Rangers team news v Union Saint-Gilloise

Rangers summer signings Ridvan Yilmaz and Rabbi Matondo trained with the team on Sunday ahead of Tuesday’s Champions League qualifier, according to The Athletic’s Jordan Campbell.

The Lowdown: Rangers’ summer signings

The Light Blues have been busy at work during the transfer window this summer, with numerous arrivals and departures to and from Ibrox.

Last month, the Gers announced the signing of 21-year-old Rabbi Matondo, who made the switch to Glasgow from Schalke 04 in a deal worth £1.8m. The Wales international joined the German outfit from Manchester City in 2019 for a staggering £11m.

Giovanni van Bronckhost’s side also recently announced the arrival of Ridvan Yilmaz at Ibrox, who joined the club in a deal worth £3.4m plus add-ons. The Turkey international made his debut for Besiktas in 2019 as an 18-year-old and has since gone on to make 62 appearances in all competitions for the Super Lig giants.

The Latest: Campbell’s team news

With Matondo having missed out on Rangers’ opening game of the Premiership season against Livingston due to injury, Campbell has shared an update on the youngster’s fitness.

Also speaking about recent arrival Yilmaz, the reliable journalist took to Twitter on Monday morning to state: “Ridvan Yilmaz and Rabbi Matondo trained with the team yesterday ahead of the UCL qualifier tomorrow.

“Another session in store today but Van Bronckhorst says a couple of players are still doubts.”

The Verdict: Big boost

The inclusion of Matondo and Yilmaz in the Gers’ squad for their Champions League qualifier against Union Saint-Gilloise on Tuesday will come as a big boost to Van Brockhorst’s side.

With it being Rangers’ first continental clash since the Europa League final against Eintracht Frankfurt in May, the Light Blues will be desperate to progress in the Champions League this season.

However, with Saint-Gilloise narrowly missing out on the Belgian title last year, this will be no easy fixture for Van Bronckhorst’s men.

Therefore, the possible inclusion of the two new signings will come as a boost to Rangers, providing them with alternative options in the latter stages of the match in Belgium if needed.

Liverpool interested in Matheus Nunes

Liverpool have been linked with a move for Matheus Nunes this summer, and there has been a new update on the club’s pursuit of the player.

What’s the latest?

According to Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manha (via Paisley Gates), there is a strong possibility that the 23-year-old will make the move to England, with the Reds remaining interested.

As per the report, Sporting Lisbon are now only interested in doing business in the transfer market to sell players at this point, and the midfielder seems one of the most likely outgoings for the Portuguese club.

Big Keita upgrade

The Reds are reportedly prioritising the midfield as key area to improve and strengthen after completing the club-record signing of Darwin Nunez this summer, and Nunes could be the perfect Naby Keita upgrade if FSG can secure a deal for the 23-year-old in the coming weeks.

The Guinea international will be out of contract in less than 12 months’ time, and although Liverpool are speculated to be in talks to negotiate a new deal for the midfielder, they may not need to if they can sign the Sporting star this summer.

According to FBRef, both Nunes and Keita matched up for goal contributions, scoring three goals and delivering one assist each, although there are many attributes where Nunes outperforms his positional peer on Merseyside.

The 23-year-old has a better shot on target accuracy (27.3%), created more big chances (six), made more tackles (two) and won more duels (6.5) on average per game, while also being more successful in completing his dribble attempts (70%) compared to Keita (63%).

The £42.2m-valued dynamo has been the recipient of high praise, with his former team-mate Goncalo Santos hailing him previously (via Liverpool Echo).

Santos said of Nunes: “It’s unbelievable when he has the ball at his feet. Nobody can catch him; it’s impossible because he’s too fast.

“If you are in the defensive phase and he gets the ball, he can run with it and fire the team 30 yards up the pitch because he is so good in possession.”

With that in mind, the powerbrokers at Anfield should carefully consider whether they ought to offer a new contract to Keita or sign an upgrade in Nunes this summer to replace the Guinea midfielder.

AND in other news: Fabrizio Romano drops Liverpool transfer update that’ll frustrate supporters

Leeds: Taylor drops McAtee transfer claim

Leeds United have been tipped to launch a bid to secure a permanent move for Manchester City midfielder James McAtee.

What’s the talk?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, journalist Ryan Taylor had this to say on the matter.

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He said: “I think McAtee is one that Leeds will look at permanently. They’re partial to that kind of deal. We saw them sign Lewis Bate from Chelsea, that kind of high potential youngster that they’re willing to invest in, although it hasn’t quite worked out yet.”

As a product of City’s youth academy, which has produced players such as Phil Foden, McAtee has made 93 appearances for the club across their senior and youth sides.

Over those appearances, the 19-year-old has scored 44 goals and delivered 27 assists in the process.

His latest campaign saw the midfielder score 18 goals and provide seven assists in 23 league appearances for City’s U23s.

He also made six senior appearances for Pep Guardiola’s side, showing that he is on the fringes of breaking into the first team.

Leeds supporters will be buzzing

Should the Manchester club not be able to guarantee regular senior minutes for the teenager next season, perhaps a move away from the Etihad Stadium could be the best next step for him and his development.

Taking all of this into account, it’s safe to suggest that the Englishman would be an exciting signing for the Yorkshire club and have a lot of Leeds supporters buzzing to have such a promising young player in their ranks.

As Taylor also mentioned, the Whites have not been shy when it comes to signing young players from clubs across England.

In addition to Bate, figures such as Joe Gelhardt and Sean McGurk have made moves to Elland Road in recent years, highlighting just how eager the club can be when it comes to securing deals for young talents and developing them for the future.

Moving forward, if the Whites see an opportunity to potentially secure a loan, or even a permanent deal for the City starlet, this is definitely something that they should look to explore, as the possible long-term benefits could be huge for the club.

AND in other news: Marsch could seal the next £142m talent in Leeds bid for “magnificent” £16k-p/w target

Newcastle transfer news

Bundesliga reporter Stefan Bienkowski has revealed the latest transfer news that he’s ‘been told’ on reported Newcastle United target Moussa Diaby.

The Lowdown: Interest

It has been reported for some time that the St. James’ Park outfit hold an ‘interest’ in signing Diaby this summer, and he is ‘not unsellable’ for Bayer Leverkusen.

However, he could cost up to ‘€70m’ (£60.3m), which would smash the club-record £40m fee that they paid for Joelinton back in 2019.

The Latest: Offer made

Taking to Twitter, Bienkowski has revealed that the North East club are the only English side to have made an ‘offer’ for Diaby, although the winger is not interested in a move to Tyneside and is not pushing to leave Leverkusen:

“As I understand it, Newcastle are the only English team to have made an offer for Bayer Leverkusen forward Moussa Diaby.

“However, I’ve also been told the player isn’t interested in a move to St James Park and isn’t pushing for an exit from Leverkusen either.”

The Verdict: Big blow

It is certainly a big blow to hear that Diaby is not interested in a move to the Magpies.

He scored no fewer than 17 goals and made a further 14 assists in total over all competitions last season (Transfermarkt), impressive numbers indeed for a winger.

The Frenchman has been praised by German media for his ‘amazing’ dribbling, ‘irresistible’ pace and ‘astonishing’ speed of thought, and he was even dubbed ‘unstoppable’ after scoring one goal and setting up another in a thumping 4-0 win over Borussia Monchengladbach last term (Bundesliga).

Nonetheless, it looks as if the Toon will now have to look at other targets if they want to strengthen out wide this window.

Leeds and Burnley lawsuit on Everton

Finance expert Kieran Maguire has now revealed some significant news involving Everton.

The Lowdown: Leeds and Burnley compensation

As shared by iNews, both Leeds United and Burnley are now seeking £200m in compensation in order to try and offset the advantage that the Goodison Park outfit have received through alleged overspending.

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It is understood that representatives from the two clubs have formally requested that the Premier League order them not to delete any relevant information with regards to their accounts.

The Latest: Maguire shares latest

Speaking to Football Insider, Maguire has revealed that both Leeds and Burnley have decided to pursue a compensation claim regardless of which team were to get relegated to the Championship:

“There are some precedents which need to be considered.

“There was the Carlos Tevez case in 2005. West Ham agreed an out-of-court settlement with Sheffield United. That was nothing to do with FFP because it didn’t exist then.

“But we have recently had a settlement between the owners of Derby County and Middlesbrough with regards to FFP breaches.

“You can understand why Burnley and Leeds are doing this. My understanding is that they have decided to pursue this regardless of who got relegated.”

The Verdict: Significant

The fact that Leeds and Burnley are pursuing this, despite the Clarets going down and Leeds and the Toffees staying up, is significant.

The claim could have easily been thought of in bitter taste, but it looks as if the Blues could still have a potential problem on their hands given Leeds’ involvement even after staying up.

If the claim is successful, then this may alter their transfer plans significantly for the summer, and they will not want to be restricted spending-wise again, after only spending a mere £1.7m last summer.

Nonetheless, the Merseyside club will still be confident that they have not broken any rules, and will continue with their plans as normal for now.

In other news, find out which ‘reckless’ flop EFC could now sell this summer here!

Liverpool transfer news on Nicolo Zaniolo

Liverpool are long-term admirers of Roma’s Nicolo Zaniolo and could make a move for him this summer, according to Gazzetta dello Sport (via Sport Witness). 

The lowdown

Zaniolo, 22, is predominantly a right winger but he’s also played 17 matches this season in a second striker role. That means he could provide cover and competition for Mohamed Salah, but may also be able to operate as a false nine in the manner of Roberto Firmino, for example.

Liverpool, of course, signed both Salah and Alisson from Roma in 2017 and 2018 for fees of £34million and £67million respectively.

And it seems Julian Ward, taking over as sporting director from Michael Edwards, could look to find more success by shopping in the Italian capital.

Zaniolo has just over two years remaining on his deal at the Stadio Olimpico, though his current focus may be on preparations for the Europa Conference League final against Feyenoord on 25 May.

His hat-trick against Bodo/Glimt last month helped steer Jose Mourinho’s side into the semifinals.

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The latest

The Italian press claim Zaniolo has been a Liverpool target for some time, so this is seemingly an Edwards target being carried over into Ward’s new role.

If the player is to extend his stay at Roma, he wants a contract worth €4million per year, which equates to about £65,000 per week, says the report. But if he’s to leave, he won’t be short of suitors, either domestically or abroad.

Juventus and AC Milan are waiting in the wings, and the player’s first instinct is apparently to remain in Italy.

He would apparently find it difficult to turn down a ‘super offer’ from overseas though, as Liverpool and Antonio Conte’s Tottenham Hotspur ‘have continued to monitor him for some time’.

It’s thought that he would cost somewhere between €65million and €70million (£55.3million-£59.5million).

The verdict

Is Zaniolo good enough for Liverpool? His goals/assists record this season is good without being spectacular – seven scored, eight assisted in 39 appearances across all competitions.

But it’s important to remember that he’s still a young player and that his development has badly affected by injury. The Italian suffered two anterior cruciate ligament injuries in the space of a year, so patience may be required.

What’s more, some of Zaniolo’s underlying numbers are strong. He records a high volume of dribbles (81st percentile), touches in the attacking penalty area and progressive passes received (both 80th), highlighting his technical proficiency and intelligent movement.

This is the former Serie A Young Player of the Year, and Klopp may believe he can unlock his potential.

In other news, Liverpool may have found a Jordan Henderson replacement.

Newcastle to keep an eye on James Maddison

An update has emerged on Newcastle United and their interest in Leicester City’s James Maddison ahead of the January transfer window…

What’s the talk?

Journalist Dean Jones has revealed that the Magpies will continue to keep tabs on the English midfielder and his situation at the King Power, although they face a battle to land him.

He told GIVEMESPORT: “They’ll definitely be keeping an eye on it, but Leicester’s situation will determine whether he becomes available.

“It’s hard to imagine that they’re going to let anyone leave halfway through a season when they’re fighting for their Premier League status.

“They’ve already had players ripped out and they’re struggling to bounce back from that.”

Howe’s next Guimaraes

At the halfway point in the 2021/22 campaign, Newcastle were 19th in the Premier League table and in desperate need of a magic touch on the pitch.

The signing of Bruno Guimaraes, with help from the likes of Kieran Trippier and Dan Burn, provided that spark as he hit the ground running in England.

He averaged a SofaScore rating of 7.25 in the top-flight – higher than any other Toon player with 10+ appearances – and scored five goals in 11 starts as he led the club to an 11th-placed finish – 14 points clear of 18th.

Whilst Newcastle may not be sitting in such a precarious position come January this time around, Maddison could come in and push the team further up the table by injecting more quality into Howe’s attack.

The gem, who is valued at £60m by his current club, has proven that he can score and assist goals at an impressive rate in the Premier League and would be a major upgrade on the Magpies’ current options.

Since the start of the 2020/21 season, Maddison has scored 22 goals and provided 16 assists in the top-flight for Leicester – including 12 goals and eight assists last term.

Meanwhile, no Newcastle player managed more than eight goals or five assists in 2021/22, with Callum Wilson and Allan Saint-Maximin leading the way.

These statistics suggest that Maddison, who was once dubbed a “magician” by Statman Dave, would improve Eddie Howe’s options both in terms of scoring goals and creating them.

Therefore, he could come in and hit the ground running – given he has already proven himself in the Premier League – just like Guimaraes did in January 2021. He could make an instant impact on the side, by elevating the attack, and give them a lift in the second half of the season – if the club can convince Leicester to part ways with him.

Why Singapore beating Zimbabwe is a big deal

All you need to know about the side behind the latest shock result in international cricket

Srinath Sripath30-Sep-2019Double-take, but did you say Singapore’s men’s senior team beat Zimbabwe’s men’s senior team on Sunday?Yes, that’s right.At cricket?That’s why we’re talking about it.The Zimbabwe of the Flowers, Taibus, Taylors and Streaks?The same.An exhibition game right, that doesn’t count towards anything?Nope, it very much is official and it very much does count. Zimbabwe are playing a T20I tri-series in Singapore, where Nepal are the third side. And since April 2018, when the ICC granted T20 status to all its members, each and every 20-over game between any of the 104 member nations counts towards official records.Wow. But it must’ve been a fluke?Not so much. Singapore are among the fastest rising member nations around the globe. Just last month, they beat Nepal and made it to the qualifiers for the T20 World Cup, as one of 14 teams. Six of those will actually make it to the 16-team World Cup next year.ALSO READ: Singapore create history by clinching T20I victory over ZimbabweZimbabwe were probably not at their strongest…They certainly haven’t fielded their full-strength side for this series, with a number of big names like Brendan Taylor, Craig Ervine*, Chris Mpofu and Sikandar Raza missing for varying reasons. Instead, they’re looking at this tri-series to give an opportunity to some of their younger and upcoming players, but none of that is to take away any credit away from Singapore. To put things in perspective, Singapore were playing a Test nation for the first time, and their players had a combined experience of 43 T20Is, compared to Zimbabwe’s 136.And Zimbabwe are still a Test nation right?Yes, they’re still among the ICC’s 12 Full Members, the elite sides who play all three formats. But they have been hit by one crisis after another. They are currently under suspension because of government interference in their cricket administration, and barred from competing in ICC competitions, which has ruled them out of the T20 World Cup Qualifiers. And they have also been hit by the retirement of former captain Hamilton Masakadza, one of their longest-serving players and leading batsman.Singapore are ranked just six places below Zimbabwe in the men’s T20I rankings•ESPNcricinfo LtdThat’s sad. Where has all this left them?As low as 15th on the ICC men’s T20I rankings, which means they are only six places above Singapore who, at 21, are at their highest-ever ranking. They’re above the likes of Kenya and Canada. You might remember that Zimbabwe (with Masakadza’s help) beat seventh-ranked Afghanistan just a couple of weeks ago.SEVENTH-RANKED Afghanistan lost to FIFTEENTH-RANKED Zimbabwe? Is that what you just said?Yes, but let’s focus on Singapore.Sure. Tell me more about their side. Aren’t the players all just South Asian expats living there?Singapore have been lurking as a solid team in 50-over cricket for a long time in the World Cricket League era, the second-tier one-day competition for Associates, with a mix of players comprised primarily of south Asian expats. But their fortunes took a dramatic shift this year with the arrival of Tim David, a Perth-based hard-hitting batsman who has been a member of the Perth Scorchers in the Big Bash League.The 23-year-old David qualifies for Singapore by virtue of being born there and has played a massive role in Singapore’s recent success in all formats. He made 77 off 43 balls against Nepal in July in a win that sealed Singapore’s place in the upcoming T20 World Cup Qualifiers, top-scored with 41 off 24 balls in the win over Zimbabwe and was the tournament’s leading scorer with four half-centuries in five innings in the recent opening round of the new Cricket World Cup Challenge League one-day tournament (which has replaced the World Cricket League) held in Malaysia, where Singapore went 4-1 a week before this tri-series with Nepal and Zimbabwe.Are Singapore the smallest ever nation to beat a Test team like Zimbabwe?Hong Kong come close. They’ve beaten Bangladesh in the past. But Singapore probably are the smallest nation to beat a Test side in an official international game. They have less than a third of Zimbabwe’s population, and roughly 3% of geographical size. Sure, New Zealand and Ireland have fewer people, but they aren’t tiny city-states, are they?Singapore beat Nepal to make it to the World T20 Qualifiers•ESPNcricinfo LtdWhen are Singapore playing in this World T20 Qualifier? And how can I follow their progress?They are competing less than a month from now, and need to qualify out of a group featuring Scotland, Netherlands, Papua New Guinea and Namibia, all ranked above them. The tournament runs from October 18 to November 2 in the UAE.Anything else I should know?Singapore only played their first T20 international three months ago, and have since won four of their five games. After Afghanistan, Nepal and Oman, they could be the next big success story from South Asia. While Afghanistan and Nepal’s rise are more widely known, Oman, who famously beat Ireland in the 2016 T20 World Cup, will go into the T20 World Cup Qualifiers as one of the favourites.*Oct 1, 09.25GMT: The piece was amended to reflect the fact that it was Craig Ervine missing in action for Zimbabwe, not his brother Sean

The cricketer who shaped T20

Shahid Afridi was the perfect T20 cricketer even before people began to realise what that looked like, but time is finally catching up with him

Jarrod Kimber05-Aug-2017On his face is the same smile you’ve seen a million times over the last 21 years, the one that shows just how happy he is just to be alive, happy to be out on the field playing cricket. He’s about to play a T20 for Hampshire, but smile apart, Shahid Afridi doesn’t look the same as he used to.In English cricket, it’s often hard to tell if a player has put on some weight, or just has too many sweaters on. But, either way, Afridi doesn’t look his old self. At his best he was lithe, almost catlike. Now he looks every day of his 37, or 42 years. He doesn’t move like the super freak of years earlier; he moves like a man just getting out of bed.But today’s smile isn’t that much different to the one when Afridi won Pakistan the 2009 WT20 semi-final, with bat and ball, and then won the final, with bat and ball. The image of Afridi standing mid-pitch at Lord’s, arms raised, moving his head around like an excited puppy, is the image of T20’s first king.****If you are looking for a bowler for T20 cricket right now, you’re probably looking for a fast bowler or a spinner who turns the ball both ways. If you are looking for a batsman, you are probably looking at someone who can strike at over nine runs an over no matter what time they come into the innings. Afridi was this player before we knew what T20 was.Afridi’s critics have always said he’s a decent bowler who slogs. Dude, that’s like totally what teams want right now.To many analytics cricket people, Andre Russell is the perfect T20 cricketer. But Afridi was the perfect T20 player before anyone knew what they were looking for. He’s a rock as a bowler, completely dominates the middle overs, and if needed can bowl at the top or at the death. And he can bat in any of the 20 overs: Russell hasn’t shown as much flexibility batting in the Powerplay.

The biggest problem was that he was ahead of his time. Analytics were barely involved, so no one knew that Afridi was the template of what T20 players should be.

If you look at it on a micro level, Afridi is even better. He was hitting boundaries, especially sixes, when the world was trying to run singles. Well before Chris Gayle cottoned on to the fact that risky singles aren’t as high-yield as risky boundaries.Afridi also batted like all parts of the game were the death, which is where the next big move in T20 will probably come, and in Russell’s case, already has. As a spinner, he was incredibly hard to get away, was useful on wickets that assisted him, and is still handy on the ones that didn’t due to his constant changes of pace and sudden bounce.This is just who Afridi is. It isn’t something he created, like Sunil Narine or Pat Cummins with their batting; he didn’t formulate a T20 bowling career like Michael Yardy. He was just born a T20 natural.The biggest problem was that he was ahead of his time. Even at that World T20 of 2009, no one was talking about legspin dominating T20, or contesting that a high strike rate early in the innings is worth more than one later on. Analytics were barely involved, so no one knew that Afridi was the template of what T20 players should be.Those were the T20 dark ages; it was just a bit of fun, the ICC seemed to have a tournament every few months, the IPL was about cheerleaders, the Big Bash was not yet a league. No one understood his real worth because we hadn’t even started looking at players’ value. We were still talking about averages; the analytics companies hadn’t started researching the effects of the ball spinning in or away yet.Shahid Afridi was just that guy who was either a clown or the greatest hero you’d ever seen. Often in the space of two balls.****In 2003, Afridi played three ODI matches, his economy rate in those games was over five runs an over. In his 19-year career, that was the only year Afridi went at more than five an over. He has never gone for runs.He is playing at the Ageas Bowl, home of Hampshire, an English county with an excellent T20 record over many years. But in his previous match for Hampshire, against Somerset, he went for over ten runs an over, and despite a handy 18 off 11, he was, depending on who you speak to, dropped, rotated or rested for Hampshire’s following game.Afridi celebrates with Peshawar in the PSL•PCB/PSLThis one against Kent, he’s back, being hidden at short fine leg as Kent got off to a quick start. Afridi doesn’t bowl until the ninth over, after up-and-coming legspinner Mason Crane has had an over. There is a small titter from the few Hampshire fans who have braved the cold as he comes on to bowl.Afridi’s first ball is a knee-high full toss; it’s only taken for a single. He spends 15 seconds stretching himself, and then he stands at the top of his mark, looks at his field and decides it’s all wrong. He changes the shape of it, and straight away the batsmen keep hitting the ball right to the fielders he’s moved. His over, which will have two full tosses, goes for only five runs. Afridi limps out to short third man and continues to stretch.Afridi drops a caught-and-bowled to start his second over. It was completely pulverised by Sam Northeast and it goes to the boundary and very nearly takes a part of his hand with it. Two balls later, Afridi slides one through Northeast and hits his stumps.It’s clear the ball is stopping on the surface a bit, but even with that allowance, the Afridi zip, the magic where his balls seemed to get quicker after they landed, has long gone. Pace-wise, he looks only marginally quicker than Crane.James Vince, Hampshire’s captain, changes the field, and Afridi changes it back; Afridi is right again. His third over has another wicket, a ball that was dragged from outside off to mid-on, and he could have had another if not for a dropped catch. Every time Afridi does anything, the Hampshire Twitter account gets boom boomed by the lovers and haters. This over has brought them all out.Afridi is taken out of the attack so he can change ends. Jimmy Neesham, Kent’s Kiwi allrounder, tries to smack one that doesn’t spin and loops to short third man for Afridi’s third wicket. And then Afridi tosses one up to Daniel Bell-Drummond, a batsman with England pretensions, and he gets a thick edge out to deep cover, Afridi has four. The Hampshire Twitter manager is under as much pressure as the Kent lower order.When Afridi started his spell, Kent were 65 for 1 from their eight overs, eight overs later they have added 58, 26 of them off Afridi, and he has taken four wickets.****

James Vince, Hampshire’s captain, changes the field, and Afridi changes it back; Afridi is right again

There is no player in the history of the game who has ODI numbers that look more like T20 stats than Afridi. In ODIs in 2007, he averaged 29 with the bat while striking at 161 (and went at 4.6 an over with the ball). Virat Kohli has never struck at more than 157 in an IPL season, AB de Villiers’ career IPL strike rate is 148 and even Yusuf Pathan, an Afridi-like player, only has a career IPL strike rate of 142.Afridi has played in both parts of T20 cricket, the pre-enlightenment entertainment phase, and the early cricmetrics era. The pre-enlightenment time pretty much stopped around 2013, so we can look at Afridi from August 2009 to July 2013. Then the Cricmetrics era starts August 2013 until now.In domestic T20 of the pre-enlightenment, his strike rate was 164. In the leagues he played in the most, England, Australia and Pakistan, he was miles under the average economy rate when bowling; in England, he was almost two runs less an over. In over 50% of his games he went for less than seven an over. In the 45 innings he bowled out, 43 of them he was under the match economy rate. In that same period he batted 39 times and in 41% of them he scored more than 20 runs at better than the match economy rate.In the era when we were trying to work out T20 cricket, Afridi had already nailed it. He smacked the ball at a strike rate that was in an ivory tower that was built on a mountain, and no one could hit him off the square.In the pre-enlightenment, when he was on the field for one of those teams he played for, their win-loss record was 1.44; when he wasn’t, it was 1.09.Afridi is not that player anymore. Whatever his real age, that age has caught up with him. He’s a role player now. The teams he plays for now only win .095 times; when he doesn’t play, they win 1.37. He is no longer the weapon. As a bowler, he’s still more than decent: 87% of the time (down 8%) his economy is better than the match average. He only scores over 20 at better than the match rate 27% of the time now.But the real truth isn’t that he’s way worse than he used to be, it’s that the game has caught up. His strike rate pre-enlightenment was 164; in the last four years it’s slowed to 152 now. Which isn’t terrible, except that in that same time the game has sped up. Overall, batsmen have struck more quickly roughly as much as Afridi has slowed.The shadows are lengthening on a memorable career•Getty ImagesYet even as the Wall Street GMs and analytics factories change T20, up until a year or two ago, Afridi was still an incredible performer. He hasn’t evolved much (he hits a few more sixes now), it’s just that the game has just slowly started catching up to where he has always been.****Hampshire seem to be in control of the chase. George Bailey finds some form, and Tom Alsop is intent on batting through the innings. When Bailey is out, they need 38 off 28, and out strides Liam Dawson.There is no doubt that in a previous era this would have been Afridi walking out. Even in the 2009-13 period, 38 from 28 would have been seen as the kind of chase where you send out a big hitter to try and destroy. Plus, the younger Afridi would have only needed six balls to get a couple of boundaries and ice the game. But T20 has changed, and any batsman is now good enough to get away boundaries. Even without Afridi at the crease, 38 off 28 is no longer seen as hard. Hampshire were still well in charge.Dawson isn’t a dud. He has now represented England in all three formats and despite getting picked as a bowler for England, is actually a batsman. But Dawson isn’t a quick scorer, his career strike rate in T20 is 109. He scores a boundary every 11 balls. Afridi hits one every five balls for his entire career (we need a word beyond “elite” for that). Dawson is a 40-off-30 man, and Hampshire need a few quick boundaries as Alsop is 24 off 27 at the other end. Dawson doesn’t hit a boundary; he makes four off nine. Hampshire now need 22 from 13 balls.And out strides… Lewis McManus.Unlike Dawson, McManus can hit boundaries and hits one every 7.8 balls; he’s even hit as many sixes as fours in T20, a sure sign that he gets the way the game is going. And last game he made 34 from 18.This time it doesn’t quite come off for him, though. McManus makes eight from his five balls, with one boundary. Alsop faces the other eight balls and makes seven from them and Hampshire come up short.Shahid Afridi never leaves the dugout.

Whatever his real age, that age has caught up with him. He’s a role player now

Twitter is restless.”If @SAfridiOfficial came to bat in place of dawson then surely you would win”.”Could I say that was a fixing match?? I just can’t believe the result… I will not support hampshire anymore. Afridi plz leave hampshire””F***ing batting selections I think u forget that u have shahid afridi.”This season for Hampshire he has made 44 from five innings. He’s averaging eight, but worst of all, his strike rate is 104. But being that he is Afridi, earlier this year in the PSL he averaged 25 at a strike rate of 173. With his skills, even in decline, he might go on to have a few more years in franchise cricket if his body can hold together. You wouldn’t dare to not bat the old Afridi in a chase like this, but Hampshire dared to not bat him twice.Afridi has always been a freak, an outlier, something not of this world, but as T20 matures, he’s the template. Northants signed Seekkuge Prasanna for the NatWest Blast last year; he’s a legspinner who hits the ball very hard. Almost no one outside Sri Lanka knows of him; he hasn’t done much in international cricket so far. Northants found him mainly using their Moneyball-based approach, looking for a cheap ideal T20 import. Prasanna hits at a strike rate of 163; his bowling economy is 7.17, both marginally higher than Afridi’s. But he is, on paper, the new Afridi. He won’t be the last.All of this happens while Afridi still plays. He has retired almost as many times as he has won Man-of-the-Match awards, and he either loves playing the game or he loves what playing the game brings him. But he is out there, plugging away. Right now Afridi is two things, the ghost of T20’s past, and the foretaste of its future.

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