Durham maintain knock-outs push as Callum Parkinson collars Nottinghamshire

30-run victory maintains hosts’ hopes of quarter-final berth

ECB Reporters Network12-Jul-2024Ashton Turner and Callum Parkinson impressed as Durham strengthened their chances of reaching the Vitality Blast quarter-finals with a comfortable 30-run win over Nottinghamshire Outlaws at the Seat Unique Riverside.Having been put in to bat, the hosts made a competitive 160 for six, as Turner (44*) combined with Ben Raine (23*) for a partnership worth 54 after they were struggling at 106 for six, which was largely down to three wickets from Lyndon James (3 for 31).The Outlaws made a good start to their chase but a fantastic Durham bowling performance led by Parkinson (3 for 15) saw the hosts grab their sixth win of the season as they restricted the visitors to 130 for nine.Durham are now back in the top four with two games to play and their fate is in their own hands, while Notts remain bottom of the North group.The Outlaws won the toss and elected to bowl first at a chilly Chester-le-Street and the visitors got their first scalp as the T20 World Cup’s top wicket taker Fazalhaq Farooqi bowled Graham Clark in the second over.Alex Lees and Ollie Robinson rebuilt well amid tricky conditions and probing bowling from Afghanistan international Farooqi.Lees then smacked two James deliveries down the ground for four to put the pressure back on the Outlaws bowlers.James bounced back as he got Robinson for 21, with the Durham man smashing one to mid-off and he then bowled Lees for 29 to swing momentum back to the visitors.Colin Ackermann and Turner combined well in the middle overs for Durham but Liam Patterson-White picked up two quick wickets, Ackermann for 20 and Michael Jones for one to leave the hosts in a perilous position.James then picked up the wicket of Bas de Leede, but Raine came in and along with Turner scored some vital runs to put the hosts within reach of a competitive score, with the pair picking up 21 from the penultimate over including a first six of the night from Raine.Turner and Raine took the hosts to a competitive 160 for six, with the duo finishing unbeaten on 44 and 23 respectively.Durham put the squeeze on the Outlaws from the off, with the North group’s bottom side picking up just six runs from the first two overs.The pressure was felt by Ben Martindale as he was the first Notts batter to depart when a full toss from de Leede was helped through to Robinson behind the stumps.Joe Clarke and Ben Slater rebuilt in the powerplay before Slater started taking on the short legside boundary and he cashed in when he hit de Leede for back-to-back sixes.Clarke hit three fours from a Raine over but he struck back as he removed the Outlaws skipper for 23 and Slater quickly followed as he departed for 20 when Parkinson got him LBW.The left-arm spinner then got Tom Moores as he was caught behind and Jack Haynes was his third victim of the night to leave the Outlaws with a mountain to climb.Nathan Sowter then bowled James, but Matthew Montgomery hit Raine for four consecutive fours to give the visitors some hope.Sowter then got Montgomery for 30 to leave the visitors staring down the barrel of a seventh Blast defeat of the season.Late wickets from Ackermann and Ben Dwarshuis saw Durham over the finish line for their fourth consecutive home T20 win.

49ers now make contact with ex-Rangers boss to replace Farke at Leeds

49ers Enterprises have now made contact with a rather surprising new candidate over the possibility of replacing Daniel Farke at Leeds United, according to a report.

Latest on Daniel Farke’s future at Leeds

Despite talking about the fact that the Whites sealed automatic promotion to the Premier League last weekend, talk since then has been about the future of Farke, as the 49ers weigh up what to do with the German.

Shades of Pablo Hernandez: Leeds could sign "unbelievable" Aaronson upgrade

Leeds United could try to snap up this top EFL star now promotion has been sealed.

1

By
Kelan Sarson

Apr 28, 2025

It’s been reported that club chiefs could be ready to sack the former Norwich man and bring in a replacement before the new season begins in the top flight. The hierarchy are tempted to move on from the Leeds boss as they are not sure whether he is the right man to lead them in the Premier League, given his record in the division while in charge of the Canaries. A decision hasn’t been fully made yet, but already there are names being linked with a move to Elland Road.

Jose Mourinho has been talked up about making a return to England and the Premier League, while Give Me Sport have reported that the Whites are interested in former Southampton manager Russell Martin. Leeds are said to be considering a move to appoint the Scotsman, despite the fact he was sacked by the Saints because of their start to life in the top flight. Martin has been sounded out about a return to the managerial dugout and what his vision would be.

49ers make contact with ex-Rangers boss to replace Farke at Leeds

But the list of possible replacements doesn’t stop there, as according to The Guardian, Leeds have made contact with Giovanni van Bronckhorst about becoming their new manager.

Former Rangers boss Giovanni van Bronckhorst.

The report states that chairman Paraag Marathe is flying into the UK on Monday from San Francisco to talk to Farke about his future at Elland Road. The American will attend Leeds’ match against Bristol City before then holding a meeting with the German later in the week.

Marathe will need to be convinced by Farke that he is the right man for the job, as the Whites already have looked at managers who are out of work or would cost a low compensation fee given their financial restrictions. They have ‘sounded out’ van Bronckhorst, as well as Roger Schmidt and Davide Ancelotti.

Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s record at Rangers

Games

68

Won

42

Drawn

11

Lost

15

Points

137

Points per game

2.01

Van Bronckhorst, who managed Rangers between November 2021 and November 2022 and led them to the Europa League final in the process, has been out of work since leaving Besiktas in November last year.

The 50-year-old has experience of playing in British football, as he played for Rangers and Arsenal, but has never managed in England. Therefore, his arrival would be a huge gamble for the Whites and a baffling one at that, with Farke’s experience with Norwich likely better than none at all.

Less clinical than Nunez: Liverpool must cash in on "embarrassing" star

Liverpool are on the cusp of winning the Premier League title for the second time in its modern format. Victory will take Anfield’s top-flight triumphs to 20 across the sweep of history, levelling with bitter rivals Manchester United.

It could be settled this week. Should second-place Arsenal, whose eggs lie in the Champions League basket, fall at home against Crystal Palace on Wednesday, Liverpool will win the title. Otherwise, the Merseysiders have the chance to clinch it themselves when they host beleaguered Tottenham Hotspur at the weekend.

Arne Slot is going to get a taste for silver on English soil, and he’s going to want more. The Dutch tactician, who replaced Jurgen Klopp last year, has already confirmed Liverpool are planning to attack the summer transfer market with a hunger.

Liverpool boss Arne Slot

Multiple areas require attention, but with Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah’s contracts wrapped up, it’s clear Liverpool are looking to spend a shedload on a brand-new centre-forward.

Why Liverpool want a striker

Klopp’s many players have been effectively subsumed into Slot’s way of life, but Darwin Nunez remains an uncrackable nut.

Liverpool’s head coach gave it his best shot, but the 25-year-old hasn’t reacted all that well to the Dutchman’s tactical nuances, scoring just seven times across all competitions and starting only once in the Premier League since Boxing Day.

He’s set to leave, but sourcing the perfect successor isn’t going to be a walk in the park. On Monday, Fabrizio Romano revealed on GIVEMESPORT’s Market Madness show that Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak remains the top target at number nine but won’t be signed unless his exorbitant £150m valuation is slashed.

Strong across all areas and a goalscorer of the highest station, the Sweden international’s the dream, alright, but the report details growing interest in RB Leipzig’s Benjamin Sesko and Joao Pedro, who has scored 30 goals and laid on ten assists across 70 games for Brighton.

Newcastle striker Alexander Isak

Change is afoot at Anfield, but Nunez isn’t the only member of Slot’s attacking fold who may be in the firing line this summer.

Plenty of speculation has circled around Luis Diaz’s head, but the in-form, multi-positional winger might be better off staying put this term.

However, there’s another who needs to be sold. Believe it or not, this man’s actually been more wasteful in front of goal than Nunez since Slot walked through the door.

Liverpool must cash in on wasteful star

It’s curious that Liverpool should be cruising toward the Premier League title, their first since Jurgen Klopp dominated the 2019/20 campaign, but feel in need of surgery across a range of positions.

Such is the ambition of this team, whose future will surely lie at the forefront of the European game with key players tied down and exciting targets being lined up.

But Liverpool will need to cash in on one or two. They haven’t received bang for their buck with Nunez, but Diogo Jota has been a clinical presence in the final third since he signed for Liverpool from Wolverhampton Wanderers for a £41m fee in 2020.

Liverpool forward Diogo Jota

However, he’s endured a miserable season and may well be heading toward the end of his time on Merseyside.

Only 15 months ago, Sky Sports’ Jamie Carragher remarked that Jota, from a pure ball-striking standpoint, might be Liverpool’s deadliest goalscorer, saying, “he’s a better finisher than the likes of Suarez, Torres, even Salah.”

Quite the praise, but not true anymore. So many injuries and inconsistencies have taken their toll, and this current version pales in comparison to the sure-firing Jota of old.

Jota’s shooting boots have deserted him. He’s missed 13 big chances in the Premier League having converted six goals, as per Sofascore. Across the past two campaigns, the 28-year-old fired 17 strikes home, missing 13 big chances.

Something’s gone awry. Given that he’s actually been more profligate than Nunez this season, it doesn’t feel like Jota’s toils are backing up Carragher’s lofty words from last year.

Liverpool Forwards – Shooting Stats in Prem (24/25)

Apps

Goals

xG (+/-)

Chances missed

Mohamed Salah

33

27

23.84 (+3.16)

21

Luis Diaz

32

11

9.23 (+1.77)

9

Cody Gakpo

30

8

6.22 (+1.78)

6

Diogo Jota

22

6

7.26 (-1.26)

13

Darwin Nunez

25

5

4.88 (+0.12)

6

Federico Chiesa

4

0

0.25 (-0.25)

1

Stats via Sofascore

The Uruguay striker, set to leave in the coming months, hasn’t actually been all that wasteful in front of goal this season; rather, he’s lacked composure and a stylistic understanding of Slot’s demands.

Liverpool are going to sign a new centre-forward, to be sure, but why not two? A young, eager-to-please star could fill Jota’s boots, jockey with the young and lively Jayden Danns for a nailed-down place in Slot’s high-performing squad.

Were Salah not in such staggering form this season, Nunez and Jota’s struggles may well have been to the detriment of Liverpool’s title charge, for neither have covered themselves in glory this season.

Alan Shearer even branded Jota “embarrassing” after a half-baked attempt to win a penalty in a victory over Newcastle last season, when ostensibly he could have struck cleanly on goal instead.

The Portugal international has more than paid his due at Anfield over the past five years, but every dog has their day, and this talented forward no longer bears his trademark incisiveness in the final third.

Liverpool striker Diogo Jota

Given that he takes home a pretty penny at £140k per week and is about to enter the penultimate year of his contract, it might be worth cashing in while FSG can still bank a sizeable fee.

Maybe he was once Liverpool’s cleanest finisher, but he’s performing to a lower standard than Nunez and that makes the final comment on Carragher’s claim.

Dream Trent replacement: Liverpool want "the best RB in the Premier League"

Liverpool appear set to lose the Scouser in their team on a free transfer this summer.

By
Angus Sinclair

Apr 21, 2025

Ornstein: Exit concern emerges as Aston Villa star attracts "big admirers"

As the summer transfer window approaches, Aston Villa have reportedly been handed a fresh exit concern with David Ornstein claiming that one particular star is now attracting “big admirers”.

Ornstein drops Aston Villa exit update

The Villans already saw Jhon Duran depart in the January transfer window and whilst they used his exit to their benefit on the incomings front, they’ll be desperate to avoid any major exits. The forward’s exit should act as a warning over the spending power of those in the Saudi Pro League and just how quickly players can call it quits at Villa Park.

That said, Champions League qualification would, therefore, likely prove to be more important than ever in the Midlands this season. The likes of Ollie Watkins and Jacob Ramsey have both already been linked with moves away in 2025, but a place among Europe’s elite for a second-consecutive campaign could put an end to any doubt over their respective futures.

Aston Villa in pole position to sign star in total deal that may cost £130m

He’s been catching the eye of Unai Emery.

1 ByCharlie Smith Apr 3, 2025

They’re not the only players threatening to steal the headlines, however, and the interest in Unai Emery’s best players should come as no surprise after his side earned their way into the Champions League last eight as well as the FA Cup semi-finals.

Now, according to Ornstein of The Athletic, Morgan Rogers is now “attracting admirers” ahead of the summer transfer window.

Like Watkins and Ramsey, the interest in Rogers should come as little shock. The midfielder has once again been excellent at Villa Park this season and remains a player destined to reach the very top. Whether he reaches that position in the Midlands remains to be seen, but given how important the former Manchester City man is under Emery, the Spaniard will certainly hope that’s the case.

"Important" Rogers is crucial for Aston Villa

One of many former Manchester City youth academy stars now thriving elsewhere, Rogers has become more important than ever at Villa Park and those in the Midlands should do everything to keep hold of a player of his calibre. At just 22 years old, the only way is up for the England international who has already earned impressive praise from Emery.

The Villa boss told reporters in March: “With how football is changing, I appreciate a lot the players being versatile, playing different positions, understanding everything tactically. One of them in our squad is clearly Morgan Rogers, and John McGinn as well.

Southampton's TylerDiblingin action with Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers and Ian Maatsen

“This versatility and performing like we are always needing is really very important. Sometimes I’m pushing other players to be versatile or to adapt. Being versatile in case we will need it.

“Not every player is ready to do it, but Morgan Rogers is always positive and his versatility is very important for us. In the last match, we played in different positions with Morgan.”

So, even as the big admirers arrive, Villa should ensure that Rogers stays put with their European ambitions forever increasing in the Midlands.

How much of a loss are Pooran's and Klaasen's retirements to international cricket?

Not as much as many might think: only a fraction of their white-ball internationals were games of real consequence

Osman Samiuddin12-Jun-2025Nicholas Pooran has retired from international cricket. Heinrich Klaasen beat him to it by a week. Their retirements may not feel as seismic as some recent ones, but as two of the game’s most fearsome and effective middle-order hitters, they’re far from insignificant. Their work has always been valued in very modern currencies. Last year, Pooran broke Chris Gayle’s record for the most sixes hit in T20s in a calendar year.Actually, he obliterated it, ending with 170, well past Gayle’s 135 in 2015 (Pooran played 38 more innings, which feels at least as relevant a metric). Klaasen ended the same year with 105 sixes, the sixth-most hit in a calendar year.Between them on that list it is all Gayle, a marker of the esteemed company they are in, as well as a reminder of how far ahead of the game Gayle was back then. Gayle never officially retired from the game; he just kept going until there was nowhere for him to go. But in that too he was presaging.Pooran and Klaasen have retired but they’re not retired because these days cricket retirements are not goodbyes so much as quiet-quitting; that is, finding ways to do less for more – or for at least the same reward as before – and with a better work-life balance.They’re a loss, yes, except we’re not really losing them. Pooran said goodbye on Monday night and on Thursday he’ll be saying hello again, as captain of MI New York in Major League Cricket’s third season. Klaasen will also be there, captaining Seattle Orcas. Ferris Bueller thought life moved pretty fast nearly 40 years ago. He had no idea.Also, if international cricket is your thing, then they’re even less a loss, because international cricket was not – is not – really their thing. International cricket didn’t really see the best of them.Actually, let’s rephrase that: truly meaningful international cricket didn’t see the best of them, or nearly enough of them. Only 23 of Klaasen’s 118 white-ball international matches were in ICC World Cups – games with real meaning and jeopardy. An even smaller proportion of Pooran’s games were at those events: 24 out of 167.In other words, 80% of the international white-ball games Klaasen played, and 86% Pooran played, lacked any real, meaningful context. That is basically what so much bilateral white-ball cricket is now – random matches floating in the ether without rhyme or reason (more so since the end of the short-lived ODI Super League in 2023) and with dwindling commercial returns in most instances.Klaasen walks back after his hundred against England in the last ODI World Cup, one of all too few white-ball internationals of real import he played•PUNIT PARANJPE/AFP via Getty ImagesAs such, these retirements don’t say anything about the two players’ commitment to the game, or about their sense of national duty, however nebulous a concept that may be. They don’t, in fact, say as much about Pooran and Klaasen as they do about international cricket. They’re retiring with a pinnacle international event – the T20 World Cup – less than a year away. An event Klaasen made the final of last year and almost won for South Africa. In Klaasen’s case, he is also foregoing the chance to play in a home 50-overs World Cup in 2027.But for him to play in next year’s T20 World Cup would mean he plays in a majority of the 23 bilateral T20Is South Africa have scheduled until then, which will only accrue a scintilla of meaning closer to the event, in the guise of being warm-ups. He’d probably also have to play some of the 12 ODIs scheduled in that time, which serve even less purpose. West Indies have 25 T20Is scheduled for the same period.This is the vicious cycle of international cricket as it stands now. Smaller boards need ever more money to keep their best players, which comes from greater ICC revenue distribution, which come from more ICC events, for which, as preparation, teams need their players for bilateral cricket, which, in turn, compels players to make the kind of choices Pooran and Klaasen have made.Not only will both players be playing games – within the context of T20 league play – with more immediate competitive meaning, they will also earn more playing in franchise leagues between now and then. A lot more. (It’s worth reading this post on the Broken Cricket Dreams blog for an idea of the potential difference in earnings.)Cricket was pretty pleased with itself in the aftermath of the IPL final, when Virat Kohli ranked that triumph – long-awaited as it was – still several rungs below Test cricket. But the messenger was more significant than the message, as Andre Russell was quick to point out to the last week. “Those guys [Kohli and others] get lucrative central contracts to play Test cricket and play on the biggest stages, of course they want to play. West Indians? You might play 50 or 100 Tests and, you know, after you retire, there’s not much to show for it.”There’s even less to show for it if you don’t play red-ball cricket. So a more illuminating ranking would have been of where Kohli placed the IPL triumph in comparison with international white-ball cricket and its trophies. Perhaps he rates the international wins higher. But with these decisions, it’s clear where Pooran and Klaasen place it. The two are not a younger generation as such – Klaasen is only three years younger than Kohli and Pooran is nearly 30. But their tribe is only going to grow.

Is Prithvi Shaw's 244 the highest individual score in a List A match?

And has anyone made a higher percentage of a team’s score in a T20I than Romania’s Rebecca Blake?

Steven Lynch15-Aug-2023What records did Prithvi Shaw set during his double-century for Northamptonshire the other day? asked Mumtaz Hussein from India
Prithvi Shaw smashed 244 from 153 balls against Somerset in the Royal London Cup 50-over match against Somerset in Northampton last week. It was the highest score in List A cricket for Northamptonshire, beating Wayne Larkins’ unbeaten 172 against Warwickshire in a 40-over Sunday League game in Luton in 1983, and the second-highest in the English domestic competition, behind Alistair Brown’s 268 in a 50-over match for Surrey vs Glamorgan at The Oval in 2002.Including Brown’s innings, there have been only five higher individual scores in List A matches, three of them by Indian batters: 277 by Narayan Jagadeesan (Tamil Nadu vs Arunachal Pradesh in Bengaluru in 2022-23), the ODI-record 264 by Rohit Sharma (India vs Sri Lanka in Kolkata in 2014-15), and 248 by Shikhar Dhawan (India A vs South Africa A in Pretoria in 2013). The other one was D’Arcy Short’s 257 for Western Australia against Queensland at the Hurstville Oval in Sydney in 2018-19.Shaw reached 200 in 129 balls, the seventh-fastest on record, and the second-quickest in England behind Ben Duckett’s 123 balls for England Lions against Sri Lanka A in Canterbury in 2016. The only three List A double-centuries faster than Duckett’s were Jagadeesan’s (see above), which came up in 114 balls, and two by Travis Head for South Australia: from 114 deliveries against Queensland at the Karen Rolton Oval in Adelaide in 2021-22, and 117 against Western Australia in Sydney (Hurstville Oval) in 2015-16.Shaw’s 244 was his second double-century in List A matches, following an undefeated 227 for Mumbai against Puducherry in Jaipur in 2020-21, when he reached 200 from 142 balls. He’s the fourth man to score more than one List A double, after Rohit (three), Brown and Head, but the first to make them in different countries.Roy Swetman, who died recently, was capped by three different first-class counties. Was he the first to achieve this? asked James Farrell from England
Wicketkeeper Roy Swetman, who died last month aged 89, was capped by Surrey in 1958, Nottinghamshire in 1966, and Gloucestershire in 1972. Neat and unflashy behind the stumps, Swetman played 11 Tests for England, the first after being selected for the 1958-59 Ashes tour even though he wasn’t Surrey’s regular keeper at the time. He should perhaps have played more often but, as his Surrey team-mate Micky Stewart recalled, “He enjoyed his time off the field too much. He’d start off the season in good nick, but after a few weeks back he wouldn’t be so sharp. He didn’t have the strength and stamina to maintain that lifestyle. It was sad, really.”Swetman was actually the second player to be capped by three counties, back in the days when movement between them was much less frequent than now. The first was the slow left-armer Bob Berry, by Lancashire in 1950, Worcestershire in 1957, and Derbyshire in 1961. Like Swetman, Berry also played for England, in two Tests against West Indies in 1950.In case anyone is unfamiliar with the term, county caps are usually awarded to someone who has become a regular player. It used to be an important stage in a player’s career – for a start it meant he would be paid more. Some counties, however, have discontinued this long-established tradition, and award caps (or sometimes “colours”) to anyone who appears for their first team.Mohammad Rizwan made a catch as a substitute in a recent Test, then joined the match as a concussion replacement and made another dismissal. Has anyone ever done this before in a Test? asked Hafeez Ahmed from Pakistan
Mohammad Rizwan pulled off this unusual double during Pakistan’s recent Test against Sri Lanka in Colombo. In Sri Lanka’s first innings, Rizwan took a catch at point to dismiss Kusal Mendis while on as a substitute fielder. Later he replaced Sarfaraz Ahmed, who was suffering from concussion; in the second innings Rizwan – by now a fully fledged member of the team – stumped Ramesh Mendis as Pakistan approached victory.It was indeed the first time a player had made dismissals for the same side as a substitute in a match he was playing in, which has only been possible since concussion replacements have been allowed. But in the early days of Test cricket, when teams often did not have spare players handy, there were three instances of a man taking a catch as a substitute against his own side. The first to do it was Australia’s captain Billy Murdoch, who caught his team-mate “Tup” Scott against England at Lord’s in 1884. He was fielding in place of WG Grace, who had injured a finger. This was actually the first substitute catch in any Test; Scott had top-scored for Australia with 75.Murdoch was followed by two more Australians in Ashes Tests. Affie Jarvis caught his team-mate Fred Spofforth in Melbourne in 1884-85. He’d only just been dismissed himself, six overs earlier, but England were short as Billy Barnes was injured. A few seasons later, in 1886-87, Charles “The Terror” Turner caught Reginald Allen in Sydney. He’d just sent down 64.1 (four-ball) overs, after 53 in the first innings, so must have been delighted to be asked to field for the opposition! He was needed as England’s Billy Gunn had been pressed into service as an umpire on the final morning, in the absence of one of those appointed. None of this trio of Aussies took a catch for their own side in the same match (even though Jarvis kept wicket in his game), so Rizwan is unique in that regard.Rizwan dismissed Kusal Mendis as a substitute fielder and stumped Ramesh Mendis later in the Test when he replaced the concussed Sarfaraz Ahmed•AFP/Getty ImagesRebecca Blake made around 70% of Romania’s runs in a recent T20I – was this a record? asked Geoffrey Harrison from England
Romania’s Bucharest-born captain Rebecca Blake scored 135 not out in her team’s 20-over total of 197 for 4 against Malta in Ilfov County last week. That’s 68.52% of the total – which, as this table shows, currently comes in third place for a women’s T20I (counting only all-out innings, or those where the full quota of overs was used).Top of the list is Sindhu Sriharsha, who made an unbeaten 74 out of 103 for 3 – 71.84% – for United States against Bangladesh in Abu Dhabi in September 2022. Next comes Deandra Dottin, with 112 out of 159 for 6 – 70.44% – for West Indies vs Sri Lanka in Coolidge (Antigua) in October 2017.The men’s T20I record is 75.10% – 172 in a total of 229 for 2 – by Aaron Finch for Australia against Zimbabwe in Harare in July 2018.Which player’s life story is told in the book The Globe-Trotting Cricketer? asked Keith McKenzie from Australia
This is the much-travelled Australian-born cricketer Bert Kortlang, who played first-class matches for Victoria in Australia before the First World War, and for Wellington in New Zealand afterwards. But that wasn’t the end of it: he travelled far and wide, and played minor cricket in many far-flung places, including Argentina, Canada and the United States. Back in Australia, he became a journalist and a friend of Don Bradman, who was the godfather to one of Kortlang’s children. Pelham Warner, the former England captain who was later closely involved with cricket as a journalist and administrator, compared him to the Scarlet Pimpernel: “We hear of him here; we hear of him there; the beggar pops up everywhere.”Kortlang died in 1961, aged 80, but his life story was reassembled by the New Zealand writer Rob Franks, in a book for the Cricket Publishing Company that came out in 2022. Not many were printed, so it’s rather hard to find, but it is beautifully produced and a very good read.And there’s an addition to last week’s question about the players who made their international debuts in all three formats in the shortest time frame, from Mike Halliwell from Australia, among others
“There’s a name to add to the list: the Australian legspinner Alana King completed her set in 14 days, the same as Mukesh Kumar, during the 2021-22 women’s Ashes series. King made her T20I debut in Adelaide on January 20, won her first Test cap in Canberra on January 27, and played her first ODI in Adelaide on February 3.”Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

FAQs: Your ready reckoner for the 2022 Under-19 World Cup

Who are playing, when and where, what’s the format, and – hey! – how come there’s no New Zealand?

Srinidhi Ramanujam13-Jan-2022When does it start?
The 14th edition of the Under-19 World Cup, a one-day competition, will begin on January 14 with a double-header, both matches in Guyana. The first game will be played between hosts West Indies and Australia in Providence, while Sri Lanka take on Scotland in Georgetown. There will be 48 matches overall, with the final slotted for February 5.How many teams are taking part?
Sixteen. Group A has Bangladesh, Canada, England and United Arab Emirates; Group B has India, Ireland, South Africa and Uganda; Group C has Afghanistan, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea and Zimbabwe; Group D has Australia, Scotland, Sri Lanka and West Indies.Related

Who was the most expensive uncapped Indian player to be bought in an IPL auction?

Covid-19: Five Indians, including Yash Dhull, ruled out of Under-19 World Cup game against Uganda

Who was the first cricketer to wear a helmet in Tests?

The Class of 2020 – who are the graduates to make a mark?

'Don't let the mind wander' – staying in the moment key for India at Under-19 World Cup

Why aren’t New Zealand participating?
New Zealand decided to withdraw from the tournament owing to “extensive mandatory quarantine restrictions for minors on their return home”, because of Covid-19. Scotland, who had fallen short in the Europe qualifiers, were included as the 16th team in New Zealand’s absence.Where are the matches being played?
In the Caribbean, for the first time, with a total of ten venues across four islands being used. The main – Super League – quarter-finals will be held in North Sound and Coolidge, and the final will also be in North Sound, at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium.What’s the format?
The teams are divided into four groups of four each, and they will play each other once apiece. Like in past editions, the top two from each group will progress to the Super League knockouts, but those who don’t qualify will earn crucial playing time in the Plate competition to compete for positions nine to 16, which will run concurrently with the main tournament. It means every team will play the same number of games.Will DRS be in use?
There will be no DRS. Since only a select set of games will be broadcast, the camera set-up will not be the same across all venues.Will there be strict bubbles for all teams?
The bubbles will be managed in such a way that the wellbeing of the young players – both physical and mental wellbeing – is taken care of. The ICC is taking cognisance of the fact that it is a long tournament, added with the fact that the young players have not been in such situations before. There will also be mental-health professionals available to the teams as it was during the men’s T20 World Cup last year.Can games be rescheduled if Covid-19 affects a team in a major way?
That’s what the ICC plans to do if the need arises. The intention is to be fluid and flexible to deal with unforeseen developments.Have any schedule changes already taken place?
Yes. Visa glitches delayed Afghanistan’s arrival in the Caribbean. As a result of the delay and the quarantine requirements for the tournament, their first game was moved from January 16 – they were supposed to take on Zimbabwe – to January 18, when they will play Papua New Guinea. Games on January 20 and 22 follow, against Pakistan and Zimbabwe respectively. All the sides in Group C have had games rescheduled to deal with the change. And Afghanistan’s two warm-up games, against England on January 10 and UAE on January 12, were cancelled.ESPNcricinfo LtdDoes the ICC verify the age of the players?
The ICC left it to the individual cricket boards to verify the ages of their cricketers.How did the teams qualify?
Ten of the 16 teams advanced directly for the global event. After missing out on a place outright initially, Scotland replaced New Zealand. The last five spots went to the sides that won their respective regional qualifying events. Canada qualified from the Americas, pipping the USA, Argentina and Bermuda. Papua New Guinea, who couldn’t participate in the previous edition after missing their 2019 regional qualifier final over disciplinary issues, advanced from East Asia-Pacific, Uganda went through from Africa, Ireland from Europe, and UAE qualified from Asia.Who are the defending champions?
Bangladesh beat India to win the Under-19 World Cup in 2020. It was their first World Cup win at any level.Which have been the most successful teams over the years?
India, they have won the title four times – in 2000, 2008, 2012 and 2018 – and have a win percentage of 76.83. Australia have won the tournament thrice, in 1988, 2002 and 2010, while Pakistan have clinched the title twice, in 2004 and 2006. Bangladesh (2020), South Africa (2014), West Indies (2016) and England (1998) have won the tournament once each.The last decade saw two teams dominate – India and Australia. Between them, they won three of the six titles and finished runners-up four times between them. Pakistan were the only other side to make it to more than one final in the decade, twice falling short at the last step.Any first-timers?
No, the last edition had Japan and Nigeria making their maiden appearances in the Under-19 World Cup. There are no newbies this time, though Uganda will be featuring after a gap of 16 years. They have taken part only twice – in 2004 and 2006 – before this World Cup.Are spectators allowed at the venues?
Guyana, Antigua and St Kitts and Nevis will allow only fully vaccinated people to come in, while Trinidad & Tobago will not allow any spectators.Where to watch?
Local broadcasters around the world will telecast the matches. It will also be streamed on .

The Perfect Tarik Skubal Game Plan to Send the Tigers to the ALCS

SEATTLE — Only two Tigers left-handed starters have won a winner-take-all postseason game: Hal Newhouser in 1945 World Series Game 7 and Mickey Lolich in ’68 World Series Game 7.

Both won on the road.

Both won on Oct. 10.

Friday night, on the road, on the same date, Tigers lefthander Tarik Skubal takes the ball for the Tigers in a winner-take-all game, the American League Division Series Game 5 against the Mariners.

Newhouser and Lolich each threw shutouts. They faced 38 and 33 batters, respectively. Skubal never has faced more than 31. He has never thrown more than 108 pitches. Tigers manager A.J. Hinch likes to say he has nobody better than Skubal—who does?—so how long Skubal stays in the game will be a key to Game 5.

The Tigers are 0–3 this year against Seattle with Skubal on the mound. He is 0–2 with a 4.58 ERA against the Mariners and 14–4 with a 1.97 ERA against all others.

Here are five keys to Skubal’s game plan as he sees the Mariners for a fourth time, this time with the season on the line.

1. Attack hitters

This is classic Skubal. If you’re Seattle, the last thing you do is “wait him out” and “drive up the pitch count.” The Mariners cannot give him strikes because Skubal takes them like nobody in baseball.

Skubal led the majors in throwing strikes (70.3%), first-pitch strikes (71.3%), swing percentage against (54.8%), percentage of 0–2 counts (38.7%) and lowest OBP leading off an inning (.196). He is the most aggressive pitcher in baseball.

2. Use adrenaline

Skubal is a fierce competitor who channels big-game energy into more velocity. After pitching 210 innings this year, he is still throwing harder than ever. His two highest fastball velocity games this year have come in the postseason: AL Wild Card Game 1 (99.1 mph, a career high) and AL Division Series Game 2 (98.1, the ninth highest of his career). His regular-season average was 97.6 mph.

Skubal has thrown 43 pitches this year clocked at 100+ mph. All other left-handed starters combined have four.

READ MORE: The Niche Pitch Overpowering Hitters This MLB Postseason

3. Re-establish the changeup

Skubal’s changeup is the best pitch in baseball as determined by run value. But he’s throwing it in the postseason. His two starts in 2025 with his lowest changeup usage have both come in the postseason: AL Wild Card Game 1 at 21.5% and ALDS Game 2 at 21.6%.

Skubal Changeup Use, 2025

Percentage

Average Against

Velocity (mph)

Regular Season

31.4%

.154

88.0

Postseason

21.6%

.222

88.8

4. Get the slider down

While throwing fewer changeups, Skubal has almost doubled the use of his slider, his third best pitch, from 12.5% in the regular season to 21.6% in the postseason.

His command of it in ALDS Game 2 was not great. He was leaving it up and glove side, not where he put it during the season:

Skubal Slider Location

MLB Statcast

5. Keep the ball out of the middle of the plate

Obvious, right? Even someone with great stuff like Skubal gets hurt when he leaves pitches middle/middle, as we saw in Game 2 against Seattle. Out of 97 pitches he threw, he left only three down the middle. Jorge Polanco hit two for home runs. Julio Rodríguez fouled the other down the right-field line.

This should be great theatre. Skubal pitched for Seattle University, the only school to offer him a scholarship out of high school, at Bannerwood Park, just 10 miles from T-Mobile Park, where he starts Friday.

A reigning Cy Young Award winner has the ball in his hands in a winner-take-all game. It’s only the fifth time it has happened in the 30 years of the wild-card era. The most recent game when a reigning Cy winner stepping on such a huge stage worked out well for Detroit.

Reigning Cy Young Award Winners in Winner-Take-All Games, Wild-Card Era

Pitcher

Team

Game

Result

Notes

Justin Verlander

Tigers

2012 ALDS Game 5

W, 6–0

Shutout

Roy Halladay

Phillies

2011 NLDS Game 5

L, 1–0

8 IP

Barry Zito

A’s

2003 ALDS Game 5

L, 4–3

6 IP, 4 R

David Cone

Yankees

1995 ALDS Game 5

L, 6–5 (11 innings)

7 ⅔ IP, 147 pitches

West Ham hold talks with £20m star who has the same agent as Kyle Walker-Peters

West Ham have reached out to the agents of a player who has the same representatives as Kyle Walker-Peters, with Nuno Espírito Santo’s side weighing up a January move.

West Ham's rumoured transfer plans for January

The Hammers are preparing for a crucial January window as Nuno looks to address the club’s alarming goal-scoring struggles with a significant striker signing.

Given Niclas Fullkrug is poised for the exit door next month, this could be absolutely vital to their hopes of remaining in the Premier League.

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

West Ham 1-5 Chelsea

Nottingham Forest 0-3 West Ham

West Ham 0-3 Tottenham

West Ham 1-2 Crystal Palace

Everton 1-1 West Ham

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Brentford

Leeds 2-1 West Ham

West Ham 3-1 Newcastle

West Ham 3-2 Burnley

Bournemouth 2-2 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Liverpool

The German forward has been a real disappointment since his arrival in 2024, which has been marred by constant spells on the sidelines through injury, and he’s failed to score a single league goal since West Ham’s 2-2 draw at home to Bournemouth in April.

Callum Wilson has filled the void brilliantly as of late, bagging three strikes in his last three games, but the Englishman’s own torrid injury history means West Ham need an alternative.

According to some reports, West Ham are in pole position to sign Union Saint-Gilloise striker Promise David in January, with the club having already made contact.

The towering 6 foot 5 forward has netted 62 goals over the past three seasons and represents exactly the type of young, powerful striker Nuno has reportedly identified as essential.

Man United’s Joshua Zirkzee has emerged as another top target, with West Ham identifying the £36.5 million forward as a potential replacement for Fullkrug.

West Ham and Tottenham get Ivan Toney response after holding discussions

The Al-Ahli striker is fielding enquiries ahead of January.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 29, 2025

Insider ExWHUemployee has also claimed that, beyond the addition of a new striker, Nuno’s side are looking at signing a new defender and midfielder in January as well.

West Ham hold talks with Tiago Gabriel's camp ahead of January

Only bottom-side Wolves have conceded more top-flight goals than the east Londoners so far this term, so their leaky backline certainly needs to be addressed.

West Ham could reignite talks over a deal for Toulouse defender Charlie Cresswell, who they came very close to signing in the summer (ExWHUemployee), but Lecce sensation Tiago Gabriel is also attracting their attention.

That is according to INews and journalist Pete Hall, who report that West Ham have made contact with Gabriel’s agents ahead of a potential January move.

The Portugal Under-21 international has impressed in Serie A, so much so that Juventus and Brentford have also held discussions with his camp about a winter transfer.

As things stand, Juve are believed to be the frontrunners for Gabriel as they look to find cover for Gleison Bremer, but West Ham may have a secret weapon.

This is because Gabriel is represented by CAA Base, the same agency that Walker-Peters employs, so the Irons seemingly enjoy a productive relationship with them already.

According to inews, the 20-year-old is currently valued at around £20 million, with Lecce looking to make a seismic profit on the £1.5 million they signed him for last January.

Berta signing is in danger of becoming Arsenal’s biggest flop since Pepe

While the defeat to Aston Villa has taken the wind out of their sails somewhat, Arsenal are still having an excellent season.

Mikel Arteta’s side are top of the Champions League table, having won five of five, and still sit two points clear atop the Premier League table.

However, while most of the team are playing at the level expected, a few stars aren’t quite where the manager would want them to be.

This latter camp includes one of Arteta’s most significant signings, who, if he doesn’t start improving, could become Arsenal’s new Nicolas Pepe.

What went wrong for Nicolas Pepe at Arsenal

In the summer of 2019, after Unai Emery’s first season in the dugout, Arsenal decided to go big in the transfer market, spending what was then a club record fee of around £72m to sign Pepe.

While the figure did raise a few eyebrows at the time, it wasn’t considered too outlandish as, in 41 appearances in the 17/18 season, the winger racked up a sensational haul of 23 goals and 12 assists.

Unfortunately, the Emirates faithful would never see the talented international reach that level during his time in North London.

In his first campaign in England, the former LOSC Lille star managed a reasonable, if a little underwhelming tally of eight goals and ten assists in 42 appearances.

However, as it was his first season in a new league, and he produced a goal involvement in the quarter-final, semi-final and final of the FA Cup, fans gave him some leeway.

Unfortunately, he also failed to hit the heady height of his Lille numbers the following season, ending it with a tally of 16 goals and five assists in 47 games, with ten of those goal involvements coming in the Europa League.

The 21/22 campaign would prove to be his last in red and white as Bukayo Saka was now well and truly Arteta’s first-choice right winger.

The 30-year-old spent the next two years on loan, first with Nice in France, and then with Turkish outfit Trabzonspor.

Arsenal finally agreed to terminate Pepe’s contract in the summer of 2024, and the player who was supposed to be the club’s superstar attacker left with a middling tally of 27 goals and 21 assists in 112 appearances.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Since then, the Gunners have been a bit better at spending money, but there is one of Arteta’s signings who could end up following the Ivorian’s path, lest he improve, and quickly.

Arsenal's new Nicolas Pepe

Now, it’s still early in the season, so making any concrete predictions about Arsenal’s summer signings would be unwise.

However, as things stand, the attacker who has somewhat underwhelmed since his big-money move, and could go down a similar route to Pepe, is Viktor Gyokeres.

Like the Ivorian, the Swedish international joined the Gunners for a fairly sizable fee off the back of a truly sensational season in a weaker league.

For example, the “absolute steam train,” as dubbed by analyst Ben Mattinson, scored 54 goals and provided 13 assists in just 52 appearances.

Moreover, while nobody expected him to recreate those numbers in England, fans would have expected more than what he has delivered thus far.

For example, even though he hasn’t been a total flop like some other striker signings this season, the 27-year-old’s return of just six goals in 17 appearances is underwhelming.

Furthermore, all four of his Premier League goals have come against relegation candidates, and in games against the big sides earlier in the season, he looked somewhat out of his depth. As Gary Neville said earlier this term, he’s a bit of a “misfit.”

Appearances

52

17

Minutes

4248′

1130′

Goals

54

6

Assists

13

0

Finally, with Mikel Merino contributing up top, Gabriel Jesus back in matchday squads and reports that Kai Havertz is set to come right back in as Arteta’s first choice before Christmas, it’s not difficult to see a world in which the Stockholm-born powerhouse becomes a rotation option.

That was evident against Aston Villa. Arteta relied on the Swede to make a difference, bring him on at half-time for Merino. Yet, in his 45 minutes on the field, the centre-forward only had 11 touches of the ball and completed just four passes. He didn’t even have a single shot.

With all that said, there is still plenty of time for the former Coventry City star to come good, especially if he starts the next two games against Club Brugge and Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Ultimately, the next six months will be vital in determining whether Gyokeres becomes Arsenal’s next superstar striker or their next Nicolas Pepe.

Their new Ozil: Arsenal ramp up move to sign £88m "generational talent"

The incredible talent could be a real game-changer for Arsenal and become Arteta’s own Mesut Ozil.

2 ByJack Salveson Holmes 6 days ago

Game
Register
Service
Bonus