Older Hughes hopes he's wiser too

In the tour match against South Africa in Sydney, Phillip Hughes will have the chance to make an impression against the side he began his now flagging Test career against with a bang

Daniel Brettig in Sydney01-Nov-2012At the age of 23, Phillip Hughes grins when recalling his exploits as a 20-year-old. In his first Test series three years ago Hughes laid waste to South Africa’s bowlers in Johannesburg and Durban, fearlessly clouting them to all parts as Australia claimed an unexpected and memorable series victory.Back then, it was a simple game for Hughes, his homespun technique confounding a South African side that now admits to misreading his game. However the years since have brought more days out of the Australian team than in it, and a public examination of Hughes’ technique and character reached its nadir last November when he was caught Martin Guptill, bowled Chris Martin, four innings in a row. That sequence against New Zealand cost Hughes his Test spot, the third time he had been dropped.”It’s hard to put it, how low it really got,” Hughes said. “There have been lots of ups and downs. I’ve been in the international side a couple of times now and had the taste. Back in South Africa was three years ago now, so there has been a fair few low times and there have been a fair few high times as well. It’s about being as consistent as possible and scoring runs is always good for that confidence.”Cricket’s a funny game at times, especially batting up at the top of the order. You nick sometimes, you get low scores. The key is once you get in, you get good scores. I suppose in 2009 I was just going with the flow at that stage. I had confidence behind me, runs were behind me, and I just happened to click on that tour. I was a lot younger then.”It’s the same game. It’s about keeping things very simple. I don’t like complicating things.”Ahead of Australia A’s tour match against the South Africans at the SCG, Hughes is confident once again. Not in the “too young to know better” sense that he took to South Africa in 2009, but in a more mature sense based on a steadily refashioned technique, a so-far-successful move from New South Wales to South Australia and a greater knowledge of what is important in life.”I’m grateful for getting selected in this team,” Hughes said. “It was only four months ago I didn’t get selected in the Australia A team that toured England and that was a disappointing time. I went to Worcester and got an opportunity there. Now, with runs on the board, I see myself in this team and I’ve got a great opportunity ahead of me.”I feel I’ve opened my leg-side play up so I can hit to all areas of the field. A couple of years ago I was probably limited. My strength was the off-side. I feel like now I can play all around the field and I think that’s a big thing in all formats but especially the short format, where you’ve got to open that [leg-side] up.”

“I feel I’ve opened my leg-side play up so I can hit to all areas of the field. A couple of years ago I was probably limited. My strength was the off-side.”Phillip Hughes

South Africa remain intrigued by Hughes, given how confidently he attacked them in 2009. They fared better against him in South Africa last year, though Hughes was still able to craft an important half-century in the first innings of the Johannesburg Test. Dale Steyn said the earlier miscalculations would not be repeated at the SCG.”I think we summed him up badly and he made us pay,” Steyn said. “I think when he came down to South Africa more recently we’d definitely done our analysis a lot better of the Australians, especially him, and he didn’t get away from us. I think we went short and wide [in 2009] and we didn’t realise that he could cut so well.”In the next series we were a lot straighter and we kind of tucked him up a lot more. It was a lot tidier in all honesty. We didn’t give him the freebies that he got in the previous series.”South Africa are much wiser this time around, but so too is Hughes. He will hope that the next three days will be the start of his path back to the kind of Test match glory he experienced at the first time of asking.

Cristiano Ronaldo & Al-Nassr team-mates gifted brand new BMW XM cars worth €155,000 complete with personalised license plates

Cristiano Ronaldo, Sadio Mane and the rest of the Al-Nassr squad have been gifted brand new personalised BMW XM cars that carry a €155,000 price tag.

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Part of official club partnershipFleet of BMWs delivered to RiyadhCR7 has collection of supercarsFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱GettyWHAT HAPPENED?

The Saudi Pro League outfit boast a working relationship with Mohamed Yousuf Naghi Motors, the official importer of BMW products in the Middle East. That lucrative agreement will run until 2027 and makes the German manufacturers Al-Nassr’s official automotive partner.

AdvertisementDID YOU KNOW?

BMW have similar deals in place with European heavyweights Real Madrid and AC Milan. As part of the deal, players get access to luxury cars such as the BMW i5, i7 and XM models. Stars on the field are supplied with personalised vehicles that feature their own unique license plates.

THE GOSSIP

Ronaldo has been posing with his in Riyadh, after seeing Al-Nassr presented with their own fleet of cars – with electric charging points being installed at the team’s training centre. CR7 has been granted access to a Frozen Black BMW XM Label, which reports is valued at €155,000, with ex-Liverpool forward Mane taking on the same wheels.

WHAT NEXT?

Al-Nassr have posted on social media: “Luxury meets football stars. Al Nassr players behind the wheel of their BMWs.” It remains to be seen how much time Ronaldo spends driving his new BMW, as the five-time Ballon d’Or winner boasts a stunning collection of expensive supercars.

Michael Neser hopeful of Ashes availability despite hamstring injury

Ashes hopeful suffers low-grade hamstring strain less than a month out from the first Test

Alex Malcolm11-Nov-2021

Michael Neser suffered a hamstring strain•Getty Images

Queensland are hopeful Test aspirant Michael Neser will still be available for the first Ashes Test after suffering a minor hamstring strain on the opening day of the Sheffield Shield clash with Western Australia at the Gabba.Neser suffered the strain during his ninth over on the first afternoon after taking the early wicket of Cameron Bancroft. He had a scan on Thursday morning that revealed a low-grade strain in his right leg. Queensland physio and former Australia Test batter Martin Love said he was optimistic Neser would be available for selection in the opening Ashes Test despite it being less than four weeks away.”He will be assessed in the coming days to arrive at a suitable return to play date,” Love said. “At this stage, we are hopeful that, if required, he would be available for selection for the opening Test.”Neser has yet to play a Test match for Australia but has been a regular member of Australia’s Test squads since 2018 and has come close to selection on a number of occasions. The retirement of James Pattinson has pushed him closer to the top of the queue of fast bowlers waiting in the wings behind Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc.Neser is a certainty to be named in Australia’s extended squad, due to be announced soon, but his participation in the three-day intrasquad match to be played in Brisbane starting on December 1 is now in doubt. He has had an interrupted start to the season, having missed two of Queensland’s Shield matches due to the birth of his child.Meanwhile, WA veteran Shaun Marsh is set for an extended period on the sidelines after suffering a bad calf injury while batting on the second day. Marsh was forced to retire hurt and did not return to bat or field on day two with his availability for WA’s next Shield game against Tasmania and his participation in the early part of the BBL season for Melbourne Renegades in severe doubt.WA bowler Joel Paris also suffered a minor hamstring injury on day one at the Gabba. He was able to bat on day two but won’t bowl in Queensland’s second innings.

الخليفي بعد الإطاحة بـ ليفربول: الجميع انتقدنا ونجحنا في إقصاء أفضل فريق بـ أوروبا

تحدث رئيس باريس سان جيرمان، ناصر الخليفي، عن نجاح فريقه في إقصاء ليفربول من منافسات بطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا.

وتغلب باريس سان جيرمان على ليفربول بركلات الترجيح، وحسم تأهله إلى دور الـ 8 بدوري أبطال أوروبا.

وفي مقابلة مع شبكة “سي بي إس سبورتس”، أشاد ناصر الخليفي بالشخصية التي أظهرها لاعبو باريس سان جيرمان أمام ليفربول.

وقال الخليفي: “ليفربول هو أفضل نادٍ في أوروبا حاليًا، وقد احتل المركز الأول في مرحلة الدوري، وهو متصدر الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز”.

وأضاف: “نحن فخورون جدًا، بصراحة، مع كل الاحترام لليفربول، الفوز عليهم في آنفيلد أمرٌ مذهل، أظهر اللاعبون شخصيتهم المميزة”.

اقرأ أيضًا | أليسون بعد توديع دوري أبطال أوروبا: كنا بحاجة للحظ.. وليس لدينا وقت للشكوى

واستطرد: “لدينا واحد من أكثر الفرق الشابة، إن لم يكن أكثرها شبابًا، في أوروبا، لذا فإن بناء فريق قوي هنا وإظهار هذه الشخصية أمرٌ مذهل”.

وواصل: “اليوم وفي العامين الماضيين، وخاصةً هذا الموسم، لأكون صادقًا، النجم هو الفريق، الجميع يُكرر ذلك؛ المدرب واللاعبون مذهلون، إذا سألتني من هو أفضل لاعب أمام ليفربول، فأنا لا أعرف، سأقول جميعهم”.

وشدد: “صدقني، حتى لو خسرنا هذه المباراة، فسيكون كلامي هو نفسه، نحن في ربع النهائي، ولن نقول إننا سنفوز بدوري أبطال أوروبا اليوم، لكن مباراةً تلو الأخرى، نبني شيئًا للمستقبل، هذا هو الأهم”.

وأتم الخليفي: “انتقدنا الجميع في بداية الموسم، قائلين إننا لن نتأهل، لكن عقلية اللاعبين والمدرب هي أننا سنفوز أينما ذهبنا، نريد أن نلعب بطريقة هجومية، ونريد أن نلعب بأسلوبنا ضد أي فريق”.

Rangers eyeing "remarkable" 31-goal star who’d be lethal with Cantwell

The summer transfer window officially opened for business on Friday and Glasgow Rangers have already been hard at work to improve their playing squad.

Head of recruitment Nils Koppen has brought in Oscar Cortes on loan from Lens, Jefte from Fluminense on a permanent deal, and Clinton Nsiala is set to arrive at Ibrox from AC Milan at the start of next month after his contract with the Italian giants expires.

The Light Blues are also reportedly in pole position to sign winger Yusuf Kabadayi from Bayern Munich on a permanent deal to add to their collection of new recruits.

They have strengthened their defensive options with Nsiala and Jefte and look set to add to the wide areas with Cortes and Kabadayi, but they could also add more firepower by bringing in a new centre-forward.

Cyriel Dessers

Cyriel Dessers was the main number nine for Rangers during the 2023/24 campaign and the former Cremonese attacker failed to make the most of the chances that were created for him.

His 16 goals in the Scottish Premiership came from an xG tally of 21.59, an underperformance of 5.59, and no other player in the Gers squad underperformed their xG by more than the 29-year-old dud.

Koppen could, therefore, dip into the market to land a more clinical forward for Philippe Clement to work with, and he already reportedly has at least a couple of names on his list.

Rangers targeting SPFL marksman

According to Football Insider, the Light Blues are eyeing up Hearts centre-forward Lawrence Shankland for a possible move to Ibrox this summer.

The report claims that the Scotland international, who came on as a substitute for his country against Germany in the opening game of the European Championship on Friday, is a target for Clement and Koppen.

It states that the Premiership team would struggle to turn down a 'big' offer for his services, although it stops short of revealing what sort of figure would represent a big bid, as he has one year left to run on his current contract.

Lawrence Shankland on international duty with Scotland.

Football Insider adds that Rangers are also interested in signing Rapid Bucharest marksman Albion Rrahmani in a deal that could be worth up to £5m.

However, it does not reveal whether or not the Scottish giants would like to sign the Kosovo international as well as the Hearts skipper this summer.

The outlet does, though, state that Shankland would be up for a move to Ibrox if the two clubs can thrash out an agreement, which suggests that personal terms would not be an issue as the player is keen to make the switch to Glasgow.

If Koppen does decide to go ahead with a deal, the Scottish ace could come in and be lethal alongside Todd Cantwell at the top end of the pitch for the club next term.

Why Todd Cantwell is a striker's dream

The former Norwich City star is a dream attacking midfielder for a centre-forward because of his busy style of play, which sees him constantly buzzing about the field to link up play and create chances.

He averaged 51.6 touches per game in the Premiership this season, compared to Tom Lawrence's 35.3 per match as his alternative in the ten role, which illustrates how often the English whiz looked to get on the ball to make things happen.

Rangers midfielder Todd Cantwell.

This means that the lone striker for Rangers is rarely left isolated as Cantwell is always around them to provide a link between the midfield/wide players and the number nine.

The 26-year-old wizard also has the quality to be lethal in the final third as both a scorer and a creator of goals to form an exciting partnership with whichever forward is picked to play in front of him.

23/24 Premiership

Todd Cantwell

Starts

24

Goals

7

Assists

5

Big chances created

7

Key passes per game

1.7

Pass accuracy

84%

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, the former Premier League ace produced 12 direct goal contributions in 24 starts – one every other start on average.

The fact he only registered five assists from seven 'big chances' created and 51 key passes, though, suggests that the Light Blues need a better finisher up front to make the most of Cantwell's creativity, and that is what they could get by signing Shankland this summer.

Why Lawrence Shankland would thrive with Todd Cantwell

Firstly, the Hearts star is a proven Premiership performer who would be able to hit the ground running at Ibrox due to his experience in the division.

The Glasgow-born centre-forward has played over 100 matches in the Scottish top-flight in his career, which means that he would not need time to adapt to the quality and physicality of the league – unlike an addition from a foreign division with no prior experience in Scotland may need.

Hearts attacker Lawrence Shankland.

Shankland's ability in front of goal on the pitch is another reason why he could be a lethal striker to play in front of Cantwell for the Gers next season.

The 28-year-old star, whose campaign was hailed as "remarkable" by journalist Josh Bunting, showcased his quality week-in-week-out in the Premiership.

He racked up a staggering 31 goals and eight assists in all competitions for the Scottish side, including three goals in four Europa Conference League qualifiers, and the majority of those goal contributions came in the top-flight.

23/24 Premiership

Lawrence Shankland

Appearances

37

Goals

24

Minutes per goal

136

Big chances missed

9

Big chances created

6

Stats via Sofascore

He was crowned PFA Scotland Player of the Year thanks to the statistics above, as he consistently found the back of the net for Steven Naismith's side.

The Scottish marksman scored 24 goals from an xG tally of just 18.36, an overperformance of 5.64, and this shows that he was far more efficient with the chances that came his way than the aforementioned Dessers.

Bad news for Dessers: Rangers plotting bid for Scotland international

The Light Blues are reportedly interested in signing the Scottish centre-forward.

By
Dan Emery

Jun 13, 2024

Shankland has the quality to outperform his expected goals return, whereas the Nigerian forward spurned far too many opportunities, and that is why he could be a phenomenal addition to the team to finally make the most of Cantwell's creativity at the top end of the pitch next season.

"Increasingly real" chance £63m star moves this summer as Man City lurk

Manchester City have been handed something of a boost as one of their targets seems increasingly likely to leave this summer, with the Citzyzens among those credited with an interest should he do so.

Summer of change for Manchester City

It is shaping up to be a big summer for Manchester City despite having won their fourth Premier League title on the bounce under Pep Guardiola. Kevin de Bruyne is being regularly linked with Saudi Arabia, and has revealed that he has "to be open to everything", fanning the flames of his rumoured departure.

Meanwhile, fringe duo Sergio Gomez and Kalvin Phillips are both likely to depart, with the Spaniard being tracked by clubs in La Liga and Phillips returning from a dreadful spell on loan with West Ham.

Kalvin Phillips for West Ham

In addition, there has been speculation around the futures of Julian Alvarez and Bernardo Silva, with the latter having a £50m release clause in his contract in Manchester. Between the posts, Stefan Ortega has ended speculation surrounding his future by penning a new contract at the Etihad stadium, which will keep the German at the club until 2026.

However, there remains significant speculation over the future of last season's no.1 Ederson, who is thought to be subject to interest from Saudi Arabia and could yet depart this summer, with the club not set to stand in his way should he choose to do so.

Man City eye "exceptional" manager as Guardiola successor, Pep loves him

He could be the next man to dominate English football.

By
Ben Browning

Jun 11, 2024

If he does leave, they will need to move to find a new shot-stopper, with veteran Scott Carson the only other recognised goalkeeper on their books. Now, they may have been handed a boost in their chase.

City target likely to move on

That comes in the shape of FC Porto and Portugal no.1 Diogo Costa, who is set to start the EURO's as Roberto Martinez's first choice. The 24-year-old has long been linked with a move to the Premier League but for the majority of the time it has been with cross-city rivals Manchester United.

He still has three years left to run on his £23,000 a week deal at the Estadio de Dragao, but there remains a 75m euros (£63m) release clause in his contract, something that has prevented his departure until now.

As per reports in Portugal [via Sport Witness], departure this summer is becoming an 'increasingly real scenario' as it has been claimed that Porto may need to make a big sale this summer to balance their books.

City's interest is matched by Arsenal and of course Chelsea, who are not content with the two goalkeepers signed last summer and would reportedly like to add another.

How Costa compares to Ederson (23/24 domestic league)

Ederson

Diogo Costa

Appearances

33

33

Clean sheets

10

13

Saves per 90

1.81

1.62

Save %

70.7%

72.7%

He won't be available for nothing though, with Porto still keen to receive a fee close to the release clause, though anything less will surely be considered if there is a real need to sell the goalkeeper.

He remains a work in progress, but has been hailed for his "world class" potential by compatriot and Man City rival Diogo Dalot: “I grew up with him, he’s my friend, there’s a great relationship between us and I know perfectly well that he has the capacity to one day be world-class.”

If City make a move, the friends will be facing off next season.

Abid Ali 215*, Nauman Ali 97 put Pakistan in complete command against Zimbabwe

Stumps In a series in which Zimbabwe have offered little competition, this might be the nadir. On a turgid, attritional day for the hosts, Pakistan piled the runs up high with Abid Ali scoring an unbeaten double century on the second day of the second Test in Harare, combining for a 169-run partnership with No. 9 Nauman Ali, who scored a brisk 97 of his own.It allowed Pakistan to amass 510 before Babar Azam declared, leaving Zimbabwe with an uncomfortable final session to negotiate. But that they didn’t, with Brendan Taylor’s side losing four frontline batsmen in 30 overs and ending up trailing by 458 runs overnight.It might be easy to forget now but both sides claimed a share of the spoils in the morning session. At that point, the hosts kept their hopes of restricting Pakistan below 400 alive with wickets at regular intervals, and were just three strikes away from wrapping up the innings. Pakistan’s nightwatchman Sajid Khan frustrated Zimbabwe for the first hour, but saw his stay come to an end thanks to a splendid diving catch from Regis Chakabva, whose wicketkeeping has been under scrutiny at times on this tour.Mohammad Rizwan combined for an equally handy partnership with the ever-present Abid, while also speeding things up. There were a few whipped boundaries through the off side, and the pair might have carried through to lunch before Rizwan tried to target Tendai Chisoro over mid-on. A horrible miscue found the fielder, and tailender Hasan Ali nicked off to Luke Jongwe in the following over.Zimbabwe might have smelled blood then, but it was Pakistan who landed all the punches in the session that followed. After four attritional sessions of the hosts ensuring they stayed within touching distance of Pakistan, Abid and Nauman wrenched the game out of their hands in a middle session that devastated Zimbabwe’s chances. If they imagined they would come out after lunch and mop up the tail, the two batters put paid to such fanciful notions, hurtling through the gears as the total began to swell.With Zimbabwe supposedly well into the Pakistan tail, there was expectation that the more able batter in Abid would take a more progressive approach through the middle session, but it was Nauman who broke the shackles more regularly. He targeted the spinners from time to time, awaiting deliveries in the slot to launch over long-on as five of Pakistan’s six sixes came off his bat. Once he got to his half-century – with a boundary to square leg – he began to lay waste to the Zimbabwe attack.Jongwe was smashed for 17 in that over, before Milton Shumba found himself going for 18 in the following one. It seemed no sooner than Abid’s double century had come up that Nauman was eyeing three figures of his own. Blink and you would miss it, but by tea, the scorecard had Nauman single digits away from a hundred.It might be a tad unfair to say Abid didn’t adjust the tempo of his innings over five sessions, but he continued to prioritise solidity and assuredness over thrift. It is hard to fault the formula that has ground Zimbabwe into the dust for nearly two days, and when Abid pulled a long hop to cow corner to bring up 200, there was a sense of inevitability about it. He might have batted the whole Test without anyone being able to snare him, but when Nauman lazily lifted his foot up in the air just after tea, Chakabva cannily whipped off the bails to have him stumped, leaving the left-armer three short of a remarkable hundred.If Pakistan’s total suggested the pitch might be a decent one for the batters, Zimbabwe went about dispelling that notion effectively. The first wicket to fall was pure misfortune, with the umpire misjudging the line of a ball that was missing Tarisai Musakanda’s leg stump, giving Tabish Khan his first Test wicket. Tabish, whose debut was the focus of much scrutiny, was tidy overall without quite being penetrative, with that role taken up most effectively by Hasan.Zimbabwe looked to hunker down and shut shop for much of the first session, but Hasan was finding swing at pace, and one that seared back in off a length ripped past Kevin Kasuza and sent his stumps tumbling. He had hung around at the crease for 43 deliveries without looking up to much while managing just four runs.Taylor looked to take a more proactive approach, getting a couple of boundaries away early, but Zimbabwe needed a long-term survival strategy. When the Zimbabwe captain pushed at one from Shaheen Afridi from around the wicket, any hopes of him being the one to lead that resistance was extinguished.Zimbabwe were in freefall by now, and there was still time enough for Sajid to trap Milton Shumba in front as the noose began to tighten. Zimbabwe have been suffocated by now, and you would expect the knockout blow isn’t far away either.

Phil Parkinson sends warning to Wrexham squad as Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney's side prepare for hectic week

Phil Parkinson has warned his Wrexham squad that every player will be required to step up as the club prepare for a hectic run of fixtures.

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  • Parkinson tells Wrexham players to be ready
  • Face a congested fixture list
  • Have enjoyed strong start
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Parkinson has warned his squad that every player will be required in the coming weeks as Wrexham prepare for a congested fixture list. They face Leyton Orient in the league this weekend before taking on Stevenage on Tuesday. Wrexham then play Northampton Town the following Saturday, before a clash with Wolves' Under-21s that Tuesday. Four days later, they face Lincoln City.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Wrexham have enjoyed a strong start to life in League One, winning five and drawing one of their first seven games. They currently sit top of the table, level on points with second-placed Birmingham, although they have a game in hand.

  • WHAT PARKINSON SAID

    Parkinson told reporters: "It's the start of a busy period for us. All the squad is going to be utilised over the next month or so when the games are going to come thick and fast. We've had periods like this before but I'm pleased with the way the squad is shaping up."

    On this weekend's game, he added: "Orient started the season with results not going their way, but they came on the wrong side of a lot of tight games.

    "You always get a good atmosphere at Brisbane Road, it's a historic stadium. I love going there, particularly when I was manager of Charlton, which was a local derby. There's always a real east-end welcome, but we're looking forward to getting down there and hopefully keep our run going."

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT?

    Wrexham's clash with Leyton Orient kicks off their busy period. They will be desperate to get another three points on the board.

West Indies hoping to move on quickly after 'showing fight' against England

Kraigg Brathwaite targets greater discipline and consistency ahead of two-match home series with South Africa

Nagraj Gollapudi28-Jul-2024You want West Indies to be good at Test cricket? You want them to win matches consistently and not just a one-off Test victory every now and then? Then give them regular opportunities to play more Tests. Otherwise, it is very difficult to expect them to perform when they get to play Test series every six months. That is how West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite put in a nutshell the predicament of his inexperienced Test team and why the visitors lost the Richards-Botham Trophy 3-0 to England.This is the second Test series Brathwaite’s team had played so far this year, having drawn the two-match series in Australia in January. Though several players featured in the domestic four-day West Indies Championship between February and mid-April, only a few had any real experience of English conditions by the time West Indies arrived in July for the Test series. A three-day warm-up match against the ECB’s County Select XI at Beckenham, which was affected by a rain on a slower pitch, was their only preparation ahead of the Lord’s Test.Undercooked and underprepared, that was the general theme that underpinned West Indies’ plight this series. Brathwaite, though, said he was “excited” to look ahead with West Indies playing South Africa in a two-Test home series, which starts in Trinidad from August 7. “I’m very excited that we have two Test matches in a week’s time because we need more cricket,” Brathwaite said at the post-match presentation on Sunday afternoon. “Being in this competitive and this intense international game, when you are playing it more against good players, you will improve. [When Test series are] being spaced six months apart, it’s kind of tough.”Related

  • Brendon McCullum praises England's hard edge after 3-0 series win

  • Wood's spell from hell reverse-swings it for England

  • West Indies staring at a whitewash after throwing ascendancy away

  • Stokes hails 'phenomenal' Wood after Edgbaston haul seals series sweep

  • England sweep series 3-0 after Wood finishes off West Indies resistance

But the counter to Brathwaite came from his team’s head coach, Andre Coley, who believed to get more matches West Indies would need to justify their “case” by winning more. “The Catch-22 is: to get more matches they [West Indies] need to be performing in the matches that you do get for some kind of case to be made about increasing the number of matches,” Coley said afterwards.Coley did, however, point out that West Indies would need better preparation ahead of Test series, especially through a combination of more practice matches to allow his players to get a better understanding of the local conditions. “For the matches that we do have, it’s really an opportunity for us to be the best that we can and then potentially look at how we lead into Test matches, if there’s an opportunity for us to maybe have more [warm-up] matches in that particular environment, if it’s foreign to us, or engage in more bilateral discussions where these things can be facilitated.”However, both captain and coach were on the same page in their immediate review of why West Indies lost to England. While Coley said they could have “competed better”, Brathwaite said West Indies lacked “discipline” in every facet thus restricting them to being “good in phases” but not for long stretches of a game.”[Our] discipline altogether wasn’t good,” Brathwaite said. The blame lay with both batters and bowlers, he said.After the second day’s play at Lord’s, Jayden Seales, who won the West Indies Player-of-the-Series award with 13 wickets, said it was “frustrating to look at the scoreboard” because his batters had failed in both innings which eventually cost them the first Test. Though the batters came good at Trent Bridge in the second Test, with Kavem Hodge scoring his maiden century, Brathwaite blamed the bowlers for not being “as good” as they were “supposed to be” in the first innings and the team for fluffing catches.

“It’s about having within this squad a certain level of bravery to be able to stand up to that [extreme pace] and expect that this is the level of cricket that you are at, but at the same time, it’s not beyond you”Andre Coley on his players’ battles against Mark Wood

At Edgbaston, West Indies’ bowlers failed to create any sustained pressure after reducing England to 54 for 5, allowing them to post 376 in their first innings. While there were some good spells, there never seemed any structured plan to dominate or restrict the England batters. By the time Mark Wood and Ben Stokes combined to pull the guillotine, West Indies were defeated in mind and body language, in front of a cheering full house.Why did the bowlers fail to impose themselves? “Really and truly we weren’t as consistent as you need to be,” Brathwaite said. “If you look back, the guys [England batters] scored a lot of runs square of the wicket. You want to be hitting top of off stump. We didn’t hit that area long enough. You had some decent pitches in the second and third Tests and if you have a good pitch you pretty much are going to score on both sides.”It wouldn’t always be easy to control it and obviously when you are playing against good batsmen, you give them momentum. So one thing you have got to do is get back to where we were in Australia: you look at the percentages and where we pitched the ball there – consistently on that top of off stump. We weren’t there consistently throughout this series and that put a lot of pressure on controlling the run rate.”Coley, too, agreed, saying that after picking up three wickets on the first evening, if England were bowled out under 300, West Indies could have had “some kind of lead” but it was “definitely a missed opportunity”.Mikyle Louis raised his maiden Test fifty•Getty Images”There’s history around the series,” he said. “The fact that we had the trophy and now pretty much turned it over with a young emerging side, there would’ve been a lot said about this being a walkover. Obviously, we should have competed better, but we did show a lot of fight during the series.”West Indies, Coley pointed out, were not exactly going home empty handed. There were some takeaways and as an example he presented the case of Mikyle Louis, who became the first player from St Kitts and Nevis to play Tests for West Indies, making his debut at Lord’s and completing his Test initiation with a maiden fifty at Edgbaston, having faced among the fastest spells of extreme pace bowling from Wood at Trent Bridge first and then again in the third Test.Coley said that Louis, 23, was brave, but importantly the England experience would teach him a lot. “I can remember having a conversation with Louis about Mark Wood, about playing back home first-class cricket where potentially maybe 10, 20 people in the stands [watching] versus 20,000 people in the stands [in England] and then the uproar when the bowler comes in. So definitely, it is a steep learning curve for him and the other battles.”That’s the game. You keep learning. There were instances as you would’ve seen or able to recall in the second Test or even here where we really stood up to that and played pretty well. So it’s really about replicating that and having, for me, within this squad a certain level of bravery to be able to stand up to that and expect that this is the level of cricket that you are at, but at the same time, it’s not beyond you. Just being positive and having as much common sense as possible.”

Valentim reconhece Athletico-PR abaixo na final da Copa do Brasil e lamenta: 'Muito difícil revertermos'

MatériaMais Notícias

da esoccer bet: O técnico Alberto Valentim reconheceu que o Furacão terá uma missão “muito difícil” para ser campeão da Copa do Brasil. Isso acontece porque, neste domingo, pelo confronto de ida da final, o Athletico-PR perdeu para o Atlético-MG por 4 a 0 no Mineirão. Dessa forma, o treinador procurou ser realista, mas ressaltou que o time irá buscar a vitória no confronto da volta.

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da bwin: >ATUAÇÕES: Athletico-PR não se encontra em campo na final da Copa do Brasil

-Lógico que temos que ser realistas, é muito difícil revertemos na Arena (da Baixada). Nós temos que tentar vencer, sim. Utilizar a força da nossa casa, para que a gente ganhe lá, para fazer uma outra grande partida dentro da Arena – disse Valentim.

Após a partida, em entrevista à TV Globo, o atacante Pedro Rocha ficou na bronca com a arbitragem e questionou o critério da arbitragem (clique aqui e saiba mais). Nesse sentido, Valentim também falou sobre o tema, mas voltou a destacar a partida aquém do Furacão e destacou que o time teve uma “tarde infeliz”.

– Claro que a gente teve a nossa parcela de culpa pela derrota. A gente não está aqui para tirar as nossas responsabilidades, a única coisa que eu comentei com o quarto árbitro é que nós tomamos dois cartões amarelos em seguida – declarou Valentim.

– Não tem problema usando o mesmo critério. O Cittadini também sofreu uma falta semelhante. Mas quem não esteve à altura hoje foi no nosso time, foi uma tarde infeliz do nosso time – completou.

Atlético-MG e Athletico-PR voltam a campo na próxima quarta-feira, às 21h30, na Arena da Baixada. O confronto é válido pelo jogo da volta da final da Copa do Brasil e terá transmissão em tempo real do LANCE!.

Ainda vale lembrar que, para levar a Copa do Brasil, o Furacão precisa derrotar o Galo por cinco ou mais gols de diferença. Uma vitória por quatro de diferença levará a decisão para os pênaltis – não existe o critério do gol marcado fora de casa na competição.

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