Everton: Big Leandro Trossard transfer news

Everton are keen on Brighton and Hove Albion’s Leandro Trossard, according to sports journalist Pete O’Rourke.

The lowdown

With Dominic Calvert-Lewin currently out injured, Salomon Rondon is the only fit centre-forward at Frank Lampard’s disposal.

While he’s predominantly a left winger, Trossard is capable of playing as a striker or an attacking midfielder.

The 27-year-old is into the final year of his contract at the Amex Stadium. However, The Athletic reported in May that Brighton have the option to extend his deal by a further 12 months.

The latest

O’Rourke took to Twitter on Monday afternoon to share the news on Trossard.

“Everton are interested in a move Brighton attacker Leandro Trossard,” he wrote.

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The verdict

Trossard would be a good signing for Everton.

In 107 appearances for Brighton, he’s recorded a highly respectable 30 goal involvements (scoring 19 and assisting 11).

And he’s currently enjoying a strong run of form, with eight goals in his last 15 for club and country.

He was on target again at the weekend, netting Brighton’s second in their 2-0 win at West Ham United.

Trossard, similar in profile to Paulo Dybala and Antoine Griezmann according to FBRef, has been dubbed a ‘complete package’ by Brighton journalist Andy Naylor.

His agent says he will only leave Brighton for ‘a really attractive project’, and so it’s down to Frank Lampard and co. to convince him that Everton is a significant step-up.

Nottingham Forest eye Emmanuel Dennis

Nottingham Forest have had an exciting summer in terms of their transfer window with 12 new signings secured already, and now they could be set to make their 13th with a new update on a potential target reported.

What’s the latest?

According to Sky Sports Transfer Centre, Nottingham Forest remain interested in signing Watford striker Emmanuel Dennis this summer.

As per the report, the newly-relegated club value their player at £20m but Forest would prefer a deal to loan the player with an option to buy at the end of the season.

Following the story from Sky Sports,  The Athletic journalist Adam Leventhal reported that Forest have now made an opening offer for the player.

Leventhal tweeted this morning:

“Breaking: @TheAthleticUK understands #NFFC have now made opening offer for #WatfordFC’s Emmanuel Dennis. Reported last month re interest, understand that is now developing.”

A big Surridge upgrade

Following the departure of Lewis Grabban and Keinan Davis, there is definitely an opportunity for Forest to strengthen their striker position this summer despite already capturing the services of Taiwo Awoniyi.

Awoniyi was one of the very first signings made this summer by the club, however, Dennis can offer the side some valuable Premier League experience in their pursuit to retain their top flight status this season, and would be a big upgrade on fellow centre-forward Sam Surridge.

Despite both strikers having the exact same number of shots (44), Dennis outperformed Surridge in front of goal in almost every key attribute in the position last season.

Dennis scored more goals (10 v 9), delivered more assists (6 v 3) and created more big chances (33 v 17), as well as having a higher goal conversion rate (22.73% v 20.45%), all whilst playing seven less games than the 24-year-old Forest centre forward, according to Squawka Comparison Matrix.

As a result, the Nigerian sensation who was dubbed “very talented” by Claudio Ranieri could provide a fantastic improvement in Forest’s attacking threat, something Steve Cooper will want to address following the side’s lacklustre attacking performance against Newcastle United in their first top flight game last weekend.

Cooper’s team suffered a 2-0 defeat on their visit to St James’ Park, but it wasn’t the score-line that is a cause for concern because Forest failed to register a single shot on target and created no big chances throughout the game, which will be a big problem should it continue into the upcoming fixtures.

With that being said, the signing of Dennis would be a major coup for the club, as he is not only an improvement on their current starting striker, but can add some great experience on coming up against many of the well established Premier League sides this season.

Spurs: Sessegnon has shocker v Chelsea

Tottenham Hotspur snatched a point from Chelsea as Antonio Conte’s return to his former club ended in a fiery manner with both managers receiving a red card in the Premier League’s second gameweek.

It means the Italian will not be in the dugout when they host Wolverhampton Wanderers in north London next weekend, though he will still be picking the team. He’ll have a big decision to make at wing-back as Ryan Sessegnon was just not at the races at Stamford Bridge.

Spurs should be encouraged because they not only picked up a point late on but also scored twice against the Blues, two feats that they could not manage across four encounters in 2021/22.

The England U21 international was hooked after just 57 minutes as he was being given the run around all evening – indeed, he won just two of his 11 duels at a win success rate of 18%, committed two fouls and lost possession eight times from only 28 touches (some three fewer than even goalkeeper Hugo Lloris), as per SofaScore.

Elsewhere on the pitch, the 22-year-old liability failed to register a single successful dribble or record an attacking contribution of note, with zero crosses, zero key passes and zero shots, which is a worrying sign from an attack-minded wing-back, particularly one that scored last weekend.

And when there’s a Champions League winner in Ivan Perisic sitting on the bench, it could soon become an easy switch for Conte to make, given his vast experience and quality in such a role.

The entirety of Chelsea’s right flank, ranging from Reece James to Ruben Loftus-Cheek and Kai Havertz all recorded a better SofaScore rating for the game than the young Englishman, who was slammed as being “awful” and a “rabbit in the headlights” by former Head of GOAL, James Dickens.

Dan Kilpatrick of the Evening Standard was less than impressed too as he graded the former Fulham gem as the Lilywhites’ joint-worst performer with a 4/10 in his post-match ratings column.

‘Picked ahead of Perisic, the wing-back was overrun defensively and fluffed his chance to quickly equalise when his effort was saved by Edouard Mendy,’ he wrote.

As such, Sessegnon badly let his manager down considering the faith put in him to start such an important and huge fixture. He had every right to given his display down against Southampton but last season’s third-placed finishers a different kettle of fish indeed.

AND in other news, Alasdair Gold: Spurs could seal late “amazing signing” in 19 y/o gem, he’s the future…

Newcastle close to sealing Nick Pope deal

A major update has emerged on Newcastle United and their pursuit of Nick Pope in the summer transfer window…

What’s the talk?

Northern Echo journalist Scott Wilson has revealed that the Magpies are set to make the giant shot-stopper their second signing of the month, after bringing Matt Targett in from Aston Villa.

He Tweeted: “NUFC close to completing a deal for Nick Pope. Fee for England international will be around £12m, with Burnley keeper set to battle with Martin Dubravka for number one spot next season…”

In the accompanying article, it is claimed that the England international has told the Clarets that he would like to move on following the club’s relegation from the Premier League.

The Athletic’s David Ornstein has since added: “Newcastle understood to have agreed fee in principle with Burnley for Nick Pope. 30yo England int’l GK now set to undergo medical. Hope is deal will be completed by end of week.”

Forget Hugo Ekitike

Whilst talks are reportedly set to take place with the Stade Reims striker this week, it is time to forget about Ekitike for now and focus on how good of a signing Pope can be for the club.

The Burnley star is set to join to provide competition to Martin Dubravka and his statistics suggest that he can be a big upgrade on the current Toon number one when it comes to sweeping up.

Pope ranks in the 99th and 98th percentiles for defensive actions outside of his box and the average distance of those actions respectively per 90 over the last 365 days. This shows that he is one of the best goalkeepers in Europe’s top five leagues in terms of successfully coming off his line to prevent danger.

Dubravka, meanwhile, ranks in the 11th percentile in both categories. He was reluctant to leave his penalty area too often in the 2021/22 campaign and his statistics look poor in comparison to the man who may end up replacing him at St. James’ Park.

When it comes to shot-stopping, there was not a great deal of difference between them as Pope saved 73.6% of the shots against him in comparison to the Slovakian’s save percentage of 67.9%.

These statistics suggest that the Englishman will be a sublime addition to the team as he will put real pressure on Dubravka and offer the head coach a different style of goalkeeper – with his ability to sweep up behind the backline – to utilise in games.

Therefore, Howe will be elated by the Burnley giant’s imminent arrival and will now be looking forward to working with him next season, assuming the deal goes through.

AND in other news, PIF plotting NUFC swoop for “infectious” £50m “class act”, just imagine him & Trippier…

Tottenham eyeing move for Carlos Alcaraz

Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly interested in a move for Racing Club starlet Carlos ‘Charly’ Alcaraz, according to reports in Spain.

What’s the word?

As per Marca, the Premier League outfit have been named as one of the clubs believed to be keeping an eye on the promising 19-year-old following his impressive displays for the Argentine club since his senior debut in January 2020.

The report suggests that, while the teenager has a $25m (£20.4m) release clause in his current contract, Spurs could well be able to secure his services for $20m (£16.3m) should they wish to bring him to England this summer.

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One of the most highly-rated prospects in South America, the report compares him to compatriot Lautaro Martinez for the potentially colossal fee that he could command in the future.

The next Ardiles?

A move for the teenager would no doubt stir memories of another great Argentine to have played for the Lilywhites, with the hope that he can go to replicate the success of the club’s legendary former player and one-time manager Ossie Ardiles.

The similarities don’t just exist in their country of birth, with Alcaraz also mirroring the Tottenham great in the attacking midfield role that he plays.

A star of English football in the 1970s and 80s, Ardiles scored 25 goals in 311 appearances in all competitions for the north London side in a glittering decade-long stint at White Hart Lane, notably winning the FA Cup in successive seasons in the early 1980s while also claiming the UEFA Cup in 1984.

Although it may well be an unwanted burden to compare the youngster with such an icon of the game, the £1.35m-rated gem has already shown glimpses of his talent in his embryonic career to date, netting four goals in just 13 Copa de la Liga games this season, while also developing something of a penchant for free kicks.

An all-round talent, the starlet also has a 51% dribble success rate and averages 1.2 tackles per game, while he has won an impressive 64% of his aerial duels this term – an illustration of his tenacious, hard-working nature.

Such qualities appear to indicate a player who would be at home under Antonio Conte, with Tottenham’s sporting director Fabio Paratici needing to get the deal over the line for the Ardiles-like Argentine talent Alcaraz.

In other news – Imagine him & Bentancur: Spurs can find perfect Conte gem in £49.5m-rated “phenomenon”

Marnus Labuschagne's leggies re-open an old question

Australia’s fingerspinners have learned to adapt to Asian pitches that offer turn or inconsistent bounce. On flat tracks like Dubai’s, however, they lack the cutting edge that a specialist wristspinner can bring

Daniel Brettig in Dubai08-Oct-2018When Australia’s thinkers assessed a desperately poor showing in Sri Lanka two years ago, much of the spotlight was shone upon the spin bowlers needing to be more consistent to impose pressure. Nathan Lyon went away and worked on his “bowl ugly” mindset, centered around changes of pace and trapping batsmen in the crease, while Steve O’Keefe returned to fitness to reclaim the spot he gave up to Jon Holland.In subsequent series in India and Bangladesh, Australia’s spin bowling division performed far more strongly, Lyon in particular, while O’Keefe and Ashton Agar played useful supporting roles. Holland, in the meantime, worked his way back into contention. All based on the concept of nagging accuracy, targeting the stumps and letting the pitch do the work.Ah yes, the pitch. In all three of the Sri Lanka Tests, three of the four India Tests (Ranchi excepted) and both the Bangladesh Tests, the surfaces prepared offered help for spin bowlers – whether sharp turn, inconsistent bounce, or both – virtually from the first day. Fingerspinners prosper in such climes, provided they deny batsmen loose balls with which to find the boundary. Put simply, there is enough natural assistance to lend an element of mystery and danger to these tamer members of the spin brotherhood.But in the sorts of conditions presented in Dubai on the first two days of Australia’s first Test against Pakistan, the need for a quality wristspinner’s extra snap, bounce and variation was as clear as the folly of scheduling a long-form match from Sunday to Thursday in the UAE when the weekend is set for Friday and Saturday. It was clear even before the debutant batsman and part-time wristspinner Marnus Labuschagne entered Australia’s attack and quickly found the sort of grip and bounce that neither Lyon nor Holland could conjure this early in the match.This is not to say Lyon bowled badly, tying down an end for long periods while conceding barely two runs per over. What he lacked was the sort of help in the pitch that would enable him to hit gloves, pads or stumps with regularity, something he may be able to find later in the match should Australia’s batsmen grant him the opportunity. For Holland life was more of a struggle, as he found the combination of the quicker pace demanded by the conditions and the high-arm action of his natural style did not agree with one another. So looping deliveries on a good length in Australia became flatter half-volleys in Dubai – CricViz stats had him landing 46% of his deliveries in the slot fuller than desired, whereas Lyon’s figure was a more tantalising 35%. Holland, for all his gifts, has some work to do.Largely due to the freakish nature of Shane Warne’s physical and tactical gifts as a spin bowler, Australia may never again have a talent of his like again. But this is not to say that the nation’s cricket system is unable to nurture wristspinners capable of doing the job where and when required – it needed only a glance towards one of the few populated areas of the Dubai International Stadium to glimpse Australia’s selection chairman Trevor Hohns, a more than serviceable legspinner and contributor to the successful 1989 Ashes tour. His reluctance to go to the West Indies in 1991 led indirectly to Warne’s fast-tracking and the mesmerising tale to follow.Based in Queensland, Hohns has seen numerous legspinners come and go during his time in and around the selection panels of Australia and the Bulls, including Daniel Doran, Cameron Boyce, and more recently Mitchell Swepson, who toured India alongside Labuschagne. Figures of 1 for 121 in his only match for Australia A on that tour probably ruled Swepson out of contention for this series, while at the same time the chances created by Labuschagne helped contribute to his own bolter’s case.Marnus Labuschagne celebrates his maiden Test wicket•Getty ImagesBefore this match, the captain Tim Paine had spoken of Labuschagne’s legbreaks as a useful value-add to his studious batting and alertness in the field: “We think Marnus brings a lot to the group, he’s a really good player of spin and we think as well his legspin will be something we can throw at the Pakistanis. They might not expect him, and they’ve really improved in the last 12 months.” But his emergence midway through a previously barren second day for the Australians highlighted the possibilities that might be offered by a more regular wristspin presence.From Labuschagne’s right hand the ball bounced and spun with enough pace to force false strokes, coaxing an edge from the bat of Asad Shafiq that was well caught by Paine, and another that eluded the grasp of Aaron Finch. At the same time Labuschagne’s high arm and topspin had the ball disturbing a previously benign surface for some of the first occasions in the match, regardless of whether it had landed in the rough or the middle of the pitch. Leggies do, for the most part, find that little bit extra.”I’ve been working on my bowling for a long time but the last three months specifically, just getting a bit faster through the air and making sure I’m bowling the right length,” Labuschagne said. “Been working really hard with Sri [Sridharan Sriram] and John Davison back home, making sure we get that length right. So it was pleasing to see it come off today, I was able to come on and not go for too many runs and also lucky enough to get a wicket as well.”It was a change-up, a change in momentum, a change in the rhythm of the batsmen and just making them think a little bit differently about how they want to play shots and stuff like that. That’s probably the key, trying to get them to think a little bit differently with someone who bowls a bit of legspin.”Of course with that extra reward comes extra risk, and in an increasingly metricised and quantified Australian cricket environment, the art of the legspinner may be seen as too much of an extravagance. Except, that is, when taken up as an extra string by a batsman, as is the case with Labuschagne, or before him the suspended Steven Smith and David Warner. An assessment of Australia’s current stocks in wristspin certainly carries that sense, given the fringe status of Swepson, Boyce, Adam Zampa, Fawad Ahmed and the teenager who swapped places with Fawad in Victoria’s domestic limited-overs campaign, Tom O’Connell.Among those compelled to deliver the ball by flinging it over the wrist towards batsmen kept guessing by its spin, drift, drop, and turn, perhaps the most intriguing prospect in Australia right now is another Pakistani, Usman Qadir. Chosen by Western Australia in Agar’s absence, he claimed six wickets in four matches of the same tournament where O’Connell made his debut, and appears to be in the state’s plans for the Sheffield Shield, having already stated his desire to qualify for Australia. Should he win a distinguished talent visa through his performances, such a pathway may well open up within the space of two years.In the closing overs of day two, as Finch began his first Test innings in the company of Usman Khawaja, the primary threat of Yasir Shah’s legbreaks was parried with a few nervous moments along the way. Yasir’s skills, so outsize as to have been celebrated by none other than Warne himself, are of an exceptionally rare kind, combining the consistency of Lyon with the spin, bounce and variation hinted at by Labuschagne. For now, at least, Australia must look on at his wiles with a combination of aspiration and envy.

When Aponso did what Zampa couldn't

Plays from the first ODI between Sri Lanka and Australia at the R Premadasa Stadium on Sunday

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Colombo21-Aug-2016The off-pace trickeryMitchell Starc breathed fire to take 24 wickets in the Test series, but it was guile that brought him his 100th ODI wicket, which came in fewer games for him than for any other bowler. Pitching full and wide, Starc drew Dhananjaya de Silva into one of his languid cover drives, but de Silva was through with his shot by the time the ball came. In the end, the inside half of the bat was taken, and the ball floated up towards short midwicket, where a fine catch was taken.The omenAustralia’s Adam Zampa had not extracted outrageous spin during his seven overs, but the Khettarama revealed itself to be a raging turner fairly early in the chase. Debutant Amila Aponso pitched one on a length just outside off stump and it leapt dramatically away from Steven Smith’s bat. The turn was too drastic even for wicketkeeper Kusal Perera to handle, and the ball finished in Angelo Mathews’ hands at slip. All through the chase, Australia would have to negotiate raging turn.The cool catThe ‘Dilscoop’ led to his dismissal and his bowling was bashed around, but Tillakaratne Dilshan still managed a few acts of effortless brilliance in the field, despite being the oldest man on it. His most impressive moment came in the 25th over, when Mathew Wade nailed a slog sweep off Lakshan Sandakan, though Wade perhaps didn’t loft the shot as much as he would have liked. Standing at short mid-wicket, Dilshan reached up, plucked the ball from the air, and casually threw it over his shoulder.The dropKusal Mendis had several close calls during his half-century, but none luckier than during the first ten overs, when he was dropped on 14. He swept James Faulkner high towards deep square leg and, though Aaron Finch appeared at first to be lining up the catch nicely, he wound up misjudging it, falling over backwards, and palming the ball onto the rope. When he rose up, he signaled that he’d lost the ball in the sun.

Clinical India sweep series

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Jul-2015Jadhav raced to his maiden ODI ton and with Stuart Binny flayed the Zimbabwe bowlers for 50 runs off the final 19 balls, helping India finish strongly on 276 for 5•Associated PressMohit Sharma broke Zimbabwe’s opening partnership in the sixth over when he trapped Hamilton Masakadza for 7•Associated PressZimbabwe had only one other meaningful partnership – 50 for the fourth wicket between Richmond Mutumbami and Chibhabha – after which their innings collapsed. India bowled them out for 193 to romp to a 83-run victory and sweep the series 3-0•Associated Press

Sri Lanka out to settle grudges

Accustomed to dealing with disturbances, Sri Lanka’s siege mentality and desire to win has grown stronger with each English antagonism

Andrew Fidel Fernando10-Jun-2014Who is Sri Lanka’s greatest cricketing rival? There was once a clear winner but the now the answer lies in shifting sands. Australia had been cast as arch-villain in Sri Lanka’s cricket adolescence and there are still many fans who savour wins over Australia most, if only for their enduring scarcity.In recent years, matches against India have evoked the strongest emotions. Once the island’s older brother, India has been re-imagined as a bully by some. But, at this present minute, neither India nor Australia are Sri Lanka’s most coveted target. Following months of skirmishing in board rooms, on the field and in the media, the Tests against England have become a quest for justice.Sri Lanka have the limited-overs series in the bag but, with the ODIs having built to a fever pitch, a victory at Lord’s or Headingley would by some distance be the sweetest of the tour. For a side that does not often engage in on-field aggression, and whose tempers run steadier than most, this is about as heated as it gets.Sri Lanka’s quarrels with England are many. There was Sri Lanka’s abstention as tensions ran high over the ‘Big Three’ plan for the ICC in Singapore in February, but of more immediate consequence to the players has been Paul Farbrace’s move to England. The players have refused to blame Farbrace, who was a popular and effective coach in his short time in charge, but resentment still lingers at the timing of his departure.”I understand the choice Farby made,” Kumar Sangakkara had said ahead of the ODIs. “Whether it was fair of the ECB to put him in that situation when he was still with us is a different question. It wasn’t pleasant.”There were hints of insider knowledge in England’s mode of attack in the ODI series, particularly in the manner they targeted Sri Lanka’s young batsmen, even if the team came through that scrape okay.Sri Lanka are less secure in the Test arena and it is here Farbrace has most scope to confer an advantage. Just months ago, he was in meetings about the aspects of Sri Lanka’s cricket they must aim to sharpen up. He has seen techniques and temperaments at an intimate distance. He knows which loose strings to tug on to make the whole fabric unravel.The questions raised over Sachithra Senanayake’s bowling action have also irked the side. When they learned of his being reported by the match officials, the team wondered again about the timing. Senanayake has played international cricket without issue for two years. These kinds of things happen in “certain parts of the world”, captain Angelo Mathews said on the subject.

More accustomed to staving off homegrown disturbances, the team has long learned to thrive within a siege mentality. They are more desperate for success now than they were a week ago

Whether or not Senanayake’s action is legal remains to be seen but there has almost certainly been more scrutiny and suspicion in England than he had previously had on any other tour. Mahela Jayawardene later revealed how the team had closed ranks around Senanayake, setting up a team dinner in his honour. “It was definitely a big motivating factor,” he said.The sides also remain at odds over Senanayake’s Mankading of Jos Buttler at Edgbaston. Days later, some England players maintained Sri Lanka had played unsporting cricket, while Sri Lanka’s players have shown no sympathy for Buttler, or remorse. More accustomed to staving off homegrown disturbances, the team has long learned to thrive within a siege mentality. They are more desperate for success now than they were a week ago.But desire alone will not bring success when so much inexperience abounds. The likely openers have fewer than 20 Tests between them and not one pace bowler in the squad has more than 20 matches to his name. Dimuth Karunaratne will face a stern test of his technique, if he gets to play, while Shaminda Eranga has the opportunity to crystallise the promise his sharp seam bowling has so far suggested.Mathews is also leading the Test side outside Asia for the first time. His handling of the limited-overs sides has been astute, but there have been damaging moments of conservatism in the long format. Mistakes are perhaps inevitable for a captain so young. A heartening scoreline in this series would see Mathews quell doubts and entrench himself fully as Sri Lanka’s long-term leader.He had been in fine rhythm with both bat and ball in the ODIs and his batting, in particular, may prove crucial if England get the green tracks they have reportedly requested, and the top order is laid low early. In Tests against Pakistan this year, Mathews had unveiled both an appetite for circumspect rebuilding and for large scores.Sangakkara and Jayawardene, though, have been through it all before. They have been in sides that have triumphed in foreign conditions, and others that have been blanked. They know how the team can draw from collective frustration, and they know at which point such feelings become destructive.The pair arrive now at their final opportunity to redress mediocre Test records in England. A Test series win here has eluded both men as well. They will hope to leave the country with more than just a litany of grievances.

'I don't care what I look like, I want to give the bowlers nothing'

Somerset’s Nick Compton is an an old-school scrapper whose timeless virtues are paying dividends

Interview by George Dobell30-Apr-2012It is not, perhaps, so much the Compton name that should be capturing the imagination, but the Compton style. The emergence – or the re-emergence – of Nick Compton is relevant not because it evokes memories of his grandfather Denis but because it has shown the value of a style of play that was becoming endangered in the domestic game. In an age of disposable cricket, Nick Compton was built to last. In an age of bashers and dashers, Compton offers reliability. As Brian Rose, Somerset’s director of cricket, put it: “The way Compton plays forward-defensive and backward-defensive is as good as I have seen.” Bearing in mind Rose opened the batting for England with Geoff Boycott and captained Viv Richards at Somerset, that is high praise indeed.Compton’s qualities may sound prosaic, but they are as timeless as they are priceless. His judgement about which balls to leave outside off stump is excellent, his defence – off front and back foot – could keep out the rain, and his powers of concentration would shame a security camera. Whereas many contemporary batsmen look for the shortcut to success by trying to hit their way out of trouble – the get-rich-quick version of batting – Compton is content to wear the bowlers down, see the shine off the ball and wait.Those qualities, unfashionable though they may have become, remain as valuable as ever. At a time when the techniques of a generation of England batsmen have been exposed – both on the spin-friendly surfaces of Asia and the seam-friendly surfaces of England – Compton provides a timely reminder that there is another way. Bowler-friendly conditions tend to separate the wheat from the chaff, and while the majority have flashed and snicked, Compton has followed his 1000 runs last year – he was one of the first to the milestone – with over 700 already this year. If it wasn’t for his name, the comparisons would all be with Jonathan Trott and Jacques Kallis.The Kallis comparison pleases Compton. He refers to the South African as “the biggest influence of my life” and admits to spending hours in front of the mirror emulating Kallis. For all the self-deprecating talk, though, Compton has a pleasing drive and cuts and pulls unusually well. He is not, by Test standards, particularly strong off his legs, but so keen is his desire to play straight and avoid leg-before dismissals – a weakness in the past – that a few sacrifices have had to be made.Compton also has one significant advantage over most of his rivals for a Test spot: he can bat anywhere from one to six. He is currently batting No. 3 for Somerset, but has spent much of his career opening. He is pressing as much for Andrew Strauss’ position as Ravi Bopara’s.His mantra is simple. “I keep saying to myself, ‘Give these bowlers nothing,'” he told ESPNcricinfo. “Even after I reach my hundred, I say to myself, ‘Give these bowlers nothing.’ I don’t care what I look like, I just want to give them nothing.”That is not to say Compton cannot improvise. He scooped Brett Lee for six during the Champions League last year, and as he accelerated towards Somerset’s declaration at Trent Bridge, demonstrated a surprisingly large range of strokes and an ability change gears: his first century took 241 deliveries; his second just 81. But just because you have 50 shirts in the cupboard, doesn’t mean you have to wear them all at once, does it? For the majority of the time, Compton plays the percentages. He adores batting. He is greedy for runs. He puts a high price on his wicket. Those are good qualities for a Test batsman.There is, Compton says, “an unsung hero” in his story. Neil Burns, who kept wicket for Somerset among others, has been a mentor since 2005. The pair have spent many, many hours in the nets and talking about building “a package” that would turn Compton into a player of international class.”I was disillusioned when he got hold of me,” Compton said. “I had played a bit of first-team cricket and I was impatient for more. I remember him saying to me, ‘What have you actually done?’ It brought me back down to earth when I realised I hadn’t actually done anything. So we spent six months just working on my defence. It was the most uncomfortable six months of my life, but we built a new package, really, all based on the understanding that it doesn’t matter how good your cover drive or your pull is if you can’t stay out there. I wanted to play the one ball I faced with as much quality as I could to make sure I could play another ball. I scored 1300 runs that season.”I lost track of that a bit. Kevin Pietersen came on the scene and everyone wanted to bat like him. I tried to dominate, but that wasn’t my strength. My strength is to bat for long periods of time.”Compton’s call-up to the Lions squad is, as he put it, “a stop on the journey”. It is not the destination. “I have unfinished business for the rest of the year,” he said. “I’m on a journey and it is far from finished.”He has been here before. After six centuries in the 2006 season, he won selection on that winter’s A tour. He performed well, too, but with the realisation that an England place was tantalisingly close, he lost focus. Not helped by some clumsy handling by Middlesex, the next two seasons brought no centuries and just three scores over 50. Dropped from the first Middlesex side – what he calls a “crushing, devastating” experience – he ended up playing club cricket. It seemed his chance had gone.

“I’d love to play for England. I’d bite your arm off. But it’s also a distraction. The disappointment I experienced in the past was devastating and I don’t want to feel like that again”

“I put a huge amount of pressure on myself after coming back from a successful Lions tour and I really wanted to kick on,” he said. “Looking back, though, I was far too intense. I was trying to attain perfection, and I’m not sure that exists in cricket. I got into a downward spiral. I wanted it all too badly.”I’m not 21 now. I’ve played a bit. I’m focused on the immediacy of my career. I’m focused on fulfilling my role for Somerset as well as I can. You learn.”I’m a calmer person now and I’ve settled on a formula that works for me. If I get caught up in aesthetics it takes me down the wrong path.”I know this might very well be my last chance. Neil said, ‘You’ll get one chance at this.’ And of course I’m excited. I’d love to play for England. I’d bite your arm off. But it’s also a distraction. The disappointment I experienced in the past was devastating and I don’t want to feel like that again. Captaincy is something I’d like to do in the future. And winning the Championship is a huge aim for everyone at Somerset. But I need to focus on the next ball. Anything else is a distraction.”Leaving London and Lord’s – a ground where the Compton name appears on a stand and where he had a year remaining on his contract – at the end of 2009 was a brave move. But, as Compton said, “the ambitions of Middlesex didn’t match mine”. He was coaxed to Taunton first by Justin Langer, who liked the fight in him, and then by Rose, who saw in him a man who would complement Somerset’s array of strokemakers. He wanted Compton to occupy the crease and concentrate on batting for long periods of time. It is working, too: Compton has faced 1407 balls in first-class cricket this summer: no one else has faced more than 716. “I was a bit surprised by Mark Ramprakash’s comments about pitches,” Compton said. “He seemed to be saying that it makes batsmen want to have a go at the ball, but I’ve gone the other way with it. It’s made me more aware of technique and defence and doing the basics right.”I smile sometimes when I see people practise. They tend to practise attacking the ball. They practise in perfect conditions and they like to express their talent and hit the ball. But how much help is that when you play on a pitch where the ball nips around? And how many players in county cricket can bat for a day or a day and a half? There’s Cook, there’s Trott, but there aren’t many others. I enjoy taking on the responsibility to bat through the innings and provide the foundations for the rest of the team.”There are so many strokemakers down here. Brian Rose wanted me to provide the foundations for them to bat around and I’ve grown into it. I believe in foundations. I know that if I spend a lot of time at the crease, the runs will come. I feel I’m a strokemaker too, but that isn’t the role the team need me to fill.”Compton knows he will never emulate the success of his grandfather. But, if he completes 1000 runs before the end of May – thereby becoming the first man to achieve the feat since Graeme Hick in 1988 – he will have achieved something that Denis never managed.

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