind. It might be a case including a retained player.”BCCIThe right-to-match-card factorThe difference between this auction and the previous two big auctions – in 2011 and 2014 – is significant. In 2011 the right-to-match card did not exist. In 2014, teams were allowed to retain up to five players before the auction. Teams were allowed one right-to-match card in the auction if they retained between three and five players, two right-to-match cards if they retained one or two players, and three right-to-match cards if they did not retain anyone. This time, teams have only been allowed to retain a maximum of five players through a combination of retentions and right-to-match cards.”The plus point in 2014 was it did not matter who you used the RTM for – it could be on an Indian or overseas player. This time that has also changed,” the franchise head said.The franchise head pointed out that teams would only look to use the right-to-match card if they really wanted a particular player. “If somebody tries to play the game of driving the price up deliberately you forego the RTM and look for another option.”MS Dhoni, who has been retained by Chennai Super Kings, said the franchise would need to leave aside “emotions” at the auction table and figure out whether it would fit its auction strategy to retain a particular player. Dhoni did say the Super Kings still believe in having as much “local flavour” as possible in the squad, and that R Ashwin would be on top of their wishlist. Ashwin is among the 16 marquee players who will kick off the auction.Uncapped players in line for big bucksA new challenge awaits franchise think-tanks, with potentially severe impact on their auction strategies. For the first time in an auction, the IPL has brought forward the bidding of uncapped players. Until last season uncapped players would go up for bidding on the second day, allowing franchises to demarcate their budgets smoothly. But with the success of players who made their names while uncapped, such as Jasprit Bumrah, the Pandya brothers, Shreyas Iyer and Sarfaraz Khan, the IPL felt alternating the sets of capped and uncapped players would provide an equal balance.”It has never happened before, capped and uncapped alternating,” a franchise CEO said. “So people have to think a lot and it is going to affect people’s auction strategy majorly. The uncapped players will get some money and spoil the strategy. It was clear in the past where uncapped players came in later and you would keep some money for them. This time you need to balance it out.”The franchise analyst, though, has a different view. According to him bringing the uncapped players into the same pool as everyone else will benefit teams like Kolkata Knight Riders who have retained two overseas players and can retain three more Indian capped players through the right-to-match-card option.”If KKR retain their core group along with the RTMs they are likely to get nine players (they will bid for four of their players from the previous group in addition to the retentions). Then they just need two good overseas players, which they will look for from the uncapped category which could come even cheaper.”BCCIEntertainers need to prove performanceOne key factor the franchises are alert to are injuries to players. It does not matter then whether the player is a past great or an impact player. Two examples are Chris Lynn and Dwayne Bravo. Lynn, who has provided robust beginnings as an opener at Kolkata Knight Riders, and has one of the best strike rates in T20 cricket, missed the majority of the Big Bash League – he plays for Brisbane Heat – recovering from a calf injury.In the last year Lynn has also undergone a significant shoulder reconstruction and, according to one franchise official, has begun using his weaker left arm to throw since he cannot throw with his right arm. Lynn is currently desperate to prove his fitness and get back to playing for Australia in the T20 tri-series also involving England and New Zealand. But team owners, the franchise official said, will be sceptical about shelling out big money for Lynn.As for Bravo, he is playing the Big Bash League for Melbourne Renegades after a long recuperation form a hamstring reconstruction. Bravo is one of the best allrounders in the format along with countryman Kieron Pollard, but franchises are keeping an eye on the future. “When you are 34 and coming from such a serious injury teams will be careful not to push themselves too much since this is their livelihood,” the franchise head said.Then there is Chris Gayle, who has established himself in the IPL with breathtaking innings against all sorts of bowling, in front of full houses, without succumbing to pressure. However, Gayle’s age and fitness remain concerns despite his stature. Gayle can possibly still fill stadiums. But will a franchise buy him for just that fact? Not really. “The job of the player is to combine with the team to win matches,” the franchise head said. “The reason Gayle attracts crowds is because he entertains and then he wins matches.”The moment you stop performing, entertainment has no value.‘Raising a paddle does not require a genius’Ultimately the best franchises are those that make smart buys without splurging too much on their bids. In 2014, the last big auction, the purse available to franchises was INR 60 crore (USD 9.4 million approx). This year it is INR 80 crore (USD 12.6 million approx). So franchises have more money which could mean bigger buys and more spending.However, a team director lays out a simple formula for how franchises would look at spending their purse, including retentions. “You spend INR 76 crore on about 15 players, which includes five retentions. The 15 will have about eight Indian players and seven from overseas. The remaining money you can buy different players for cheap.”IPL auctions have never followed a set pattern. The purest measure, the T20 form of a player, has never been the main determining factor while retaining or picking a player. Instead personality and spur-of-the-moment calls by owners have been dominant factors in decision-making at the auction table. “It needs a lot of hard work to identify a player and convert him into smart buy,” the franchise head said. “There are many value players. That is where the skill is. Anyone can pay a top dollar. When you are sitting on a purse, raising a paddle does not require a genius. But you who you raise it for determines how smart you are.”

Wearing a watermelon against Dilley

A teenager bats against county and Test pros and lives to tell the tale

Luke Alfred02-Oct-2016In my final year at school I was chosen to open the batting for the Transvaal Under-19 side with a big-hearted kid called Craig Norris from a neighbouring school. We had one mid-week warm-up game against a Transvaal Invitation XI at Morningside before flying down to Stellenbosch for the 1982 Nuffield Week, a tournament for South African high schools.I can’t remember exactly what we thought but I’m sure we assumed that the Invitation XI would be made up of ringers and sundry club unemployables of good standard. We’d negotiate past the fixture with the minimum of fuss and be on that plane down to the Cape in a jiffy.In those days, club cricket in Johannesburg was properly competitive. Several Premier League clubs employed English professionals like Richard Lumb or Ashley Harvey-Walker, sometimes called Ashley Harvey-Wallbanger by the wits of the local scene. Every so often you would encounter a Transvaal player on a soft club weekend, or a Transvaal B player trying to play their way back into form or fitness.Schoolboy cricket was hard-fought but genteel. You played on good wickets in front of gently appreciative fathers and mothers sitting in deck chairs; you wore your blazer to tea, didn’t argue with the umpire, and didn’t appeal unless you had a good chance of getting it right. Mostly they were heavenly days.

When Dilley and Radford came off, Page replaced them. He was slippery, darting it off the seam, thudding a couple into Craig’s midriff and hurting him on the juicy inner part of the thigh. Alvin Kallicharran watched it good-naturedly from the slips

As a younger boy, clutching my precious 12th-birthday bat and standing timidly knock-kneed in my recently scrubbed , I remember listening to Lumb and Harvey-Walker in a daze of wonder. If you were lucky enough, your headmaster might select you to attend one of their precious net sessions on Friday afternoons at Balfour Park. I didn’t learn many cricket lessons at these sessions, spending the afternoons in a funk of thwarted desire. Lumb, I noticed, was kitted out with St Peter equipment, down to batting mitts that shaped over his hands like boxing gloves. Only boys with rich parents could afford St Peter gear. The rest of us had to be content with sanding the edges out of our Gray-Nicolls bat (“sand the grain,” urged my dad), lovingly applying linseed oil in the long months before summer with a (rag) from the kitchen.Sometimes Lumb spoke about Geoff Boycott – or “Geoffrey” – his Yorkshire opening partner. It was usually in tones of mild derision, but he always managed to find space in his tales for a sort of reluctant admiration. Then he laughed and shook his big head of hair and went back to the far less perplexing business of leading the fielding drills.Harvey-Walker was a different proposition. He was clipped, speaking in a language I identified as English but only partially understood. We must have seemed retarded because we never quite understood what he was saying but didn’t have the courage to ask him to repeat himself. Sessions were conducted in a busy miasma of mutual incomprehension as he clucked at us in his Derbyshire accent, and we did the best we could to act on what we thought he’d said. Net sessions didn’t run particularly smoothly.It was only when Hugh Page came into the schoolboys’ dressing room as Craig and I were padding up after we “lost” the toss against the Invitation XI that we began to realise what we were in for. “You might want to wear this,” Page said to me kindly as he passed me his helmet, an outsized maroon number with a protruding visor that stretched all the way to the Zimbabwe border. I had never worn a helmet before. Mostly we just wore our caps. If you came upon anyone really quick in schoolboy cricket, you reeled in your shot-making and waited for him to blow himself out. This helmet was large and ungainly, with fiddly straps. It was like batting inside a hollowed-out watermelon.Richard Lumb bats against Essex at Lord’s, 1980•PA PhotosCraig, who was better than me and had played more regularly at a higher level – he was playing in the Transvaal “Mean Machine” side a year or two later – probably took first ball, but before long I was facing Graham Dilley, then opening the bowling for England.Dilley hammered his front foot down like some storybook Gulliver but also had a back-foot drag, so the two sounds arrived fractionally before his deliveries cannoned into the splice of my much-used old County bat. I hopped about the crease like a scalded rabbit, and didn’t score anything in front of square for the first hour as I flicked and glided and nudged.Neal Radford opened the bowling with Dilley, and when he realised he couldn’t get me to nick off, proceeded to cheerfully bounce me. The forward short leg probably got in on the action but I was too busy trying to survive to listen very carefully. When Dilley and Radford came off, Page replaced them. He was slippery, darting it off the seam, thudding a couple into Craig’s midriff and hurting him on the juicy inner part of the thigh. Alvin Kallicharran watched it good-naturedly from the slips. The wickets would come, his indulgent smile seemed to be saying, it was just a matter of time.After a while their pity hardened. Radford bounced us some more. A Warwickshire professional whose name I’ve forgotten started to get lippy. We couldn’t have been far from a hundred partnership – Alfred 40-odd – when I spooned an inelegant mistimed drive to mid-off. The Warwickshire pro went off, swearing like a sewer.As I walked back to the pavilion, struggling with my helmet, our coach caught my eye. “That wasn’t so bad,” he said breezily, and I could see the relief in his eyes.

Rampant CSK spoil Vijay's homecoming

A heaving home crowd and suffocating pressure exerted through MS Dhoni’s captaincy were an all too familiar sight for a hometown boy in visitor’s clothing

Arun Venugopal in Chennai26-Apr-20154:27

O’Brien: Everything went right for CSK

To watch Chennai Super Kings go about their business is to watch a group of fearless acrobats. Or a bunch of polished, eagle-eyed accountants. Or probably both. To watch it through the eyes of M Vijay is to capture the images seen by an insider. Vijay and two of his colleagues – captain George Bailey and Wriddhiman Saha – have been Super Kings in the past. They know how things work here.Vijay, fielding at long on, is at the receiving end of some affection from the crowd. He is the local boy after all. In the 16th over, MS Dhoni pushes the ball towards him and turns around for the second, daring Vijay to run him out.Vijay can’t prevent Dhoni. Neither can he stop the crowd’s roar from going a higher gear, much louder than the cheers they had reserved for him. Vijay watches Dhoni take on Mitchell Johnson the next ball. The latter homes in on the ball quickly enough, but his wide throw isn’t gathered and Dhoni steals another double.Vijay has already seen Brendon McCullum and Dwayne Smith tear into Kings XI Punjab’s bowling. He has seen Johnson drop McCullum and Raina. Now he sees Dhoni and Raina, and later Ravindra Jadeja run his team ragged. But he hasn’t seen it all just yet.Walking out to bat, Vijay is greeted cheerfully by Super Kings’ designated goodwill ambassador Raina. Given their all-consuming intensity on the field, however, Vijay might have well felt like a gangster, who has shifted to the rival camp, locked in a one-on-many combat with his old mates. Dhoni, meanwhile, is trigger-happy with his field placements. He shuffles his men at least thrice in the first over.First, he banishes Raina from the second slip and puts him at covers. Then he has two men populating the short third-man region. By the time the sixth ball is bowled, Virender Sehwag has chipped one straight to mid off.Ashish Nehra comes on at the other end. Vijay drives him through covers for four. Nehra turns to the slower ball soon after. Vijay, misreading it, plays an uppish drive. Safe. Raina & Co. are running to Nehra and clapping away loudly. Nehra has a devilish grin, Vijay a sheepish one.Vijay manages to cream a four and a six the next over, but the tap will soon run dry. In the sixth over, Nehra strikes Shaun Marsh on the pads, and appeals. Nay, roars for lbw. The crowd roars with him. Given. Eleven men in yellow wrap one another in clumsily coordinated hugs.Jadeja comes on and has Bailey edging behind. Dhoni leaps in delight. Jadeja has already sprinted away, with his equally delirious team-mates in pursuit. Vijay can only watch.Meanwhile, Ashwin has pulled off a brilliant save in the slips, falling heavily to his left. Dhoni bangs his gloves in appreciation. Raina runs in from cover to slap Ashwin’s back. There is searing energy everywhere, the frightening pack-like mentality Vijay is all too familiar with.Faf du Plessis is hurling himself on the field when he is not manically chasing a boundary-bound ball. Even Nehra is putting in the dives. It feels like the entire team has hovered around the batsmen, making them gasp for breath, and seek an escape route.Vijay can only watch. In awe. In helplessness. There is the familiar offbeat field-placement that Dhoni has patented. In comes Raina at leg slip. Jadeja fires the ball on leg stump and David Miller clips it. Raina swoops down in an instant and grabs the ball just before it kisses the floor. More clumsy hugs. More high-decibel cheering in the crowd.Vijay has been watching too many of these celebrations. He decides to counterattack, and charges Ashwin. He strikes the ball to deep mid-wicket. But there lies in wait Super Kings’ crowd-pleaser Dwayne Bravo. He holds on to the catch, and jives to the crowd’s soundtrack. Vijay, who has pulled off a few jigs himself – on one occasion even dropping the ball while doing so – isn’t even watching; he is walking back to the dugout.Thereafter Kings XI embrace slow death, their opponents revelling in their cohesive assault. They even afford themselves some fun in the last few overs, with Ashwin and McCullum humouring the star-struck crowd. Before long, there is more hugging and backslapping in the Super Kings camp. And there is the one sight that unfailingly makes their fans go berserk: that of Dhoni calmly picking up his stump souvenir and walking away without a care in the world.

The Mumbai that made Tendulkar

As the cricketing world goes into a farewell frenzy, the city’s humble and school playgrounds that moulded Sachin Tendulkar into the cricketer he is today remain as simple and unpretentious as ever

Sidharth Monga and Amol Karhadkar13-Nov-2013They’re naming gymkhanas after him, they’re minting gold coins with his face on it, politicians are falling over each other to honour him, jealous administrators are trying to pull the rug out from under each other’s feet, but thankfully they have left alone the places that made Sachin Tendulkar, some of which were made by Tendulkar. More than any other cricketer of his era, Tendulkar has been about his fans. How nice it would have been had the politicians, businessmen and administrators running Indian cricket sent some of them to visit these places in the weeks leading up to his farewell.The unkempt maidans (fields), the unassuming school, the residential buildings, they all have something genuine to say about Tendulkar. Mumbai cricket even. Mumbai even. They don’t stand out or lose their simplicity just because Tendulkar was there. In the week in which Tendulkar will end his international career, it is business as usual in the places where Tendulkar has spent most of his life outside international cricket.Shivaji Park in Dadar has kids playing even at 11am because the Diwali holidays are on. Different clubs, teams and individuals own plots here, as on other maidans, where they hold their nets sessions, training and games. Some parts of the ground are bald, some have long, untended grass, and some are well taken care of. There is no boundary rope, and no white-paint markings anywhere, though. The young Tendulkar’s coach, Ramakant Achrekar, used to teach at the Kamat pitch. Not all the players here can point to it. It is not a patch of great interest.The Kamat pitch is close to the centre of the ground, leaning towards the northeast. Next to it, a serious match of cricket is on. The whites worn by the kids – no older than 15 – are immaculate, there is no sightscreen, the umpire moves to the other end at the end of the over, and the keeper wears a helmet. The field is pretty attacking, but there is no boundary here either. That’s the Mumbai way: you don’t think of hitting boundaries, you just bat. You have to run your runs, and are not allowed to hit in the air. “Hawet maaraycha nahee.” These kids have picked up a lot of mannerisms from televised cricket, but the coaches here are making sure they play proper cricket, at least in their formative years. The Bombay school of batsmanship lives on, at least for the time being. There is something peaceful about Shivaji Park despite its being bang in the middle of busy mid-town Dadar. You get to watch innocent cricket, sit in the shade of the many trees, eat (peanuts) and wonder what others whiling away their time here are up to. Some of them are fast asleep on the benches.Shardashram school teacher Ragini Desai flanked by a young Vinod Kambli and Sachin Tendulkar•ESPNcricinfo LtdAbout three kilometres to the southeast is Shardashram, Tendulkar’s school since 1984. Except you can’t spot it without having gone past it two or three times. The Shardashram residential society opposite the school is more prominent. The school doesn’t have a single photo of Tendulkar. The only signs that he – and others like Chandrakant Pandit, Pravin Amre, Vinod Kambli, Ajit Agarkar and more than 100 Ranji cricketers – studied here are the trophies in the cabinet in the principal’s office. The board outside is small, the front of the building is rented out to a bank and a gym, and its simple colour scheme makes it look every bit like a school meant for, as principal Krishna Shirsat puts it, the “lower-middle and middle class”.Shirsat used to teach maths and chemistry when Achrekar brought Tendulkar here in 1984. Cricket was the sole reason for his move from a school in his suburb, Bandra. Shardashram would even move its internal exams when they clashed with the cricket. And cricket was all Tendulkar did.”We used to win everything,” says Shirsat. “Harris Shield, Giles Shield, Vinoo Mankad, Matunga Shield… And because we won everything, there would be a first round, second round, third round, and so on. So as soon as the cricket season started in July, you would rarely see Sachin in school.” Shisrat would always be available to help Tendulkar, should he need help with maths and chemistry after school hours. When he was selected for Mumbai in 1988-89, the match clashed with a practical board exam, and Shirsat tried to use all his influence to make a special allowance for Tendulkar so he could take the exam after the match.About two years after Tendulkar enrolled, along came Ragini Desai, a physical training and Hindi teacher, a jovial woman with an expressive face and constantly moving eyes. Achrekar was Shardashram’s cricket coach, she was the team’s manager. She was present when Achrekar blasted Tendulkar and Kambli for batting on and on and putting on a 664-run partnership against a weak team. She knows of all the (a street food) escapades of the two friends, and she has a valuable notebook titled “Cricket”.When she went to matches with the team, Desai recorded brief scores in this notebook. She added clippings from newspapers next to the scores as the kids became more and more famous. She has preserved that notebook, and would love to show it to Tendulkar, but she hasn’t ever had the opportunity to meet him after he left school. She hasn’t tried to do so either. She would love to go to the Wankhede Stadium for Tendulkar’s last match, but she is not complaining about how the chances of getting a ticket are minimal.A view from the corridors of Shardashram Vidyamandir•ESPNcricinfo LtdThis school-playground duo is complemented by the tag team of Sahitya Sahawas and MIG cricket club, further north, in Bandra East. Along the way you pass two other influences on Tendulkar’s life: the Siddhivinayak temple where he sneaks in to pray late in the night, and St Michael’s church in Mahim, where his wife, Anjali, lights a candle for him every week.Sahitya Sahawas literally translates to “literature living together”. A building in Worli where Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri, Dilip Vengsarkar and Ajit Wadekar lived is named Sportsfield. Sahitya Sahawas is the Sportsfield of Marathi literature. It is where Tendulkar lived as a child. The Tendulkars have neither sold their house here nor rented it out. The guard – stern but not rude – says it will take an application to the secretary of the building a day in advance for him to even point to the window of the Tendulkars.A stone’s throw away, MIG is more open to intruders. A huge Tendulkar mural has come up only a couple of days ago on its main wall. So close to his childhood home, in a city with houses with no outdoor spaces to play sport in, MIG has been Tendulkar’s personal laboratory. Over the years – 25 to be precise – MIG has fulfilled his odd wishes, says Aashish Patnakar, the club’s secretary.Before going to Australia, Tendulkar would practise on half-pitches with rubber balls; he got that here. Before going to England he wanted to bat against wet balls on moist, grassy pitches; he got that here. When he was recuperating from a back injury, he wanted to jog here, but not during the day; they would open up for him at 4.30am. During the busy season when all grounds are occupied, Tendulkar can come to MIG and expect to get a proper facility during the lunch break, which is extended to one hour for his benefit.The Sahitya Sahawas colony, where Sachin Tendulkar lived as a child•ESPNcricinfo LtdIt is here that Tendulkar and his friend Atul Ranade used to do what technology has just started doing: simulate different bowling actions and release points on a bowling machine. Ranade was a master at doing impressions, and he would run in imitating different bowlers and help Tendulkar prepare for different actions. Even when Tendulkar moved to Bandra West – closer to the sea, posher – he would come here to practise.In Bandra West, Shirsat went to meet Tendulkar about five years ago at his residence in his new building, La Mer. “I told his PA I wanted to meet Sachin,” Shirsat says. “His PA said I would have to wait for 15 minutes. Fifteen minutes later, he came and told me Sachin was too busy. I got angry, and asked the PA to tell Sachin that Shirsat sir has come, does he want to meet him?”And Sachin came running like a four-five-year-old kid comes running to his parents. And then we spoke for 15 minutes with him looking down. Even in school he would look down after saying something “Tendulkar has now given up that apartment for a bungalow of his own, not too far away, in the same suburb. A police van outside the bungalow is a permanent presence nowadays. He is also a member of parliament, although the other day he drove himself far into the north of the city, to the suburb of Kandivli, for a Mumbai Cricket Association function. The bungalow now looks like a fortress.When he was desperate to move in here, he got the workers to do double shifts. The noise in the night obviously disturbed the neighbours. The neighbours were each given a handwritten letter from Tendulkar, asking for their co-operation with the Tendulkars who needed to shift there as soon as possible. No one complained after that.It’s back in south Mumbai that the boy became a man in the world of cricket, playing Kanga League matches in senior sides on wet pitches at Oval Maidan, Cross Maidan and Azad Maidan. His debut as an 11-year-old came for a side housed at Azad Maidan, which is equally well known for being a venue for strikes and agitations. Two days before Tendulkar starts his final Test, about three kilometres from here, fasts until death are being observed for 100% subsidy by the higher-secondary school committee, for railway admissions under notification 1/2007; and an indefinite protest – among others – for an 8% reservation for a particular community. Big photos of Mahatma Gandhi, Bhagat Singh and Che Guevara abound.Many such protests would have been on when Tendulkar went into the tent of John Bright Club in 1984. These maidans are all heritage sites, so no club can build permanent structures here. The notices outside clearly ban any kind of commercialisation in the form of posters, banners or advertisements on the fences of the maidans; cooking, hawking, peddling et cetera are outlawed; water connections can only be used by proper authorities for “in general, only cricketing activities”.Tendulkar’s next club, SF Sassanian, is like John Bright in betraying no signs that Tendulkar was first seen by the cricketing world while playing in the Kanga League for them. All it has for a dressing room is six ramshackle benches and a few cupboards.All this, Tendulkar’s world before he scored a century on first-class debut, hasn’t changed much over the years. Everywhere you go, Shivaji Park, Oval Maidan, Azad Maidan, Cross Maidan, you can imagine that curly-haired boy squeaking away – he was quiet only while teachers were around, every teacher of his says – from net to net, from to riding pillion on Achrekar’s scooter, having fun with not a bother in the world, eating , going to school once in a while.You can find a bit of Tendulkar all over Mumbai. And you don’t need plaques, commemorative coins or extravagant felicitations to establish that bond.

Azhar shows off his Test skills, again

The search for young batsmen who display the virtues of patience, concentration and lengthy attention spans has gathered steam, and Azhar Ali, so far in his two-year career, has shown signs that he is one such player

Kanishkaa Balachandran in Pallekele11-Jul-2012When Rahul Dravid announced his retirement from international cricket a few months ago, a pall of gloom descended over cricket. It wasn’t necessarily because of the departure of a great player. It was partly because of the uncertainty around whether the next generation have it in them to sustain Test cricket, because it is common opinion that the last generation of quality Test players is slowly slipping away. That they are being replaced by batsmen loaded with skill sets needed for Twenty20 cricket, but are rather lost in Tests. The search for young batsmen who display the virtues of patience, concentration and lengthy attention spans has gathered steam, and Azhar Ali, so far in his two-year career, has shown signs that he is one such player. He showed it at the SSC in this series and, again, at Pallekele, shrugging off his first-innings duck to get to a century in the second.Azhar knows a thing or two about occupying the crease and wearing the opposition bowlers down. His job is to hold one end up so that another player can adopt a more aggressive approach, especially if there is scoreboard pressure. When Azhar walked to the crease late on the third day, Pakistan had just begun their task of erasing a first-innings deficit of 111 and setting a target that would give them a chance to level the series.The momentum was firmly with Sri Lanka at the end of the third day. Pakistan had to practically double their first-innings effort to give themselves a realistic chance of fighting back. Adding to the pressure was an inconsistent middle order, a half-fit Adnan Akmal, and the seaming conditions witnessed over two completed days.Pakistan, perhaps, were fortunate that the harsh sun had evaporated whatever moisture there was on the surface, making batting considerably easier on day four. There was no exaggerated movement in the air or off the pitch to test the technique of either Mohammad Hafeez or Azhar. Both had to ensure they batted an entire session, to gain psychological points over the hosts. Azhar, true to requirements, cut out the extravagance, only playing balls within his reach.He was particularly impressive through the covers, pounding anything with width. Mahela Jayawardene maintained attacking fields for a while during the morning session, packing the slip cordon, but Azhar ensured he drove off the full face of the bat, exploiting the big gap between mid-off and cover, and also straight down the ground. He was judicious with deliveries that honed in on his off stump, preferring to leave them alone. His defence was solid too, and he found opportunities to pick up quick singles.There may have been a case to accelerate post lunch, but the quick departures of Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq forced Azhar to revert to a watchful approach. He had Asad Shafiq – the last recognised, fit batsman – for company, and the pair created some anxiety in the Sri Lanka camp with a stand of 100 for the fifth wicket. Prior to that, Azhar had shared stands of 94, 48 and 18. His was the prized wicket.When Azhar reached his century, shortly after tea, it was his third in Tests for the year – the most by any batsman. It should silence his detractors, who in the past have pointed to his poor conversion rate – he had 13 fifties and only three centuries coming into this game. Another impressive feature of his innings was his stamina, converting twos to threes each time he exploited a big gap. The bowlers needed a mistake on his part and he obliged on 136, chasing a wide Fernando delivery. It was a rare lapse in concentration, after hours of hard work.”Asad and I were aiming to play till the end of the day, so I was a bit disappointed to get out. I was disappointed to leave him alone,” Azhar said. “Hopefully he can string together a good partnership tomorrow morning.”Reflecting on his good form in 2012, Azhar said that the England series in the UAE, during which he scored a career-best 157, convinced him that he belonged at the highest level. “I’ve been playing well over the last few Test matches,” he said. “The England series especially gave me a lot of confidence. I am carrying on from there.”The batting conditions, he said, had eased. “On the first day, the first couple of hours were difficult for the batsmen. It was doing a lot for the seamers. It has settled down now and got a bit slower. But I feel that if a bowler puts in an effort, he can get something out of this pitch.”Though Azhar failed to bat out the day, he helped give Pakistan a fighting chance: their lead stands at 188 with two wickets in hand and Shafiq at the crease. He was confident his team had sufficient runs to create pressure. “We came into this Test with the intention to win and level the series. We have the runs on the board to put pressure on Sri Lanka. I don’t think we need to rely only on the seamers. Saeed Ajmal is a world-class spinner and I think he can change the game for us in one spell.”

Younis rues his moment of madness

The flawed reverse-sweep will not stop replaying in Younis Khan’s head for a while. It will haunt

Sidharth Monga at the P Sara Oval14-Jul-2009Eat your heart out KP. Fret not, Misbah, you have company. For years to come, Younis Khan’s reverse-sweep will be discussed, debated, derided, and blamed for the final collapse that cost Pakistan the match and the series. By the time you read this, shot would have played thousands of times on the loop, reminding everyone of what could have been.Consider the circumstance: Pakistan staged a comeback in true original style. After getting bowled out for 90 on the first morning, they bowled incredibly well to keep the deficit down to 150 following which the debutant Fawad Alam, opening for the first time in first-class cricket, scored a big century. Along with Fawad, Younis had added 200 for the second wicket to stretch the lead to 135. The bowling seemed at their mercy, a big target was on the cards, and the momentum was theirs.Then the rush of blood to the head. Perhaps over-confidence against the spinners. It was the first ball of a part-time spinner’s spell, and Younis inverted his stance. Out came a full toss outside leg, which he chased and connected with. On many occasions it would have lobbed behind the wicketkeeper but today it ricocheted off his right shoulder and went straight to the wicketkeeper, much like Kevin Pietersen’s sweep off Nathan Hauritz in Cardiff last week. Pakistan duly collapsed, losing nine wickets for 35.”Yes [it’s replaying in my head]. I am still thinking if I hadn’t played that shot, we would have been in a completely different situation,” Younis said after Pakistan squandered all the hard work over the last two days.It didn’t answer the questions. Was he not thinking when he played the shot? Was he thinking too much? Did he feel he needed to dominate? Did he not know his undercooked team was prone to collapsing? The truth perhaps is that when you are batting in full flow these thoughts don’t cross your mind. This was after all the same shot that he had so effectively employed repeatedly against the same team during his triple-hundred in Karachi earlier this year. Only against a much better spinner – Muttiah Muralitharan.Still, Younis cannot hide. This shot will not stop replaying in his head and, for a while, it will haunt him. It will also probably hide the other factors responsible for the defeat. What, for example, of the rest of the batsmen, experienced campaigners most of them? For the third time in a row, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik, Misbah-ul-Haq and Kamran Akmal were part of a collapse. That somehow will be forgotten when we look back at this Test two years from now.”I have been saying for the last four-five years that if one person commits a mistake, the others shouldn’t,” Younis said. “If we hadn’t added 200, then what would have happened? I don’t point fingers at anybody – I never blamed Salman Butt [for throwing his wicket away in Galle]. This is a team game.”Or what of Daryl Harper’s umpiring errors, which could make a case for hurrying in the era of umpire review systems? Or, for that matter, carrying reserve umpires on tours to replace a man in poor form. Harper didn’t have a special Test in Galle, and today two of his four lbw calls looked decidedly wrong, and two appeared to have enough doubt.It is also worth noting that the pitch did not have any monsters in it, which would mean that a set batsman didn’t need to take risks and could think of playing out the game. The other argument would be that the pressure had already been lifted and put on the opposition. Logic will also suggest that for once the other batsmen should have fought the momentum swing. Allowance will be made for the way Shoaib Malik got out – many stronger blows to the stumps than this flying kiss have failed to dislodge the bails. In the end, though, we will come back to the shot Younis played.We remember Sachin Tendulkar’s attempt at an inside-out shot off Saqlain Mushtaq at Chennai in 1999, not the last three wickets falling for four runs. Pietersen’s shot is still being talked about in greater length than England’s toothless bowling. It’s a cruel sport, and Younis will be reminded time and again of a task that he started so well but left unfinished because of a cute shot. One shot. No retake.

Fletcha Middleton, Nick Gubbins grind as Hampshire reply slowly to Warwickshire's 455

Liam Dawson continues prolific form with another five-wicket haul

ECB Reporters Network20-Apr-2024Liam Dawson claimed his 10th first-class five-wicket haul but Hampshire and Warwickshire’s Vitality County Championship clash slowed to a glacial pace on day two at Utilita Bowl.Left-arm spinner Dawson had five five-fors this time last year, but after a personal best season with 49 scalps, he now has double that number after chipping away at the Bears on a flat pitch.His five for 146 stopped Warwickshire at 455 before Fletcha Middleton and Nick Gubbins unhurriedly scored half-centuries in reply.The duo put on 124 together for the unbroken second wicket to get Hampshire to 140 for one – 315 behind the visitors – at the end of the day.Warwickshire resumed to find a pitch that had become slow and harder to score quickly on – the rate dropping from 3.5 runs per over on the first day to 3.1 on the second – but equally tricky to find breakthroughs with the ball.Nightwatchman Danny Briggs was a particular frustration for his former county as he stoutly kept Dan Mousley company for almost an hour, in a 46-run stand.His wicket, bowled about his legs by Dawson, wasn’t enough to give the hosts more than one bowling bonus point, while Warwickshire fell nine runs short of 400 in their quest for a fourth batting point.The switch back to Dukes balls hasn’t seen a marked difference to what was seen in the fixture with Lancashire, but Hampshire did get through five balls during their bowling effort as the ball regularly found itself out of shape. Warwickshire also needed to replace their original ball in the 40th over.Mousley was given a life on 32 when Ben Brown couldn’t stump him quickly enough, but Tom Prest’s leg-side line tactic had him bowled three balls later.Jacob Bethell got a start before chasing Mohammad Abbas outside off stump only to edge to Brown.Either side of lunch, Hasan Ali chipped Dawson to mid-on, before Michael Burgess returned from the interval to lose his middle stump to a nip-backer from James Fuller.Dawson ended the innings when Olly Hannon-Dalby advanced, swung and was castled. Dawson has already bowled 535 balls this season, only Simon Harmer has delivered more – and the Essex man has bowled in all three fixtures.Hannon-Dalby was rhythmic, accurate and impossible for Ali Orr to get in against. Orr managed one boundary but otherwise was pinned down against the tall seamer for 22 balls before he was lbw to a ball which nipped back.Gubbins almost followed Orr straight back to the Rod Bransgrove Pavilion but was spilled at second slip, before he and Middleton found a defensive groove.It was rarely an attractive watch from either batter but none of the seven bowlers used by Warwickshire could find a chink in their defences.Middleton was the fastest to fifty in 129 balls – the fifth time he had reached the milestone in the Championship since making his debut at the start of last season.Gubbins followed him there for the 57th time in his first-class career in 104 balls as he and Middleton serenely reached close in the spring sun. Gubbins ended the day on 67 and Middleton on 61.

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