South African Harmer plugs Essex's spin-bowling gap

Essex have turned to South African Simon Harmer to answer their spin weakness

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2016Essex have signed Simon Harmer, the South Africa offspinner, on a one-year deal as they prepare for life in the first division of the Championship.Harmer will qualify as a Kolpak registration and will help address a glaring Essex weakness. They won the second division title largely without a specialist spinner – Ashar Zaidi played only two matches – even in a season when changed toss regulations encouraged spinners back into the domestic game.Harmer made his Test debut for South Africa in January 2015 and has five Test caps, with 20 wickets at an average of 29.40 with best match figures of 7 for 153. He will be available in all competitions next season.Chris Silverwood, Essex’s coach, said: “Simon is an exciting cricketer who has played at the top level of the game for his country. He will give us another high quality spin option in all formats.”Harmer said: “Playing county cricket has always been a boyhood dream of mine and to have the opportunity to fulfil that dream at Essex is very surreal.”I am really looking forward to adding as much value as I possibly can to the team and making sure our time in the Specsavers County Championship Division One is a long one.”Harmer has had a satisfying month. He was also appointed as Warriors’ captain in the Sunfoil Series when Colin Ingram stood down after knee surgery.Harmer is the second South African to win a non-overseas contract in county cricket in successive days, following Colin Ackermann’s signing for Leicestershire.

Aston Villa: Emery Could Ditch Buendia For Selfless Prodigy

Aston Villa fans will have been keeping a close eye on the progress of Middlesbrough this season, with two of their brightest young stars currently on loan with the Championship side.

Cameron Archer has long been lauded as one to watch at Villa Park and has certainly shown glimpses of his potential with Michael Carrick's side, notching ten goals and six assists in just 18 appearances in the second tier.

However, he is likely to remain behind Ollie Watkins in the pecking order in Unai Emery's side and unless the Spanish manager changes his formation in order to accommodate both next season, it is difficult to see Archer becoming a regular in the Premier League.

Emery could promote Aaron Ramsey into his starting side next term considering his impressive performances, with the Englishman likely to compete with Emiliano Buendia in the attacking midfield role, given the Argentine's lack of goal involvement in the top flight so far this term.

Who is Aaron Ramsey?

Ramsey, who is the younger brother of Jacob, spent the first half of the Championship season with Norwich City, where he would manage a respectable three goals and three assists in 18 appearances.

Since linking up with Carrick at Middlesbrough, the 20-year-old has taken his game to another level, notching five goals and one assist in just 11 Championship outings, with a superb WhoScored average rating of 7.16 for his performances.

For context, the top performer at Villa so far this season has been Watkins with a 7.01 rating from WhoScored, so Ramsey will surely be eyeing up a first-team spot when the 2023/24 campaign rolls around.

While Archer and Ramsey's performances weren't quite enough for Boro to seal automatic promotion from the second tier, they will likely be key figures for Carrick in the playoffs, and could well help the north east side return to the Premier League.

Carrick was full of praise for Ramsey's role in his side earlier in the season, saying:

"AJ was brilliant. He's a selfless player. He makes selfless runs for those around him, he's intelligent, he sacrifices himself and understands what others around him are good at.

Soccer Football – FA Cup Third Round – Manchester United v Aston Villa – Old Trafford, Manchester, Britain – January 10, 2022 Aston Villa’s Emiliano Buendia reacts REUTERS/Phil Noble

"He's just a good footballer. He's fitter and stronger, because athleticism is a big part of his game, but I thought his football intelligence and quality on the ball was fantastic."

Despite Villa's impressive form in recent weeks which has them on the brink of the Champions League spots, Buendia has just five goals and two assists in 33 appearances in the top flight, with a disappointing 6.74 rating from WhoScored.

The Argentine also averages fewer shots (1.2 vs 1.7) and dribbles (0.7 vs 1.8) per game than Ramsey, so the academy graduate could easily take Buendia's place in the first team if he can transform his strong recent form into equally impressive Premier League displays throughout 2023/24.

Archer's incisions give Essex reason to grumble

The late wickets of Ryan ten Doeschate and James Foster allowed Sussex a way back into the first day at Colchester

Will Macpherson at Colchester04-Aug-2016
ScorecardRyan ten Doeschate top-scored with 83 for Essex•Getty Images

There was, at Colchester’s idyllic Castle Park, plenty of grumbling early on Thursday. The car park queue took forever, they said; the stand from last year was gone (on grounds of cost), and there weren’t enough seats. The beer? Well, that was £4 for a can. And where the hell was Ravi? (Mr Bopara sat the game out due to illness).What’s more, the trees at the Trevor Bailey Drive End had been chopped down, with a pair of moanable results: not only had the ground’s perfect circus of foliage been interrupted, but the gap had left the natty new-builds beyond naked. The most generous said things were not what they once were, the more damning suggested – with a game fewer from next season – that this was another festival on its last legs.Not everything in Essex these days, though, gives quite such reason to lament. Each of the next two weeks bring a white-ball quarter-final, and they sit atop Division Two of the Championship. If their interest in Alex Hales revealed a club bristling with ambition, then the return of Varun Chopra proved that, under Ronnie Irani and Chris Silverwood, they have the pull to attract high-quality players – a Championship-winning captain, indeed.Essex are yet to win a game that Alastair Cook has not played in, but they possess depth. Not only are they missing Bopara, but Jesse Ryder – who appears unlikely to be at the club next season – and Matt Quinn, who felt sore in the warm-up and was not risked with those quarter-finals in mind.Despite some quality pace bowling from Jofra Archer, on Championship debut, that depth was on display here, even if they never quite pulled away as they had threatened. There were typically stylish half-centuries from Nick Browne and Dan Lawrence and, late in the day, Ryan ten Doeschate – batting two places higher than he often does – made a rollicking 83 before being bowled by Steve Magoffin. On a pitch with plenty of bounce, it looks a fine toss for ten Doeschate to have won, though it seems unlikely that the events of last year – when spin took 28 of the 36 wickets to fall in Essex’s game with Surrey – will be repeated.The opening session did plenty to abate the morning muttering. Browne left plenty, but had 10 boundaries in his lunchtime 46, including a triptych of straight drives that deserved to be framed and sold at auction, as well as some fine cuts and back-foot punches through point.After the break, though, things became less comfortable. In Chris Jordan’s first over, Browne reached 50 with an edge through vacant third slip, then nicked over Harry Finch – a taller man would have taken it – at first. In his newfound spirit of discomfort, Browne edged behind to become Archer’s first Championship wicket then, next ball, Tom Westley was hurried by a ripsnorter of a short ball that took a bit of glove, some helmet, and looped to third slip. Westley, who is having such a fine summer, left looking rather nonplussed. “I felt for him actually,” said Luke Wright, echoing the batsman’s thoughts. “That would have got most players out.”At the other end stood Jaik Mickleburgh, whose 54 was never pretty but – given Essex’s congested top order after the signing of Chopra and the fact that Cook won’t play a Test until July 7 next summer – was apposite of timing and unfussy. Eventually, in a tough period that brought an early tea through bad light, he was cleaned up by Magoffin, by now bowling a fine spell of inswing. Lawrence was wonderfully waspish and busy, pulling off the front foot and insouciant on the drive – particularly down the ground – and looked furious when he top-edged another Archer short ball to cover after tea.Archer, who, at the end of a slow run, has a beautifully smooth action – which perhaps disguises the steepling short ball that earned his second and third wickets and hurried each of Essex’s batsman – looks a terrific prospect. He is a mechanically magnificent beanpole who has that knack of making extreme exertion seem effortless. Best of all, he is as excitable as he is exciting; each of his three scalps – particularly Westley – was greeted raucously. The 18-month contract he signed this week looks fine business from Sussex.Wright, who felt his team had allowed Essex 30 too many and confirmed Harry Finch was having a scan on a blow to the hand, said of Archer: “I wanted him to play, he needed to play, the way he’s been bowling. At times you watch him and think if he ran in faster he could bowl really quick. It looks easy for him. He has the surprise ball, with the pace. He runs in slowly and it’s casual, then it comes out so quick. Sometimes it’s easier when quicks fly in because you have that pace and rhythm.”So, with the late wickets of ten Doeschate and James Foster for a tidy 42, lbw to David Wiese, ended an entertaining day but one that – given five of Essex’s top six passed 42 but none bettered the captain’s 83 – never totally silenced those grumbles.

Horton hundred tightens Leicestershire's grip

ScorecardPaul Horton struck his first hundred since his switch from Lancashire [file picture]•PA Photos

Paul Horton’s first century since joining Leicestershire helped cement his side’s strong position on a rain-affected second day of their Specsavers County Championship match against Sussex at Hove.The former Lancashire opener made 100 as Leicestershire reached 300 for 4 replying to Sussex’s 163 in the 43.2 overs possible because of rain and bad light.But with a lead of 133 and wickets in hand, Leicestershire are still in a strong position to win their second game of the season thanks to the foundations laid by Horton and his captain, Mark Cosgrove, who put on 114 for the third wicket in 32 overs.It was Horton’s 22nd first-class hundred, which he reached with a cut off Danny Briggs that brought him his 14th four, and came after he passed 50 in three of his four previous Championship innings for his new county.However, the 33-year-old, who joined Leicestershire last winter, lasted two more balls before he was caught behind down the leg side off George Garton, sent on his way after a consultation between umpires Ian Gould and Nigel Llong. His runs came off 174 balls and he batted for just over four hours.Even with floodlights on from the start, which was delayed until 2.10pm because of morning drizzle, batting conditions weren’t ideal although there was little in the pitch to assist Sussex’s seamers.Sussex captain Ben Brown brought left-arm spinner Danny Briggs into the attack in the 54th over but it was leg-spinner Luke Wells, who bowled six overs either side of tea, who offered more threat and an appeal for a catch at the wicket off Mark Pettini when the ball turned out of the rough was turned down.Garton was the pick of the Sussex attack in two lively spells down the slope. Despite being plagued by no-ball problems – he was called for over-stepping seven times – the 19-year-old left-armer worked up a decent pace, swung the ball both ways and was rewarded with a second wicket after tea.Having just been on-driven for four by Cosgrove, he produced the perfect inswinging yorker which knocked out two stumps and Leicestershire’s captain was gone for 80, made from 136 balls with ten fours.It halted a stand of 49 in 12 overs with Brighton-born Pettini, who ended the day unbeaten on 42 with Niall O’Brien on seven. The umpires brought the players off at 5.20pm because of bad light and play was abandoned for the day shortly afterwards when rain arrived.

England Women survive spin scare to chase 91

England Women huffed and puffed past India’s spin attack to secure their second straight win at the Women’s World T20, in Dharamsala

The Report by Shashank Kishore 22-Mar-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:40

‘A lot of belief in our dressing room’ – Knight

India Women nearly got out of jail courtesy their trump card, spin, in conditions as subcontinental as it could get to lift the hopes of a boisterous home crowd, but a turbo-charged start from Sarah Taylor and Tammy Beaumont helped England Women overcome a nervous breakdown. They eventually crossed the line by two wickets in a pulsating finish in Dharamsala.India’s 90 for 8, which seemed inadequate at the halfway mark, was made to look bigger as England’s pre-determined approach on a surface, where the ball spun visiously, came back to bite them. It needed the calm of Natalie Sciver, who made a crucial 19, and Jenny Gunn to allay fears of a shock loss as England squeezed home with six balls to spare.Ekta Bisht, who replaced Poonam Yadav in the XI, injected fresh life in to India’s defence with a crafty display of left-arm spin bowling to finish with career-best figures of 4 for 21. But, lack of application with the bat threw India’s campaign in choppy waters. They need to win against West Indies on Sunday and hope other results go their way.After misfiring with the bat, India came out attacking, and received an early fillip when Charlotte Edwards was dismissed by the third over. But Taylor, perhaps identifying the surface to be a raging turner, announced herself with three fours off her first seven balls to briefly throw India’s plans off.Beaumont also showed she was up for the fight by making a sprightly 20. Harmanpreet Kaur, who was smashed for three fours off her first three balls, hit back with two wickets off successive balls. Beaumont holed out to midwicket before Taylor was stumped superbly by Sushma Verma.From 42 for 3, England’s nervy approach was reduced to a battle of push and prod as Bisht exploited the slow, spinning surface to scythe through the middle order. Heather Knight, who had earlier picked up three wickets with her offspin, was stumped, too, while Lydia Greenway was trapped plumb in front attempting an expansive sweep to leave the game on a knife’s edge.India’s fielders also lifted themselves, even though England found scoring slightly easier against the pace of Jhulan Goswami. England also had a reprieve when Katherin Brunt survived a close lbw shout, with England needing 11 off 23. Then as things got tighter, the nerves began to show as Kaur put down a regulation catch at cover with England needing three. The next ball was hit behind point for four by Anya Shrubsole to trigger wild celebrations in the England camp.Earlier, there was little doubt that the toss would be crucial, and Edwards opted to bowl. The decision paid off almost immediately as Vellaswamy Vanitha fell in the first over to leave two of India’s best batsmen – Mithali Raj and Smriti Mandhana – to weather the early storm.Mandhana started off with a crunching off drive, but the slowness of the wicket became evident early on as she repeatedly found leading edges off cutters. England were surprisingly off the boil on the field, but the hole India dug themselves in to allowed England to regroup.Shikha Pandey, and not Kaur, walked out at No. 4 in a bid to up the ante. But Pandey struggled, which put more pressure on Raj. A touch player, who relies on timing instead of muscle, she then looked to go over the top, only to see the ball lob to point. The batting meltdown somewhat seemed complete when Veda Krishnamurthy was bowled through the gate by Knight’s loopy offspin to leave India on the ropes at 52 for 5 in 14 overs. That they finished with 90 was courtesy Kaur’s improvisation and Anuja Patil’s deft touches.A second successive sub-100 score put immense pressure on India’s spinners to pull off a heist. Hard as they tried, all England needed was an injection of momentum at the top. Once they got that, it was a question of weathering the blips, which they overcame, but not without jangling nerves.

New transfer target: Leeds eyeing move for ‘warrior’

Leeds United are thought to be keeping tabs on Arsenal left-back Kieran Tierney ahead of a potential move.

The Lowdown: Lack of minutes

Tierney hasn’t featured heavily this season at the Emirates, playing just 468 minutes of Premier League action, starting only four top-flight games.

That has been due to Oleksandr Zinchenko’s arrival in the summer, with Mikel Arteta’s side currently on course to pip Manchester City to the title.

Tierney shares the same agent as Patrick Bamford and is under contract in north London until 2026, however, he is being linked with a summer exit, with Elland Road named as a potential destination.

The Latest: Transfer update

90min shared a story on Wednesday regarding Tierney, who is attracting interest from a number of top-flight sides including Leeds.

Those at Elland Road are monitoring the Scot’s situation, with Arteta aware that his lack of minutes may become an issue for Tierney.

The Verdict: Needed

Junior Firpo has found some form of late, scoring the winner against Southampton and starting every game under Javi Gracia. However, the Spaniard is the only recognised left-back on the books in Yorkshire, so a move for Tierney, hailed as a ‘warrior’ by Ashley Cole, could be required.

The Whites will need to remain in the top flight for a transfer to gather any real pace, though, but it looks as if Tierney may be a name to keep an eye on heading into the summer when Leeds are likely to be under new ownership in the 49ers Enterprises.

Issy Wong: 'Sometimes you're the bug and sometimes you're the windshield'

The fast bowler is looking forward to showing how much she’s learned since losing her place in the England women’s side

Vishal Dikshit20-Feb-2024Issy Wong was just 20 years old when she became an all-format international cricketer, a feat not many can lay claim to. She is among the fastest bowlers in the women’s circuit, one of the most promising young players in England, and was earmarked as the successor to Katherine Sciver-Brunt.Wong, however, has fallen off England’s plans over the last year, having been dropped from all three formats, but the harshest blow was losing her place in the T20 side. She missed out on last year’s World Cup, where England lost the semi-final to hosts South Africa, but there’s another one coming up in September-October in Bangladesh and with it comes the chance for redemption.With year’s Women’s Premier League, starting February 23, being held in the lead-up to the 2024 T20 World Cup, Wong is hoping to use the tournament in India to make her way back into the England squad by working on the “feedback” she has received from the team management.Wong had a stellar season for champions Mumbai Indians in the inaugural WPL, with 15 wickets in 10 games (including a hat-trick in the Eliminator match). Except, she couldn’t quite replicate the same form in the home summer, managing just one wicket in 30 balls across five games in the Hundred for Birmingham Phoenix and featured in just one T20I in 2023. It’s ironing out those ups and downs that she’s focused on now.”I’m really looking forward to it,” Wong told ESPNcricinfo of the upcoming WPL. “I probably played close to my best cricket last year and I’m looking to build on that and to keep hopefully contributing. That’s what, as players, we want to do. We want to contribute to the success of the team, and I was lucky enough to do that last year. Obviously, probably things didn’t go my way last summer but that’s life, isn’t it, sometimes good things, sometimes [bad] … But otherwise, you say ‘sometimes you’re the bug and sometimes you’re the windshield’. I felt like the windshield in India last year and I was probably the bug in England. It is what it is. You just got to keep driving.

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“Obviously disappointed not to be involved with the England stuff but the feedback I’ve had is really clear so it’s up to me now to go away and to do something about it. Last year as well I had missed out on the [T20] World Cup just before the WPL and sometimes you get bad news and it’s all about how you react to it. They’ve been very clear with what they want from me which is good and all I can do now is try and do something about it and give them more reasons to pick me than not. That’s what I’ll try and do and wherever I am, I’m going to try and get better as a cricketer. I’ve got a really good opportunity to work with two of the best fast bowlers (team-mate Shabnim Ismail and mentor and bowling coach Jhulan Goswami) to ever play the women’s game and that’s such a good opportunity for someone like myself. I’m 21, I don’t know anything, so I’m just here to learn off people like Gosy (Goswami).”In her solitary T20I last year, against Sri Lanka at home in September, Wong looked visibly out of sorts, struggling with her run-up. Her first of the two overs she bowled saw her deliver a wide as well as three front-foot no-balls before her second leaked three fours to finish with figures of 2-0-24-0. While other younger bowlers are being played ahead of her for England now, Wong has been working on her game the off-season.England captain Heather Knight had even said openly that Wong’s run-up issues were because she was “listening to a lot of different voices,” and that she would work with England’s bowling coach Matt Mason “to get a bit of context of where she’s at.””I spent a lot of time towards the back-end of last summer and over the winter working with Matt Mason and working really closely with them just on rebuilding stuff,” Wong said. “We called it ‘repair work’ at the time, just to get me back at my best. I feel like that’s all behind me now and the next step is match practice so playing in England A games (before England’s T20I series in India) out here in December was fantastic for me because I was back playing in games and competing and I’m a competitor and I think a lot of the time you kind of over-analyse, especially last summer I wasn’t playing a lot of games.”[I] probably thought too much about what I was doing, and I ended up doing kind of the wrong things. Whereas I think I’m probably at my best when I’m given a situation to get our team out of and all my energy is going into how I’m going to win the game in front of me as opposed to what my left leg’s doing, what my right leg’s doing, what my pinky on my left hand’s doing. It doesn’t matter. You just got to win the game in front of you. Those games were really helpful in December to get some match practice, but I’m absolutely fit and ready to kick it on and to try and contribute as much as possible.”Issy Wong picked up a hat-trick in the WPL Eliminator match last year against UP Warriorz•BCCIThe A series in Mumbai was Wong’s last competitive series, where she picked up four wickets from three T20s and was named the Player of the Match in the last two for her performances of 2 for 18 and 28* off 30 and 1 for 35 and 35 off 15.Even though a spot in the starting XI may not be assured this time since Mumbai have bought the experienced Ismail at the recent auction, a good outing at the WPL could put Wong back on the radar of England women’s coach Jon Lewis, who is at the WPL too, coaching UP Warriorz.”I love taking wickets, but I don’t think it’s the only aspect of my game,” Wong said. “I want to contribute wherever I can if that means standing at fine leg and saving boundaries then put me at fine leg and I’ll save you some boundaries. I want to win games for my team and that’s all that’s on my mind at the moment. What I do might reflect well and might reflect badly on me, but I want to win games for MI at the moment and maybe England will happen in the future.”Home advantage is not something Mumbai can benefit from this time. As compared to last year, when the entire WPL was held in and around the city, this year’s WPL will be split between Bengaluru and Delhi. Despite being its first year, the crowd at last season’s WPL made Wong feel that people were “invested,” even if her best memories were from sell-out crowds back home.”In England, last summer we saw a really good atmosphere and especially the Ashes games with the Barmy Army coming and filling it up,” she said. “We sold out Lord’s, we sold out Edgasbton and The Oval. They are the biggest grounds in England and the atmosphere in them is really good but in terms of consistent atmosphere in domestic games, the WPL was really special. It felt like what we were doing on the pitch mattered to people off the pitch. It felt like people were really invested and we definitely felt the support coming from off the pitch while we were on the pitch. I think that really helped us last year.”

The last of Trumper

It is a hundred years to the day that Victor Trumper played his last Test match. A look back at the genius batsman (and his phobia of clergymen)

Ashley Mallett01-Mar-2012The cricketing gods loved one batsman above all others: Victor Thomas Trumper. Whenever Trumper strode boldly onto the green sward on his way to the middle of his beloved SCG, the crowd rose as one to applaud. It was said even the blades of grass seemed to bow respectfully in the wake of the great man, becoming a rolling sea of green, nature’s own version of a Mexican wave.To the day, 100 years ago, Trumper played his last Test innings. It was March 1, 1912, the fifth and last Test of the 1911-12 Ashes series, at the SCG, and Australia needed 363 runs to win the game. At the non-striker’s end, little Syd Gregory contemplated the seriousness of the situation, as the great SF Barnes cruised past to deliver the first ball of the Australian second innings.Barnes, England’s finest bowler, operated a shade above medium pace, bowling a combination of swing and spin, the fast legbreak his most potent weapon. The cricketing gods must have been taking a tea break, for Barnes dismissed Trumper for 5 in the first innings, producing a near perfect legbreak, which pitched leg and would have taken the top of off, had not Trumper’s bat got in the way – alas, only to catch an edge, giving Frank Woolley, who stood tall and straight like a Grenadier Guardsman, a dolly at first slip. Trumper’s fate didn’t seem fair somehow. Woolley himself had scored an unconquered 133 in England’s first innings of 324. Big Warwick Armstrong hit the top score of 33 in Australia’s paltry 176.But today Trumper was setting out to make amends for a summer of discontent for Clem Hill’s Australian team. Trumper’s only century in the Test series had been in the first match, at the SCG. He hit 113 in the first dig, and, significantly, it was the only match of the series that Australia won. By the fifth Test Australia trailed 3-1 and were looking to turn the tables on an England team that included some of the greats – among them Jack Hobbs, George Gunn, Wilfred Rhodes, the captain, JWHT Douglas, and, of course, Woolley and the incomparable Barnes.The first ball from Barnes was a yorker, but Trumper dismissed it in a flash, playing what he called the “dog shot”. As the ball careered towards leg stump, having moved from off to leg in the manner of a late reverse swinger, Trumper merely lifted his front leg, swivelled neatly on his back leg, meeting the ball on the half volley and dismissing it from his presence to the backward-square fence. Umpire Bob Crockett broke into a broad grin, unusual for such a stern soul, and the crowd rose to acclaim Trumper’s mastery. The four, then a two past gully, and a single to mid-on, brought Gregory to face the music. Two balls in a row from Barnes beat the Gregory outside edge, but he survived.How could Trumper know then that this day would be his last in Test cricket? Nephritis, the kidney disease, which took his life in 1915, was yet to show its ugly face. However, the mental stress that had always plagued Trumper throughout his career was at its most distressing when he happened to set eyes on a man wearing a dog collar. Those who saw his batting genius at first hand never understood why Trumper believed he was doomed to failure if he spotted a man of the cloth in the crowd.”How can I get runs with all those clergymen standing about?” Trumper whispered to Clem Hill at Lord’s in 1899. The pair had just walked from the field, Australia having got England out for a modest 206. But despite the presence of many dog collars in the crowd, the very next day Trumper scored his maiden Test century, 135 not out. Hill also hit 135 in the Australian first innings of 421, runs that set the side up for an impressive ten-wicket victory. It was Trumper’s second Test match. In his first, WG Grace’s last, Trumper scored a duck (bowled by Jack Hearne) and 11 (bowled by FS Jackson).In Australia on December 4, 1891, the 14-year-old Trumper impressed Grace’s visiting England team by fielding brilliantly as Grace and others batted on the edge of the SCG. Trumper was one of a number of youngsters who fielded, and he was invited to have a hit. Wearing knickerbockers and a brave face, young Trumper struggled to middle too many on the rough turf and Grace strode towards him: “You can surely field, m’boy… but I am afraid, batting is not your forte. You’ll never get anywhere as a batsman.”Eight years on, at Lord’s, Grace had changed his mind about the young Australian. He knocked on the Australian dressing room door and asked to see Trumper, who had just made his maiden Test century. The doctor handed him his bat, upon which he had written the words: “From the past champion to the future champion.”Traditionally, cricketers are pretty superstitious. Well, most of them. For Australia the devil’s number is 87, which is supposed to date back to the time Don Bradman was dismissed pulling a ball onto his stumps on that score against Victoria once. Keith Miller, then 12, was watching. He looked at the score board. “Fancy getting out for 87, unlucky 13 from 100,” he mused.The great Victoria and Australia fast-medium bowler Alan Connolly always took the field for his country with a piece of Hugh Trumble’s green-and-gold Test hat-band on his person. Celebrated England wicketkeeper Alan Knott had a peculiar habit of having a handkerchief hanging precariously from his trouser pocket, and when standing up to the wicket to Derek Underwood and Co, he would always gently touch the top of the stumps for good luck.

As the ball careered towards leg stump, having moved from off to leg in the manner of a late reverse swinger, Trumper merely lifted his front leg, swivelled neatly on his back leg, meeting the ball on the half volley and dismissing it from his presence to the backward-square fence

Bill Whitty, the left-arm medium-fast bowler from Mount Gambier in South Australia, once told me that during Trumper’s brilliant summer of 1910-11, he “could do anything at any time. All the bowling came alike to him, and he was just as likely to get a couple of fours off the first two balls of the day as he was off the last two. But he could not relax at the batting crease if he saw a clergyman, either on the way to the wicket or in the crowd while he was out in the middle.”Trumper’s fear of the men in dog collars was extraordinary, and his superstitiousness was in complete contrast to Bradman, the man who took over from Trumper as Australia’s batting idol, and had no fear. “Friday the 13th, black cats, treading on cracks in the pavement and the figure 87, are all silly superstitions and pure nonsense,” Sir Donald told me in 1974. For many years Bradman occupied Room 87 on the eighth floor of an office block opposite the Adelaide Town Hall. I wonder if Geoff Boycott would have occupied Room 111 in a Leeds building, given that 111 is England’s devil’s number – derived, I believe, from the legend of Admiral Nelson: “one arm, one leg, one a***hole…”In Manchester in 1902, Neville Cardus, a boy then, sat transfixed as Trumper and Reg Duff walked to the wicket. He said to himself: “Please, god, let Victor Trumper score a century today for Australia against England – out of a total of 137 all out!” Trumper scored 104 before lunch. Ever self-effacing, he wrote in his diary that day: “Wet wicket. Fourth Test. Won toss. Made 299. Self 104…” Only three Australians have scored a century before lunch on the first day of a Test match – Trumper in Manchester in 1902, Charlie Macartney in Leeds in 1926, and Bradman, also in Leeds, in 1930.Surely there were men of the cloth in the crowd that day. Maybe Trumper’s eyes were only for the ball. Imagine if the opposition today knew of such a weakness. Masks with the image of a man of the cloth on them would be handed to every fan barracking for England. England under JWHT Douglas or Archie MacLaren could have done with the likes of David Sheppard in the side, who was among the dozen-odd clergymen to have made their mark in English cricket history, and who wore his dog collar to matches.Reverend Sheppard certainly incurred the wrath of Freddie Trueman once, who, upon a misfield, said to him: “It is a pity, David, that you only put your hands together on a Sunday.” During that England tour Down Under, of 1962-63, Sheppard wore his dog collar to a reception and when a bishop appeared, Trueman called: “Hey, David, is that your senior pro?”Today we mark 100 years since Trumper played his last innings. Australia lost that match, but Trumper scored exactly 50 – again caught at slip by Woolley off Barnes.Trumper’s legacy to the game of cricket was not the number of runs he scored, but the way he played the game. We don’t rank Sachin Tendulkar above Bradman just because he has scored a mountain more runs than him – albeit in 130 more Test matches. Cardus summed it up best when he said of Trumper: “You will no more get an idea of the quality of Trumper’s batsmanship by adding up his runs than you will get an idea of the quality of Shelley’s poetry by adding up the lines written by Shelley.”The great CB Fry said of Trumper: “Victor Trumper is perhaps the most difficult batsman in the world to reduce to words. He has no style, yet he is all style.”In 1980, Kim Hughes, the gifted yet wayward Australia batsman, hit a magnificent century at Lord’s in the Centenary Test match. In batting terms that innings was the epitome of Trumper. The memory of its class and style lingers, as has that of Michael Clarke’s amazing unconquered 329 at the SCG this golden summer. Methinks there was more than a touch of Trumper in both those innings.Bibliography
by Ashley Mallett
by AG Moyes
Victor Trumper’s 1902 diary

Contact made: Fulham submit loan enquiry to sign “remarkable” striker

Fulham have made contact to enquire about a deal to bring a new striker to the Premier League on loan, according to a fresh report.

Fulham's season so far

The Cottagers have made an extremely mixed start to the new campaign having won three, drawn three and lost six of their opening 12 games, meaning that they currently find themselves sitting 15th in the top-flight table.

Everton (1-0)

Arsenal (2-2)

Brentford (3-0)

Luton Town (1-0)

Crystal Palace (0-0)

Manchester City (5-1)

Sheffield United (3-1)

Brighton (1-1)

Chelsea (2-0)

Tottenham (2-0)

Manchester United (1-0)

Aston Villa (3-1)

Marco Silva’s side have struggled to find the back of the net and are the joint-lowest scorers with Burnley ahead of the clash with Wolves, so it’s clear that the manager will have to enter the market to find some prolific reinforcements should he want to change his fortunes in the final third.

The Portuguese boss has set his sights on Ajax centre-forward Chuba Akpom, who only put pen to paper over the summer from Championship side Middlesbrough, and it’s fair to say that he’s made an impressive start to his new life at the Johan Cruyff Arena.

Fulham now "ready to spend" over £40 million to sign striker in January

The Whites want to back Marco Silva with a much-needed forward.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 14, 2023

England’s former youth international has firmly established himself as John Van’t Schip’s best-performing offensive player so far this season in the Eredivisie (WhoScored – Ajax statistics), and the 28-year-old’s impressive form has caught the eye of the hierarchy at Craven Cottage ahead of January.

Fulham showing interest in Chuba Akpom

According to TEAMtalk, Akpom is of interest to Fulham, alongside several other clubs who are also looking to secure his services at the start of next year.

Crystal Palace and Fulham are amongst the clubs who have enquired about the availability of Ajax striker Chuba Akpom, TEAMtalk can reveal.

"Sources have now told TEAMtalk that Akpom is open to the idea of a move to the Premier League and with Ajax ready to consider a loan deal, there is interest.

"Crystal Palace and Fulham are both very keen on a possible deal for the 28-year-old, while Everton, Burnley, Luton Town and Sheffield United are also keeping tabs on the situation.”

Ajax striker Chuba Akpom.

Akpom could be a "remarkable" addition

During his time at Ajax, Akpom has so far scored five goals from 13 matches in total which shows how prolific he can be in the final third, but he’s capable of operating everywhere across the frontline and even as an attacking midfielder (Transfermarkt – Akpom statistics).

Sponsored by Nike, Schip’s talisman was named the 2022/23 Player of the Season in the Championship, so the fact that he’s received individual recognition for his performances in England shows that he’s capable of reaching the high standards required to succeed.

According to BBC reporter Oluwashina Okeleji, Akpom is a “remarkable” striker, and when you consider that he shares the same representative, Elite Project Group Ltd, as Alex Iwobi (Fulham agents), this existing connection that his management have to the club could give the board a small advantage should they try to get a deal over the line.

Spurs news: Tottenham eyeing £35m move to sign "unbelievable" player

Tottenham Hotspur's transition into life without club-record goalscorer Harry Kane has been seamless. The Lilywhites have hit the ground running under Ange Postecoglou, remaining unbeaten after eight games to sit top of the Premier League to make their star man's departure yesterday's news. With James Maddison, Heung-min Son and others stealing the headlines, it looks as though the only way is up for those in North London.

The question is, however, how long can a side last before the absence of a consistent 30-goal striker takes its toll? At some stage, Postecoglou will know that he may have a problem to solve, and that's when January and one particular transfer target could come into play.

What's the latest Spurs transfer news?

Spurs arguably landed two of the deals of the summer in the form of Postecoglou and Maddison, with the latter quickly becoming the former Celtic manager's main man at the club. Despite their impressive work in the summer transfer window, though, the Lilywhites still lack an out-and-out number nine, having failed to replace Kane. As the January transfer window gets closer and closer with each passing day, however, a resolution to that problem could begin to arise.

The latest Jonathan David transfer news certainly suggests that may be the case, too. According to reports in Spain, via Caught Offside, Spurs have turned their attention to the LOSC Lille striker, who is reportedly valued at €40m (£35m). The report claims Spurs are said to be keen on signing David in the January transfer window as he fits into Postecoglou's plans. David, still only 23 years of age, could certainly help fill the golden boots of Kane, and may even be the final piece to the puzzle for Postecoglou at Spurs.

How good is Jonathan David?

jonathan-david-premier-league-transfers

After David's goals and assists total reached the 30 mark in all competitions last season, having found the back of the net 26 times, and turned provider four times, he has got off to a similarly impressive start in the current campaign. So far, the Lille forward has found the back of the net on four occasions, and David's stats have even outperformed Spurs striker Richarlison in a number of areas in league action, as per FBref.

Player

Goals

Progressive Passes

Progressive Carries

Jonathan David

2

18

13

Richarlison

1

12

7

The Canada international has earned deserved praise for his performances in the last couple of years, including from journalist Austin Ditlhobolo, who previously posted on X: "Jonathan David, 21, is a predator in the box. Unbelievable finisher, who just fired Lille into the lead against Salzburg. Current French Ligue 1 top scorer. The Canadian hitman has scored more goals than Mbappe, Messi & Neymar. No wonder he was linked with LFC."

So, when the question inevitably comes the way of Postecoglou, regarding just who could replace Kane at Spurs, David may well become the answer for the Australian, making the January transfer window even more interesting to watch.

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