Spurs: Kane set to miss start of the season

As per The Telegraph, Harry Kane is set to miss the start of Tottenham’s Premier League campaign and their opening match against Manchester City following his participation at the European Championship with England.

The Lowdown: Kane future up in the air

Of course, Kane’s future is up in the air – he told Tottenham earlier this summer that he wishes to leave the club (Sky Sports).

Manchester City have been heavily linked with the England captain as they look to replace Sergio Aguero in attack.

The Latest: Kane to miss season start

Unsurprisingly, Kane has been given some extra time off this summer after helping England reach the final of Euro 2020.

As a result, no matter which club he is with by 15 August, he will not take part in the 2021/22 Premier League’s opening weekend.

The Verdict: Makes sense

This comes as no great surprise. As the Three Lions skipper and most important player going forward, Kane started every single one of England’s games at the summer tournament and completed two matches which went to extra time (Transfermarkt). He also made 49 appearances in all competitions for Spurs during the most recent campaign, so he is bound to be in need of a reast.

By the time the new season starts, he could have completed a transfer to the Citizens, even if Daniel Levy and co are desperate to keep him in north London (Manchester Evening News). With the 27-year-old being Tottenham’s top league goalscorer for seven seasons in a row and being hailed as a “special player” by former Spurs manager Jose Mourinho, it’s little wonder that the club’s hierarchy want to do all they can to retain his services.

In that case, perhaps it would be better for them if he is unavailable – the last thing they would want is to lose to a Kane-inspired display from the Premier League champions if he swaps Spurs for Manchester in the next three weeks.

In other news, this man expresses his disappointment at missing out on the Spurs managerial position.

Lancashire labour to Rayner and Lewry

A round-up from the first day of the latest Championship matches

Cricinfo staff06-Aug-2008Division OneLancashire laboured to 206 all out on the first day against Sussex at Old Trafford, yet this represented an useful comeback after the hosts floundered at 90 for 5. Jason Lewry did the early damage: Lou Vincent dragged one on for nought while Iain Sutcliffe was also bowled by a cracking delivery which held its line on off stump. Stuart Law hung around for 52 balls for his 9 before edging a good-length delivery from Luke Wright to the wicketkeeper. However, Lancashire weren’t done just yet and fought back impressively through Steven Croft (46 from 87) and Francois du Plessis who put on 59 for the fifth wicket. Ollie Rayner removed du Plessis and Croft fell 10 overs later, smartly held by Chris Adams at first slip, but Luke Sutton (45*) and Dominic Cork at least ensured Lancashire reached the lofty heights of 200, with a patient stand of 53. Rayner mopped up the tail with 5 for 65, his third five-wicket haul, and Sussex were 9 without loss at stumps.England’s one-Test wonder, Darren Pattinson, ran through Somerset with 5 for 40 on the first day of their match against Nottinghamshire at Taunton, traditionally a batting paradise. In reply, however, Nottinghamshire had lost six wickets of their own but had gained a vital first-innings lead of 79. Nottinghamshire made crucial early inroads, with Charlie Shreck trapping Justin Langer leg-before while Pattinson picked up Marcus Trescothick’s wicket. When Ian Blackwell fell for 1, Somerset had fallen to 25 for 5, prompting a salvaging act from their lower-order. Craig Kieswetter began proceedings with a brisk 18, while Steffan Jones stroked 27 from 45. Somerset were blown away for 106 in 39.1 overs. Yet Nottinghamshire struggled too, as Andy Caddick removed Matthew Wood for a duck, but Bilal Shafayat (25) and Mark Wagh (46) steadied their reply with a stand of 65. Samit Patel stood out for the visitors, celebrating his call-up to England’s one-day squad, with a fine 56 from 80 balls as Nottinghamshire went to stumps with a lead of 79, though with only four first-innings wickets remaining.Sixteen wickets tumbled at Taunton and another 15 crashed at Chester-le-Street between Durham and Kent, as the visitors closed on 43 for 5 in reply to 146. Durham trail the Division One leaders, Nottinghamshire, by 10 points but have a match in hand, and they began solidly today with an opening stand of 58 between Michael di Venuto and Mark Stoneman. Ryan McLaren struggled in his opening spell, so the onus fell on Robbie Joseph to make the breakthrough, removing the openers, before Amjad Khan put Durham onto the back foot with the wickets of Shivnarine Chanderpaul (edging to second slip) and Dale Benkenstein (inside edge onto his stumps) in quick succession. Liam Plunkett led a brief revival with a punchy 21 from 39, but Martin Saggers found immense swing to clean up a brittle tail with 4 for 26, the hosts skittled for just 146. Kent suffered the same difficulties as Durham, losing Rob Key (4), Joe Denly (21) and Neil Dexter (1) with 26 on the board. When Mark Davies picked up his third wicket, that of the nightwatchman Saggers, Kent were limping on 43 for 5 and trail by 103 going into the second day.Jacques Rudolph rescued Yorkshire with a solid 83 on the first day against Hampshire at The Rose Bowl. Rain delayed the start by two hours and, when play got underway, Chris Tremlett’s snorting fifth delivery removed Andrew Gale while Anthony McGrath was struck plumb in front. Chris Taylor didn’t last long, edging James Tomlinson – who swung the ball prodigiously – to a diving Nic Pothas, while Adam Lyth drove a limp return catch to Dimitri Mascarenhas. However, at 82 for 4, Yorkshire’s South African dug deep to salvage the innings while his team-mates came and went in a procession. Cautious and steady throughout, he was nevertheless alert to scoring opportunities and stroked 12 fours. Crucially, he found support in David Wainwright whose 65-ball 18 might have lacked fluency but at least provided solidity. At stumps Rudolph, who was dropped on 78, was unbeaten on 83.Division TwoGraeme Hick crashed his 136th first-class hundred to lead a dominant Worcestershire performance on the first day against Derbyshire at New Road. Hick, who turned 42 in May, made 149 from just 151 balls – his highest score for two years – and shared in partnerships of 184 with Ben Smith (76) and 123 with Steve Davies (71) during Worcestershire’s 450 for 8 declared. They raced along in the first session, smacking 118 runs in boundaries alone, as Vikram Solanki became the first to notch 1000 Championship runs in the season. Derbyshire’s bowlers leaked 45 extras in a disappointing display, with seven no-balls from Graham Wagg, and Dan Birch should have held Hick at midwicket on 74. Hick was relentless before he fell to a rare loose shot, lofting to Charl Langeveldt at long-off.A fine 104 from Marcus North put Gloucestershire in a good position on the opening day against Leicestershire at Cheltenham. No play was possible in the first session and Leicestershire were soon in business when William Porterfield, who returned from Ireland duty, nudged a leg-side delivery behind to Paul Nixon. And though Kabir Ali looked in excellent touch, he edged Dillon du Preez to Boeta Dippenaar at second slip to leave Gloucestershire tottering. However, North bristled with confidence – particularly against Claude Henderson – and found a useful ally in Hamish Marshall, with whom he put on 167 in 46 overs. North ought to have been held on 52 when Joshua Cobb fluffed a running catch at mid-off and, in spite of reaching the nineties three times this summer, he finally notched three figures from 142 balls. It was his first ton for 14 months, and the relief told when he slapped one straight to mid-off. Marshall, who made a patient 70, also fell to Jim Allenby but Gloucestershire – who are still seeking their first Championship win of the season – are reasonably placed at 256 for 5.A superb, rearguard 103 from Jamie Dalrymple hoisted Glamorgan out of the depths against his former county, Middlesex, on the opening day at Colwyn Bay. Glamorgan were put in and soon slipped to 53 for 5 as Middlesex’s seamers took advantage of helpful bowling conditions. Tim Murtagh had Richard Grant edging behind while David Hemp was held neatly at third slip by Ed Joyce off the impressively disciplined Alan Richardson. When Tom Maynard offered no shot to Danny Evans, Glamorgan were 53 for 5 and going nowhere. Enter Dalrymple. He put on 56 with Mark Wallace and, after another rain delay, a further 66 with Dean Cosker (39 from 62) to irritate Middlesex. Nurturing the tail brilliantly, he put on 145 for the last three wickets to notch his first hundred in three years as Glamorgan went to stumps on 258 for 9.

Worcester floods once again

The storms which have ravaged England in recent days have again caused the rivers surrounding Worcestershire’s home at New Road to break their banks and flood the ground

Cricinfo staff07-Sep-2008
New Road is under water yet again © Getty Images
The storms which have ravaged England in recent days have again caused the rivers surrounding Worcestershire’s home at New Road to break their banks and flood the ground. It means that there is almost no chance of the county’s remaining two home matches being staged at the venue.New Road was unusable for the remainder of the summer after severe flooding in June last year, although it was back in service at the start of 2008 thanks to extensive fund raising and tremendous efforts by the groundstaff. However, in spite of an insurance pay-out of £300,000 and an ECB grant of £75,000, the club made a pre-tax loss of £693,211 as it was estimated that the clear-up and other costs totalled close to £1 million.As a contingency, a deal was signed with Kidderminster CC to use their facilities if there was a recurrence of the 2007 flooding.The county will make an announcement tomorrow when they are expected to confirm that Kidderminster will host their last two games, both against Middlesex, in the Pro40 League next Sunday and County Championship Division Two on September 17.

Southampton: Saints face blow in Brandon Williams pursuit

Southampton have suffered a setback in their pursuit of Manchester United full-back Brandon Williams, following an injury lay-off to his teammate Alex Telles [Hampshire Live].

The Lowdown: Southampton gear up for 2021/22

Looking to improve on a disappointing 15th placed finish last term, Southampton manager Ralph Hassenhuttl will be hoping to acquire the personnel necessary to bring around significant on-field improvement in 2021/22.

Wasting no time in terms of recruitment, the Austrian boss has brought in three reinforcements in the form of Theo Walcott, Romain Perraud and Olly Lancashire [Transfermarkt].

However, they have now encountered some problematic circumstances surrounding their latest pursuit.

The Latest: Williams pursuit takes hit after Telles injury

Having a keen eye on 20-year-old Williams for a while, Southampton had already been set back in their chase by his pre-season involvement with the Red Devils due to Luke Shaw still recovering from playing at EURO 2020 [Hampshire Live].

Moreover, the South Coast club now have to contend with the news that Williams’ counterpart Alex Telles has been ruled out for six weeks with an ankle injury, which means he is likely to stay at Old Trafford.

The 5 foot 7 ace has also been mentioned by manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in recent times, as he said: “We’ve got kids wanting to play of course. Brandon has done well in the left-back position.”

The Verdict: Bitter blow for Southampton

Frustratingly, this setback will give Hassenhuttl added concern ahead of the forthcoming campaign – this is a player he has been chasing as far back as January.

In 2020/21, Williams registered a solitary assist across 19 appearances combined for Manchester United and Manchester United Under-23’s [Transfermarkt].

Impressing with his passing ability across the campaign, the versatile defender recorded a passing accuracy of 84.6% [WhoScored].

Once labelled as ‘absolutely outstanding’ by his boss, Southampton will now have to either bide their time in order to secure his services or move on to other targets.

In other news, Southampton have completed a deal for a Premier League defender.

Ball: Everton are crying out for a player like Jesse Lingard

Former Everton defender Michael Ball feels his old side are crying out for a player like Manchester United attacker Jesse Lingard.

Lingard spent the second half of last season on loan at West Ham and showed everyone his attacking quality from that No.10 position.

In 16 league appearances, the 28-year-old scored nine goals, helping the Hammers to secure European football. He also recorded four assists during that temporary spell at the London Stadium.

Considering that, West Ham understandably want to bring Lingard back. However, according to The Athletic, United’s £30m asking price is proving to be a problem, while Sky Sports claim the Hammers have just a 10 per cent chance of re-signing the England international.

It could perhaps present a team like Everton with a chance, with Ball believing the likes of Lingard and Ross Barkley are the kind of players the Toffees need.

“They’re two players Everton need, two players Everton were crying out for last year,” the retired full-back told TT. “We were very slow and passive in that sort of No.10, third-man run midfield area.

“Jesse’s loan was very successful at West Ham, so it’s no surprise that Everton are interested in him.”

Last month, some reports suggested that Everton were indeed interested in signing Lingard from United, so perhaps it is something they end up pursuing.

Katich set to open in first Test

Simon Katich is set to take Phil Jaques’ place in Australia’s line-up for the first Test against India after the coach Tim Nielsen confirmed the pair had been in a “bat-off” in the West Indies this year

Cricinfo staff03-Oct-2008
Simon Katich is likely to partner Matthew Hayden in the first Test © AFP
Simon Katich is set to take Phil Jaques’ place in Australia’s line-up for the first Test against India after the coach Tim Nielsen confirmed the pair had been in a “bat-off” in the West Indies this year. Katich is likely to open with Matthew Hayden when the Test series kicks off in Bangalore next Thursday having been won a spot in the final tour match ahead of Jaques.It would be a tough call on Jaques, who fought off Chris Rogers to be the preferred replacement for the retired Justin Langer last year and has averaged 50.37 in his nine Tests since then. However, Katich grasped his opportunities even more firmly when he stepped in for the injured Hayden in the Caribbean and averaged 63.80 including two centuries.”Mainly the selectors thought that Katto and Jaquesy pretty much had a bat-off in the West Indies,” Nielsen said after the first day of the tour match. “We didn’t picture it that way at the time, but they thought Katto was playing extremely well.”He made hundreds in Antigua and Barbados, the last couple of Tests of the series, he’s come off a stellar summer in Australia and is in such good form that they just thought he may have edged himself in front of Jaquesy as the second choice opening batsman behind Matthew. It’s a nice position to be in when you’ve got three quality opening batsmen, unfortunately three doesn’t go into two, so the choice they made was to go with Simon this time.”Jaques did not disgrace himself in the West Indies, where he finished off with 108 in his final innings, but Katich’s versatility went in his favour. Katich is a usually sharp fielder, although he had a horror spell of dropped catches in the West Indies, and his left-arm wrist-spin could be particularly useful as Australia field an attack lacking spin experience.”It’s just the whole package,” Nielsen said. “Katto can bowl spinners if we need him to. He didn’t bowl today. He’s a good fielder and player. I’m not saying Jaquesy doesn’t do those things, but just at the moment the feeling is that Simon is maybe playing a bit better.”

Braithwaite prefers to join Tottenham

According to Sport, Barcelona forward Martin Braithwaite now ‘prefers’ to join Tottenham Hotspur this summer and is ‘among the favourites’ to possibly replace Harry Kane if he leaves.

The Lowdown: Spurs in striker hunt amid Kane drama…

Tottenham managing director Fabio Paratici has his sights set on strengthening new boss Nuno Espirito Santo’s forward options before the start of 2021/2022.

In the last few weeks alone, Spurs have been linked with a fair few strikers in Dusan Vlahovic, Simy and even Lautaro Martinez.

This comes amid question marks surrounding the future of superstar Harry Kane as Manchester City continue to push for his signature.

The Latest: Braithwaite ‘prefers’ to join Spurs…

Bringing the latest on Tottenham’s search for a new forward, Sport believe that Denmark international Braithwaite ‘prefers’ to join the Lilywhites over London rivals West Ham.

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

It is believed the possible departure of Kane would allow Spurs to sign two new strikers with the 30-year-old listed as a possible candidate to replace their star man if he were to leave.

Sport even claim that Braithwaite is ‘among the favourites’ to succeed Kane and he has asked for more time to consider his future, especially considering the option of a move to Spurs ‘attracts him much more’ than the Irons.

The Verdict: Avoid…

The 56-cap international has apparently restored his reputation in England following a solid Euro 2020 campaign, but we’d advise Spurs to avoid Braithwaite as a favourite to succeed Kane in the event of his departure.

He scored just two goals in 11 La Liga starts for Barcelona last season, leaving little wonder they are desperate to get him off the wage bill.

Braithwaite’s age also indicates that Tottenham stand to gain little to no sell-on value from his signing.

If he is to sign, it should be in support of either Kane or a superstar replacement, not as the replacement himself.

In other news: ‘Yes yes yes’, ‘Buzzing’, ‘Game changer’…Tottenham fans erupt as ‘beautiful’ news confirmed, find out more here.

Blue retain title with crushing win

India Blue retained the Challenger Trophy, putting together their most emphatic performance of an unbeaten campaign in the final in Cuttack

Cricinfo staff26-Oct-2008
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Robin Uthappa was named as the Player of the Tournament © AFP
India Blue retained the Challenger Trophy, putting together their most emphatic performance of an unbeaten campaign in the final in Cuttack. As bright as Blue’s show was in the eight-wicket thrashing, so was the dullness of Red’s display. Their batsmen put up a paltry 151 and their bowlers failed to strike early to make the contest a bit more exciting.Blue had successfully defended targets in their two games, and if Red’s decision to bat first was prompted by a thought of breaking that trend, it surely didn’t work. They were bowled out for 151 in 43 overs. Ashok Dinda and Siddharth Trivedi struck the early blows to leave Red at 72 for 6, and if not for a 66-run stand between captain S Badrinath and Praveen Kumar, Red might have well folded up for much less.If the Red’s batting was lacklustre, the start for Blue put out any doubts as to who the winner would be. Ajinkya Rahane continuously pinged the off side for fours, sometimes a touch risky, and overshadowed Robin Uthappa, the leading run-getter in the tournament. Uthappa was tentative to start with, and his timing far from perfect, but he made up for the sluggish beginning by taking on Piyush Chawla. When Uthappa holed out in the deep off the same bowler, the openers had put on 93 in 14.3 overs, effectively closing out the contest.Things did not go to plan from the start for Red. After playing off a maiden over first up, Parthiv Patel was lbw to Dinda in the second over. Rohit Sharma, whose century against India Green helped Red to the final, was teased with deliveries outside off stump from Dinda, and the persistence paid off when he edged a drive to Virat Kohli at second slip.Badrinath and M Vijay then played with caution to see off the new ball. The first ten overs brought just 25, but Vijay decided to step up the rate against a tiring Irfan Pathan in the 11th, taking a six and a four in an over that fetched 12. Aggression got the better of Vijay; trying to charge Trivedi and loft him over his head, he only nicked the ball to Dinesh Karthik.Jaydev Shah was bowled off an inside edge, and Trivedi got his third when he foxed Abhishek Nayar with a slower delivery – committed to a back-foot drive, the batsman didn’t middle it well and the ball lobbed to Kohli at cover.It was time for Red to rebuild, but Badrinath lost another partner when Chawla’s attempted strike over mid-on was caught by Chetanya Nanda, running back from mid-off. Badrinath, though, found support from Praveen. Badrinath scored just four from his first 20 deliveries, and relied on nudging the ball around for singles.Praveen’s entry put in some momentum; he hit Ashwin for a straight six and in the next over both he and Badrinath took boundaries off Nanda. Praveen went along at a good clip, but he was dismissed by a straighter one from Nanda. With the tailenders exposed, Badrinath had to keep the bulk of the strike. However, he departed soon after Praveen, beaten by an offspinner from R Ashwin as he attempted to cut the ball fine. Ashwin, with eight wickets, finished the top wicket-taker in the tournament.Badrinath would have also expected quick wickets from Praveen in Blue’s chase, but he and L Balaji failed to keep the runs in check to exert any pressure. Rahane started with two fours off consecutive deliveries from Praveen, though both shots weren’t too convincing. The off-side driving was only to get better as Blue raced towards their target. Uthappa, the in-form batsmen for Blue, surprisingly had got just 7 off 20 balls in the first ten overs.An attempted loft off Praveen didn’t connect but still rolled to the boundary. However, with Chawla brought in the 13th over, Uthappa changed gears rigthtaway with ten runs off the first two deliveries. He then came down the track to hit medium-pacer Vinay Kumar, his Karnataka team-mate, for a six. After he fell, Kohli stroked his way to an unbeaten 35. Rahane brought up his half-century, in the process taking a six off Mohnish Parmar. He was trapped in front by the same bowler, leaving way, perhaps fittingly, for captain Yuvraj Singh to guide his team to victory.

Rangers battling to sign Chukwuemeka

A recent report has suggested that Rangers are battling with Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur to sign Caleb Chukwuemeka this summer, and the teenage forward could be an excellent long-term addition to Steven Gerrard’s squad at Ibrox.

What’s the word?

According to The Daily Record, Rangers are one of several sides to show a keen interest in the Northampton Town forward this summer, although he is currently being driven by a potential move to the Premier League.

He could well join his brother, Carney, at Aston Villa, whilst Spurs recent decision to send Kion Etete on loan to the Cobblers may well have sweetened the deal in their favour, which suggests that Rangers are currently playing catch up in the race to sign him.

Would Chukwuemeka be a good signing?

Although Chukwuemeka has made just 28 senior appearances in his career thus far, scoring two goals, he certainly seems to be highly regarded by a lot of teams higher up in the footballing pyramid.

Whilst the 19-year-old probably wouldn’t be challenging for a place in Gerrard’s first-team straight away, considering the plethora of options the 41-year-old manager has available to him in attack, he could be an excellent option for the future if he can realise his obvious potential at Ibrox.

Former Northampton boss Keith Curle was full of praise for the teenage forward last season, saying:

“He showed good understanding and good composure. I don’t think he struck the ball as cleanly as he wanted to but that’s Caleb because he has a little bit of magic.

“Every outfield player has a job when we’re out of possession and it comes more naturally to some players than others. Caleb is a forward-thinking player and it’s not as natural. Give him a ball to chase when he might get a goal out of it, the lad finds a yard. We need to find that yard when he’s going the other way and he’s got to track a runner.“It’s all part and parcel of the game and when he understands that and it becomes second nature, he’ll be a very good player.”[freshpress-quiz id=“593776”]Chukwuemeka’s contract at Northampton is set to expire at the end of this season, so he could be a very cheap, low-risk transfer for Ross Wilson to complete this summer, so he should definitely try and bring him to Ibrox.And, in other news… Wilson heading for huge Rangers mistake with “warrior”, fans will be gutted

England hold on for one-run thriller

England clung on for a thrilling one-run victory against Trinidad and Tobago in their final warm-up match before Saturday’s US$20million match against the Superstars

The Bulletin by Andrew McGlashan28-Oct-2008
Scorecard
Kevin Pietersen shapes to launch one of his three sixes © AFP
England clung on for a thrilling one-run victory against Trinidad and Tobago in their final warm-up match before Saturday’s US$20million match against the Stanford Superstars. England were reduced to 11 fit players by a stomach bug sweeping the camp, but Kevin Pietersen sparkled with the bat before a patched-up attack did just enough to hold off a fine challenge from T&T. Steve Harmison kept them below the 10 needed from the final over, but there were concerns over Andrew Flintoff after he left the field before the end.If there was any thought that T&T would suffer a hangover from their success against Middlesex they were ill-founded and they once again put on a fine display. It was the perfect pressure-test for England ahead of the dart at millions and for a while during the closing overs it looked as though they would fail.Misfields started to appear from England and Ian Bell dropped a high catch at long-on, but Flintoff performed his usual end-of-innings party trick before Harmison – who had earlier bowled the first maiden of the tournament – stepped up for the final over. He targeted yorkers and was largely on target, yet could do little about an audacious dab-sweep from Samuel Badree which left T&T needed four off two balls. A tie would have led to a Super Over contest – a one-over aside duel to decide the result – but Harmison conceded just two singles as Ravi Rampaul was run out off the last ball.Four England players didn’t even make it to the ground, meaning Alastair Cook and Ravi Boapra were handed unexpected chances along with the already announced recalls for Graeme Swann and Harmison. It made team selection easy, but left them with an unbalanced side. England used the opportunity to experiment ahead of the main event at the weekend, promoting Samit Patel to No.3 then throwing him the new ball in a repeat of T&T’s tactics. Both were neither a major success or complete failure and at least Pietersen knows what is at his disposal and was able to witness his troops under some pressure.Pietersen himself had stood out with his class during a 30-ball 44, after Daren Ganga missed a tough catch to remove him 8, as England put their foot down in the second half of their innings. Pietersen’s effort was the most commanding innings of the week to date and showed how quality can overcome tricky conditions.Given the trend of the previous matches their 141 looked more than par, especially on a pitch with increasing uneven bounce, where some deliveries climbed alarmingly from a ridge on a good length. It was a well-paced innings, anchored by Bell’s sensible 37 from 41 balls before Pietersen provided the late impetus with three huge sixes between midwicket and long-on.T&T, though, weren’t going to die wondering. Justin Guillen was unlucky to be given out caught off his forearm, as umpire Asad Rauf decided against using the referral system. Lendl Simmons and the fearless Darren Bravo took on England’s attack, as Flintoff conceded three fours off his first three balls, before both fell in the space of three deliveries.Paul Collingwood showed the value of taking the pace off the ball during his economical four-over spell, which appeared to have given England some breathing space. Swann’s performance didn’t exactly cement his place for the big game, and Collingwood’s value as a bowler could put pressure on him.However, any hope England may have had of a comfortable finish vanished. Denesh Ramdin began to perform a repeat of his match-winning innings against Middlesex as he launched a late dart at the target. He crunched Harmison for a mighty six over long-on, only to fall later in the same over as he tried to chip over short fine-leg. He had got T&T close, although there was a little too much for the tail to do. England held on, but if they thought this was pressure wait until there’s life-changing money at stake in three days time.

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