Arsenal man continues to prove his worth with double salvo

Olivier Giroud has been a figure of mockery for many football fans since his arrival at Arsenal, but the slick-haired Frenchman continues to prove doubters wrong with another (potentially) crucial goal.

Giroud has even developed his own trademarked goal scoring angle at the near post. He might be mocked for a lack of pace, or missing the occasional sitter, but Wenger’s main man up front continues to provide for his side when the Gunners need it most.

Some fans are decidedly unsure about the big striker..

But his brace tonight should be enough to give Arsenal fans a bit more faith that Olivier Giroud is of a standard to carry Arsenal to the ‘next level’.

Its not like every fan is against you, Olivier.

Maybe a few more performances like this and the cruel world of Arsenal twitter will begin to be a bit kinder about the big man.

Would like to echo your feelings there, Nour.

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England rocked by fresh injury blow as Newcastle boss Eddie Howe confirms Callum Wilson will withdraw from Three Lions squad

Callum Wilson will pull out of the England squad for their upcoming matches after sustaining an injury, Newcastle coach Eddie Howe says.

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Wilson suffered hamstring injuryWill pull out of England squadJude Bellingham also a doubtWHAT HAPPENED?

Wilson was absent as Newcastle lost 2-0 to Bournemouth in the Premier League on Saturday. He was ruled out after sustaining a hamstring injury in the midweek Champions League match against Borussia Dortmund.

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The injury means the forward will have to miss next Friday's Euro 2024 qualifying match against Malta at Wembley and the away game against North Macedonia the following Monday.

Jude Bellingham is also in danger of missing the double header after he missed Real Madrid's match against Valencia in La Liga on Sunday because of a shoulder injury.

WHAT EDDIE HOWE SAID

Howe said after his team's Premier League match at the Vitality Stadium: "Callum won't travel with England. He's going to be out for a number of weeks."

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR NEWCASTLE

After the international period, Newcastle will take on Chelsea in the Premier League on November 25.

21 touches for Haaland! Winners, losers & ratings as Man City's machine breaks down against Brentford to open the door for Arsenal

An anonymous afternoon from the City striker set the tone as Guardiola's men suffered a shock defeat thanks to two goals from Ivan Toney

This wasn't meant to happen. Manchester City were expected to cruise to victory against Brentford in their final match before the World Cup, but instead they've left the door wide open for Mikel Arteta and Arsenal.

Erling Haaland hardly touched the ball as Brentford's centre-backs had a comfortable afternoon against the usually ruthless Norwegian machine, who was clearly missing a cog or two in his first start since late October.

To be fair, the warning signs were there early doors. After missing two chances inside the opening 10 minutes, Ivan Toney struck. Snubbed by Gareth Southgate and with a point to prove, the Brentford forward caused problems for the City defence all afternoon and would add a second to claim a historic win for Thomas Frank and his troops.

Sixteen of City's megastars will now head to Qatar, although they won't be going there with a beaming smile. It was an uncharacteristically poor performance from Guardiola's side, who could now have five points to make up when the season gets back underway.

Here's GOAL's winners, losers and ratings from an utterly miserable afternoon for the Premier League champions.

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    The Winners

    Arsenal:

    Was he watching? Surely he was?! Mikel Arteta can lead his Arsenal side into the international break an incredible five points ahead of City, if they can get the job done against Wolves later on Saturday. It's an unbelievable position for the Gunners to be in prior to the World Cup break, and one that their fans probably would never have imagined in their wildest dreams at the start of the 2022-23 season. Could Arteta really guide his side to their first Premier League title win since 2004? They may not get a better chance. What a time to be a Gooner!

    Phil Foden:

    Are you watching, Gareth? You better have been! If Foden doesn't start for England at the World Cup it will be an absolute travesty. The 22-year-old is a generational talent and he came up big when Guardiola needed him. In truth, like many of his team-mates, Foden had a pretty forgettable first half. That was until we hit stoppage time. As Kevin De Bruyne's corner bounced towards him, Foden unleashed. It was an unstoppable strike with flawless technique that arrowed past David Raya and into the top corner. City may have lost here, but you certainly can't blame their homegrown forward.

    International managers:

    As with all top-flight games taking place across the globe this weekend, international bosses will be praying for no late injury issues that could disrupt their plans just a week before the World Cup gets underway. Indeed, City have the joint-most number of players heading to Qatar (16, level with Bayern Munich) and fortunately for them, and the likes of Gareth Southgate, Luis Enrique, Fernando Santos and all the other national team bosses that rely on the Premier League champions' vast talent pool, everyone appeared to come away unscathed. Well, almost. Aymeric Laporte was down for around seven minutes as he received treatment on a nasty gashed head, but that certainly won't keep him out of Qatar. He's a warrior, is the Spain international.

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    The Losers

    Erling Haaland:

    It just wasn't Haaland's day. Restored to the starting XI, City's goalscoring freak would have been hungry to make a big impact in his final game before over a month off, but he was largely anonymous. It's difficult to criticise the Norwegian, given the gargantuan impact he's had since joining the Premier League champions, but Brentford's three centre-backs will go home and put their feet up in the knowledge they were rarely troubled by the 22-year-old. And you don't say that very often when Haaland's involved. The battling, bruising and ultimately brilliant focal point of a striker just wasn't on show at the Etihad today. The service to him wasn't great, granted, but Haaland wasn't in the groove either. Unfit? Maybe. But he certainly won't want to use that as an excuse. He had just 21 touches all game, the second lowest of all players who started the match and even fewer than both goalkeepers, Ederson and Raya. The former Dortmund forward's afternoon was summed up perfectly when, in the first half, he lay flat on the ground bemoaning how he'd failed to grow tall enough to connect with a cross from Foden, not realising De Bruyne had swung over another delivery that may well have been on a plate for him.

    Ilkay Gundogan:

    Scoring is Haaland's job, not Gundogan's, but boy could City have done with the midfielder wearing his shooting boots today. The Germany international had at least two presentable chances in front of goal in the second half and he wasted both of them. Woefully, in fact. First, he blazed over as he struggled to sort his feet out following Haaland's clever touch inside, before he again ballooned over the bar when well positioned in the box. Look, we're not expecting the same numbers Gundogan managed a couple of seasons ago – that saw him score 17 in all competitions – but he really should have done a whole lot better here, and his wasteful finishing ultimately cost his side the points. The former Dortmund midfielder's dismal afternoon was made worse when he allowed Toney to run off him to score the winner in second-half stoppage time.

    The City fans:

    They came to see Haaland. He did little. They certainly expected all three points. They got none. Throw in some controversial VAR calls and it was a hugely frustrating afternoon for City's supporters. Indeed, many of the decisions could have quite easily gone their way. Rico Henry's handball looked to be on the line, and thus a penalty, although a conclusive camera angle wasn't available to reverse Peter Bankes' original decision of a free-kick. De Bruyne, too, will argue he was clipped as he ran through. The Belgian was deemed to have dived, no penalty awarded. Store that one firmly in the 'seen them given' category. Their team remain behind Arsenal in the table, a gap that could extend to five points by the time a ball is even kicked in Qatar. City fans aren't used to it and they won't like it. Improvement needed in the second half of the season, especially if they're finally going to halt their Champions League duck.

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    Man City Ratings: Defence

    Ederson (7/10):

    Made two top early saves to deny Frank Onyeka and Ivan Toney as Brentford started on top but could do little to keep out either of the latter's goals. He may not be Brazil's No.1 but he remains one of world's top goalkeepers and Guardiola certainly wouldn't swap him for anyone.

    John Stones (5/10):

    He's just not a right-back. Stones wasn't majorly at fault here but he doesn't provide anywhere near the same attacking threat as Kyle Walker. Will head off to Qatar now safe in the knowledge he'll be restored to his familiar centre-back role.

    Manuel Akanji (4/10):

    Beaten in the air by Ben Mee as the Brentford centre-back's towering header led to Toney's opener. It was a key moment in the match and ultimately helped the visitors claim all three points.

    Aymeric Laporte (6/10):

    Couldn't stop Toney from opening the scoring as his attempt to clear ultimately saw the ball loop into the net. Shades of Terry Butcher as he was patched up with a bandage around his head in the second half and did incredibly well soon after to divert the ball away to stop Brentford scoring a second.

    Joao Cancelo (4/10):

    What's happened to the buccaneering, assist machine of last season? Back in the XI after his midweek ban, Cancelo struggled to provide the attacking threat from left-back that we've become accustomed to. A really quiet afternoon for the Portuguese and he was even booked for diving.

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    Midfield

    Kevin De Bruyne (5/10):

    Tried to pull the strings and get City moving forward but wasn't able to stamp his authority on the game as well as he usually does. His passing accuracy was an alarmingly low, for him, 69%, although he did stop Brentford adding to their goals tally with an incredible goalline clearance late on.

    Rodri (6/10):

    You can't really blame Rodri for this one. His passing was excellent as he kept trying to move his team forward, but ultimately he was on the losing side.

    Ilkay Gundogan (3/10):

    This wasn't a typical Gundogan performance. He hopelessly shanked a shot when Raya was miles off his line in the eighth minute and then squandered two more presentable chances in the second half that could've turned it all in City's favour. Way, way below his best.

Lusa aposta em jogo consistente e busca terceira vitória seguida na A2

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de um início de ano complicado dentro de campo, a Portuguesa parece ter reencontrado o bom futebol. O time vem de duas vitórias consecutivas e está a apenas um ponto da zona de classificação para o mata-mata da segunda divisão do Campeonato Paulista.

A boa fase é resultado de um modelo sólido e bem definido de jogo, segundo o lateral esquerdo Vinícius Silva, um dos destaques do time.

– Todos os jogadores sabem o que fazer em campo e cumprem com rigor as orientações da comissão técnica. Vínhamos jogando bem desde o início do campeonato, mas as coisas demoraram um pouco a engrenar. Agora, tenho certeza de que todos assimilaram as ideias e isso vem se convertendo em resultados – afirmou.

O jogador também destacou a importância de levar a Lusa de volta a primeira divisão do campeonato estadual.

– Estamos muito focados em levar a Portuguesa de volta ao Paulistão, lugar de onde nunca deveria ter saído. Jogar com essa camisa é uma honra e um privilégio e temos que dar até a última gota de suor para alcançar esse objetivo – completou.

O Paulistão da A2 conta com 16 equipes. As oito melhores avançam e disputam um quadrangular final, que dá duas vagas para a elite do futebol estadual em 2020. Os dois últimos são rebaixados à série A3.

O próximo compromisso da Portuguesa é neste sábado (29), contra o São Caetano, no Anacleto Campanella.

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Restored Hales ready to make up for lost time

Alex Hales knew the risk he was taking when he opted to sit out the start of the English season but he feel fit and raring to go against Yorkshire at Trent Bridge

Jon Culley30-Apr-2016It will be four years in August since Andrew Strauss walked off the field at Lord’s after the last of his 100 Test matches, by which time it is possible that the number of opening batsmen who have attempted to step into his shoes in the England side will be almost in double figures.Alex Hales is the current incumbent. He is the eighth to have been chosen as Alastair Cook’s partner post-Strauss, following on from Nick Compton, Joe Root, Michael Carberry, Sam Robson, Jonathan Trott, Adam Lyth and Moeen Ali. It is not a role that comes with much job security. Of those discards, five or six matches is the average time it took the selectors to make a decision.Hales, therefore, is probably at the halfway stage, and given that he came home from his debut series in South Africa with a batting average of precisely 17 from four matches he is hardly in a position of strength. Some critics, notably Geoff Boycott, have already written him off.In the circumstances, then, it might have been seen as a gamble on his part to miss the opening three weeks of the county season in favour of a rest, more so with hindsight. In his absence, Lyth and Moeen have made hundreds, Robson a hundred and a double in the same match. Likewise, James Vince and Mark Stoneman, so far untried but on the selectors’ radar, have also posted three-figure scores. Hales, though, is convinced it was the right thing to do.”When I was making the decision I had to take into account that other openers could and probably would score runs but I had to do what was right for me,” he said.”Going back to the 2014 one-day tour to Sri Lanka, I’d probably had three or four weeks off in two years. On a mental and physical level I was pretty knackered.”I had a good chat with the coaches and figured the best thing to do was come back with a full tank and ready to give 100 per cent. I felt if I didn’t give myself the best chance to score runs I wouldn’t be doing myself justice.Rivals’ head start

Sam Robson (Middlesex): 363 runs at 121

Adam Lyth (Yorkshire): 153 runs at 38.25

Daniel Bell-Drummond (Kent) 128 runs at 64.00

“So I’ve had some time back at home in Buckinghamshire seeing my dad and mum and I’ve had a holiday with my girlfriend in Scotland.”I was keeping an eye on the scores and I did notice who was getting runs but I feel the ball is in my court. I feel fresh and in good form in the nets and I have a couple of games now to score some runs.”With that in mind, Hales will line up for Nottinghamshire against Yorkshire at Trent Bridge, where Root will also make his first appearance of the summer, before going head-to-head with Robson and Compton against Middlesex at Lord’s next week, after which national selector James Whitaker and his colleagues will begin to ink in names for the first Test against Sri Lanka on 19 May.At the moment, the likelihood is that he will keep his place, although he admits he does not feel particularly secure and hopes the selectors look at his white-ball form in South Africa as a reason not to make hasty decisions. While his Test match returns were modest, his five one-day internationals against the Proteas, coming soon after his maiden ODI century against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in November, yielded scores of 57, 99, 65, 50 and 112.”I’ve had no indication of how long I might have (to prove myself in Test cricket) but if you look at the one-dayers – it took me nearly 20 games to nail that spot,” he said.”I had a poor ODI series against Australia at the end of last summer and if you average 23 after 20 games you can understand if they drop you.”Heading into the UAE I still had a point to prove in one-day cricket. So in terms of 50-over cricket it could not have really gone any better with the Pakistan series and SA was great on a personal level. They kept their faith in me and I repaid that faith.”So hopefully they will back me for the Sri Lanka Test series and I can show them that I belong at that level.”He feels, moreover, that there is some cause to be positive after the South Africa Tests, even if the numbers are not so impressive.”Obviously, the Tests did not go to plan in terms of runs but I learned a lot from the experience,” he said. “For a debut series it does not come much tougher than SA away.”But I didn’t feel out of my depth. If you look at my dismissals it was more often than not me getting myself out, which in a strange way I would probably rather be the case. I wasn’t thinking ‘this bowler’s got me on toast here, this bowler’s too good for me.’ It was me making mistakes, which I can do something about.”Alex Hales’ first Test innings ends at the hands of Dale Steyn•Getty ImagesHis weakness, he accepts, is in shot selection, which presents a tough challenge for a player with naturally aggressive instincts.”I’m going to have to improve in terms of managing my attacking instincts because I still want to be an attacking player and it is about knowing the time to do it,” he said.”There will be times when I need to rein myself in but I still want to hit the bad balls for four. It is about making better decisions outside off stump. I want to keep improving in all formats but the aim this summer is to try to nail down that that Test spot.”In that respect, Hales has undergone a change of mindset since his early days as an England player, entering the arena as a Twenty20 specialist at 22 years old and making 99 from 68 balls against West Indies in only his fifth appearance. At that stage, the lucrative possibilities offered by making himself a specialist in the short format were at the forefront of his thinking.But then came 2013, two years after he had topped 1,000 first-class runs for the first time, when he averaged a paltry 13.94 in the four-day format.”I was focussing on T20, wanting to be the best in the world in that format and for while it worked because I had the number one spot for a year or so in the T20 rankings”But after 2013 I went away to the Big Bash in Australia and I started to think ‘I’m not about that – I want to be good in all three formats.'”So that winter I made a real conscious effort to prioritise four-day cricket when I came back. And as it happens by doing that it improved my technique and improved my one-day game.”The challenge for me is to open in all formats. There is only David Warner who has been able to do that in international cricket and it is a tough challenge. The skill sets are pretty different opening in T20 compared with Tests, for example, but it is something I’m striving to master.”If Hales has learned to broaden his horizons, he also knows not to look too far ahead.”That comes from experience,” he said “When I was younger, in my first couple of years at Notts, I would be going into a game thinking ‘I’ve got to score runs’ and if you do that you end up over-thinking everything and going away from what you naturally do as a player. I’ve got better at staying in the present.”So I’m not going into these two games for Notts with any targets. Being successful comes down to doing everything right before the game – getting your practice right, your skills right.”I have practised intensively this week and I feel like my game is in good order. I’ve done all I can off the field and behind the scenes to go into the game with confidence.”The break has done me good and made me hungry to succeed in these two games. But you can’t think about the end results. If think about the process instead and how to get there, the rest should take care if itself.”

Botafogo paga parcela e está em dia com o acordo do Ato Trabalhista

MatériaMais Notícias

Sob problemas financeiros, o Botafogo teve um alívio neste sentido. Com um mês e meio de salários e direitos de imagem atrasados junto ao elenco profissional, o clube quitou, de acordo com o portal de transparência do Alvinegro, a décima parcela do acordo do Ato Trabalhista, equivalente à quantia de R$ 1.760,000,00.

O Botafogo tem compromissos com o ato desde 2015, quando conseguiu, junto ao Tribunal Regional do Trabalho, o direito de parcelar os valores em dez anos, sendo que o primeiro foi fatiado em duas partes – de janeiro a março e de abril a dezembro. Em 2019, ficou definido que o Alvinegro teria que pagar um total deR$ 21.120,000,00, que está sendo dividido em doze parcelas, uma por mês.

> O DIA A DIA DO BOTAFOGO

Apenas esse ano, o Botafogo pagou R$ 17.600.000,00, de acordo com o portal de transparência, e está rigorosamente em dia com o compromisso. Ao todo, o departamento financeiro já depositou mais de R$ 90 milhões voltados ao Ato Trabalhista, que deverá ser quitado até 2024.

O Ato Trabalhista centraliza em uma conta judicial os pagamentos do clube para diversos credores ordenados pelo tempo do processo. O Plano Especial de Execução fica limitado às execuções das sentenças ou acordos homologados em ações distribuídas até a data da publicação. Além disto, o acordosuspende o cumprimento dos mandados de penhora e das ordens de bloqueios de crédito expedidas em face do Botafogo.

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Moody backs Pietersen for England comeback

Sunrisers Hyderabad head coach Tom Moody believes England “would be foolish” not to consider Kevin Pietersen “as a serious option” if he is able to prove his fitness and form in county cricket. Sunrisers had agreed to release Pietersen from the group stages of IPL 2015 to allow him to pursue his ambition of earning a recall to the England Test team.”A player of this stature on and off the field is a big loss to any side, particularly because he had so much to prove and he had such a good Big Bash, so he is in such quality form,” Moody told ESPNcricinfo from Perth. “It is disappointing but we also recognise his personal situation and I don’t think we can ever step in the way of anyone’s desire to want to continue, or at least pursue their international dream.”While thanking Sunrisers for their “support and understanding” in making the decision, Pietersen accepted he will need to “focus on performing domestically” to give himself the best possible chance of meriting selection again. Moody believes that a lot of “water has to pass under the bridge” before Pietersen can hope to even be considered.”The last 12-18 months of his international career was plagued with injury,” Moody said. “So he needs to prove his fitness and form. His record shows what he is capable of delivering. So you put those two things together and I think England will be foolish not to consider him as a serious option. Where he fits into the balance of their Test side is another question because their top six look quite settled at the moment.”So things will have to happen with regard to that opening, but as we know, with our game things can happen pretty quickly. To have him eager, on the sidelines, fit and punching out runs game after game is only a positive sign for England.”Moody, who played several seasons of county cricket himself, is convinced Pietersen will be highly motivated and do “everything he possibly can” to finish some “unfinished business” with regards to his international career.”A chapter of his international career is still left and it was cut short and any chance is good enough at that level to try and scale that mountain again,” Moody said. “If it means to him that he has to go through the hard graft of building a huge amount of runs in the early part of the summer and if his opportunity doesn’t come till the back end of the summer or even after that, I am sure he’s prepared to give it a shot.Tom Moody – “I think his motivation is going to be very high, purely because he’s got an agenda, which is to score as many runs as he can to make it impossible for the selectors to ignore him”•PA Photos

“I think his motivation is going to be very high, purely because he’s got an agenda, which is to score as many runs as he can to make it impossible for the selectors to ignore him. It is not going to be easy, at the start of the English summer the ball can seam around a bit, it is going to be hard work for a batsman.”Those cold mornings, getting up with three jumpers on, is not as glorious as representing an IPL team in a blockbuster Twenty20 tournament. But he has got higher things on his list to address and that is to rejuvenate his international career.”Pietersen’s skirmishes with coaches in the past have been well documented. He was less than charitable towards Andy Flower in his autobiography, and in 2008 when he was captain, had a fallout with Peter Moores, leading to both men losing their jobs. In his second stint as England coach , Moores is already under pressure after England’s early exit from the World Cup. Moody, who has coached several teams including Sri Lanka, believes handling players with differing personalities in a team is part of the “excitement of management.””I think in every team you are going to have different personalities,” he said. “We are all not cut out of the same cloth, that needs to be embraced. Quite often your best players are those challenging players who push the boundaries. At the end of the day that’s all part of the excitement of management, to mould those contrasting personalities into a successful team.”Although Pietersen would have added muscle to the Sunrisers squad, Moody is confident there is enough batting depth available among the international recruits to tide over his loss. The presence of David Warner, who has been named captain, Eoin Morgan, Kane Williamson and Ravi Bopara makes Moody believe the team has “all bases covered” to mount a strong campaign.

Carters, Patterson guide New South Wales

Ryan Carters scored his fourth first-class century and Kurtis Patterson moved within sight of his second as New South Wales cruised to a strong position on a rain-affected second day against Queensland at the SCG

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Dec-2014

Ryan Carters finished unbeaten on 111•Getty Images

ScorecardRyan Carters scored his fourth first-class century and Kurtis Patterson moved within sight of his second as New South Wales cruised to a strong position on a rain-affected second day against Queensland at the SCG. New South Wales began the morning at 1 for 17 and at stumps they were 3 for 234 and trailed Queensland by 34 runs, with Carters on 111 and Patterson on 89.The pair had put on an unbeaten 156 for the fourth wicket after James Hopes picked up two wickets to have the Blues wobbling at 3 for 78 earlier in the day. Carters registered his first century this Sheffield Shield season while for 21-year-old Patterson, it was a chance to reach triple-figures for the first time since his 157 on debut in November 2011 at the age of 18.Legspinner Cameron Boyce was the only wicket taker besides Hopes, bowling nightwatchman Will Somerville around his legs for 26. Three overs earlier, Somerville had been caught at cover off spinner Cameron Brimblecombe but was recalled by the umpires, who believed the ball had ricocheted off the helmet off the silly mid-off fielder, making it a dead ball.

Jones signs as Gloucs four-day captain

Former England wicketkeeper Geraint Jones has signed a two-year contract with Gloucestershire and will captain the side in first-class cricket next season

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Oct-2014Former England wicketkeeper Geraint Jones has signed a two-year contract with Gloucestershire and will captain the side in first-class cricket next season. Jones is expected to play as a specialist batsman and assumes the captaincy due to Michael Klinger’s absence for the first part of 2015.Jones, an Ashes winner who played 34 Tests and 49 ODIs for England, was recently released by Kent after losing his place to Sam Billings. He spent time on loan with Gloucestershire during the 2014 season, playing in three Championship and two T20 matches, and was identified by director of cricket John Bracewell as the man to provide cover for Klinger, who has been captain in all formats since joining in 2013.”With Michael Klinger not re-joining us until June next year, Geraint will captain the team in four-day cricket for the 2015 season. We have spoken to Michael about that and he is comfortable with it,” Bracewell said. “We intend using Geraint as a batsman and his presence on the field will be invaluable in offering advice and assistance to our young bowling attack.”Jones last played for England in 2006 but has since represented Papua New Guinea, the country of his birth. He has scored 8615 first-class runs, including 15 hundreds, at an average of 32.50 and his arrival will add to Gloucestershire’s batting strength after the departures of Alex and Will Gidman. Jones’ wicketkeeping experience means he can also provide back-up for Gloucestershire’s two regular glovemen, Gareth Roderick and Cameron Herring.”Firstly, I’d like to thank Kent County Cricket Club for the fantastic 15 seasons I spent with them,” Jones said. “I learnt a huge amount there and without the opportunities they gave me I never would have had the career that I have.”Following an enjoyable month on loan with Gloucestershire during 2014, I am excited to be joining the club on a full-time basis and for the challenges that lie ahead. They have a great set up here and I am looking forward to taking on the role as four-day captain and to working in tandem with Michael Klinger. This is a young and talented squad and I relish the opportunity of working with them and to playing a part in their future development.”I also look forward to working with John Bracewell and his coaching team. They impressed me greatly during my loan period so the chance to work full time with them I know will have big benefits.”

Kaneria appeal 'totally without merit'

An application by Danish Kaneria to have his life ban imposed by the ECB overturned has been dismissed as “totally without merit” by the UK’s Court of Appeal

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Aug-2014

The ECB have said Danish Kaneria has “exhausted all legal options”•AFP

An application by Danish Kaneria to have his life ban imposed by the ECB overturned has been dismissed as “totally without merit” by the UK’s Court of Appeal.Kaneria was banned for life by the ECB in 2012 in relation to the Mervyn Westfield spot-fixing case. The suspension is applicable globally under any board affiliated to the ICC, although Kaneria, who has repeatedly denied involvement in corruption, has played T20 cricket in the USA.In May, Kaneria appealed to the UK Commercial Court and was rejected and today a judge in the Civil Division of the Court of Appeal, the Rt Hon Sir Stanley Burnton, threw out Kaneria’s latest attempt to have his ban overturned.He also ruled that Kaneria could not request this decision to be reconsidered and an ECB statement said that “Kaneria has exhausted all the legal options available to him to appeal a life ban imposed for his role in spot-fixing while playing for Essex.”However, ESPNcricinfo understands that Kaneria is still considering other options – possibly involving the European Courts or the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) – although his long-running appeals have been extremely costly and he may not be able to fund any further attempts even if they exist.An appeal under the ECB’s regulations was unsuccessful last year but Kaneria continued to pursue the case through the Commercial Court, a subdivision of the High Court that deals with business disputes. Costs of £100,000 imposed upon Kaneria were also upheld by Justice Hamblen, who ruled that the ECB had not exceeded its powers in imposing the ban.Giles Clarke, the ECB chairman, said: “The ECB welcomes today’s decision to dismiss the application by Mr Kaneria to appeal the life ban imposed for his corrupt activity. Mr Kaneria acted as a recruiter of potential ‘spot-fixers’ and used his seniority and international experience to target and corrupt a young and vulnerable player.”It is high time that Mr Kaneria came clean about his involvement in these corrupt activities and stopped misleading the Pakistan cricket fans and wider public with his empty protestations of innocence.”We once again urge him to apologise publicly for his past actions and to start the process of redeeming himself by supporting the Pakistan Cricket Board’s anti-corruption initiatives and assisting the police and law enforcement bodies in the Asian subcontinent with the vital job of exposing and cutting off the primary source of cricket corruption.”

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