Fulham must land Jannik Vestergaard deal

Fulham came away with a point in their first Premier League game of the season as a result of a 2-2 draw against Champions League finalists Liverpool.

The Cottagers took the lead on two occasions only to be pegged back by Jurgen Klopp’s side, ultimately ending with both teams sharing the points.

Using this match as an example, it’s easy to see why the west London club have looked to strengthen their defence by not only signing Shane Duffy on a season-long loan deal, but also with a reported deal for Issa Diop now looking likely.

Should Marco Silva feel the need to add even more strength and depth to that area of his squad, one figure they were said to have made an offer for last week is Leicester City centre-back Jannik Vestergaard.

If Fulham are able to bring the Foxes figure to the club, this could give Silva the chance to form what could be a formidable defensive duo at the back between Vestergaard and Duffy.

Having only played in ten league games last season, the 30-year-old still managed to show off his defensive talent by racking up more clearances (41) than the majority of other players in Leicester’s squad.

Similarly with Duffy, in the 18 league games he play for Brighton last season, he made 91 clearances in total, leaving only two other Seagulls players with more.

This shows how dominant the duo are in the air as they both adopt a classic no-nonsense approach to the defensive side of the game. It also suggests that a partnership between them could cause problems for any side trying to score or defend a corner, for example.

Hailed for his “outstanding” performances in the past by Alan Shearer, Vestergaard was not included in the squad for Leicester’s recent league game against Brentford.

Having fumbled a 2-0 lead to eventually draw 2-2 with the Bees, it seems as though the Midlands club could have done with having him in the team.

If the 6 foot 5 centre-back isn’t likely to be a regular starter for Brendan Rodgers’ side this season, Fulham should do all they can to bring him to Craven Cottage and partner him alongside Duffy at the back.

Should the club end up signing the giant defender, he and Duffy certainly have the defensive credentials to give the Cottagers a good chance of avoiding getting relegated back to the Championship.

Alan Myers drops Everton transfer claim

Everton’s transfer business so far this summer has done little to reassure fans that they won’t be embroiled in another relegation battle this season.

The Toffees have so far only signed one player, as James Tarkowski joined on a free transfer from Burnley, while star man Richarlison moved to Tottenham Hotspur in a £60m deal.

You would have hoped that the Merseyside outfit would have had replacement options ready after their windfall from the Brazilian, but there has been very little action since his exit, and it seems as if new signings are not imminent.

What’s the word?

According to Sky Sports journalist Alan Myers, Everton fans shouldn’t expect any new signings until the team returns from their pre-season tour in the United States.

In full, he said: “I wouldn’t expect any incomings until the team are back from the states, nothing imminent.”

Lampard’s side are currently in the USA and looked uninspiring in a 2-0 defeat against Arsenal recently.

They kick off the season against Chelsea in less than three weeks and supporters will be desperate to see some new additions before then, otherwise, it promises to be another long hard season for the Toffees.

Supporters will be gutted

The Toffees have so far been slow to find a replacement for Richarlison and risk starting the season with the injury-prone Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Salomon Rondon as their only natural options up front.

Meanwhile, fellow relegation candidates Leeds United, Fulham and Nottingham Forest have all arguably strengthened their squads with new signings ahead of the new season, which does not bode well for Lampard’s side.

Last summer saw Everton spend just £1.8m on transfer fees, as Demarai Gray joined from Bayer Leverkusen, and that led to a disastrous campaign.

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So to be in a similar position this summer, where they are yet to spend a penny on transfer fees, is baffling, and Albert Einstein perhaps put it best when he defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

Everton have spent poorly under the ownership of Farhad Moshiri and although the fanbase will be keen to see those mistakes learnt from, spending more than £1.8m would certainly help the club in their bid for survival.

AND, in other news: “Close to agreement..”: Ornstein drops big update, Everton supporters will be gutted..

Rangers close to signing Rabbi Matondo

A French journalist has dropped a big Glasgow Rangers transfer claim that will surely have left Giovanni van Bronckhorst buzzing as he looks to improve his squad further.

What’s the news?

Marc Mechenoua has tweeted about the Ibrox side’s interest in Welsh winger Rabbi Matondo, saying: “Rabbi Matondo is close to signing with Glasgow Rangers for a sum close to €2m. In Ligue 1, Lorient and Troyes have made offers for the player.”

This is yet more good news for Rangers as they continue to make some headway into the summer transfer market, and a deal for Matondo would be a shrewd move.

Van Bronckhorst will be buzzing

It’s no secret that the Dutchman has been looking to strengthen the attacking options available to him at Ibrox, with a right-winger being a key priority in this window.

The former Manchester City academy prospect joined Schalke for a €9m fee in 2019 but has struggled to ascertain himself into a key member of the German side during his stay, spending time on loan at Stoke and Cercle Brugge.

His form at the Belgian side last season saw Rangers linked with the winger, and it’s easy to see why. The 21-year-old scored 10 goals in 27 appearances, as well as adding a further two assists – and if there were any weaknesses in the Ibrox side last season, it was a lack of goals from either wing.

Having been linked with Rangers since the end of last season, it appears they have beaten off competition from Celtic, who were also seemingly interested in Matondo.

With Van Bronckhorst trying out numerous players on the right-wing last season to no great success, a player of Matondo’s talent should hopefully be able to slot into the position with ease and hit the ground running.

With the World Cup looming on the horizon for the youngster, regular game time at a club the stature of Rangers will do his international chances no harm at all as he aims to add to his 11 caps for Wales.

AND in other news: David Ornstein drops big transfer update that’ll have Rangers supporters gutted

Leeds eye Sonny Perkins swoop

Leeds United have got their transfer window off to a frantic start with Victor Orta and Jesse Marsch wasting no time in improving the squad.

It’s been an urgent but much-needed rebuild with the Whites enduring a dismal 2021/22 campaign.

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They survived by the skin of their teeth and they are in no mood to repeat things next time around.

Marc Roca, Brenden Aaronson and Rasmus Kristensen have been added to a squad that could be gutted by the potential departures of Raphinha and Kalvin Phillips.

Marsch will have big shoes to fill if they leave but with a glowing list of young prospects coming through the ranks, there is hope that one day the American could unearth his very own Yorkshire Pirlo.

Speaking of Pirlo and the best to play the game over the last two decades, Leeds could well be on the verge of repeating their Rio Ferdinand masterclass.

The centre-back signed for the Elland Road outfit back in 2000 in what was a then club-record fee of £18m from West Ham.

Fast forward 22 years later and Leeds are turning to the Hammers again, this time to sign a player at the opposite end of the pitch to Ferdinand.

That happens to be teenage forward Sonny Perkins with the Elland Road hierarchy believed to be casting their eyes towards the youngster.

The 18-year-old hasn’t earned a great deal of first-team football yet but has been banging in the goals at youth level, finding the net on 19 occasions for their U18 and U23 sides.

That form has seen Leeds linked with a switch as they aim to bolster a set up already blessed with some of the finest talents in their age group; Sam Greenwood and Joe Gelhardt.

Perkins, who has been earning “rave reviews” in the words of ExWHUemployee, certainly deserves more minutes but whether he’d earn them more under Marsch than David Moyes remains to be seen.

Either way, Leeds already have a history of recruiting from the Irons and it went pretty well with Ferdinand before he secured a move to his now beloved Manchester United.

Perkins may not be the stoic defender that the now television pundit is but he is equally as brutal, just in the opposition’s penalty area instead.

The youngster clearly has an enormously bright future ahead of him and as a result, he’d be a wise signing from Orta. Perkins really does have the world at his feet.

AND in other news, Orta now plotting Leeds bid for “complete” £25m machine, just imagine him & Roca…

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…

Mendis and Dhananjaya battle adversity to keep Sri Lanka afloat

Kusal Mendis showed grit and Dhananjaya de Silva showed flair in rescuing their team from a rocky start in Chittagong

Mohammad Isam01-Feb-2018Bangladesh taking an early wicket in a home Test has meant, at least in the last 15 months, a couple more following quickly. England and Australia found themselves in trouble early as reputable batsmen were riddled with self-doubt at the first sign of a slightly turning ball, close-in fielders and big appeals.When Dimuth Karunaratne fell to Mehidy Hasan in the third over with his side yet to open their account, the home side may have thought of an impending collapse. Judging by the bowling changes and field settings, it was clear that they expected Kusal Mendis and Dhananjaya de Silva to be roadkill on their way to taking the upper hand in the first Test.But these two Sri Lanka batsmen didn’t take a step back or let the close-in fielders or bowling changes get to them. Mendis and Dhananjaya got down to business rather quickly, and turned the tide in their favour (or as cricketers like to say, shifted the momentum). Dhananjaya finished the day unbeaten on 104, his fourth Test century, and his second successive three-figure score. The pair added 187 runs for the unbroken second wicket, leading a fine recovery from a tough start.By the tea break, Dhananjaya had struck seven fours in his 37, which came off 42 balls. He ended the day’s second session by clattering Taijul Islam, Bangladesh’s most senior spinner in the absence of Shakib Al Hasan, for three fours in an over, two straight and one over cover. Mendis still wasn’t in the groove at this stage, having made 13 off 39 balls. He had survived a dropped catch when Mehidy put down an easy chance at second slip when Mendis was on four.This was a scrappy innings from Mendis, having been dropped on 57 too when Imrul couldn’t grab the edge off Mehidy in the 31st over. He survived three reviews taken by Bangladesh amid plenty of plays and misses against the left-arm spinners. But survive he did, not letting these incidents affect his batting in any way. He just let them pass with a toothy grin, and moved on to the next ball.Mendis struck six fours and a pulled six in his unbeaten 83 off 152 balls, which would be a huge sigh of relief for a batsman returning to the team after sitting out the tour to India. His return to the side didn’t start off well in the tri-series, making just 73 runs in four innings.Dhananjaya meanwhile was sailing smoothly to a fourth Test century. He reached his fifty off 65 balls before hitting five boundaries in the next two overs. Although one of them streaked past the slip cordon, he sweetly timed the other two through point and extra cover. Dhananjaya took nearly the same number of balls to reach his next 50, which gave him consecutive hundreds in Tests. In the previous game in Delhi, his unbeaten 119 was a match-saving effort, compiled while battling breathing problems and a glute injury.Mendis and Dhananjaya got their international breakthrough around 18 months ago when they battered the Australians during a 3-0 home series win. Dhananjaya was the highest scorer in that Test series – his first – having made 325 runs at an average of 65. But he started to lose that form in South Africa last year, ending up with him losing his place in subsequent series against Bangladesh and India.The Delhi hundred marked his return to the Sri Lanka Test fold, but he would be keen to use this innings in Chittagong as a more solid footing to get his career back on track. He looks the more upright of the two batsmen, sometimes looking similar to Upul Tharanga in his uncomplicated ways.Not that Mendis looks complicated in his technique or batting style, but it hasn’t been straightforward for him of late. He had two lowly series against Zimbabwe and South Africa before making 194 against Bangladesh last year. But after a poor series against Pakistan in the UAE where he made 58 runs in four innings, Mendis lost his place through the India tour.Like Dhananjaya, he too would love to get to the three-figure mark on the third morning, and build from this performance. And with the pitch in Chittagong getting spicier by the session, two batsmen with runs behind them would be crucial for Sri Lanka, who are still 326 runs adrift. The first two sessions on the third day will really be a test of determination for de Silva and Mendis.

Pakistan, press-ups and national redemption

The themes of redemption and rehabilitation had been a constant companion for Pakistan in the build-up to what proved to be an epic first Test, but it was only in that moment of victory that the true significance of their 75-run win could be understood

Andrew Miller at Lord's 18-Jul-2016Shortly after 6 pm on the fourth afternoon at Lord’s, Mohammad Amir burst through Jake Ball’s defences with a fast and fierce stump-rattler and took off on that trademark spread-eagle celebration. In that moment two of the most significant aspects of Pakistan’s post-2010 story were pulled as one to lower the blinds on arguably the darkest chapter of their sporting history.The themes of redemption and rehabilitation had been a constant companion for Pakistan in the build-up to what proved to be an epic first Test, but it was only in that moment of victory – and its immediate aftermath, as Younis Khan turned from senior pro to drill sergeant to lead his team in a set of five press-ups and a salute to the flag – that the true significance of their 75-run win could be understood.Of course, Amir’s moment of glory will capture the imagination – and doubtless the back pages too – for his joy and passion, and that final victorious release of emotion, harked back to his more innocent teenage life, when he was known simply for his searing genius and not for any nefarious agreements with shady agents and hangers-on.But to hear Misbah-ul-Haq talking, in quietly reverential terms, about the inspiration that he and his team-mates had drawn from their weeks of training with the Pakistan Army in Abbottabad, and how eagerly every member of the team had wanted to emulate the tribute that he himself had made after reaching his hundred on the first day, was an indication of a wider truth about the national team’s importance to their country.Suddenly, it made sense why the likes of Wahab Riaz had been talking of treating Amir like a “little brother”, and how the team’s doubters – most notably Mohammad Hafeez and Azhar Ali, but even, for a time, the captain himself – had come to accept the need for a collective show of unity on a tour so significant that personal differences simply could not be allowed to fester.It is hard to fathom the disconnect that must have existed between Pakistan’s players and their people in the years after the spot-fixing saga, especially given that the team had been living as exiles for most of that decade already – and remain so to this day – driven from their homeland by geo-politics and the sinister creep of terrorism.Cricket, in that grim context, ought to have been on hand to offer light relief to a troubled nation. Instead, the events of Lord’s 2010 offered a betrayal that went beyond the identity of the three guilty players.Here then, in a quirk of fate too juicy to ignore, was an opportunity to apologise to the nation with the most grandiose gesture imaginable. And how staggeringly Misbah and his men have seized the moment.”The one thing that we learnt from [Abbottabad], the army people are not getting much salaries, but for this flag and for the Pakistani nation, they want to sacrifice their lives,” Misbah said. “That’s a big motivation for all of us. Everyone is really putting effort in for that flag and the nation. We are giving 100% to try to win all the games.”The team was really hoping that we would get a chance [to do some press-ups] because I got a chance after scoring a hundred. But after winning this game they got the chance to send this small tribute to all those army men who were working really hard with us there at the boot camp. It’s a good message to send.”For some, such militaristic overtones may have uncomfortable connotations in the current climate, not least in a week that has featured a failed coup in Turkey. And, where Abbottabad is concerned, it is hard to think of that city without thinking of its most famous former inhabitant, Osama bin Laden, and the violent end that he met at the hands of US Navy Seals in May 2011.But it is a message that will resonate back home nonetheless, for the overt show of patriotism on the one hand but also for the clear message that hard work and discipline can overcome all manner of hardships. From the boot camp in Abbottabad, through the focus on skills in Lahore and, finally, to a lengthy acclimatisation period at the Ageas Bowl, every step of Pakistan’s journey to this redemption has been well-documented. However, in the moment of victory, Misbah was finally able to join the dots together.”The first importance was for the team to get fit, because if you are not fit enough you cannot really perform and be competitive,” he said. “Everyone worked really hard throughout that camp, then it comes to skills and then it comes to preparation in similar conditions to where you have to play.”I think the [Pakistan Cricket] board did a really good job in getting us here for ten days’ camp and a couple of [warm-up] games. That gave us a proper chance to acclimatise and it was really good for us that our batsmen got some confidence. If we can get to good scores we can win again here because our bowling attack is really good.”Pakistan’s victory salute was a symbol of overcoming hardships•Getty ImagesThe appointment of Mickey Arthur, in that regard, has so far proven to be a masterstroke. He departed his last tour of England as a figure of fun, sacked on the eve of the 2013 Ashes as the events of “Homeworkgate” caught up with a truculent squad. But where a pernickety insistence on detail proved his downfall back then, now it has provided Misbah’s leadership with a vital show of back-room support.”Whatever we needed before going into a Test match, we did it,” Misbah said. “You could say that was really emphasised by the coach, he influenced the cricket board to do the right preparations and be disciplined, and that is going to help us in the future also.”When it comes to the future, that is something that Pakistan’s cricket team can now embrace with alacrity, and it is at this point that Amir’s personal tale swims so clearly into view. There remains a hard core of dissenters – former players for the most part – who still maintain that he should never have been allowed to darken the game again. Zero tolerance for corruption – be it fixing or doping – is advocated by those who believe that innocence in sport needs to be protected at all costs – forgetting, perhaps, that innocence isn’t necessarily granted to all countries and cultures equally.And for that reason, there was something irresistible about the sight of Amir soaring once again on that final evening – amid the joy of that final wicket, but also with the fizz of one of the overs of a pulsating match, in which he smashed Stuart Broad’s stumps and then briefly appeared to be on a hat-trick, only for DRS to show a splinter of inside-edge on Steven Finn’s lbw.This was Amir reborn – restored, in the game’s closing moments, to the towering magnificence with which he had launched his first tilt at a Lord’s Test six years ago – remember the irresistibility of his six-wicket onslaught in the opening overs of the 2010 Test, before his world caved in?He had taken his time to settle into his comeback, and two dropped catches on the second day had extended his purgatory for a few extra overs. But in the end, Amir seized that second chance, and how Pakistan – as a nation – needs to hear such a powerful message that better times can come again.”That was a special moment for him,” Misbah said. “That could be the start of a new life and I think and hope he will prove to everybody that he can really be a good man now. He’s a good cricketer now, a good human being, and that’s the only way he can go. He is so lucky to get another chance, but it’s a new life for him, a new start.”England, inevitably, will be stung by this defeat, and have already been piqued by the celebrations. Over on Twitter, Tim Bresnan, one of England’s Ashes-winners on the 2010-11 tour of Australia, warned that the press-ups might come back to “bite” Pakistan, just as England’s infamous “Sprinkler” dance riled the Aussies on that trip, and Alastair Cook was clearly struggling not to sound churlish as he reflected on the scenes in England’s moment of defeat.”I didn’t take any offence but certainly, at that emotive time, it’s not pleasant viewing,” he said. “They’re entitled to do what they want and obviously it’s united them and shown us what a challenge we’ve got.”But frankly, such scenes had next to nothing to do with Cook and his men. It was all about Pakistan’s journey back into the light, by whatever means could help them to atone for the sins of their recent past. And, for this redemptive contest at least, it could not have worked to more spectacular effect.

Anderson breaks record but Holder denies England

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Apr-2015The side-story of the day was James Anderson’s pursuit of the England Test wickets record. He drew level by having Marlon Samuels caught in the gully•Getty ImagesJoe Root was then given the ball and slid one into the pads of Shivnarine Chanderpaul for a huge lbw appeal…•Getty Images…which was given out to spark another Root celebration of much running. It was a big wicket for England and their third of the morning session•Getty ImagesAfter lunch West Indies frustrated England for a while, before Jermaine Blackwood played a loose stroke to give Chris Jordan his second wicket of the match•Getty ImagesBut Denesh Ramdin and Jason Holder got together to move West Indies into calmer waters•Getty ImagesThe pair added a century stand for the seventh wicket as England began to wonder where their next wicket was coming from•Associated PressBut James Anderson returned to not only become England’s leading Test wicket-taker but to reignite the tourists’ hopes•Getty Images

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