Anwar's record and de Villiers' sixes

Stats highlights from the Group B game between South Africa and UAE in Wellington

Bishen Jeswant12-Mar-20155:05

Insights – Using DRS effectively

341 South Africa’s total, their fourth 300-plus score at this World Cup, the joint-most with Sri Lanka. They have made a 300-plus score in each of the four games where they batted first this World Cup.0 South African batsmen who made a century today, making their 341 the highest score in World Cup matches without a single individual hundred. The previous record was also set during the 2015 tournament when Pakistan scored 339 against UAE without a single batsman getting to 100.20 Sixes hit by AB de Villiers during this World Cup, the most by any batsman in a single edition. Matthew Hayden struck 18 sixes during the 2007 World Cup. Chris Gayle also has 18 during this World Cup.36 Sixes hit by De Villiers in all World Cups, the most for any batsman. He went past Ricky Ponting who has 31 sixes in World Cup matches.Shaiman Anwar, with 309 from five matches, has the record for most runs by an Associate player in a World Cup•Getty Images309 Runs made by Shaiman Anwar at this World Cup, the most for any batsman from an Associate nation in a single edition. Second on this list is Ryan ten Doeschate with 307 in the 2011 World Cup.11.5 Average opening stand for South Africa in this World Cup, the second-worst for a Test nation, behind Pakistan’s 10.4. South Africa’s six openings stands at this World Cup have been 10, 12, 18, 12, 0 and 17.8.1 Quinton de Kock’s ODI batting average in 2015, the worst for a top-order batsman (Nos. 1 to 7) from a Test nation (min. five innings). De Kock has played seven innings in 2015 with a top score of 26.2-15 De Villiers’ bowling figures in this game, his career-best in ODIs. This is the second time that De Villiers has claimed two wickets in an ODI. Since 2014, he has picked up at least a wicket on five out of the six times he has bowled.

Struggling Mathews coming under pressure

Angelo Mathews has an unconvincing Test record so far and the success of Dinesh Chandimal and other younger players is threatening to usurp him

Andrew Fidel Fernando at the Premadasa17-Mar-2013In an ODI at Lords in 2011, vice-captain Angelo Mathews joined Dinesh Chandimal at the crease with 17 runs needed for victory and 13 for Chandimal to make a memorable hundred in his sixth innings. His words to Chandimal changed the young batsman’s outlook and provided the period of play for which that match is remembered. “You go for your hundred, Chandi,” Mathews said. “I’ll hold one end up. We’ve got almost eight overs and I am confident I can finish this myself.” So with his side on the cusp of victory, Mathews blocked out 20 of his 21 balls, to allow his partner the runs to pass the milestone.Chandimal does not well remember the furious expression captain Tillakaratne Dilshan wore on the balcony as the young men pursued individual glory, and says not much was made of their hijinks after the win. Perhaps the seniors felt no harm was done and that as the batsmen matured, they would learn never to risk the team’s wellbeing. Mathews and Chandimal are captain and vice-captain now. Both men have grown as cricketers, but not at the same rate. Their innings on day two in Colombo makes that difference plain.For Mathews, his 16 from 38 was another of those frustratingly brief innings in which he had seemed to bed himself in, before a moment of misjudgement consumed him to leave a strong foundation unused. The slider to dismiss him from Sohag Gazi was a fine one, but you get good balls in Test cricket. The mark of a good batsman is to see those out. The 37 balls prior had given every indication that Mathews would help haul Sri Lanka into safety alongside Kumar Sangakkara, but as comfortable as he seemed, Sri Lanka fans have learnt not to make much of Mathews’ starts. At 25, he is quickly nearing on a career’s-full of wasted opportunities.His demise brought Chandimal to the crease with Sri Lanka at 69 for 4, teetering on the slope to a first-innings deficit. Like Mathews, Chandimal set about settling himself in – nervily to begin with, but eventually he pieced his defence together and made his judgement precise. Until a back-of-a-length ball from Rubel Hossain skidded beneath his bat to rattle off stump, the bowlers rarely scored a psychological victory against him. When he departed, Sri Lanka had passed the visitors’ total and were headed for a healthy lead of their own.

In 12 Test innings, Chandimal has crossed 50 six times. Mathews meanwhile, has only hit fifty 12 times in 53 attempts

Chandimal’s 102 was particularly encouraging for its composition. Like Mathews, he has in the past made a large percentage of his runs in fours, and as such neglected to rotate the strike effectively, like the more seasoned hands in the team are wont to do. At the Premadasa, he was denied his heavy reliance on boundaries by an outfield so lush, fielders in the deep were in danger of coming across wild Pokémon.So he retooled his approach, and batted as he rarely has at the top level, in any format. Gaps were mined thoughtfully, and the rapid swishes shelved. Chandimal might hit the fielder once or twice but he persisted with the shot and the strategy until it pulled in his favour. Soon he was working the field with as much ease as the great at the other end who has marked his return from a two-month injury layoff with three consecutive hundreds. Chandimal’s first, stuttering fifty came from 97 deliveries. His second, from an unfussy 72. He has played sparkling innings outside Asia but struggled vexingly at home. During his hundred, the sparse crowd at the Premadasa beheld a batsman improving mid-innings, before their eyes.”My first tour was the World Twenty20 in the West Indies and since then I played about a year and a half away from home. During that time I wasn’t able to train for Sri Lankan conditions as much,” Chandimal said of his lean stretch at home. “I was inexperienced then as well and didn’t quite understand things. Only recently have I had a chance to play a bit more in the subcontinent. There was a failing on my part as well, because I need to learn to adjust quickly, but now I’m training hard with Marvan Atapattu and I feel I’ve rectified that. I hope in the future I’m confident I can play well at home, so that the team can do well.”In 12 Test innings, Chandimal has crossed 50 six times. Two of those knocks came against South Africa on debut in Durban, where he helped a senior batsman hold the innings together in each dig. Sri Lanka’s biggest Test win in recent years was his reward. The other away half-century came in the New Year’s Test this year, when he batted alongside the tail in the second innings and remained unbeaten to give his side a small hope of victory, though it never came. Mathews meanwhile, has only hit fifty 12 times in 53 attempts – 23% of his innings, as opposed to Chandimal’s 50%. Mathews also bowls, unsuccessfully so far in Tests, but Chandimal has kept in five of his seven Tests, and performed his second skill almost as impressively as his first.As Lahiru Thirimanne also begins to grow in stature with the bat, Mathews is in danger of being leapfrogged by two younger, newer batsmen in the side. He was groomed for the captaincy for almost two years, and if he is to avoid being usurped by men whose education has come more swiftly, he must quickly begin amending an unconvincing record.

Ajmal's ten, and Misbah's impressive start to captaincy

Stats highlights from day three of the first Test in Dubai where Pakistan completed a 10-wicket victory

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan19-Jan-2012England’s defeat is their first since the loss in the third Test of the Ashes in Perth in December 2010. Between then and this defeat, they had won seven out of nine Tests. It is also Pakistan’s fifth victory over England in Tests played outside England. Pakistan’s last win against England came in the third Test of the ill-fated 2010 tour at The Oval when they went on to win by four wickets. Pakistan’s 10-wicket victory is their third such win against England and their first against them outside England. Overall, England have suffered 10-wicket defeats on 20 different occasions. Their previous such defeat came against South Africa in Headingley in 2008. Misbah-ul-Haq led Pakistan to their seventh win in his 13th match as captain. His win-loss ratio of 7.00 is the best among Pakistan captains who have led their team in at least ten matches. Saeed Ajmal’s match haul of 10 for 97 is the fourth-best by a Pakistan bowler in Tests against England and the best by a Pakistan bowler at a neutral venue surpassing the 8 for 72 by Shoaib Akhtar against Australia in Colombo in 2002. Ajmal’s ten-wicket haul is only the second by a Pakistan spinner against England after Abdul Qadir’s effort in 1987.For the first time since the Perth Test in December 2010, England were bowled out in both innings without aggregating 400 runs in the game. It is also the first time since 2000 that this has occurred against Pakistan and the tenth time overall in the same period.It is also the 11th occasion for England since 2000 and their first since the Johannesburg Test in 2010 when there has been just one fifty-plus score in the Test. Matt Prior was their only player to reach fifty in this match.The aggregate partnership for the top four wickets in the match for England was just 77. This is the fifth-lowest for England since the end of the World War I. Since the end of the Sri Lanka series, Alastair Cook has had a mixed run. In seven completed innings he has failed to go past five on five occasions but in the other two innings against India, he scored 294 and 34. Ajmal also became the fifth bowler to pick up seven lbw wickets in a match. Only Mohammad Zahid and Chaminda Vaas have picked up more lbw wickets in a match (8).

The importance of Sunny

Gavaskar was was not just another cricketer but a metaphor for a country’s aspirations

Ayaz Memon10-Jul-2009A few weeks ago, shortly after Sunil Gavaskar had delivered the first Dilip Sardesai Memorial lecture at the Cricket Club of India, a twentysomething man asked me if Gavaskar had been a better batsman than Sachin Tendulkar, reducing me to a hum-and-haw wreck. I could understand the legitimacy of his curiosity, but was there a legitimate answer?I must here confess to being a Gavaskarphile. Who from my vintage isn’t? The passage of time sometimes tends to either exaggerate or diminish the value of the past, but the Gavaskar phenomenon, all things considered, makes for one of the great stories of not just modern sport, but also Indian life.I was 15 when he exploded into the Indian consciousness with his record-breaking exploits in the West Indies in 1970-71, and since then have followed his amazing journey, largely for professional purposes, sometimes with deep personal flourishes, mostly with awe and admiration, but sometimes also with despair and anguish.On my first few tours as a cricket writer I got to know first-hand not only of Gavaskar’s supreme batting skills, but also the different facets to his persona. In Pakistan in 1982-83, he scored in excess of 400 runs, but became increasingly moody as the series started going awry and his captaincy came under threat. Despite that, his innate sense of humour never deserted him. In Hyderabad (Sind), after India had lost the Test and the series, I remember Gavaskar being asked by a journalist how he would have liked India’s batsmen to play the rampaging Imran Khan. “The best way would be to put a sightscreen between him and us,” he replied with a straight face.This humour could, of course, move from being self-deprecatory to caustic in the matter of minutes – or a few tours. In 1985, when India went to Sri Lanka, Gavaskar was still determined to bat in the middle order, much to the chagrin of the captain, Kapil Dev. Soon after arrival, asked informally by the press corps if he had given up opening, Gavaskar was vehement in denial. “I will open doors and bottles, but opening the innings is another matter,” he said with a smile.Our paths have criss-crossed several times over 30 years, and we even worked together at the same publication, , for a while, but I can’t claim to know Gavaskar intimately. Apart from his immediate family and a few close friends, I doubt anybody does. Like most virtuosos – in any walk of life – he can be aloof to the world around him, living out his personal convictions with an inner strength that makes him almost immune to what people think.This was more pronounced in his playing days, when he could be stubborn, obstinate, tantrum-prone and sanctimonious – apart from being a record-breaking batsman. Sometimes it would appear that he was at war with the world, sometimes with himself; both were probably true. He fought furiously for pride and self-respect at a time when Indian cricket was easily dismissed; he also raged for perfection as a batsman because he wanted to be the best, no less.
Not all the time was he in the right. At times he could be easily riled by trifles or be seduced into petty-fogging to prove a minor point. In his time he has had a few memorable altercations with umpires, opponents, fellow players and administrators, which he would see as silly now. As captain, he sometimes stretched defensive tactics to bizarre levels (with active help from rival captain Keith Fletcher in 1981, it must be added), which accentuated his “mean” image. More infamously, he once batted 60 overs for 36 runs in the 1975 World Cup, and in 1981almost conceded a Test match after getting into a spat with Australian umpires.But over a long career and life these prickly facets must be balanced by several other sanguine ones, not all known, for a more balanced picture of the man. Gavaskar’s general disposition is usually sunny, as his nickname goes. He has a sense of fun that can oscillate between the droll and the ribald, depending on the company he is in.He is also a terrific after-dinner speaker because he is a splendid raconteur. In an informal setting he can be a great mimic, bringing to the fore the tremendous powers of observation that helped him read the game so well. He can hold his own in any company, be it Nelson Mandela or a Bollywood starlet. His world view is large, his knowledge vast, and he can be an engaging conversationalist.He has been Indian cricket’s strongest minder. Few mess with him when he has a cause to fight. He was in the forefront of championing players’ rights and was instrumental (along with Bishan Bedi) in giving the cricketers’ association voice and meaning. It must be a cause of some regret to him that the current players don’t see the Players’ Association as important anymore.After he retired, when we worked together at , there was not a week in which I didn’t see him try to help out cricketers less fortunate than him with their benefit matches or some other financial assistance. “These guys have given everything for the game, and deserve support,” he would say.Some years later he started the Champs Foundation – without too much fanfare or publicity – to provide financial help to needy and ailing sportspersons across disciplines. Also, during the 1993 riots in Mumbai, as is famously known, he went and rescued a Muslim family from a mob near his residence.

Like Tendulkar, Gavaskar was for India not just another cricketer, but a metaphor of the country’s aspirations and hopes. His very presence provided emotional and psychological security far beyond the parameters of a cricket field. He left an indelible impact on not just scorebooks, but on the Indian psyche

Students of psychology might see contradictions here, and they might not be entirely wrong; but then again, they wouldn’t quite be completely right either. For, at his core, Gavaskar is no different from any of us: highly complex, but essentially human.It is as cricketer that Gavaskar emerges unique and as one of the most towering personalities in the game. In a broader context, like Tendulkar, he was not just another cricketer but a metaphor for the country’s aspirations and hopes.In his tribute in , Peter Roebuck, writes, “[…] Such were his powers that he’d have been productive 50 years earlier or 50 years later; even in this hurrying world, some things do not change, the principles of batsmanship not least amongst them.” But this is only half the saga. Gavaskar’s very presence provided emotional and psychological security far beyond the parameters of a cricket field. He left an indelible impact on not just scorebooks but on the Indian psyche.It intrigues me that not till his magnificent 221 in the heart-breaking run-chase at the Oval in 1979, which compelled Sir Len Hutton to call him the best opening batsman in the game, was Gavaskar’s genius acknowledged worldwide, and he was rated alongside Viv Richards and Greg Chappell. By then, he had been playing for eight years and had scored more than 5000 runs! Sir Len, of course, had greater reason for empathy with Gavaskar, having been an opener himself.There are several analyses and tributes that I can cite, but an anecdote involving another great player of the 80s, Javed Miandad, and a couple of his colleagues, perhaps puts things in the best perspective.We were at Miandad’s house in Lahore in 1989, celebrating his 100th Test match and in between the partying I asked the Pakistani maestro his opinion about Gavaskar. ”Many have played this game brilliantly but few have understood it as well as this man,” said Miandad pointing in Gavaskar’s direction. “He knows cricket like the back of his hand. Did you see his innings against us at Bangalore two years back?”Would there have been a Tendulkar as we know him if there was no Gavaskar?•AFPI had, and consider it perhaps the most skilful and poignant knock in Indian cricket history. Only one batsman in three innings of that Test match had crossed the 50-run mark. The ball turned square from day one, and India were to bat fourth chasing a little over 200 for victory. This was like climbing Mount Everest in a snowstorm. But Gavaskar was not to be fazed. With sublime technique and dogged determination, he mastered the conditions to keep India in the hunt even as wickets fell around him like nine pins.On the rest day of the Test I went to interview Tauseef Ahmed, the offspinner, and his room-mate Iqbal Qasim, the left-arm spinner. The spin twins had reduced the Indian innings to rubble. Now only one man stood between them and victory: Gavaskar, unbeaten on 50-something. Tauseef and Qasim were usually chirpy souls, but on this day appeared so high-strung that they wouldn’t even talk to each other.” [that old man is still batting],” said Qasim, breaking the silence. ”Bat ? (does he have a bat or a wall?)” Tauseef chipped in. ”We’ve not been able to sleep because of the tension.”The next day, just when it appeared that Gavaskar would win the match single-handed, he fell for 96. Imran Khan called it the best innings he had seen. India eventually lost that Test match by a small margin of 16 runs, and Gavaskar bowed out of Test cricket a forlorn, but never to be forgotten, hero.It’s almost 22 years since he retired, but memories of his exploits are still fresh. He arrived with a bang in 1970-71, scoring 774 runs in his debut Test series (still a record), and finished with a flourish, scoring 96 in his last Test innings, a century in his last first-class match, and a maiden hundred in his penultimate one-day game – all in 1987, at age 38. He retired as he always wanted to: when people asked why, not why not.Which, of course, brings me back to the original query of the twentysomething lad at the CCI about Gavaskar and Tendulkar. I still don’t have an answer, but I have a counter-query: Would there have been a Tendulkar as we know him if there was no Gavaskar?

Aston Villa pay tribute to lifelong fan Ozzy Osbourne after Black Sabbath frontman and music legend passes away aged 76

Aston Villa paid a heartfelt tribute to Black Sabbath frontman and music legend Ozzy Osbourne, who passed away aged 76. Osbourne performed his final live show at Villa Park, a homecoming farewell concert attended by 42,000 fans. The concert, dubbed Back To The Beginning, was staged as a celebration of Osbourne’s monumental career and life in music.

  • Osbourne dies aged 76
  • Performed his last concert at Villa Park
  • Had five Grammy wins from 12 nominations
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The farewell performance was not just a solo act as the legendary frontman was joined by original Black Sabbath members Tony Iommi, Terence "Geezer" Butler, and Bill Ward, a momentous reunion after two decades apart. Metallica and Guns N' Roses took to the stage in tribute to the man who helped birth a musical movement. The lineup made the event not just a concert, but a monumental chapter in rock history, a final bow that would come to define Osbourne's legacy.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Following the announcement of his death, an outpouring of love and grief came from fellow musicians and fans worldwide. Metallica shared a photo on the social media platform X, standing alongside Osbourne, captioned only with a broken heart emoji. Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood also expressed his sorrow, stating: "I am so very sad to hear of the death of Ozzy Osbourne. What a lovely goodbye concert he had at Back To The Beginning in Birmingham." Black Sabbath’s official account shared an image of their iconic frontman from the recent show, simply writing: "Ozzy Forever!"

  • WHAT ASTON VILLA SAID

    Villa's statement on Tuesday night read: "Aston Villa Football Club is saddened to learn that world-renowned rockstar and Villan, Ozzy Osbourne has passed away.

    "Growing up in Aston, not far from Villa Park, Ozzy always held a special connection to the club and the community he came from.

    "The thoughts of everyone at Aston Villa are with his wife Sharon, his family, friends, and countless fans at this extremely difficult time.

    "Rest in peace, Ozzy."

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Born John Michael Osbourne on December 3, 1948, in the Aston district of Birmingham, Ozzy grew up surrounded by the industrial grit that would shape his musical identity. He soon emerged as a defining voice of heavy metal, earning him the title "Godfather of Metal." The band’s 1970 debut album stormed the UK charts, and subsequent releases like , , and cemented their place in rock history. Their influence was enormous as they inspired generations of bands and sold more than 75 million albums across the globe.

Perth Scorchers crush Sydney Thunder on Warner's BBL return

David Warner’s first appearance in the BBL for more than nine years fell flat for Sydney Thunder as tournament-leaders Perth Scorchers cruised to a nine-wicket victory in what is becoming another very impressive campaign.One of their two defeats this season came against Thunder – a surprising loss at home – but once a promising third-wicket stand between Warner and Ollie Davies had been broken that never looked like being repeated. Thunder, who were famously bowled out for 15 earlier in the season, lost 8 for 41 and couldn’t bat their 20 overs. Scorchers needed less than 13 in the chase.AJ Tye put some daylight between him and the chasing pack at the top of the wicket-taking tally in what is becoming a stellar season while Cameron Bancroft produced one of the highlights of a one-sided occasion with a spectacular boundary catch.

Davies shines again

It was a lone hand in Thunder’s innings. The ease with which Davies timed the ball was a stark contrast to all his team-mates, including Warner, alongside who he dominated a 67-run stand for the third wicket. “I’ll keep nudging them,” Warner said on the player mic. Davies took two straight sixes off Ashton Agar, but saved his best for a strike off Tye which went well back into the stands.A 30-ball half-century was his third fifty of the season but Agar then out-thought him as he fired one in more quickly to have him stumped as Thunder’s collapse set it.

Warner’s quiet return

December 2013 was the last time Warner played BBL. That day he opened with Usman Khawaja and the pair added an opening stand of 116 in 11 overs. By the time Warner faced his second ball today he had lost two team-mates. He managed to get one strong pull short away against Lance Morris and a few overs later threaded a drive down the ground against Tye as the stand with Davies started to build. However, trying to pick up towards Davies’ tempo, he top-edged an attempted scoop off Matt Kelly.

Payne’s promising start

David Payne, the Gloucestershire left-arm seamer who has played one ODI for England, is one of a host of replacement overseas players Scorchers have called on this season after all their initial signings ended up unavailable for a variety of reasons.It took Payne just two balls to strike in his first appearance, taking the left-arm pace role in place of the rested Jason Behrendorff, when a curving outswinger drew an edge from Matthew Gilkes. Later in the innings, with Thunder trying to engineer a platform for a late use of the power surge, a well-directed short ball brought a top edge from the dangerous Daniel Sams which was held at long leg.It was a team effort from the Scorchers attack with all five bowlers finding success and sending down 63 dot balls in 19 overs. Tye’s fine tournament continued with another three scalps as he became the first to reach the 20-wicket mark for the season.

Bancroft’s all-round night

Bancroft had a superb evening on the field and then calmly went about the simple chase. In a display where Scorchers barely put a foot wrong, Bancroft’s two catches were especially impressive. He went low to remove Ben Cutting at midwicket, the batter standing his ground before the third umpire confirmed the take was clean. But better was to come in the 19th over when he ran around from long-on and flew full-length at top speed to pluck out Nathan McAndrew’s well-struck pull while still being able to keep himself inside the rope.Barring anything silly the chase was never going to be in doubt and the game was over long before the opening stand of 77 between Bancroft and Stephen Eskinazi was broken. For Eskinazi, another overseas replacement, it was his first significant contribution in his third outing. Bancroft skipped to a 36-ball fifty when he sent consecutive deliveries from Usman Qadir for six and four.

Chris Green strikes as Lightning destroy Falcons

Lancashire Lightning inflicted a second defeat in three matches on Derbyshire Falcons when they eased to a comfortable 57-run victory in the Vitality Blast match at Emirates Old Trafford.After posting 179 for 7 in their 20 overs, Lightning restricted the Falcons to 122 all out, with highly-rated Australian signing Chris Green taking 4 for 12 to add to his rapid 22 in 11 balls late in Lancashire’s innings.Asked to bat first, Lancashire made a fine start, Josh Bohannon taking 14 off three successive balls from Pat Brown and 42 runs being scored in the first four overs. However, Luke Wells was bowled by Daryn Dupavillon for 5 and Bohannon caught at mid-off by Mitchell Wagstaff off Zak Chappell for 39 to leave the home side on 50 for 2 at the end of the powerplay.Lancashire skipper, Keaton Jennings, restored to fitness after a back spasm, made a breezy 16 before being dismissed in similar fashion to Wells off the bowling of Brown and the experiment of promoting Luke Wood up the order ended when he came down the wicket and was stumped off Samit Patel for 1.Tom Bruce and Matthew Hurst then put on 39 for the fifth wicket, their progress aided by a high full-toss from Chappell, who redeemed himself two balls later when he had Bruce caught at deep midwicket by Ross Whiteley for a 28-ball 35.Lancashire were 121 for 5 after 15 overs and in the remainder of the innings both Hurst and Steven Croft perished at deep midwicket off Chappell and Brown respectively, Hurst making a 25-ball 27.Lightning were 157 for 7 at the start of the last over but Green heaved two leg-side sixes off Dupavillon’s last set of six, which cost 22 runs and ruined the South African’s figures. He finished with 1 for 35 whereas Chappell took 3 for 38, Brown 2 for 37 and Patel 1 for 29.Derbyshire’s reply got off to a poor start when Luis Reece played on to Green in the second over for six and worse was to come in the fifth when Mitch Stanley yorked David Lloyd for 10. And despite scoring 48 runs when the initial field-placing restrictions applied, the powerplay ended on a low note for the visitors when Patel pulled Green straight to Jack Blatherwick at deep square leg.Nearly two overs later, Harry Came was bowled by Blatherwick for a 22-ball 26 and the visitors reached the midpoint of their innings needing 111 runs off 60 balls. Things got worse in the next over when Anuj Dal miscued a pull off Wells and was caught by Bohannon for 9 and though 15 runs came off Wells’ last over, the leg-spinner ended his spell by having the dangerous Ross Whiteley caught at deep midwicket by Blatherwick for 9.Brooke Guest’s attempt to hold the Falcons’ innings together ended when he was caught by Jennings off Tom Aspinwall and Green then removed Chappell and Dupavillon with successive deliveries in his next over before last man Brown was run out for nought to end what had become a one-sided contest.

'Months of broken promises!' – Ademola Lookman accuses Atalanta of 'poor treatment' & confirms he's handed in formal transfer request in bombshell statement

Ademola Lookman says he has handed in a transfer request and accused Atalanta of "poor treatment" and "broken promises" amid links with Inter Milan.

  • Lookman hands in transfer request
  • Accuses Atalanta of "poor treatment"
  • Winger eyes Inter Milan move
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The 27-year-old has been eyeing an Atalanta exit this summer but now the forward has taken that a step further by openly asking to leave the club. The former Fulham loanee also alleged he has been the subject of bad treatment and accused the Serie A outfit of "blocking" his chance to secure a transfer move. 

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  • WHAT LOOKMAN SAID

    Part of Lookman's bombshell Instagram statement reads: "There have been numerous clubs approach Atalanta in the past and I have previously always stayed loyal. However, myself and the ownership of the club have been in agreement that now is the right time and the club were clear with me that if a fair offer came in they would allow me to move. Despite now receiving an offer in alignment to what I believe had been discussed sadly the club are blocking the opportunity for reasons I do not understand. as a result and after many months of broken promises and what I feel has been poor treatment towards me as both a human being and as a professional footballer, sadly I feel I have no choice but to speak out for what I believe is right and I feel that enough is enough. I can confirm I have now handed in a formal transfer request."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Inter have reportedly submitted a couple of bids for Lookman this summer but have not yet met Atalanta's €50 million (£43.5m) valuation. The former Leicester City loanee has scored 52 goals and added 25 assists in 118 games for the Italian team, while starring in their Europa League triumph in 2024. However, it seems his time with the club is likely to end soon after this outburst.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    It remains to be seen if former Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain target Lookman, who still has two years left on his current contract, will be able to secure an Atalanta exit and join Inter in the coming weeks.

Seleção da Libertadores tem seis do Flamengo e destaques do Athletico e Palmeiras. Veja escalação!

MatériaMais Notícias

A supremacia de equipes brasileiras foi refletida na seleção da Copa Libertadores. Divulgada na tarde desta segunda-feira (31), a seleção da competição abre espaço para dez jogadores que atuam no futebol tupiniquim. Cinco deles jogam no Flamengo, que também tem na seleção da competição continental o técnico Dorival Júnior.

RelacionadasFlamengoZico dá ‘aval’ para Gabigol usar a camisa 10 do FlamengoFlamengo31/10/2022PalmeirasPalmeiras coloca dois jogadores na seleção dos melhores da Libertadores-2022Palmeiras31/10/2022ListasReta final: veja como terminaria o Brasileirão 2022 se os resultados do 1º turno se repetissemListas31/10/2022https://twitter.com/Libertadores/status/1587187655351054336?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1587187655351054336%7Ctwgr%5E0da6432af4797a69b682d286e94b5a39c1c71663%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fd-24798554873314517269.ampproject.net%2F2210172057000%2Fframe.html

No “elenco ideal” da seleção estão o goleiro Santos, o zagueiro David Luiz, os meias De Arrascaeta e Everton Ribeiro e os atacantes Pedro e Gabigol.

Finalista da Copa Libertadores, o Athletico-PR está representado pelo zagueiro Thiago Heleno e pelo atacante Vitor Roque. O Palmeiras, que caiu na semifinal, tem Gustavo Gómez e Gustavo Scarpa.

A seleção é completada com Janson, que defende o Vélez Sarsifield. A equipe argentina foi até as semifinais.

O Flamengo derrotou o Athletico por 1 a 0, com gol de Gabigol, na decisão em Guayaquil no último sábado (29).

ERRATA

A publicação original disse que a seleção tinha cinco jogadores do Flamengo. Pedimos desculpa pelo erro.

*Atualizada às 20h39

Nat Sciver-Brunt, Maia Bouchier plunder Sri Lanka before Charlie Dean seals series

England make 273 for 8 in 31 overs after rain delay, then close out series in style

Valkerie Baynes14-Sep-2023Ever ask yourself: “What am I doing here?” Cricket fans – at least those who take our privileged position of being able to watch the game regularly for granted – surely do. Especially sitting through interminable rain delays, mopping-up, pitch inspections… repeat. Then you witness another fairytale and realise, this is what I’m doing here.This time, it was Nat Sciver-Brunt’s turn. Playing her 100th ODI and captaining the side after Heather Knight was forced to return to the team hotel feeling unwell, she plundered 120 off 74 balls, including a 66-ball century – which was the fastest by an England Women’s player in ODIs – to lead her side to a thumping 161-run victory over Sri Lanka in the third and final match in Leicester for a 2-0 series win.Maia Bouchier was far more than just a bit-part character with her blistering 95 from 65 balls as the pair rescued their side from 18 for 2 with a 193-run partnership for the third wicket. Between them they set Sri Lanka a daunting target of 274 in a match reduced to 31 overs a side, after rain delayed the start by more than three hours (along with mopping-up efforts and pitch inspections). Then Charlie Dean appeared, taking a maiden international five-wicket haul to put the ending beyond doubt.This entire tour by Sri Lanka has produced some gripping narratives. The visitors’ 2-1 upset in the T20I series, including their first victories in the format against England – ranked six places higher – was built on captain Chamari Athapaththu’s stellar year with the bat and exposed the hosts’ weakness against spin. Then followed the dream ODI debuts of young seamers Mahika Gaur and Lauren Filer in the opening match as the hosts turned things around before taking a stranglehold of the second fixture which was ultimately washed out.Yes, this victory also came against a side ranked considerably lower than England in the 50-over format but that takes nothing away from the performance of Sciver-Brunt.It was less than a week ago that Sciver-Brunt returned to the England side, having been rested for the T20I series after being England’s Player of the Women’s Ashes, although she helped Blaze to victory over Central Sparks with an unbeaten 66 in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy during that time. Her comeback match came in a seven-wicket win in Durham, a year after she left an England training camp in the same city to take an extended mental health break.Just as Ben Stokes did with England Men, Sciver-Brunt has led by example in terms of enabling players to speak up when they need to care for their mental wellbeing. And, just as Stokes did with his 182 in the third ODI against New Zealand the previous day, Sciver-Brunt again highlighted her indispensability to any side she is part of, taking charge of the storyline after a fraught start when the visitors won the toss and opted to bowl under heavy skies.Maia Bouchier made her maiden ODI fifty•PA Photos/Getty ImagesTammy Beaumont survived on 1 when she struck Udeshika Prabodhani hard but straight to Harshitha Smarawickrama, who fumbled the chance at deep midwicket. Achini Kulasuriya then beat Beaumont’s outside edge with an excellent ball which also just missed off stump, then tempted Beaumont to advance on the next ball, only to be caught by Hasini Perera at slip.Bouchier, opening alongside Beaumont with Emma Lamb out with a back spasm, despatched Prabodhani over deep midwicket for six next over. Prabodhani responded by castling Alice Capsey, who managed just 6 batting in Knight’s place at No. 3, and England were struggling inside the six-over Powerplay which they ended at 28 for 2.But by the 10-over mark that had become 72 for 2, thanks in no small part to Sciver-Brunt, who helped herself to 15 of the 16 runs conceded by Inoka Ranaweera in her first over, her back-foot drive through cover followed by a thunderous pull to the rope at deep midwicket and a monstrous six into the stands beyond long-off.Bouchier, who made her ODI debut in Durham having played 22 T20Is, kept pace beautifully, launching a free hit of Hansima Karunaratne following a no-ball for height, over the fence with disdain at cow corner for her second maximum. She brought up her maiden 50-over fifty with the second of three fours in a row as she peppered the leg side off Oshadi Ranasinghe.Sciver brought up her half-century in just 32 balls with four off Ranaweera and she raised England’s 150 with a nonchalant scoop to the fine leg boundary off Kavisha Dilhari, one of three fours conceded by the young off-spinner in her first over as the England batters continued picking them off at will.Prabodhani did her best to end their union just before they reached the 200-mark in the 23rd over with one that beat Sciver-Brunt’s back-foot swipe and somehow evaded off stump. Sciver-Brunt brought up her century moments later with a single off Kulasuriya, but then Dilhari pinned Bouchier lbw to end a brilliant innings.Sciver-Brunt didn’t flinch, peeling off three fours from the same Dilhari over and another off Ranaweera through extra cover, but she perished next ball, picking out long-off.That brought debutant Bess Heath to the crease and she managed 21 off 14 balls, including a six over deep midwicket off Kulasuriya and a reverse-sweep for four off Dilhari, who then ended Heath’s cameo as she holed out to Karunaratne.Gaur and Filer again combined to make inroads on the Sri Lanka line-up and when off-spinner Dean trapped Athapaththu lbw for just 12 in the ninth over, Sri Lanka were in deep trouble at 46 for 4.Dean, called upon to lead the spin-bowling attack alongside Sarah Glenn with Sophie Ecclestone sidelined initially through workload management but now because of a shoulder injury, then produced the epilogue, snaring three wickets in five balls to all but close the book on the match. Her return catch to remove Karuanaratne was followed by Perera, Sri Lanka’s top-scorer with 32, caught behind and then an excellent delivery that turned between bat and pad and crashed into Dilhari’s off stump. Her fifth wicket came as Prabodhani dragged on and Filer sealed victory with her third, rearranging Kulasuriya’s stumps to end her breakout season on a high.So ended England Women’s international summer, with progress made, talent unearthed, lessons learned and work still to do, all the while leaving that empty feeling that you get at the end of a real page-turner, because we won’t see the results for months to come. That’s what we’re doing here.

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