Sunderland eye Wimbledon ace Rudoni

The Northern Echo journalist Scott Wilson has revealed some significant Sunderland transfer news on Jack Rudoni.

The Lowdown: Bid made

It has been reported that the Stadium of Light outfit have already made a bid for Rudoni, but they face competition from a number of other clubs in the Championship for his signature.

Dubbed an ‘excellent‘ player by former AFC Wimbledon manager Mark Robinson, the midfielder enjoyed a standout individual season with the south London club, as he was voted their Player of the Year (POTY).

The Latest: Luton interest

Taking to Twitter in sharing a corresponding report for The Northern Echo, Wilson has revealed that Sunderland are now facing ‘new competition’ from Luton Town to sign Rudoni, adding that it ‘increasingly looks like’ the Black Cats will need to raise their offer to £1m if they want to bring him to Wearside.

The reporter tweeted: “#SAFC facing new competition from Luton Town for Jack Rudoni. They haven’t wanted to go to £1m for the AFC Wimbledon midfielder – but it increasingly looks like they’ll have to if they’re going to get him…”

The Verdict: Get it done

Of course, Sunderland will not want to enter a bidding war with Luton or any other Championship club for Rudoni, but if they can get him for £1m or less, it would represent great business.

The Englishman is only 21 years of age, so his market value is likely to increase over the next few years, leaving the summer as the perfect opportunity to snap him up from AFC Wimbledon after their relegation to League Two.

His more than any Sunderland midfielder managed last term, which suggest that he would instantly improve Alex Neil’s side in the middle of the park.

Celtic: Jullien ready to stay put

Celtic defender Christopher Jullien is ready to stay and fight for a place in the team, according to a report from the Daily Record. 

The lowdown: Setback after setback

The Frenchman has endured a torrid spell with injury after initially missing 13 matches with a back problem during the 2020/21 campaign.

Upon making a return, the towering centre-back was then forced off against Dundee United at the end of 2020, clattering his knee off the post as he cleared a Marc McNulty shot off the line in a 3-0 victory. He was subsequently absent for 409 days as a result before returning to face Raith Rovers in February of this year.

That appearance was the solitary outing for the 29-year-old last term, and having been deemed surplus to requirements in some quarters this summer, it now appears as though the Frenchman may be willing to stay put…

The latest: Not going anywhere

As per the Daily Record, Jullien is believed to be ‘ready to stay and fight’ for a place in Ange Postecoglou’s plans next season.

It’s claimed that the Hoops have ‘received no concrete bids’ for the former France under-20 gem despite being willing to ‘listen to offers’ from clubs.

The report added that Jullien – who was branded a ‘man mountain’ by ex-Scotland defender Alan Hutton following a formidable performance containing 15 clearances in the 1-1 draw against FC Copenhagen in 2020 – has already ‘told’ Postecoglou of a willingness to remain as part of the Bhoys’ squad.

The verdict: Good news

Despite the wretched recent spell of injuries and the consequent lack of game-time, keeping a player of the £4.95m-valued Frenchman’s prowess within the Lennoxtown camp can certainly prove to be positive.

Prior to the crippling setbacks which have ultimately seen him fail to attract any attention in the market, Jullien had been a regular feature for Celtic, making 47 appearances during 2019/20 and scoring seven times that season to highlight an attacking aerial threat to accompany his defensive skills.

As the Hoops prepare to embark on another strenuous campaign in the pursuit of yet more silverware, with the addition of midweek Champions League action to cram in, keeping the 6 foot 5 Jullien at Parkhead could prove to be an unintended masterstroke.

In other news, Celtic are in ‘advanced talks’ to sign one player. Find out who it is here.

Aston Villa: Gerrard wants Glen Kamara

Aston Villa boss Steven Gerrard could reportedly be eyeing a reunion with Rangers midfielder Glen Kamara, according to journalist Dean Jones.

What’s the word?

Writing in his GIVEMESPORT club guide, the trusted insider hinted that a move to Villa Park could well be on the cards for the Finland international, with a deal ‘possibly’ in the works for a player who worked under the Englishman at Ibrox.

The Midlands side only recently secured the signing of another Kamara – Marseille’s young Frenchman, Boubacar – although it would seem another midfield addition could be in the pipeline, with Jones insisting that he can ‘not totally rule out’ a further acquisition to slot in alongside the recent arrival.

Although Brighton’s Yves Bissouma has been mentioned as one possible incoming, Gerrard’s relationship with the Gers man could well work in his favour, with the Liverpool legend having helped sign the 42-cap gem for just £50k from Dundee back in 2019.

Gerrard’s monster

After a slightly underwhelming end to the 2021-22 campaign, with Villa finishing in just 14th place, the club have already acted quickly to try and improve upon that position, adding three summer signings already despite the transfer window having not yet officially opened.

That speedy business has potentially allowed some breathing room for Gerrard and co to plot their next steps carefully, with the arrival of Kamara from Glasgow potentially a wise move to try and replicate the manager’s success north of the border, prior to his return to the Premier League back in November.

Not just used to the 41-year-old’s style of play, the £30k-per-week maestro is also a player that the Villa boss is clearly fond of, having previously dubbed him a “monster” for his instant impact at the Scottish Premiership outfit.

Also dubbed a “huge talent” by journalist Graeme Bailey, the 26-year-old has gone from strength to strength for his current side, the £5.4m-rated ace notably starting in the Europa League final defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt.

The midfielder had helped fire Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s men to that stunning showpiece affair, scoring in the second-leg semi-final victory over RB Leipzig as the Scottish side pulled off yet another shock in the competition.

The all-action star seemingly has the quality to affect the game at both ends of the pitch, netting three times and registering three assists in his 31 league outings in the 2021/22 campaign, while also averaging a solid 0.7 interceptions and one tackle per game, as well as enjoying an impressive 91% pass accuracy rate.

With a shortage of options in central midfield at present at Villa Park, particularly with Morgan Sanson potentially set to depart, the arrival of the all-round ace would no doubt provide adequate cover and increase competition for places, with his former boss in need of his monster-like presence to ruffle a few feathers.

It just remains to be seen if NSWE will back their man even further…

IN other news, Gerrard can land AVFC’s next Southgate with move for “outstanding” £120k-p/w warrior

Everton hit by Fabian Delph injury blow

Everton will host Brentford at Goodison Park this afternoon in their penultimate Premier League home match of the season, and although the Toffees’ home record is much better than when they play away, there has been some disappointing injury news which could be a huge blow for Frank Lampard.

What’s the latest?

The Toffees manager took to his pre-match press conference to deliver the bad news that Fabian Delph will not be available for selection after sustaining an injury.

Lampard told the press (via Liverpool Echo): “Fabian won’t be fit for the game against Brentford, we’ll see for the rest of the season. It’s a small injury, a muscle injury, but it’s an injury and enough to keep him out of this game.”

Lampard will be gutted

There is no doubt that Delph has made a huge difference since he returned to the team following a long-term injury which kept him out of the side for most of the season, and his influence will surely be sorely missed in midfield when you consider how his impact aligns with the team’s recent results.

After suffering a hamstring injury in January and missing 12 games for Everton, the 32-year-old returned to action just in time to make a crucial impact for his team in the middle of the park last month, and Lampard’s selection of the experienced midfielder seriously paid off.

In their last six games, Everton have won three, drawn two and lost one, with Delph featuring in every match apart from the one they lost, illustrating that he has become a real leader and a hugely positive influence for the team since his return.

That being said, it will be interesting to see how the Toffees manage without him against Brentford today. However, they have had a potential boost in midfield with Donny Van de Beek available for selection either today or against Crystal Palace on Thursday.

If Everton can take all three points from their clash on Merseyside this afternoon, it will take a lot of pressure off them in their final two games, especially if Tottenham can take all three points against the Toffees’ relegation rivals Burnley in the early kick-off. However, a win for Lampard’s men may be harder to come by without Delph to call upon, which will leave the 43-year-old gutted.

AND in other news: Huge boost as Lampard drops Everton transfer update that’ll delight supporters

Why aren't T20 teams scoring bigger more often?

If more sides approached T20 less like traditional cricket forms and embraced all-out hitting without worrying about wickets, they would end up consistently pushing the envelope

Jarrod Kimber16-May-2019Andre Russell’s left foot pointing to midwicket, his right knee bent, and his arms swinging through a ball that’s about to be called a wide is not what you think of as a traditional cricket shot. Test batting has actually slowed down in recent years, meaning T20 cricket has never been less like it. The runs-per-over figure in the last three years for Tests is 3.2, for ODIs 5.3, and in all T20s it is 8.2.T20 has lit a fire under attacking batting, and for someone who believes Test batting is proper cricket, it’s hard to look at T20 hitting and not think it’s crazy. We’ve not only perfected the cow-corner hoick but the inside-out hockey-slap, the back-of-point slice, and a host of other shots where someone will lose their Adam’s apple. Players now understand how to hit the ball hard.But the actual gains in run rates across formats are pretty low. Players aren’t adding an extra run a year in T20, and ODI cricket hasn’t become as much like T20 as some would think. The highest run rate in ODIs over a year was in 2015 – 5.5 per over; and that included extras. Viv Richards scored at 5.4. In ODIs last year the economy rate was 5.3 (mocking the whole “300 is par” notion), though it had risen from 5.12 in 2009. Even if you look at the lowest yearly run rate in the last decade, 5.05 in 2012, against the highest, in 2015, it’s only an 8% rise.ALSO READ: Types of T20 teams: the six-hitting sideThe run rate in T20 has grown slightly more quickly. In the last decade, the lowest run rate was 7.48, in 2013; last year it was 8.4, which is an 11% rise. Unlike a good T20 innings, it has been steady rather than spectacular.And that is because T20 cricket is still anchored in what we might call “normal cricket”. In 2018 the T20 batting average for all batsmen was, at 25.06, the highest it has ever been, suggesting that batsmen are putting more value on their wickets now than in previous years. They might hit a lot of sixes, and they might get quicker with their scoring, but they still play T20 like normal cricket, just with more urgency. It has not truly become a sport in its own right just yet, although it is well on its way.In computing and science, people talk about theoretical limits. In nature, the theoretical limit to how fast something can travel appears to be the speed of light (about 300,000km/s). The fastest observed human is Usain Bolt, clocked at 44.72kph. So there appear to be natural limits depending on mass, physiology and other factors. For T20 cricket we have a theoretical limit of how fast batsmen could score if they did not worry about losing wickets – the scoring rate off free hits.Since 2008, the scoring rate off free hits stands at 12.54 (runs per over); so batsmen can’t score at much faster than two runs a ball. As T20 currently stands, 12.5 is our theoretical limit, which translates to an innings score of 250.At the moment the rise of the run rate off normal deliveries is fairly in sync with the run rate off free hits. A couple of years one has increased while the other has fallen – or vice versa – but overall they are rising fairly equally. (The free-hit run rate has swung more but that is mainly because there are so few free hits every year, amounting to a fraction of a percentage point of all runs scored.)

Of course, batsmen cannot score at 12.5 for sustained periods because of the finite resource of ten wickets. Additionally, as so often happens in limited-overs cricket, there will be playing-condition changes that make that number redundant. So as long as five bowlers are needed, four fielders need to be inside the circle, there are six overs of Powerplay, and turf wickets continue to be used, it’s hard to see players crossing the 12.5 mark. If they keep improving at the current rate – in the last decade the scoring rate in T20 has gone from 7.57 to 8.4 – it will take them over 30 years to make it.But batsmen are still playing a game that is rooted in conventional cricket-think. If and when that changes, run rates could take a jump.***When I speak to T20 players and coaches, many of them point to batting averages or overall runs tallies. Batsmen still don’t want to get out, and coaches place a high value on consistency over explosiveness. T20 has changed that equation slightly, but it has not eradicated that thinking.In 2018 the average of all batsmen in T20 was the highest since the birth of the format. And this year is currently the second highest. Batsmen are batting longer, meaning more players get set – so if you think about it from a conventional standpoint, it would make sense that they score quicker than newer batsmen.ALSO READ: How batsmen began to go boom all the timeT20 batting line-ups still rely on the top order to a ridiculous degree: 496 players opened the batting last year in T20 in 717 matches (that is for both spots). At Nos. 5 and 6, over 500 players batted . Which tells you that we chop and change other batting positions because we struggle to work out what success is in those positions, while for openers a steady-as-you-go start is enough to get you multiple opportunities in that position.And that is because openers seem at first glance to be the most successful batsmen in T20. So they should be, given they have the field up for almost all of their innings, and even with mediocre years, can find themselves towards the top of the run tally or average list. Opening is the quickest-scoring batting position in T20, so even slower-scoring openers often have better strike rates than Nos. 4 and 5.If you throw in the No. 3, who gets some of the benefits that apply to openers, the first three batsmen face 57.6 balls an innings, or 48%. That does not leave the rest much of a chance to get started. Openers could go far quicker, but teams still fear the “lose three wickets in the Powerplay and lose 65% of the match” rule.It’s something teams still hold on to. A team like Adelaide Strikers seem to have taken this so much to heart that they don’t attack much in the Powerplay at all; instead they start attacking once the field goes out. This approach is steeped in traditional cricket thinking. Many of the losses that that 65% rule refers to are because teams slow down after they lose the three wickets and consolidate, and not just because they lost three early wickets. In part that is because they have stacked their batting at the top, but mostly because that is how batting always has been in cricket: your top order makes most of the runs, and if they don’t, you have to rebuild to set a new base.But what if the base is wrong to begin with?What if T20 batting isn’t about big contributions from the top but a series of contributions all the way through? In 2018, No. 8s on average faced 4.07 balls per match, and only appeared in 58% of possible innings. So that means they hardly get in, and when they do, it’s not for long.

The top six currently face 100 balls, or 83%. And often they do that by conserving their wickets and then trying to attack towards the end.To score a lot quicker, you could select a team of players who average 20 at 1.6 runs a ball; a top eight, perhaps. It takes 12.5 balls to make 20 at that speed, and if you had eight players who had the ability or temperament to do it, you would have 160 runs from 100 balls with 20 balls left in the innings. There would be two extra batsmen to consume the 100 balls, but they would be scoring what teams score in a match now, with 20 balls left. That comes down to ability, but you’d also need all-round skills, to not weaken the bowling. It so happens that a lot of the players who smash it loads do have bowling ability, like Russell, Sunil Narine, Colin de Grandhomme and Corey Anderson.Some of this goes back to traffic management. If you build a highway, the worst thing that can happen is, the highway is seen as the only option. You want to build a highway and still have a large proportion of people use other roads. Otherwise everyone will clog up the highway. If you rely too heavily on your top three and they bat slow for too long, they clog up the innings. If you have a multitude of scoring options, and everyone is trying to score as quickly as they can, the chances of traffic jams are limited.If your top three face 60 balls every game, unless they are incredibly fast scorers, you’re limiting what your other talent can do and allowing the opposition to stack their bowling in match-ups. If you have a collection of players who all can face 12-15 balls per game and go for it, everyone is a threat, and you’ll have a team with many diverse strengths and weaknesses.Even the king of T20 batting, Chris Gayle, gets himself set to ensure he scores big more often, knowing that his power can catch him up and then some. Gayle is one of 26 batsmen who have faced ten or more free-hit balls, and he is the only one with a strike rate of above 300 from them. So if even Gayle is getting set, getting a good average and ensuring his run total is high, what of mortal men? The average of all openers last year was 27 and they struck at 134. Not that long ago, batsmen who averaged 30 and had a strike rate of 130 were in demand, but openers have got so good in that position that they do score 30 at 130 as default.ALSO SEE: Russellmania hits T20This system, of players scoring faster and doing so deep into the batting order, might feel riskier at first, but it could lead to more consistent high scoring.Now while these big data trends often tell us a lot, they can be tricky. In the last three years, among all grounds used more than ten times, Trent Bridge has the highest run rate, 8.82 (which is a strike rate of 147). If you are playing at Colombo Cricket Club Ground or Multan Cricket Stadium, the runs per over are about 6.84. So a strike rate of 130 at Trent Bridge is not sensational, but in Colombo or Multan, it’s great.Sunil Narine successfully brought the pinch-hitter concept to T20s•BCCIFactors like this, not to mention collapses, weather, bowling match-ups, all affect what batsmen do. Also, there are teams like Sunrisers Hyderabad, Perth Scorchers and Chennai Super Kings, who have preferred to achieve consistent totals rather than score as many as they can, and that has helped them win titles.Even as T20 hitting has improved, cricket still finds a way, through bowlers or conditions, to make people go back to what they know.***There are ways – not exactly new ones – of extending your batting line-up and making each batsman more efficient.The pinch-hitter has been around in cricket for a long time. It was perhaps 1992 when the idea took a strong hold in ODIs, and pinch-hitters have been used occasionally since then. Narine has brought the trend back in T20 cricket. As an opener he averages 18 and strikes at 160. You’re not losing that much if you throw someone like him up: he won’t face many, if any, balls batting at Nos. 9 through 11, and he’s less likely to play for his average.There are plenty of players like Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, David Willey and Rashid Khan who have the game to be thrown up the order. If they will only face five or fewer balls anyway, targeting the Powerplay with a relatively unimportant wicket might work. You could also make the argument that batting at the death is harder, with the field out, a soft ball, and death-bowling specialists operating. You might want smarter batsmen there, whereas at the top, hitting is at its most simple. A score of ten off four balls at the top is worth more than ten off four at the death, as death over run rates are higher.But it is in the middle order that things get trickier.***Players who find themselves in the middle order are usually professional batsmen. They are trained a certain way. There are coaches who still get upset when a player hits a boundary and tries to hit another the next ball. Batsmen in the top six want to bat long and sensible, even if the definition of that has changed for T20.One of the most notable exceptions is Russell. He faces far fewer balls than a normal middle-order player – only 13 – and can bat anywhere from three to seven. Russell in the last two years, since he came back from his drugs ban, has averaged 31, but at a strike rate of 182.Najibullah Zadran strikes at 118 in T20 and 224 in T10, which is an indicator of how much further hitting can go•AFPRussell has been slowly improving over the years, averaging more. His enforced break from the game seems to have helped his batting. But unlike most middle-order players, his batting is not the sole reason he is in the team. He could afford to risk it all and only face a few balls a game because – like Narine – his bowling is strong. Now if his knees keep getting worse, he has more than enough of a reputation as a batsman to continue on the strength of that skill alone – but the ability to bat the way he does came from the original freedom his bowling allowed.Though there are few batsmen with Russell’s skills, he is not alone. Players like Anderson, Ben Cutting and de Grandhomme can score at inhuman levels. One major difference is that often these guys either aren’t bowling at all or they are the fifth or even sixth bowlers. Russell is a genuine front-line bowler. He can start batting in sixth gear without fear; most players cannot, either physically or mentally.Now imagine you had the ability to bat like Russell or Narine, but no second skill at all. There aren’t many teams who take punts on players who average around 20. Most coaches don’t see it as a passable average, no matter what the strike rate. Unless you are batting at No. 7 and giving something else in the field. So if you had any batting ability, pushing your average up while limiting your strike rate would be a fairly safe bet.These kinds of players need to be unlocked in order for batting to be spread more throughout the innings and for players to cut loose with fewer fears.***You can’t fault the players for taking the position that will help their career. But free hits have shown what is possible, and so has the T10 league. In the last T10, 21 players scored over 100 runs apiece, of whom 15 scored at over two runs a ball, and not one scored at slower than 1.5 per ball. What was interesting was the jump in strike rates for some players between T20 and T10.Andre Fletcher is the second highest scorer in CPL history. He can smoke fast bowling, including doing things like score 20 runs in four balls against one of T20’s most parsimonious bowlers, Mohammad Irfan. But after the Powerplay his strike rate often slows down 30 points or more. In the T10, without a natural slow-down period, and without the worry of having to bat for a long time, he struck at 214. In the last two years his T20 strike rate is 122; that’s some leap between the two.And it wasn’t just him. There are so many players, like Nicholas Pooran, Najibullah Zadran and Fletcher, who have so much more to give. So while there aren’t many Russells out there, the T10 and free hits have shown us that many batsmen can score at scary levels.

There were only four players of the 21 who made over 100 runs in the last T10 series whose strike rates didn’t rise by 40 or more: Alex Hales – whose strike rate in the last two years is 146 outside of Trent Bridge and 209 at his batting-friendly home; Cameron Delport, who struggled to get going in the T10 tournament; Hazratullah Zazai, who has been striking at 189 recently, so it’s hard to improve on that too much unless you are Russell (who hit three fours and 17 sixes in the T10); and Narine, who has been at 153 in T20, and went up to 187.So we can assume that Narine is batting near his natural scoring limit, and it seems like most players are not. It’s not a surprise to learn that despite getting into pretty much any side as first or second bowler, he has also spent years working on his striking – at first, hitting sixes over fours as a tail-end cameo man; and then, after Aaron Finch promoted him to try and upset frugal left-arm spinner Michael Beer, he became a semi-frequent short-innings opener.But this is a low sample size, and for all we know, the wickets were made for batting. Also, I talked to one bowler in the T10 who admitted it was hard to get up for only bowling 12 balls a day knowing you were about to be destroyed. However, like the free hits, it shows what is possible when you embrace the hitting and stop worrying about wickets.ALSO READ: Why hitting is more optimal than batting in T20Russell was an aggressive player from the start, and with two first-class hundreds in 17 games, he is a decent batting talent to begin with. But what he did was use all those elements to become the biggest force he could be with the bat. And still, his strike rate jumped 89 in the T10.It is not simple for a team owner to buy all the Andre Russells in the world, because there’s only one. And even cheaper versions, like de Grandhomme, Anderson, Willey and Chris Morris, are still quite pricey.But what free hits, T10, Narine and Russell have shown is that T20 can get a lot quicker. It’s just a question of when it will happen.If you are a specialist batsman, it’s not that easy to make a call when it is your livelihood on the line. T20 tournaments are short. If you tried going all out for one series and ended with an average of 16, would it matter that your strike rate was 180? While individual players will try it, how long before batsmen as a whole go for this approach? It might even be dictated by the people who choose teams and not the batsmen themselves.There is definitely a limit to T20 scoring at the moment, and considering that in no year have we topped the nine-runs-an-over mark, that seems to be it. Not long ago, it was eight runs an over. These limits are not natural, though; they’re man-made. As more specialists come into T20, players try new methods and continue to work out what is actually possible, the sky may not be the limit, but 12.5 will not stay as the theoretical one.

'It is a challenge but I will rise to it' – Botham unveiled as Durham chairman

Jon Culley at Chester-le-Street27-Feb-2017If one thing seemed safe to predict during the days when Ian Botham was thrilling the crowds on the field and revelling in his status as cricket’s first superstar off it, it was that he would never become part of the cricket establishment.This was the man capable of producing one of the greatest allround performances in the history of Test cricket – a century and 13 wickets against India in Mumbai in 1980 – on the back of a 48-hour bender, and who once fell under the spell of a publicist who promised to make him a Hollywood legend.He relished fame and adulation and spent large parts of his career pushing the limits of what he could get away with, with no regard for the blood pressure of those who paid his salary. The suits, the blazers, the committee men – they were there to be tested and taunted, so far as Botham saw things.Yet there it was on the card in front of him, in black and white, as he sat alongside David Harker, the Durham chief executive, and Simon Henig, the leader of Durham County Council, for his first press conference in his new role: ‘Sir Ian T Botham OBE, Durham CCC, Chairman.’First a knight of the realm, now the chairman of a county cricket club. Whoever would have thought he would one day become one of them?”No, never,” he said, when it was put to him that ‘Ian Botham, committee man’ might not have been a description he foresaw for himself. “I was fighting with them for most of my life.”As it happens, he didn’t wear a blazer – preferring a relaxed, informal look, teaming a pinstriped jacket with casual trousers and a pale blue shirt that was open at the neck. No tie. He had been picked up on that already, he said, although not by a fellow committee member but by Ben Stokes, Durham’s England allrounder, who was merely poking fun.This would be the natural dynamic of Botham’s relationship with the Durham team, one imagines. All jokes and banter. Which is why his new identity still feels a little unreal.”It is a totally new world for me,” Botham said. “I’ve always been on the other side and now I’m in the engine room.”There’s a lot of people who know me, who are surprised that I am sat here. But the ones that really know me knew I’d have a go.

Anyone who knows me knows I don’t go into anything half-cock. We still have a first-class club here and one that will prosper. And I’m in it for the long term

“Why not? I’ve been in the game all my life. I’ve seen it from a player’s point of view. I think I can give a fair bit back, maybe open some doors.”The motivation, he says, is the challenge. And it is some challenge. Durham, who finished fourth in Division One of the County Championship last season, begin this season at the bottom of Division Two, having been relegated and docked 48 points in return for a financial bail-out from the England and Wales Cricket Board that pulled them back from the brink of bankruptcy.The ECB’s £3.8 million rescue deal, combined with the conversion into shares in the club of the £3.7 million they owed Durham County Council, has cleared a £7.5 million debt and allowed Durham to begin the 2017 at least still in business, even if their competitiveness is somewhat stilted. They will start with a points deficit in the other competitions too.Botham will not be railing against any injustice, however. “The points deduction was unnecessary, I felt, but there is no point in fighting it.”At the end of the day we are still a first-class county and we have got light at the end of our tunnel, which not all clubs can say. We’ll be fine. The way I look at it is ‘two wins and we’re back in the black.'”The idea that Botham might become involved was first discussed last summer, after it was announced that his predecessor as chairman, Clive Leach, would be stepping down. Botham lives a half-hour drive away, near Scotch Corner on the A1, and retains an affection for the club, for whom he played in 1992 – their debut season as a first-class county and the last of his career. The ECB themselves encouraged the idea, aware of the impact their sanctions would make, feeling that someone of Botham’s standing and connection with the county would help them regenerate.Ironically, it was a meeting with Rod Bransgrove, the Hampshire chairman who is said to have lobbied for Durham to go down, that convinced Botham to commit to the challenge.They met, Botham said, in the Mayfair club, Alfred’s in Davies Street, of which he is a member, sharing a bottle of red wine while they discussed property investments.”I often have a drink with Rod, who is one of my closest friends and someone I’ve always been able to confide in,” he said. “I said ‘look, don’t fall off your chair, but I’m thinking about [being Durham chairman]. What do you reckon?”He was magnificent. He’s been through a similar situation [with a debt-ridden county] at the Ageas Bowl and come through it. He took me through the pros and cons and the ups and downs and at the end he said ‘you can do it.'”I said ‘right, I’ll give it a go’ and I’m glad I did. It is a challenge but I’m going to rise to it.”There will be some logistical problems. Botham’s television commitments are in place for the next 18 months and more, which will limit the number of committee meetings he can attend at the Riverside.Yet he denies he will be merely a figurehead. “It will be hard at first and I don’t know how many meetings I will be able to attend but, with technology as it is now, I can take part in a conference call from anywhere in the world.”My job is to bring in new faces in sponsorship, open doors that perhaps couldn’t have been opened.”Financially, we can’t bury the bones and hope they’ll go away, which is perhaps what has happened in the past. What we will do is be completely realistic.”Without the help of the council and the ECB we wouldn’t be here today. We’re not burying our heads. We will get ourselves back into the black sooner rather than later. We are in a position to do that. If you look at the bigger picture, we’re in the same boat – probably a better boat – than most of the other counties.”Anyone who knows me knows I don’t go into anything half-cock. We still have a first-class club here and one that will prosper. And I’m in it for the long term.”

Dominant Afghanistan complete easy win

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Jan-2016Usman Ghani’s tough stay was ended when he was bowled in the seventh over for 5•Chris WhiteoakGraeme Cremer provided the breakthrough with a skiddy delivery but Zimbabwe did not have much to smile about thereafter•Chris WhiteoakShahzad blitzed the bowling from the other end, and frequently cleared the boundary to bring up his ton•Chris WhiteoakHis 67-ball 118 was the highest individual score from an Associate nation and the fourth overall. Afghanistan compiled a mammoth 215•Chris WhiteoakZimbabwe were never really in the hunt for a series-levelling win after losing early wickets•Chris WhiteoakThey had quickly slumped to 34 for 5 in the sixth over, and the match was virtually decided•Chris WhiteoakHamilton Masakadza provided resistance with a confident 63, but it was a task too far as Zimbabwe folded for 134•Chris WhiteoakAfghanistan completed a 81-run win and also took the series 2-0, their second T20 series win against Zimbabwe in under three months•Chris Whiteoak

Billy Bowden takes his time

Plays of the Day from the IPL match between Rajasthan Royals and Sunrisers Hyderabad in Abu Dhabi

Siddarth Ravindran18-Apr-2014The over
Dale Steyn was reliably menacing with the new ball, but the most searching examination of Rajasthan batsmen’s technique came from Bhuvneshwar Kumar. The sixth over had Shane Watson and Ajinkya Rahane in major trouble: it began with Bhuvneshwar squaring up Watson with consecutive away-cutters, before a leading edge took Watson to the safety of the non-striker’s end. It was Rahane’s turn to grapple with the movement, as Bhuvneshwar showcased his ability to move the ball both ways, getting the next one to jag in sharply before flying over the stumps. A couple of defensive strokes ended an over that showcased how bowling in Twenty20s isn’t just about slower balls, yorkers or bouncers.The delayed decision
Ishant Sharma was also posing problems to the batsmen, and he was rewarded with the big wicket of Watson, who nicked a ball that curled away outside off to the keeper. There was a clear edge, Ishant was elated, and after a moment of celebration, looked back to see that the umpire Billy Bowden had not lifted his finger. The wicketkeeper KL Rahul too had thrown the ball up in jubilation, before belatedly joining in a loud and lengthy shout. By the time Ishant finished his appeal, he was past the stumps at the batsman’s end, before Bowden finally sent Watson on his way. Even Rudi Koertzen, Steve Bucknor and other umpires from the take-your-time school don’t take as long to decide.The wake-up call
In the 12th over, Rahane charged out of the crease and looked to pull a short ball from Ishant, only to miss completely and to be slammed flush on the grille. Rahane took off his helmet to ensure there was no damage to his ear, or his helmet. Even as the physio came out to take a look, Rahane’s discomfort would have increased as the DJ in the stadium egged the crowd to scream, “Sun-ri-sers, Sun-ri-sers”.The drops
Dropped catches have been about as regular as the strategic timeouts in matches so far this season. The first of them was in the sixth over when a Shikhar Dhawan chip came straight back at the bowler James Faulkner, who threw up his hands to save his face. He did protect his face but couldn’t grab onto the ball and ended up falling flat on the pitch, reprieving Dhawan. Faulkner later let-off David Warner as well, and fans of dropped catches got to see Aaron Finch put one down in the slips.

Dull game, but what a view

The first international in Dharamsala was fun for reasons other than the cricket

Saurav Dey28-Jan-2013Choice of game
I went to see this ODI predictably for the location of the stadium. All this while I had only seen this picturesque ground on TV and in images. Now it was time to catch an international match here. Also, since it was Dharamsala’s first international match, I wanted to be part of the historic occasion.I almost knew India would lose the match, because since December 2011, every time I have seen India play at a stadium (and that would be quite a few), they have lost. Thankfully this was a dead rubber, so I didn’t care too much about the outcome.Team supported
I was almost neutral. I just wanted a thrilling, nail-biting, memorable match which would rank among the top few matches I have seen at a stadium.Key performer
In a match where most batsmen struggled to score, two easily stood out. Suresh Raina weathered the storm along with Ravindra Jadeja after England had reduced India to 79 for 5. Raina was in form and had some luck as well, dropped as he was twice in his innings of 83. But despite saving India from a collapse, Raina probably got out when the team needed him the most. For England, Ian Bell started tentatively, with a few pokes and edges, but then stood like a rock at one end. His 113 was exactly half of India’s total.One thing I’d have changed
I was hoping to see England collapse after Kevin Pietersen fell to Shami Ahmed. I thought if India could manage to get Joe Root’s wicket quickly then the wickets would tumble quickly, because Eoin Morgan and Samit Patel were not in great form going into the game. I desperately hoped to see a tight finish in the chilly afternoon under the floodlights. But India could never create enough pressure.Face-off I relished
At the end of seven overs, England were 30 for 0. In came Ishant Sharma and bowled his first delivery to Alastair Cook, and the entire stadium stood up on seeing a deviation that was gobbled up by MS Dhoni. While all the Indian players celebrated, the umpire refused to budge. Since replays of controversial decisions are never shown on the big screen at Indian stadiums, the confused crowd did not know what had happened. They figured it was the right decision once a few people found out – through their phones – that the ball had actually flicked the pad. But Ishant look disgruntled and steamed in ferociously for the next few overs, beating Cook a few times and making him look edgy and wobbly. In the 12th over he shattered Cook’s stumps and the full house burst into a cheer. Ishant’s inspired spell brought back some hope for the Indian fans.Wow moment
When England were 64 for 1, Pietersen pulled a short ball from Shami Ahmed and at first glance it appeared to sail over the ropes. But Jadeja came running in from a distance, anticipated and timed the catch to perfection.Shot of the day
Against the flow of play, Raina struck three fours in the 12th over, off Chris Woakes, giving the audience something to cheer about for the first time in the match. Morgan’s sixes off Shami Ahmed in the dying moments of the match made a boring chase look a bit lively. But the most memorable shot for me was the one Jadeja lofted off Root in the 34th over. The ball ballooned up, came all the way up to our stand and landed two rows in front of me. The spectators fumbled but one of them managed to catch it.Crowd meter
The stadium, with a capacity of about 21,000, was filled to the brim. It was noisy, with people blowing horns and even conches. The crowd was lively and had a few cheerleaders who took the banter to the English fans. A whistling contest was going on between the Indian and English cheerleaders. The Indian cheerleader won it and also mimicked the English cheerleaders well. But the English fans had the last laugh as their team cruised to victory.Entertainment
The gentleman sitting beside me was probably not a regular cricket watcher. He kept asking questions like, “Why are there three pitches on the ground?”, “Why are the batsmen not hitting every ball?”, “Who are these kids standing beside the boundary line and why are they picking up the ball?”, “Is that a no-ball signal or a wide?”, “Why is Harbhajan Singh not playing? He should play every match”, and so on. He was particularly impressed by Dharamveer, the disabled ball boy who also captains India’s disabled cricket team, and travels and stays with the Indian team.Banner of the day
These days posters have been replaced by messages that fans can send to have displayed on the big screen at the ground. Among the ones I saw were: “Dhoni, please play your helicopter shot”, “Raina, you need to score a century today”, “Bhuvnesh, aim more middle stump, nothing else”, “Dhoni, I guess Yuvi should bowl today”, “Dhoni, I think you should try bowling”, “Sidhu is the god of cricket commentary”, “Indian team, please take a few wickets or I’ll feel asleep”. There were also random comments like “Jonty Rhodes is the god of fielding” and “Billy Bowden, we miss you”.Fancy-dress index
In the style of Sudhir Gautam, Sachin Tendulkar’s No.1 fan, we had in our stand a Dhoni fan who had the Indian tricolour painted all over his body and face. Dhoni’s name and jersey No. 7 were painted on his back. He was bare-bodied and stood throughout the match holding a huge India flag.Marks out of 10
7. Five of those go to the venue. Watching cricket at Dharamsala, with the spectacular snow-clad Dhauladhar ranges in the background, is a great experience. The festive, noisy crowd added spice to the overall atmosphere, but the match was mostly boring.

'People don't realise how hard it is to win in Australia'

Ray Illingworth looks back on leading England to a hard-fought Ashes win in 1970-71, and dealing with Aussie crowds and umpires

Interview by Richard Gibson18-Dec-2010″All I ever said to the lads was: ‘Have a pint or two if you feel like it but just make sure you’ve had enough sleep and are fit for play in the morning'”•Getty ImagesHow big an achievement was winning the Ashes in Australia in 1970-71?
People don’t realise how hard it is to win in Australia. A lot of sides have beaten Australia at home but not a lot beat them over there. I am talking about full sides, not without the Packer players and the South African situation. When Mike Brearley went back to Australia against a full side they lost 3-0. I think in living memory there has only been Douglas Jardine, apart from me, who has won the Ashes out there. People have defended them, like Len Hutton did in 1954-55, but not won them back and I am quite proud of that. They were pretty long tours as well, you know. Four and a half months, including New Zealand afterwards, is a really hard slog. So when it all comes to a climax in the last match, as it did in Australia, it’s a wonderful feeling. We didn’t take any inviting for a drink that night, I must say.You were 1-0 up with one Test to play. Australia were chasing 223 to win the final match. That last day must have been special…
They only wanted around 100 with five wickets left on that final day of the series. With Greg Chappell and Rodney Marsh in, it only needed one of them to get a quick 30 or 40 and the game was gone. But we won it quite comfortably in the finish. I don’t think I ever had another feeling like that.Would you say you were a tight unit as a touring group?
It was a really good set of blokes. I never had any problems at all that way. All I ever said to the lads was: “Have a pint or two if you feel like it but just make sure you’ve had enough sleep and are fit for play in the morning.” They were all responsible people, and when I see the trick cyclists and psychologists and everything they’ve got these days, I always feel that, if they are all required, you’ve picked the wrong people in the first place. John Snow would have sent them round the twist, wouldn’t he? We were a good side and we all got on well together. That was the secret. We tended to switch room-mates so you didn’t get too cliquey. Swapping about every couple of matches ensured we got the northerners and southerners mixing together. All I ever had to say to them was, “Come on, lads, here we go again, so let’s go.” No more than that.The only time I spoke to them any differently was in the dressing room during the first of the Sydney Tests. At tea on the fourth day I felt the game was there for winning, so I went into the back room and said to them: “I can’t quite put my finger on what is missing, I can’t say that no one is trying because that isn’t the case, but there is a difference between trying and giving that little bit more. I would like you to all imagine you are playing in a one-day Lord’s final. Imagine they need eight runs to win and the last over is being bowled.” We went back out and in 40 minutes the game was as good as over.That 1970-71 series has a reputation as one of the most heated in history. Is that fair?
It was never like that between the actual teams. The teams always got on all right. We had a system whereby, if we had been in the field, then as soon as we were back in the dressing room, the Aussies would come in and have a drink with us and vice versa. I can remember once in Sydney the dressing-room attendant coming in to complain: “Aren’t you buggers going? I want to shut up shop. I’ve got a home to go to even if you haven’t.”But there was a lot of hostility, wasn’t there? How much of it was down to the umpire Lou Rowan?

“When I see the trick cyclists and psychologists and everything they’ve got these days, I always feel that, if they are all required, you’ve picked the wrong people in the first place”

Without doubt he was the main culprit. It was the only time I ever felt that an umpire wasn’t being
completely honest. The fact that we didn’t get a single lbw in six matches proves the point. Lou Rowan was a very officious sort of character. It was a really silly thing that he did. He got it completely wrong. The game could have got out of hand. For example, we played the first Test in Brisbane and there was one young kid sat with his legs dangling over the wooden boundary fence. Rowan stopped the game and walked 70 yards to tell the lad to get his legs the other side. Yet this was the same guy who told me the ground was fit to continue when 30 or 40 bottles had been thrown on the field. It didn’t just happen once, it happened a couple of times. I called the players to the middle and we sat down while they cleared the bottles and cans off. We agreed to start again and then it all began again and that is when I took them off. People forget that I stayed on the field the first time. Rowan was making it appear as if it was nothing, but the bloke who moved the sightscreen was hit on the back of the head by a bottle and was taken to hospital. That could have been Snowy or another of our players. I told them to make an announcement over the loudspeaker that when the ground was cleared, we would go back. “If it starts again we shall come off again,” I said. “If we have to forfeit the game, we have to forfeit the game. But there is a principle at stake here.” Rowan laid it down that we would have to forfeit unless we went back but I was adamant that we would only go back when it was ready for us to go back.The inaugural ODI occurred during that tour…
Yes. We had a rained-off Test at Melbourne and we could have started halfway through the fourth day. But the feeling was that there was no point in beginning a Test with a day and a bit to go. So we cancelled that day and arranged a one-dayer for the day after. It was all arranged overnight and we got 45,000 people there. A Test match was then added to the series, which we weren’t happy about because it meant we played five Tests in six weeks in the hot part of the summer. The other grumble for us was that the Aussies were promised a full match-fee and we weren’t promised anything, so that nearly caused a strike. You can imagine that David Clark, the tour manager, went out with a flea in his ear. He had just spoken with Don Bradman, Sir Cyril Hawker [president of MCC] and Gubby Allen, who were out there watching. They went ahead and did it without speaking to me as captain. When I was told, I warned them that if someone got injured, there would be no one to call up from England. I also warned them that unless we got something for our trouble, they would have a strike on their hands, so they rang Donald Carr and he agreed we should get something. We finished up with 25 quid for the extra match. That’s great, isn’t it? Even the Aussies were on £200-£250 as a fee. Our amount was a pittance.How much did the adrenaline of the Ashes help your team?
The crowd are very much on your backs out there. Some of it is quite funny, you know. Certain things like, “I wish you was a statue and I was a bloody pigeon.” If you laugh with them, it can help. The old Sydney hill was very much about taking it rather than getting the pin. If you did, they would just give you more stick. Have some fun, give them a wave and you’d have no trouble.Snow had a wonderful series. How crucial is a genuine fast bowler in any England team’s bid to win an Ashes in Australia?
Wonderful was the right word. My biggest disappointment was Alan Ward breaking down more or less before we had played, because he was quick and got bounce. Unfortunately we never had the advantage of having him. I used to talk to John Edrich and Geoff Boycott quite a bit about things and I asked them: “Where do we go from here? Because we have got to get somebody.” John told me to go for this young lad [Bob Willis], 6ft 6in, sharp and able to bowl it in the right areas. I remember asking him: “Are you sure, John?” And the reply was: “I don’t think he will let you down.” So I went on John’s say-so.Do you see similarities between Willis and Steven Finn?
Very much so. Funnily enough, the first time I saw Finn bowl on TV I turned to the wife and told her he should go to Australia because he could do what Bob did for us.”I think in living memory there has only been Douglas Jardine, apart from me, who has won the Ashes out there… I’m quite proud of that”•Getty ImagesShort balls can cause problems in Australia as John Snow proved.
When he famously hit Terry Jenner, that wasn’t even a bouncer. If he had stood straight up it would have hit him on the chest. What he did was get you playing back to a length and under your armpit and then he made it change direction off the seam, so he would get people turned around, knocking it into the slips. That was his great strength. That was why there was such an argument when he hit Jenner. I was at short leg and picked him up, and as he was helped off, Lou Rowan marched over to Snowy and warned him for bowling a bouncer. I told him that even if he considered it a bouncer – which I didn’t – he had only bowled one. He went over to Tom Brooks, the other umpire, who wouldn’t support him on it. But what worried me most was Snowy – because of his temperament and the fact I knew he was upset by the whole bloody thing – who was mouthing off: “That’s not a bouncer”. I feared he was going to start letting fly, so I tried to calm him down. The next ball was inevitably a bouncer and was followed by Snow’s confirmation: “That’s a bloody bouncer.”Geoff Boycott was incredible for you on that tour, wasn’t he?
He will tell you that he played better on that tour than at any time in his life. He played magnificently. It was a shame he couldn’t play in that last Test. Not that he would have scored many on that pitch. It had been covered for two days, we had non-stop rain and it went all over the place. If I had won the toss, we would’ve bowled them out for 50. In fact, I was on the verge of declaring at around 170 for 7 or 8 on the first day, for the simple reason that I knew we had to get some wickets that night. I knew with sun on the pitch the next morning it would change, and just as I had my head in my hands, thinking about whether to do it or not, we were all out. We got the two openers out that night for less than 20 and it made all the difference in the match. If they had been there the next morning, it was a different game.Was one of the sweetest things about 1970-71 the sense of overcoming the odds?
Absolutely. I still have a piece at home, written by Richie Benaud. He said something about Ray Illingworth going home victorious when nearly all the breaks have gone against him, what with injuries, the itinerary, one thing or another.

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