England cricket is the blood-soaked saga you've been craving

Filled with gore, intrigue and major plot twists, no way is it going to underwhelm like a certain other epic fantasy show

Alan Gardner15-Feb-2022Come on, let’s admit it. We were all looking forward to the bloody end-of-season finale. Sure, they have become a little formulaic – but an England Ashes tour down under wouldn’t be an England Ashes tour down under without rows, recriminations and a round of sackings to finish off the narrative.What we hadn’t bargained for was the ECB attempting to ramp up their ailing franchise by bringing in previous showrunner Andrew “Director’s Cut” Strauss, who not only wrote out a number of minor characters – Ashley Giles, Chris Silverwood, Dom Bess – but then went for the jugular, -style, by killing off two much-loved protagonists with barely a line of dialogue for preamble.Strauss doubtless had his successful reboot of the much derided white-ball set-up in mind, though it remains to be seen whether audiences will react in the same way to his signature move. And he has left himself room to script a return for both James Anderson and Stuart Broad should things not go to plan – if the critics continue to weigh in, say, or Joe Root discovers that going to the West Indies without England’s two all-time leading wicket-takers wasn’t such a smart move after all.Clearly an overhaul was needed after the much hyped but sadly one-sided battle scene, filmed on location in Australia, in which Root’s men were unceremoniously mauled by a Dothraki horde (led by Pat Cummins in a loin cloth and some heavy eye make-up). With England’s Test ratings falling, and uncertainty about whether Root could cling to power, Strauss acted quickly by commissioning a dollop of off-field drama to distract from the underlying structural failings.Related

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Root remains on the Any-Old-Iron Throne for now, while Tom Harrison continues to lurk in the shadows – despite displaying all the popular touch of Cersei Lannister. Plot development for Strauss’ next instalment is a closely guarded secret, but rumours have suggested a number of potential twists, from Broad being brought back from the dead by the mystical ministrations of the Red-Ball Witch to a climactic assault on Lord’s by the Night King (played by the guy who runs the Hundred’s Twitter account) and his unholy following (women, children, people who refuse to wear ties).Winter isn’t so much coming for the ECB as already set in, and the fight to unite the Seven Kingdoms/18 first-class counties could drag on for several more seasons – or at least till Kevin Pietersen arrives on the back of a giant dragon to raze the lot.Anyway, here’s hoping that Strauss is given a big CGI budget and a free hand. After all, to borrow another saying from TV land, English cricket jumped the shark a long time ago.

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If you love someone, set them free. Alternatively, if you love someone, make them engage in regular 360-degree evaluations, dig into grievances about their man-management skills, look at the victorious Ashes and T20 World Cup campaigns they’ve slaved over and say, “Thanks, champ! How would you like a six-month contract extension?” Justin Langer’s entanglement with the Australia men’s team always had a star-crossed aspect to it. After resigning, he apologised if he had come across as “too intense”; Langer was, in the words of old Bill Shakespeare, “one that loved not wisely, but too well”. As for the players’ side, Cummins put it succinctly: “I don’t think he should be surprised.” At least now Langer, who had spent months away from home, will be able to return to the bosom of the people who really matter – his former baggy-green team-mates, who know the meaning of true mateship ever after.

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For some traditionalists, the annual sight of IPL owners paddling themselves silly in a banqueting hall while indiscriminately splashing the cash is pretty much the confirmation of end times (well, they’ll be right one day). But never mind the ostentatious affront to decency that is the IPL auction – the Light Roller has discovered something far worse.Last week Ben Stokes tweeted: “Just jumped on the NFT bandwagon.” A few days later, having changed his profile picture to that of small, pixellated monkey wearing a cap, he added: “Can’t believe that @ASAC_NFT have made me a Honorary Ape,crazy man thanks to all the team.” If all that makes no sense whatsoever, then give yourself a pat on the back. NFTs – or Non-Fungible Tokens – are the new celebrity grift, you see; and while footballers have been attempting to coin it for a while, it seems cricket too is to be subjected to the blockchain babble of digital pseudo-art. Do not expect it to end well.

De Kock and Burger among positives SA can take home

South Africa must find better support for lead spinner Keshav Maharaj, whose absence was felt in Pakistan

Firdose Moonda08-Nov-2025South Africa will leave Pakistan with only a share of a Test series after losing both white-ball contests, including their first ODI series under coach Shukri Conrad. Given that they have also won just five out of 13 T20Is since July, and there is a World Cup looming in three months’ time, it could be cause for concern. But there’s a caveat.Despite Conrad’s assertion that South Africa would have their first-choice players available more often than not, the opposite has happened. A packed schedule, the need to prioritise some series over others and the inevitability of injuries has meant that South Africa have not always been at full strength. That was the case for both the T20I and ODI series in Pakistan and so the post-tour analysis is likely to focus more on individuals than the overall result.This is what South Africa may have learnt:

De Kock is back for real

A four-ball one in Windhoek last month was not quite the way Quinton de Kock would have wanted to come back to the international game but he quickly found his old self, albeit in the longer white-ball game. De Kock was named player of the ODI series as he topped the run-charts with a century sandwiched between two fifties that served as a reminder of how vital he is at the top of the order.ESPNcricinfo LtdNo longer just a basher, de Kock was happy to let his young opening partner Lhuan-dre Pretorius take the lead while he dropped anchor and it worked a charm. The pair shared in three profitable opening stands and have given South Africa a good selection headache. Ryan Rickelton and Aiden Markram are the incumbents but it is difficult to see a situation where South Africa don’t find a space for de Kock, who continues to work on his game.”It’s my first time playing white-ball cricket in Pakistan and I learnt a couple of things about my own game,” he said on Saturday. “The wickets stayed low, reverse swing and there was a bit of a turn, so it was about how we adjusted to that.”De Kock will have a break before South Africa’s white-ball series in India, which could prove decisive in whether he makes the T20 World Cup squad.

Breetzke’s diminishing returns

Pakistan seemed to be Matthew Breetzke’s favourite place to play cricket earlier this year when he scored 150 on debut at the start of a run of five successive fifty-plus scores. Breetzke was the world’s leading run-getter after five ODI innings and the second-leading after eight but has since fallen to fifth after nine innings in what was a tough return, with additional responsibility.Matthew Breetzke enjoyed an excellent tour of Pakistan earlier this year, but in this one he made 42, 17 and 16•Getty ImagesHe was named South Africa’s stand-in captain and while he did a decent job in the field, his batting returns of 42, 17 not out and 16 were less than satisfactory. Breetzke was out to Abrar Ahmed on the two occasions he was dismissed – once trying a big shot and once on the forward defence – and like so many South Africans before him will want to work on his game play against legspin. In the third ODI, he wanted “to try and play as straight as possible with the variable bounce” but it proved trickier than he expected. Of course, Breetzke did not become a bad batter over the course of three matches but with a queue of top-order players knocking down the door, including Tony de Zorzi, his returns in this series may push him down the pecking order for now.

Nandre Burger’s bowling

With the first-choice fast bowlers – Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen – rested, left-armer Nandre Burger stepped up and finished second to Abrar on the wicket-takers’ charts. Four of his five wickets came in the second ODI, and three of those four in the powerplay, where he used the bouncer to excellent effect. Breetzke singled out Burger’s “aggression,” as a positive South Africa will take from this tour. Burger also found seam movement in the third match and sprinkled in slower-ball variations and has given South Africa an additional option to vary their attack.Nqabayomzi Peter, the 23-year-old legspinner, is likely to be part of SA’s future plans•Getty Images

Where are the next batch of spinners coming from?

Keshav Maharaj was rested for this series and his absence only seems to highlight his importance, but South Africa must find another tier of spinners to come after him. Donovan Ferreira had a forgettable tour with ball, bat and as a temporary T20I captain and George Linde was expensive which leaves left-arm spinner Bjorn Fortuin and legspinner Nqabayomzi Peter to assess. Fortuin was South Africa’s most economical bowler of the ODIs, and conceded at 4.50 runs to the over, but was not particularly threatening while Peter, 23, demonstrated good control and is most likely to be part of South Africa’s longer-term plans.Playing in Pakistan is tough – for reasons other than the conditions While almost all the South African players interviewed described the pitches as the most difficult thing to get used to in Pakistan, there were also other challenges that come with touring a country so unlike their own. South Africa cited last year’s Bangladesh Test series as a tour that unified them like never before because they were confined to their hotel and this year’s Pakistan visit may have had the same effect.”You kind of get into a routine because you can’t leave the hotel,” de Zorzi said at a pre-match press conference. “So it’s a bit of a grind on and off. It’s almost just staying in that work mindset and only really focusing on cricket. There’s nothing else to focus on. There’s nothing else to do. Everything is a bit of a grind, but you kind of make peace with that. And anyone would be happy to do that grind. So you just have to remind yourself that you’re lucky to be here and it’s your job.”

Phil Salt and Harry Brook announce themselves as England's next gen

After combining to topple a target of 223, Salt and Brook showed they can drive England’s next white-ball era

Cameron Ponsonby17-Dec-2023As Harry Brook launched his first ball back over the bowler’s head, West Indies captain Rovman Powell at long-on started to walk-in.The ball had gone high, with the angle blurring whether it had gone far, or just gone up. Powell continued to walk-in, but just as you expected him to look up and settle himself for a catch, his stare remained gun-barrel straight. The ball had gone. And he had the next over to prepare for.”Yeah, I knew I’d got it,” Brook smiles. “It came straight out of the screws…I was waiting for the slower ball and I was looking straight the whole time. Thankfully he missed and I took the opportunity.”Brook had walked in to bat with 37 runs required off 13 deliveries. A total that was hauled in with a ball to spare as he contributed with a scarcely believable 31 not out off 7 balls.The 21 runs he struck off the final over to win the match was a figure that had only ever been achieved once before in the history of T20I cricket.”I was trying to stay as cool as possible and relaxed. As soon as I get tensed up that’s when i lose my shape and I don’t quite hit the ball as cleanly. So I was just trying to stay as cool as possible and free-flowing.”Brook’s summary of the wave of emotions he felt when the winning runs came off his bat was typically understated, taking a moment to reflect, before sighing that, “yeah, it’s a pretty good feeling.” Whilst Phil Salt, who himself had contributed with the small matter of 109 not out off 56 balls, was more superlative, “There is no more special feeling than walking off the ground in an England shirt, winning the game.”Related

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Salt 109*, Brook late cameo fire England to dramatic chase of 223

Brook’s talent is such that in an era where every other white-ball batter to be has had to wait their turn, he’s been given a VIP wristband and allowed to jump the queue. Since the summer of 2022, Brook forced his way into the T20 side in time to play every single match of the victorious World Cup campaign before scoring four Test centuries in his first six matches, which in turn paved the way for his entry into the ODI set-up and eventually the World Cup squad.By contrast, Salt is three years his senior and made his England debut a year earlier, but has lived a bridesmaid’s international career. There to help out whenever required, but never afforded his own special day. Until yesterday.”We spoke about that actually the other day,” Brook said of England wanting to build a team of characters who can win when their backs are against the wall. “Trying to play with personality and go out there and show what you can do. Salty’s done that beautifully today, it’s his first hundred for England in T20 cricket and I’m sure if he keeps on batting like that he’ll get many more.”In Brook and Salt’s embrace at the end, you had a picture of two players with different routes but the same destination as integral members of England’s next white-ball generation.A point of particular pride for both players was that England, having scored 13 fewer sixes than the West Indies across the first two matches of the series, had turned the table in the third and out-Windied the Windies. Salt himself struck nine, Brook four, England 18 and the West Indies 16.Salt and Brook – the frontmen of England’s new white-ball wave?•Associated Press”It’s an incredible effort,” Salt said. “The power that those guys have. I’ve played with a lot of them, played with Dre in the Hundred, played with Rovman in the IPL. Even in the nets over there, I was a bit shocked at times with the raw power they have and then when you’re playing against them, seeing the ball fly over your head, it’s not just going ten metres over, it’s a good 30, 40, 50 metres over the fence. Sometimes you are genuinely in awe of it.”To out-six them today, it shows we’ve got what it takes. Mo (Moeen Ali) talked in the huddle before the game about fighting fire with fire, so that’s a nice little stat, that.”Brook has long been considered a lock, but Salt’s innings could for the first time have officially shifted the dial of England’s white-ball pecking order. It was only a matter of months ago that Salt had lost his place at the top of the order to Will Jacks, but such is his propensity for attacking the powerplay that this series saw Salt get the nod at the top of the tree, with Jacks relegated to No.3. And now, with Jonny Bairstow’s return on the horizon, it is difficult to imagine a world where England refutes the opportunity to keep Salt where he is, with Bairstow replacing Jacks at first drop.It has taken eight years for the next generation to be afforded the chance to come through, but in Salt and Brook, England have the backbone of a batting line-up that will serve them well for years to come.

The king is 70, long live the king

Viv Richards, lion in winter, talks T20 and whether he wishes he was playing in the modern era

Osman Samiuddin16-Mar-20220:59

‘If T20 was around when we were, why not go and have some professional fun’

Last week, as we mourned the tragic loss of one of the game’s greats, so passed a significant life moment for another. Sir Viv Richards, who played his last Test five months before Shane Warne played his first, is now 70 years old.Or, as he is quick to point out, “70 years young”.It’s a bit of a dad-quip but are you not going to laugh when Viv Richards laughs, satisfied with the funny he’s made? We’re talking, as we do now, via Zoom, and Richards, proudly of Antigua, is sitting in a hotel room in Lahore, as a “mentor” for Quetta Gladiators in the Pakistan Super League, talking into a smartphone. This is a very 21st-century scene, although Richards, and those shoulders, bring a magisterial touch to the framing.Related

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Nowadays this commitment is his most active involvement in the game. And while a T20 franchise mentor is totally the same energy as a company’s Chief Happiness Officer, somehow Richards’ role at Quetta has not only appeared organic, it has also been substantive.His presence in the dugout at PSL games has often been the game to watch. Even now, there’s little doubt he is – was – an athlete, the vibe he always brought, that there is nothing more serious in his life than that to which he is presently deployed. He chest-bumps, he fist-pumps, he high-fives, he grooves. In the first PSL, when Quetta reached the final, he charged on to the field to celebrate, with the same conviction with which he once celebrated a Rob Bailey dismissal. That was five years go, but he’s still so clearly into each moment of a game, you can’t help but wonder: 30 years from his last game, how much is he missing it?”Not really,” he says. “What I’m seeing is a lot of individuals who have done the game in itself proud. The magnificent players that you’ve seen, certainly the game has improved somewhat. The bats, the power-hitting, you know, most certainly the T20 stuff wasn’t around when we were playing.”With old chum Ian Botham at the unveiling of the trophy named after the two of them earlier this month in North Sound, Antigua•Gareth Copley/AFP/Getty ImagesSurely, though, there have been times where you’ve sized up some poor bowler, clocked the boundary sizes, felt the heft of that bat and thought: pad me up now?”Well, yes, I would say this, that sometimes there is a little urge… why the hell didn’t T20 come a little earlier, you know?” There’s a little shimmying of those shoulders as he says this, just one of the physical manifestations of that gold-dust swagger.”One of the things I am pleased and very happy for is that the pioneers that graced the field over the years, they would’ve set the foundation for what’s happening today. I’m just hoping that the individuals who are playing today and earning whatever, appreciate the fact that there were pioneers before who obviously led the way for what’s happening today.”A wider theme can be parsed from these lines, in which, broadly speaking, the supremacy of red-ball cricket is paramount. T20s cannot be the judge of a cricketer, Richards says. Red-ball remains “the real baptism where cricket is concerned”. Boundaries are too small. If helmets weren’t around, neither would modern batting’s derring-do be. “Suits of armour” makes an appearance, and he frets players are too readily forsaking national teams for franchises. In referring to T20s as “professional fun”, moreover, he fairly harrumphs “professional”, as might a man from a time when being a professional cricketer was not inevitable.This is a generational cleft, although it doesn’t come across as bitter as much as it does cautionary. It is to say that a world existed before yesterday, that people strived hard in it; in it people failed and excelled, in it people innovated, in it there were greats who were shaped by the circumstances of their time. It is to say that as we move ahead, we can only do so by remaining mindful of where we are coming from. Which is no bad plea.And he kind of have a point about bowlers in T20s.Richards obliges with selfies and autographs at the West Indies-Pakistan game in the 2019 World Cup•Gareth Copley/ICC/Getty Images”What I would say is that there are times when I think bowlers are taken advantage of.” He pauses, then laughs at the words that are about to come: “And I say that mildly.”You know, when you look at some of these T20 tournaments, you see the small boundaries, these huge hitters, the improvement in the bats, you know, as a batsman I shouldn’t be saying this, but I believe that the bowlers sometimes have been taken for granted. Especially when you have batters making mistakes, top-edging stuff for sixes. I believe the boundary sometimes could be a little bit bigger. Just making the playing field on the whole much more enjoyable for everyone to participate and compete.”When asked what his one wish for the game would be, he asks for bigger boundaries. It is hardly a radical manifesto, but this note of sympathy from a batter who displayed little of it to bowlers when playing adds a little gravitas.That had everything to do with the bowlers he came across, the Lillees and Thommos, the Imrans and Hadlees, as well as his own team-mates. The one thing he couldn’t dare give them was sympathy.We are currently passing through an era that might, in time, be remembered even more favourably for fast bowling. Richards watched the Ashes – it is not clear why – and, unsurprisingly, liked what he saw from the hosts.”When I looked at Australia, I felt that was the perfect example. You have four guys coming at you all day and you’ve got to survive that, your technique on the line. Testing times. The leaving of deliveries outside off stump. The concentration factor.I and I: Richards holds up a portrait of him by artist Brandon Kelly•Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty Images”Yes, you look at even Shaheen [Shah Afridi], he has come on in leaps and bounds. Ever since I’ve been coming here to Pakistan, this is one of the things I have noted – the finds in terms of fast bowlers. Guys are clicking at 145-150kph on a regular basis, which means that it is healthy in that category.”As I said, some of the things that have not changed, in my opinion, is proper fast bowling. I could call on a few from yesterday, you know, who were fine exponents. I could give you four who I played with. And the count could go on and on. But in a big way, I believe that never changes.”The fastest bowler he says he faced was Jeff Thomson, which is not surprising. The fastest ball he ever faced is, but also isn’t: a bouncer from Wasim Akram in an ODI in Hobart in late 1988. It could be recency bias of one kind – on the morning of this interview, Richards had inducted Akram into the PCB’s hall of fame. But everyone knows that though Akram operated as a sculptor, he could be a wrecking ball when the mood gripped him.”One of the quickest deliveries I have ever, ever encountered, and I believe there was someone upstairs looking after me,” he recalls. “I had some hair left then, somewhat of a mini-Afro and this one went by so quickly, I could hear it hitting the wicketkeeper’s gloves and I said, ‘Wow, wow.’ Wasim was a young man, coming on to the scene, and I was heading towards the exit door so I was glad that while he was coming then, I was going.”I can remember also that I did say to the individuals, the batsmen in the West Indies team at the time, I said, ‘Hey man, good luck to you guys, having to encounter that guy on a regular basis man.’ Wasim, he was very, very special. Up to this day, I still see that particular delivery. I have nightmares about it every now and again.”It is from a great contemporary of Richards’ that we have heard on racism over the last couple of years, since the murder of George Floyd and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement. Michael Holding has become a prominent and powerful voice on racism. For those who followed the great West Indies sides of that era, it might seem an unexpected development; even Holding himself admitted in 2020 that Richards was more politically active than he was during their playing days.Second life: Richards is probably found more often on golf courses than at cricket grounds these days•Hannah Peters/Getty ImagesThere would appear to be no specific reason why we have not heard Richards as much. It could be visibility – the pandemic has meant that the first time he travelled outside the Caribbean in recent years was for the T20 World Cup last year. It’s definitely not because he has suddenly not been subject to racist behaviour anymore. In fact, he was, as recently as when returning from the T20 World Cup, on a flight in the Caribbean. It should be getting better, he says, but it isn’t.And he is exactly as you imagine he might be on the issue.”Well, what I know for sure is, the way it should be is that all lives should matter. You know, that’s the way I look at it. All lives should matter. But in some cases, take, for instance, America, the racism we have seen on a regular basis, innocent folks being gunned down by the police, it doesn’t seem like that is the case.”So this is why I will always be an advocate in a big way. Why is it that it just keeps happening to this particular colour?” He points to his forearm. “Because I myself have gone through that sort of stuff, the racism, at some point. I’m a pretty conscious guy. I’ve always believed in my colour, my race. And anyone, in my opinion, who wants to shoot you down, to stamp on you because of your colour, he doesn’t have a divine right to do that.”This is why I would always believe in the Malcolm X factor: by any means necessary, if you need to survive some of the thinking of individuals around the world, like the National Front, the Klan. I’m for anyone of this colour, whoever is being persecuted, whoever is facing race issues, anyone on this earth who is going to say to me as a human being that I haven’t got any right to survive because of my colour – wow, I will do what it takes, what is necessary, in order to survive.”The only sour note, really, is that we’ve lost Richards to golf. That’s how he now spends his days, hanging on courses with Richie Richardson and Eldine Baptiste. Playing a fair bit too, as a handicap of seven indicates. Not bad, he says, for a 70-year-old.

Douglas Luiz antecipa dificuldades da Seleção Brasileira frente à Inglaterra 'Momentos diferentes'

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Douglas Luiz concedeu entrevista coletiva nesta quinta-feira (21), antes do amistoso da Seleção Brasileira contra a Inglaterra. Jogador do Aston Villa, da Premier League, o meio-campista falou sobre a oportunidade de jogar em Wembley e comparou os momentos das duas seleções, antecipando dificuldades.

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– Então, eu jogando aqui, falando minha opinião como jogador da Premier League. É uma liga muito forte, eles com certeza não vão querer perder. Acho que vai ser um grande espetaculo em Wembley, um estádio que não é qualquer jogador que pode jogar. Eu graças a Deus tive uma oportunidade de jogar lá em cinco anos, numa final de copa contra o Manchester City – comentou Douglas Luiz.

– A gente sabe a dificuldade do jogo, estamos tentando entender o trabalho do Dorival o mais rápido possível. São momento diferentes, a gente em reconstrução e a seleção da Inglaterra já com o grupo mais formado, mas a gente vai dar nosso melhor para vencer essa partida – completou o volante.

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Sobre posicionamento, Douglas Luiz afirmou acreditar que Dorival irá manter um volante para cumprir a função de Casemiro, que foi cortado desta convocação por conta de lesão. O jogador analisou taticamente o trabalho do novo treinador.

– Tive uma conversa com ele, e acho que ele vai manter esse número 5, porque o Dorival é um cara que gosta muito desse jogo posicionado. Ele gosta muito de defender os 11 e atacar marcando. Então, acredito que ele vá deixar esse 5 ali mais posicionado, e aí não sei se vai jogar com dois volantes ou um “triângulo”, com um 5 e dois 8. Isso vou ter um pouco mais de noção hoje – explicou.

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Douglas também falou sobre ter sido ausência em convocações no ano passado, mesmo fazendo ótima temporada pelo Aston Villa. O meio-campista retornou à Seleção na última lista de 2023, e foi mantido por Dorival Júnior para esta Data Fifa.

– Cara, eu procuro sempre fazer meu melhor dentro de campo e isso refletir numa convocação. Mas eu fico tranquilo, como eu disse, a Seleção é recheada de meio-campistas muito bons, sempre está com uma qualidade muito alta. Procurei manter minha cabeça no lugar, falei comigo mesmo que meu momento ia chegar e me preparei o máximo. Agora chegou, se não iniciar uma partida, entrar em campo no segundo tempo e poder resolver, mudar a história de um jogo – afirmou Douglas.

O volante foi questionado sobre a convivência com companheiros cariocas, assim como ele, e relembrou momentos do futebol junto dos companheiros. Além disso, o meio-campista comentou sua trajetória até chegar à Premier League.

– Primeiramente, e sinto muito confortável de estar com o Paquetá, João, Bruno, André… são pessoas que eu consegui jogar contra e favor, na Seleção Sub-20 o Paquetá, principalmente. Então, a gente tem uma liberdade e acho que isso ajuda bastante na montagem do grupo ali. Sobre a dificuldade, é bem difícil sair da comunidade de onde eu saí. Hoje estar jogando a Premier League é algo inexplicável. Só eu e minha família passamos por isso. Estou muito feliz com o clube e agora o foco é aqui na Seleção.

Cria da base do Vasco da Gama, Douglas Luiz falou sobre a resenha com companheiros vascaínos, como Bruno Guimarães e Richarlison. O volante revelou, ainda, uma conversa que teve com Léo Jardim, goleiro do Cruz-Maltino que também está no grupo da Seleção.

– Cara, essa relação é muito boa. com o Richarlison e o Bruno. Consegui descobrir do Richarlison nas Olimpíadas, eu nem sabia. Sobre o Jardim, a primeira coisa quando ele chegou aqui (na Seleção) eu perguntei: o que vai acontecer esse ano? Vamos sofrer de novo? Ele falou que precisava de algumas contratações, mas que o Ramón Díaz é um excelente treinador, então creio que não vamos sofrer. Mas essa é a resenha, fico feliz de ter atletas do Vasco aqui.

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Confira outras respostas de Douglas Luiz na entrevista coletiva desta quinta-feira (21), pela Seleção Brasileira:

– Fico muito feliz com essa concorrência que eu tenho, até porque cada vez mais exige a querer melhorar. O time exato ainda não sei, a gente vem aqui fazer nosso melhor e de tudo para ganhar minutos. Então, fico feliz com essa concorrência toda, mas é um dia após o outro. Continuar trabalhando para que tudo possa dar certo.

– Até o momento (Dorival) não (definiu o time titular). Está sendo um treinamento bastante mesclado. Acho que ele está querendo conhecer todos os jogadores. É a primeira convocação do Dorival, ele tá querendo ver quem ele pode confiar e querendo descobrir os 11. Então, não teve essa separação de titulares e reservas.

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Stokes' batting in focus as England count cost of Edgbaston errors

Captain’s poor form with bat typified off-colour display and leaves questions to be answered before Lord’s

Matt Roller06-Jul-20251:46

Harmison: England’s top-order returns a worry

Ben Stokes was surrounded. Rishabh Pant and Yashasvi Jaiswal seemed convinced that he had edged Washington Sundar down the leg side in the over before lunch, and Indian fielders converged on England’s captain. Ravindra Jadeja pointed to Stokes’ thigh pad. Shubman Gill decided against using his final review. Stokes chewed his gum, hand on hip, and glared.One ball later, India’s fielders went up in appeal again. Stokes was dumbfounded when umpire Sharfuddoula raised his finger, and held out his left hand in bemusement before reviewing. But the decision was spot on: DRS confirmed that Washington’s in-drifter had hit his pad before his bat. He shook his head as he walked off, past a fan waving an India flag in Edgbaston’s South Stand.Stokes’ innings was a grimly compelling watch, a public disavowal of his previous stance that he was “not interested” in drawing Test matches as captain. With every high-elbow defence and exaggerated leave off the seamers, he made ever more clear the extent to which his team had been backed into a corner by India. After three years, the option of last resort had finally arrived.Related

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The trouble for Stokes was that Gill knew he could attack him with spin. Stokes never settled in England’s run chase in Leeds, compulsively reverse-sweeping – he played the shot 16 times in 51 balls, the last of which brought about his dismissal. He has always been a stronger player against pace but his numbers against spinners have fallen off a cliff.Here, Stokes put his reverse-sweep away against Jadeja, but was never in control. He shifted his guard, batting across his stumps, and was caught between stools when confronted with a rough patch outside off. He lunged forward to sweep, missing as many as he hit, and gloved one ball just short of Gill at leg slip as he looked to defend.Just briefly, Stokes had started to look like his old self when back-cutting, driving and pulling Mohammed Siraj for boundaries, finally exerting his dominance on a bowler. But his dismissal to Washington felt almost inevitable: 16 of his 25 Test dismissals since the start of last year have been to spinners, and he is averaging 18.43 against spin in that time. It has been a barren run, and it was telling that Gill pushed his fielders back at the end of overs, allowing Stokes singles that would keep him on strike.

“The task today was batting out the 80 overs. The result we always try to push towards and look forward [to] was beyond [us]… It just wasn’t meant to be”

Stokes has had a bad week in Birmingham. He took five wickets in the first Test at Headingley but admitted that bowling 35 overs left him as “a shadow of my normal self”, and after 15 more on day one at Edgbaston, managed only 11 overs thereafter. Uncharacteristically, he seemed to run out of ideas in India’s second innings as the game drifted away from him slowly.His decision to bowl first at the toss backfired, with India enjoying the best batting conditions and grinding England into the ground. “As the game got deeper and deeper, it was pretty obvious that [the pitch] was not playing the way that we thought it was going to,” Stokes said. Brendon McCullum was clearer, saying: “We probably got it slightly wrong.”India’s relentlessness with the bat left England facing an unprecedented situation under Stokes’ captaincy, attempting to bat out the final day to secure a draw with a win off the table. “The task today was batting out the 80 overs,” he said. “The result we always try to push towards and look forward [to] was beyond [us]… It just wasn’t meant to be.”4:11

Stokes: We weren’t able to deliver our skills when needed

His team now faces a quick turnaround to Thursday’s third Test at Lord’s. Stokes does not expect the 336-run margin of defeat to affect their performance next week, but he needs to step up with the bat. Gill, his opposite number, does not look a natural leader in the field, but his runs have bought him scope to make mistakes that Stokes is not giving himself.The opening day of this match marked the two-year anniversary of Stokes’ most recent Test hundred, a rage-fuelled 155 in defeat to Australia at Lord’s, and he has not scored a century in any format of the game since the 2023 World Cup. He declined the opportunity to play for Durham or England Lions ahead of this series to manage his body, but his batting has suffered.Since the start of last year, Stokes has faced only 1280 balls in professional cricket, limited heavily by knee and hamstring injuries; the next fewest among England’s top seven is Zak Crawley with 2414, while Joe Root has faced 4523. If batting is a skill that relies on rhythm and tempo, then Stokes has been dancing to a very different tune.Stokes shrugged off a post-match question about his own form with the bat but his five Test scores this year read 9, 20, 33, 0 and 33, and his career batting average has dipped to its lowest mark (35.31) since the 2019 Ashes. He has been an inspirational and tactically astute captain, but Stokes’ leadership alone cannot mask his struggles with the bat.

Australia are quite good, England might not be as good as they thought

Bairstow carting a protester back to the Grand Stand the only time an Englishman extolled domination

Vithushan Ehantharajah28-Jun-2023An over into the opening day at Lord’s, two protestors from Just Stop Oil ran onto the field armed with orange paint powder. Their aim was to disperse as much of it as possible on the pitch, only to be halted in their tracks by Jonny Bairstow, Ben Stokes and David Warner. Honestly, could you think of three worse cricketers to be confronted by?Apart from Bairstow hot-footing it into the home dressing room to change out of a now stained white shirt, there was no real impediment on proceedings. The auxiliary pitch – sat two to the left of the main strip as you look out from the press box – did not have to be used. As it turned out, Bairstow’s carry of one of the protesters back to the Grand Stand from where he emerged was the only time an Englishman extolled domination on day one.Whatever debris on the field was removed with a petrol-fuelled blower, just to really hammer home the futility of the protest. A worthy one considering the debilitating effects of fossil fuels on the climate. But like many things we need to change about the world around us, there was a nagging sense it’s all too far gone. Even for believers, there’s enough doubt in the productivity of such acts to let the nuisance of inconvenience, however minor, prevail as the dominant emotion.”They have consistently shown complete disregard for the people who pay to attend events,” said CEO Guy Lavender in an MCC press release about the protest that dropped an hour later. A line far more instructive than he would have intended 24 hours after the institution had to confront a chastening from the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket for being woefully out of step with “contemporary Britan”.Jonny Bairstow removes a ‘Just Stop Oil’ pitch invader from the field•Getty ImagesThe home of cricket is only a home for those who look a certain way and, principally, can afford the entry fee. A fee which MCC felt entitled those who can afford it to an uninterrupted day’s play without being reminded the ground’s main sponsor JP Morgan is the world’s worst fossil fuel financing bank.It also entitles them to, well, not watch the cricket. Just as celebrated as the members rushing for seats in the Pavilion before the start of play is the afternoon meander to the various greens of the Nursery Ground, Coronation and Harris Gardens. A point in the day when they think, you know, all this cricket is getting in the way of our conversing.On this occasion, you could understand the motivation of those punters, however strong their ties to this England team are. This was not good viewing, by any means. Overly full bowling at a worryingly docile pace. Nuts so nude you could see the birthmarks.No one in England garb looked like they really wanted to be there, save Josh Tongue in his second Test, which is damning in its own way. They had flunked the best conditions you could ever ask for at this ground. Even Stokes seemed to be devoid of the usual funk, fiddling intermittently when testing Travis Head out with the short ball, but otherwise sticking to by-the-book fields featured in many of the paintings adorning the walls of the closed-off Long Room.As England went through the back end of 83 overs of toil, they probably looked upon the now vacant spaces in the stands with some jealousy. If only they could saunter off and chill out, rather than pointlessly address Australia’s screw-turning.At another time, players would think nothing of it. They all know this is a ground those not really into cricket come to be seen at rather than actually do any seeing. But given all the success coming into this summer, all the Bazball buzz heading into an Ashes, even the way the Edgbaston opener played out day to day, something about these empty white seats created far more of a stain than any orange pigment.There was a sense of lost hope. Of a team who pride themselves on entertaining whether they win or lose, simply losing the thread of their most vaunted – and thus, most watched – series to date, in quite unwatchable fashion. Whether you watched all of the 339 runs and five wickets, or just the first session, you were left with the same mundane conclusions. Australia are quite good. England might not be as good as they thought.Related

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There is a point be made that this is the worst ground for this particular England Test side. It’s as much the pitch – devoid of meaningful bounce today from the Nursery End – as the tradition hanging over this joint, cruelly over-emphasising the grandeur of an Ashes to a group whose best cricket over the last year has come through not taking the game and their part in it too seriously.They also need those watching them to invest emotionally in what they do, which doesn’t happen here. Perhaps Wednesday was when they found out the hard way that this Lord’s crowd need a bit more than vibes and the wrong kind of jaunty hats to buy into what you’re selling. And it’s not so much the ones who wander off, more those who remain. They’ve seen far more than most, and they care not for golfing anecdotes other than their own.There’s no Hollies Stand or Western Terrace here. Other than the occasional sponsored brass band on the outfield, no instruments are allowed. All the beer snakes are killed at birth. Try and sneak in an extra can at your peril. Oh and revelry? Just try and get that past a thorough pat-down. Whatever noise to be made has to come from the middle, and but for the cracks off the middle of the bats of David Warner, Marnus Labuschagne, Head and Steve Smith (with plenty to come from him), England couldn’t produce the infectious music that has scored the last 14 months.Expect all or some of the above to get fashioned into some excuse behind closed doors, and pray to whoever you pray to it’s not uttered publicly. There has been enough talk for a life time. Six days into this series, England’s worst by some distance has an entire narrative they built shifting against them. Previous lauders are now doubters. Their most high-profile celebrators now their harshest critics.Now, only actions matter. And at a time when English cricket and the world at large step up to fight harder in unending battles for betterment, those on the field (who are meant to be there) now find themselves rallying in similar fashion. They must hope like hell these are not equally futile circumstances.

Rise of Chris Woakes, Moeen Ali adds to England's World Cup power play

Neither had a guaranteed T20 role six months ago but once again they gave England an early stranglehold

Deivarayan Muthu27-Oct-2021Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes weren’t quite nailed on for the T20 World Cup earlier this year. Moeen didn’t get a single game when a full-strength England squad had visited India in March for a five-match T20I series, which was essentially a dry run for the World Cup. Heck, Woakes wasn’t even part of that touring squad, flying back home after the Test leg. Seven months later, both Moeen and Woakes are at the forefront of England’s T20 success. Who woulda thunk it?In England’s opener against the West Indies, the defending champions, in Dubai, Moeen and Woakes set up the game beautifully for their side in the powerplay. England moved to Abu Dhabi for this game, facing Bangladesh for the first time ever in T20 cricket, but it was just the same drill for Moeen and Woakes.The very first delivery from Moeen gripped and turned. The right-handed Liton Das then tried to throw Moeen off his length by dashing out of the crease and drilling him for back-to-back fours in the first over. The Bangladeshi fans in the little picket fence enclosures beyond the boundary were bouncing in joy, with the DJ belting out “Char Chokka Hoi Hoi”.

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Sign up for ESPN+ and catch all the action from the Men’s T20 World Cup live in the US. Match highlights of Bangladesh vs England is available here in English, and here in Hindi (US only).

Moeen, however, silenced them in his next over, when he extracted just enough turn and dip to have Liton sky a slog-sweep. Next ball, Mohammad Naim stepped out to him – but he didn’t meet the pitch of the ball either, plopping a simple catch to mid-on. Moeen punched his fist in triumph.At the other end, Woakes, the other Birmingham boy, kept slamming the Abu Dhabi track with the heavy lengths and control that has been his calling card in 50-over cricket. No width, no loose balls, just immaculate line-and-length bowling to deny the batters access to the shorter boundary.When Woakes bounded in and dug one into the pitch, he found sharp lift from a back of a length to ping Mushfiqur Rahim’s glove. Woakes then attacked Shakib Al Hasan’s ribs in the last over of the powerplay and had him flapping a weak pull to short fine leg, where Adil Rashid completed a sprawling catch.Bangladesh had fallen to 26 for 3 in the sixth over, and despite some late blows from Nasum Ahmed and Mahedi Hasan, they wound up scrounging only 124 for 9. Woakes and Moeen had dominated the powerplay so much that England even had the cushion of experimenting at the death with Rashid, who was their powerplay spinner in India.Moeen didn’t return to the attack after the powerplay salvo, but Woakes did for the 12th over, in which he let rip a Mark Wood-esque lifter and had Afif Hossain falling over in clumsy fashion. Ironically, Woakes would’ve been less likely to play on Wednesday had Wood recovered sufficiently from his ankle strain. Figures of 4-0-12-1, without giving up a single boundary, on a scorching afternoon in Abu Dhabi was some shift from Woakes. Since his return to England’s T20I side after six years in June 2021, Woakes has figures of 13-0-47-3 in four matches at a believe-it-or-not economy rate of 3.61.At the innings break, Woakes acknowledged that the recent game-time has benefitted him. “The warm-up games I didn’t feel too good, but coming in the last couple of games have gone nicely. In this format sometimes it’s just a matter of the luck of the draw, but I’m feeling better the more I play, but as a unit we’ve really gone well today so happy with that.Related

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“The [Abu Dhbai] wicket is a little bit two-paced, the IPL was before and the wickets are probably a little bit tired occasionally. If you hit the length hard, you get that little bit of variable bounce. And batters obviously can’t guess what’s happening off the surface.”Both Woakes and Moeen kept banging it away on that length, and according to ESPNcricinfo’s logs, they didn’t float a single ball on the fuller side. Their stints in the IPL have also helped their game and confidence. Moeen’s all-round brilliance was central to Chennai Super Kings winning the title earlier this month, also in the Emirates, while Delhi Capitals coach Ricky Ponting has always rated Woakes highly, even when he wasn’t so by England in T20Is.Liam Livingstone and Tymal Mills, who also weren’t part of England’s T20 World Cup plans not too long ago, contributed handsomely with the ball as Eoin Morgan’s men asserted themselves as bona fide title contenders along with Pakistan. Just in case anyone needed reminding: beware of this England white-ball side.

Mike Ashley's position clear as Sheffield Wednesday takeover reaches final candidates

After setting a soft deadline of December 5, former Newcastle United owner Mike Ashley has reportedly emerged as one of the final candidates to buy Sheffield Wednesday.

The Owls have not rushed into anything since entering administration and will be well aware that they must ensure that their next owner can make the guarantees that Dejphon Chansiri could not, financially speaking.

A number of candidates have shown proof of funds worth around £50m, but it has also been reported that a consortium from the Middle East has dropped out of contention due to the cost of completing a takeover. It is expected that, whilst the reserve price could be £30m, the actual cost of buying Sheffield Wednesday could rise to £100m over the next three years when considering a number of investments around the club.

Meanwhile, on the pitch, the Owls have the smaller matter of the Steel City derby to play against Sheffield United this weekend. They square off against the Blades looking to drag their rivals down with them in the Championship’s dropzone.

Previewing the crucial clash, Sheffield Wednesday boss Henrik Pedersen admitted that he expects to face an “organised side” in a tough challenge for his side this weekend.

With a soft deadline of 5 December for their takeover, victory over Sheffield United would certainly be a fine way to start what is a crucial two-week period.

Mike Ashley now a serious contender to buy Sheffield Wednesday

As reported by the i Paper, Ashley is now among the serious candidates to buy Sheffield Wednesday ahead of their December 5 deadline. The Owls are expected to narrow their search down to three or four options by the time that it’s time for offers to arrive and the former Newcastle United chief could yet be among those.

Whilst some will be quick to point out Ashley’s flaws from his time at St James’ Park, he could arguably be what Sheffield Wednesday need at present. He was unambitious at Newcastle when it came to signings, which left fans frustrated, but in terms of finances he was safe.

Sheffield Wednesday now targeting two more Man Utd academy stars in Amass repeat

Amass has been a great success.

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Tom Cunningham

Nov 13, 2025

The 61-year-old cleared the Magpies’ debt with an interest-free loan and may well steady the ship at Sheffield Wednesday. Whether he’d ensure that they become an established Championship side again after what seems to be inevitable relegation is another question, however.

There’s no denying that Ashley didn’t exactly jump at the chance to invest in the squad during his time at Newcastle, as they suffered relegation from the Premier League twice.

Latest Sheffield Wednesday takeover news

طارق الجلاهمة يتنبأ بسيناريو قاسي بشأن محمد صلاح.. وينتقد تصرف لاعب ليفربول معه

تحدث طارق الجلاهمة، محلل شبكة قنوات “بي إن سبورتس” القطرية عن الوضع الحالي للنجم المصري محمد صلاح داخل أورقة نادي ليفربول، بعد الأزمة التي اندلعت قبل أسبوع بسبب تصريحاته.

وشارك محمد صلاح في مباراة ليفربول وبرايتون أمس السبت، في الجولة السادسة عشر من الدوري الإنجليزي، حيث دخل كبديل في الدقيقة 25، ولعب دورًا في الفوز بهدفين دون رد.

جاءت مشاركة محمد صلاح بعد أسبوع من تصريحاته العنيفة التي هاجم خلالها إدارة ليفربول والمدرب آرني سلوت، حيث اتهم إياهم بالتخلي عنه.

وقال طارق الجلاهمة، عبر أستوديو شبكة “بي إن سبورتس” القطرية: “أعتقد أن هذه مرحلة وداع ورحيل أحد الأطراف، سلوت أو محمد صلاح، ومن وجهة نظري أعتقد أنه بالنظر إلى وداع صلاح بهذه الطريقة في ملعب أنفيلد، قد تكون هذه المباراة الأخيرة له مع ليفربول”.

وأضاف: “قد أكون مخطئًا، لكن المعطيات التي حدثت قبل المباراة والأحداث كلها تُنبئ بأن موعد رحيل محمد صلاح عن ليفربول قد اقترب، الحملة التي قامت ضده في الأسبوع الماضي من أساطير ولاعبين في ليفربول لم أتوقعها بكل تأكيد”.

اقرأ أيضًا.. ليفربول يعلن رحيل محمد صلاح بعد مباراة برايتون

وواصل: “يمكن للجميع أن ينتقد لاعبين، هذا طبيعي، لكن أن يصل الموضوع إلي (شخصنة) من كاراجر، هنا يجب أن نقول له يجب أن تعي أنك يا كاراجر أمام هرم من عالم كرة القدم، مهما كان التقليل من قيمة محمد صلاح، أعتقد أنك لن تصل إلى مراحل بعيدة، محمد صلاح قدم كرة جميلة وحطم أرقامًا كبيرة ولا نقبل التجريح”.

وأردف: “محمد صلاح من أفضل اللاعبين علي مستوى الدوري الإنجليزي وأحد أساطير ليفربول، بكل تأكيد هذا شيء أزعجني، الأمور الشخصية يجب إبعادها لأن عالم كرة القدم مليء بالمفاجآت”.

واعترف: “على الجانب الآخر، لم يعجبني تصرف فان دايك وهو القائد لـ ليفربول، القائد يجب أن يكون آخر من يرحل من المعركة، ليس من يبتعد مع أول اهتزاز، لقد وقف بشكل محايد”.

وشدد: “لولا الله سبحانه وتعالى ومحمد صلاح يا فان دايك، لم تكن لتتوج بلقب الدوري الإنجليزي، فان دايك لاعب انتهى فنيًا، يستطيع الانتقال إلى دوري آخر يؤدي فيه، لكن في الدوري الإنجليزي من الصعب استمراره مع الفريق”.

واستأنف: “كان على فان دايك أن يحمي زملائه وألا يقف محايدًا في هذه الأزمة، أريد توجيه رسالة إلى محمد صلاح، أنت لاعب فنان لا يختلف عليك اثنين، لكن للرحيل فن وكانت لديك فرصة للرحيل في الصيف الماضي وأنت بطل واسمك مُخلد في الأنفيلد، لقد قدمت كل ما عليك، كان يجب عليك تبحث عن تجربة مختلفة”.

واختتم: “لا ليفربول سيقف على محمد صلاح ولا محمد صلاح سيقف على ليفربول، كرة القدم دائمًا مستمرة، سواء في وجود النجوم أو رحيلهم، لذالك كان يجب عليك الرحيل في الصيف الماضي، لكن الله وحده أعلم بما سيحدث فيما بعد”.

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