Head recalled for bowling ability, Matt Kuhnemann leapfrogs struggling Ashton Agar

Australia selector Tony Dodemaide has defended the presence of injured players in the squad

Alex Malcolm17-Feb-20234:59

Chappell: Cummins being the only pacer in the XI is a ‘hell of a gamble’

Australia’s selectors have backflipped on their decision to leave out Travis Head in Nagpur by selecting him in Delhi because of his bowling ability. Matthew Kuhnemann has also leap-frogged Ashton Agar to make his Test debut as Australia select three specialist spinners and one fast bowler for the first time since 2017 with Cameron Green and Mitchell Starc both ruled unfit.Australia’s selector on tour Tony Dodemaide spoke to the media shortly before the toss in Delhi to explain the selectors’ decision-making. Having left Head out in Nagpur as a horses-for-courses selection due to his poor batting record on the subcontinent, and his struggles at the training camp in Bengaluru, Dodemaide explained that Head had been included in Delhi at the expense of Matt Renshaw because Australia felt they were missing a fifth bowling option in Nagpur.”Renners is really stiff,” Dodemaide said. “There’s no slight on him. He’s very much a valued player in our team planning moving forward. He was quite stiff, particularly in the first innings [in Nagpur]. So he hasn’t been dropped for those performances.”The key thing where we see the difference this time around is that Heady does offer quite a valuable option as a fifth bowler and that’s where we felt we were stretched in parts of the game in Nagpur and that fifth bowling option is something that we value, albeit another spinner. But we expect spin to dominate in any case.”

Ashton Agar struggling for form

Kuhnemann’s Test debut has come in extraordinary circumstances. Last week he was playing his first first-class match since October for Queensland at the MCG in Melbourne, having been biding his time as the second Queensland spinner behind Mitchell Swepson in their Sheffield Shield side.Kuhnemann was not selected in the initial India tour squad but flew into Delhi on Sunday as Swepson went home for the birth of his first child. Agar was picked as Australia’s second spinner in the XI in Sydney in the last home Test before the India tour and as the preferred left-arm orthodox spinner in the touring party.But Agar’s performance in Sydney against South Africa, and at the training camp in Bengaluru, meant that he was not a viable option to be picked in the first or second Test.”His red-ball game is not quite where he wants it to be,” Dodemaide said. “Matt Kuhnemann has come over and impressed. He got a chance in Sri Lanka, albeit in limited-overs form, he’s played well in domestic cricket this season and he’s impressed us in the nets. We just feel his style at the moment is more suited to these conditions.”Matthew Kuhnemann played 13 first-class matches before making his Test debut in Delhi•Getty Images

Kuhnemann made a similar shock ODI debut last year in Sri Lanka when Adam Zampa missed the tour on paternity leave.Australia have opted to not pick a second pace bowler for the first time since Chittagong in 2017 when Pat Cummins was the lone quick alongside Agar, Nathan Lyon and Steve O’Keefe, although on that occasion that did have Hilton Cartwright’s medium pace.Boland was arguably Australia’s second-best bowler in Nagpur behind Todd Murphy but only bowled 17 overs for the Test. Australia’s selectors believe the conditions in Delhi make a second quick surplus to requirements.”It’s a bit unusual going the three spin and one quick,” Dodemaide said. “We feel the pitch here, the conditions, we feel that spin will dominate the game once again and from what we understand this pitch has been used three times already this year and there’s already substantial cracking in the areas where most of the game is going to be played. That’s the reason for going for the three spinners. The fifth bowler is important too.”We don’t have the seam bowling option of Cam on the table quite yet. We’re very confident and hope he’s continuing to progress and we expect him to be available for the third Test in Indore. That’s the context around selection for this one.”

Cameron Green and Mitchell Starc hopeful for Indore

Dodemaide defended the selectors’ decision to bring three players on tour who are not fit enough to be selected in the first two Tests. Josh Hazlewood is still battling an Achilles issue while Green and Starc were pushing to be fit for the second Test but neither were quite right with their respective finger injuries despite training fully on Wednesday.”We brought them over in the expectation they’d be available,” Dodemaide said. “Starcy and Greeny didn’t quite come up for this one. We fully expect them to be online for the third one.”Certainly if [Starc] was 100% we would have had a serious conversation about the bowling structure, about two [quicks] and two [spinners] as opposed to one [quick] and three [spinners]. Certainly, it’s great balance if you’ve got that seam bowling without shortening the batting with Greeny being available. That’s not the case and we deal with what you’ve got.”Cam’s been going through his return to play stuff. He hasn’t really completed all of what he was intended to do. He still hasn’t faced quick bowlers. He hasn’t done a lot of catching as well. He’s trained for quite some time. But there’s just enough reaction and discomfort there that it’s just not ready.”

£120k-per-week Tottenham player looking to leave Spurs via agents

Tottenham Hotspur could be minus one player in the January transfer window, as he looks at alternative clubs to join via his entourage.

Tottenham preparing to face Man City in the Premier League

On the field, Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou is preparing his side to face-off against Premier League champions Man City at the Etihad Stadium this afternoon.

Tottenham eyeing January move for another £117k-per-week Real Madrid player

The Lilywhites have already been linked with Arda Guler, but there is a second Galactico on their radar.

By
Emilio Galantini

Nov 22, 2024

It’s been a mixed start to the season for Tottenham, who have displayed real inconsistency so far, but City’s own slump in form provides some encouragement for Postecoglou – who’s looking to galvanise a consistent run of form from his Lilywhites side.

“It’s always tough. You’re playing City at their place [and they have] got a pretty imposing record there,” said Postecoglou on Tottenham’s trip to Man City.

“Our four losses have been away from home. It’s always a great test, great challenge for us, for sure, to go there and disrupt things again and hopefully put some pressure on them. But we know it’s never an easy task.

Tottenham’s next five Premier League games

Date

Man City vs Tottenham

November 23

Tottenham vs Fulham

December 1

Bournemouth vs Tottenham

December 5

Tottenham vs Chelsea

December 8

Southampton vs Tottenham

December 15

“We’re definitely a better side than last year. [That is what] you are looking for first, to progress as a football team. Within that context, a lot of our players are also developing more but obviously the results haven’t reflected that which is a major part. You want to improve your standing within the game and our results haven’t reflected that. I’m still bullish and positive about our progress as a team. We’ve just got to push on now to get that consistency.”

As Postecoglou prepares his side for the trip to Eastlands, murmurs continue to surround left-back Sergio Reguilon and his immediate future at N17, with the Spaniard yet to play a single minute in all competitions this season.

Tottenham defender Sergio Reguilon.

The £120,000-per-week defender (MEN) has been selected in just one matchday squad this term as well, which came in their trip to Coventry City in the Carabao Cup, and there are suggestions that Reguilon could terminate his Tottenham contract before it expires next summer.

Sergio Reguilon's agents looking for new club away from Tottenham

According to Spanish media, Reguilon’s agents are looking to find him a new club away from Tottenham, and his departure seems “imminent” as the January window approaches.

Getafe are viewed as real candidates to sign the defender and give him a permanent new lease of life, with Reguilon spending the entirety of last season on loan spells at Man United and Brentford.

The 27-year-old’s return to La Liga is a serious possibility heading into 2025, but wherever the player ends up, Reguilon’s Tottenham career is well and truly behind him – despite originally being tipped to shine.

“I’ve been an admirer of Reguilon for some time,” said pundit Noel Whelan in 2021 to Football Insider.

“He really stamped his authority on the game and grabbed the winner to show what a quality player he is.”

سيميوني بعد الإقصاء: مواجهة باريس سان جيرمان كانت القاضية ولن أتوقف عند قرارات التحكيم

ودع فريق أتلتيكو مدريد دور المجموعات من بطولة كأس العالم للأندية، رغم تحقيقه الفوز على بوتافوجو، في لقاء لم يكن كافيًا للتأهل إلى دور الستة عشر.

المدير الفني دييجو بابلو سيميوني تحدث عقب المباراة لوسائل الإعلام، ونشرت صحيفة “آس” الإسبانية تصريحاته، وقد عبّر عن إحباطه من الخروج، مؤكدًا في الوقت ذاته رضاه عن أداء فريقه.

وتغلب أتلتيكو مدريد على بوتافوجو بهدف دون مقابل، وودع المسابقة من دور المجموعات رفقة سياتل ساوندرز، فيما تأهل الفريق البرازيلي مع باريس سان جيرمان الفرنسي.

اقرأ أيضًا | ترتيب مجموعة باريس سان جيرمان وأتلتيكو مدريد في كأس العالم للأندية

وقال سيميوني ردًا على سؤال حول شعوره بعد المباراة: “هناك إحباط، لأننا لم نتمكن من التأهل، تحقيق ست نقاط في المجموعة لم يكن سيئًا، لكن المباراة أمام باريس سان جيرمان قضت علينا (الهزيمة بالجولة الأولى)، كانت هي الحاسمة، وكل قرار فيها جاء ضدنا”.

وأضاف: “في مباراة اليوم كانت لدينا فرص للتقدم في النتيجة، ثم جاءت ركلة الجزاء التي أُلغيت بعد مراجعة لقطة سابقة لم تكن لها علاقة مباشرة، وهذا تكرار لنفس السيناريو الذي واجهناه، نحن هادئون، وندرك تمامًا ما نحتاج إلى تحسينه، وهذه التجربة ستساعدنا على ذلك”.

وعند سؤاله عن رأيه في المخالفة التي ارتكبها سورلوث والتي تسببت في إلغاء ركلة الجزاء، أجاب المدرب الأرجنتيني: “لن أتوقف كثيرًا عند هذه اللقطة، أود أن أهنئ الفريق الخصم، لقد قدم مباراة كبيرة، لعب بنزاهة وشجاعة، ودافع بالطريقة التي يجب أن تُدافع بها، وعندما تدافع جيدًا وتهاجم بنفس الكفاءة، فإن فرص الفوز تزداد”.

أما عن تقييمه العام للفريق رغم توديع البطولة، أكد سيميوني: “أنا فخور جدًا بما قدمه اللاعبون، لقد بذلنا كل ما لدينا بالكامل، فزنا في مباراتين من أصل ثلاث، ولكن للأسف هذا لم يكن كافيًا للتأهل”.

Chelsea looking at "massive" £58m signing who’d brilliantly rival Jackson

Chelsea have been searching for a reliable goalscorer since the departure of Diego Costa, spending hundreds of millions on strikers, including £97.5m on Romelu Lukaku, which didn’t turn out as planned.

The Blues’ record goalscorer is, of course, Frank Lampard, arriving late in the box from midfield, but also playing in a team that had the box dominance of Didier Drogba, dragging defenders away and opening lanes for the midfielder to score.

Frank Lampard

211

Bobby Tambling

177

Didier Drogba

164

Peter Osgood

139

Jimmy Greaves

131

Roy Bentley

119

Kerry Dixon

114

Eden Hazard

110

Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink

87

Tommy Baldwin

87

Of Chelsea’s top ten all-time scorers, eight of them have hit 100+ goals, but could the Blues have finally found their next 100+ goal man, with Nicolas Jackson?

Nicolas Jackson at Chelsea

Jackson joined Chelsea in the summer transfer window of 2023, joining from Villarreal for a fee of around £32m. Since his arrival, the 23-year-old has made 60 appearances for the Blues in all competitions, scoring 26 goals, providing nine assists, and totalling 4,755 minutes played.

Early in his Chelsea career, Jackson had some big misses that were heavily scrutinised, but his perseverance and quality have shone through as the striker is now proving many wrong with his overall impact, but also his goal tally.

Jackson is brilliant in all phases, dropping deep to link play, working hard for the team off the ball, and making runs in behind to cause problems for the opposition defenders.

However, one area the Senegal international doesn’t exactly specialise in is box dominance, bullying defenders and winning aerial duels to finish from crosses, which is one attribute the Blues are still lacking in their squad.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Chelsea looking at new striker

According to reports from TEAMtalk, Chelsea have asked for ‘fresh details’ on Dušan Vlahović’s situation, as they monitor a potential move for the Juventus forward. Arsenal also remain interested, according to the report, with Atlético Madrid another possible destination for the £58m-rated striker.

Former Juventus striker, Roberto Boninsegna, labelled Vlahovic as “massive” and “strong”, stating that he is a point of reference for the Italian giants. So far this season, the 24-year-old Serbian has scored 11 goals in 19 appearances, also providing two assists in his 1,560 minutes played.

So, the main two questions are, how would he fit into this Chelsea side and how does the Juve sensation compare to current no.9, Jackson?

Goals

0.57

0.69

Assists

0.16

0.23

xG

0.68

0.65

Progressive Carries

0.92

2.14

Progressive Passes

1.33

1.22

Shots Total

3.59

3.13

Key Passes

0.75

1.07

Shot-Creating Actions

1.97

2.67

Aerial Duels Won

1.33

0.61

Well, when you compare the metrics of Vlahovic against those of Jackson, it is clear what you get from both strikers. The latter likes to be involved in all phases, has better progressive carry numbers, more key passes per 90, more shot-creating actions, and overall has a wider skillset.

However, Vlahovic brings that box presence Chelsea are lacking, standing at 6 foot 3, winning 1.33 aerial duels per 90, and even adding extra shot volume, being an excellent striker of the ball.

By acquiring Vlahovic, therefore, Enzo Maresca would be able to deploy different strikers for different gameplans, having a mixture of attributes and weapons to utilise over the course of a season, and expanding his attacking arsenal just that little bit more.

Chelsea have unearthed an "elite talent" who's a £100m star in the making

The young Chelsea forward has potential to develop into a big player for the club.

ByDan Emery Dec 16, 2024

Chelsea must sell £40m flop who was dubbed one of Europe’s "most exciting"

da dobrowin: Since Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital took over at Chelsea, their transfer strategy has been heavily scrutinised in the media. However, in recent months, many have begun to change their tune, with things starting to gel for the Blues, the young investments beginning to fully show their quality, and the wage bill in a much healthier place.

da bet sport: One window that can still be heavily criticised though, is the first window under the new ownership, before any sporting directors were hired, and before the new recruitment strategy was in place. This saw Chelsea spend €300.75m (£249.2m) on eight permanent signings, all of whom joined on high wages.

Chelsea 2022/23 summer incomings

Player

Fee (£)

Wesley Fofana

£66.8m

Marc Cucurella

£54.3m

Raheem Sterling

£46.7m

Kalidou Koulibaly

£34.8m

Carney Chukwuemeka

£14.9m

Cesare Casadei

£12.3m

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang

£9.9m

Gabriel Slonina

£7.5m

According to Transfermarkt

Of these signings, Marc Cucurella is probably the one resounding success, with Wesley Fofana having immense ability, but being hampered by injuries, which makes his fee and wages look suspect in comparison to others in the squad.

However, one other player still at the club from this window, who hasn’t been given the opportunities required for him to show his true talent, could leave the club in January, and it may be the time for Chelsea to cash in, and part ways.

The Chelsea star who needs to be sold

Chelsea made the signing of Carney Chukwuemeka from Aston Villa during the 2022/23 summer transfer window, joining for a fee of around £20m. The excitement around the youngster was high at the time, with Boehly even stating:

However, the 21-year-old has struggled for consistent minutes since joining, suffering from multiple injury setbacks, and now finds himself out of favour under new manager, Enzo Maresca.

Chukwuemeka has made 32 appearances for the Blues since joining, scoring two goals, providing one assist, and totalling just 746 minutes.

It is now being reported by Ben Jacobs that Chukwuemeka will be available for a January exit, but the club will not consider a cut-price sale. A permanent transfer will reportedly cost interested parties the £40m release clause in the midfielder’s contract.

Chukwuemeka vs Dewsbury-Hall comparison

One man who many believe was an unnecessary summer signing in the 2024/25 window, who has taken the rotation minutes in Chukwuemeka’s position, is Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, who signed from Leicester for a fee of around £30m.

Since his arrival, Dewsbury-Hall has made 15 appearances for the Blues in all competitions, scoring two goals, providing one assist and totalling 857 minutes played. Chukwuemeka, on the other hand, has only managed five appearances this season, totalling 130 minutes played.

Chukwuemeka (23/24) vs Dewsbury-Hall (24/25) comparison

Stats (per 90 mins)

Chukwuemeka

Dewsbury-Hall

Goals

0.69

0.27

Assists

0.34

0.00

Progressive Carries

1.60

2.71

Progressive Passes

4.80

8.31

Shots Total

1.72

2.13

Key Passes

1.60

2.37

Shot-Creating Actions

3.60

5.76

Successful Take-Ons

0.80

1.36

Tackles + Interceptions

2.00

1.50

Stats taken from FBref

In the 2023/24 season, Chukwuemeka found himself getting these rotation minutes when he was fit, even starting multiple games at the start of the season under Mauricio Pochettino.

This showed the ability of Chukwuemeka, offering output with goals and assists, being combative, winning his duels (tackles + interceptions), and helping to progress play with his ability to carry and pass the ball.

Dewsbury-Hall’s metrics are slightly inflated, due to the majority of his minutes coming in the UEFA Conference League this season, against inferior opposition, allowing some of his metrics to appear extremely high, such as shot-creating actions (5.76) and progressive passes (8.31).

The key difference in the players is their wages relative to their role in the squad, with Chukwuemeka earning £100k-per-week, whilst Dewsbury-Hall earns just £80k-per-week, and doesn’t have the same track record with injuries as Chukwuemeka.

It’s for these reasons that Chelsea must move the young midfielder on.

The next Jackson: Chelsea make contact over "ice-cold" £202k-p/w star

The Chelsea target is similar to Jackson

1 ByJoe Nuttall Dec 28, 2024

Stirling available for Ireland's second Test in Sri Lanka

Two of the ODIs Ireland were supposed to play in Sri Lanka were replaced by a Test, allowing them to make the switch

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2023Paul Stirling will join Ireland’s Test squad in Sri Lanka, and be available for selection for the second Test.Stirling, who went back to Ireland from Bangladesh after the white-ball leg of the series, and will miss the one-off Test starting on April 4, has become available for Test cricket following alterations in Ireland’s schedule. Stirling explained to the last week that he had opted to sit out of Ireland’s Test commitments this year to give himself a chance to rest amid a “jam-packed” 2023 schedule, but left scope for his plans to “change or evolve” in the way they now have.Ireland’s tour to Sri Lanka initially consisted of a Test and two ODIs, but the hosts’ attempt to get more red-ball experience led to the two ODIs being replaced by an extra Test. Both the Tests will be played in Galle between April 16 and 28.

Ireland tour of Sri Lanka

1st Test – April 16-20, Galle
2nd Test – April 24-28, Galle

“Paul was originally set to join the squad in Sri Lanka for the ODI series that was originally planned. However, with those fixtures now converted to a Test match, and the scheduled Bangladesh T20I series in Ireland postponed, he will now have a greater focus on red-ball cricket and will join the Test squad for that second Test,” Andrew White, Cricket Ireland’s national men’s selector, said in a statement.Stirling, who has played all three Tests Ireland have played to date – all in 2018 and 2019 – is one of Ireland’s busiest cricketers, playing in various short-format franchise leagues around the world.Stirling’s presence will certainly add a lot of experience to Ireland’s line up. For the Dhaka Test against Bangladesh, their squad has nine uncapped players, of whom three have never played first-class cricket. There are also only four survivors from their last Test.

Jobe Bellingham in talks with Bundesliga giants! Midfielder could follow in brother Jude's footsteps with Germany switch as RB Leipzig open discussions over summer move

RB Leipzig have held initial talks with Jobe Bellingham as they are determined to sign the Sunderland star in the summer.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Bellingham could head to Germany in the summer
  • RB Leipzig held talks with the youngster
  • Bellingham's Sunderland contract expires in 2028
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Bellingham could follow in brother Jude's footsteps and move to Germany in the summer as he has reportedly held talks with Bundesliga side RB Leipzig, according to Sky Sports Germany's . Leipzig have accumulated all the information regarding the midfielder, who has a deal with Sunderland until 2028. The German side currently consider Bellingham's overall package to be too expensive, but they have also made it a priority to bring him to the Bundesliga ahead of the 2025-26 campaign, the report adds.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty/GOAL

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Other than RB Leipzig, another German giant, Borussia Dortmund, is also keen on signing the player. BVB believe they will be able to convince the youngster to join the club, where his elder brother Jude spent many memorable years before switching to Real Madrid in the summer of 2023.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The 19-year-old has impressed in the North East and looks set to move to a new club in the summer should the Black Cats miss out on promotion to the Premier League. English giants like Manchester United and Chelsea are also in the queue to secure the midfielder's signature.

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR JOBE BELLINGHAM?

    For now, Bellingham remains focused on the current campaign and will be next seen in action for Regis Le Bris' side on Saturday as they face Millwall in a crucial Championship fixture.

'The portrayal of me as a coach is wrong'

Six weeks since Peter Moores was sacked as England coach, he speaks for the first time about his second spell in charge, where things went wrong, and banishing the “data” myth

George Dobell22-Jun-20153:26

Dobell: Moores frustrated with treatment

“Frustration” is a word that crops up often in Peter Moores’ sentences at present.He is “frustrated” that he cannot finish the job he started in rebuilding the England team. He is frustrated that he will never lead England through an Ashes series. He is “frustrated” that history appears to have repeated itself. And he is, in his words, “doubly frustrated” that his portrayal in the media differs so markedly from reality.That portrayal stems, in part, from a radio interview conducted by the BBC moments after England’s World Cup exit. In it, Moores was alleged to have said that England would need to check the “data” before coming to any conclusions about the reasons for their failure.It came to be a defining moment in his downfall. It has been used to illustrate his perceived faults: an obsession with stats and a propensity to overanalyse. England’s talented young players, it was said, were stifled by such a policy.But it never happened. As was reported by ESPNcricinfo, Moores actually said “later” in that BBC interview. But his words were misheard – an honest and understandable mistake as there was a minor microphone malfunction during the interview – and while the BBC subsequently apologised to him (at first verbally and then in writing), the error was public and the apology was private. The damage, in terms of public perception, was done.The image of Moores as stats-driven has little basis in reality. So frustrated was Nathan Leamon, England’s analyst at the World Cup, by the lack of use of his statistics that it was briefly feared he may go home. Meanwhile Paul Farbrace, Moores’ faithful deputy and the man who has recently been portrayed as a liberator of the England team, has said repeatedly that the Sri Lanka team he coached to success in the 2014 World T20 used such data far more.”I don’t have regrets. I look back with quite a lot of pride”•Getty ImagesWhile it is true Moores used the word “data” during an excellent eight-minute interview on Sky (he said “we’ll have to analyse the data”) it was in response to several detailed questions and after an initial answer that started: “Now is not the time to be analysing.”It is Moores’ frustration – that word again – at such a characterisation that has prompted him to talk now. While he remained silent the first time he was sacked as England coach, declining lucrative invitations to give his side of the story, this time he has decided to speak in an attempt to correct at least a few of the misconceptions about his period as coach. He was not paid and the only item he would not discuss is how he was sacked.While Moores will not be drawn on it – he is simply not the sort to be dragged into mudslinging – ESPNcricinfo understands that he learned of his fate after his wife read about it on Twitter and phoned him. Whatever you think of him or Paul Downton (who learned of his fate a similar way), they deserved better than that. The ECB, to its credit, apologised in private and public.He does not comment, though. He hardly ever does. When he was sacked as England coach at the start of 2009, he said nothing. When England went to No. 1 in the Test rankings in 2011, largely with players he had selected, he said nothing. When Kevin Pietersen’s book came out, he said nothing. And each day he woke up and read another column from an ex-player – usually an ex-player he had dropped during his first spell as England coach – rubbishing his methods and caricaturing his personality, he said nothing.”I have to accept my time as England coach has gone,” Moores says. “It’s pretty hard to accept. But it’s done. The umpire’s finger is up. I have to look at where I go next.”But I am frustrated. The portrayal of me as a coach in the media is just wrong. If people said ‘I don’t rate you as a coach’ then fine. But when it’s not what you are, it’s really frustrating.”I don’t know how to change that. I’ve not spent my life trying to be really good with the media; I’ve spent it trying to make players better. I still passionately want to do that.”I have an official letter from the BBC. It’s a tough one, I didn’t say it. I know what I am as a coach. I’ve done it for a long time. I’ve been in the game for 33 years and I’ve coached for 17. I know the game. And what I’ve learned is, my job is to simplify the game for players and free them up to go and play.”We moved away from stats and data. Coaching doesn’t work like that at all. You watch a lot to say a little. It’s not a numbers game. We kept it simple. We tried to give the players responsibility to lead themselves.”There is a big support staff with England. And they’re all valuable. You need the security staff, the physio and the doctor. But there are times when you just want the 11 players and two coaches to watch the game and talk about it together. We were creating that environment. We were getting there.”

“In Test terms, we felt we had turned a corner. Would I have been sacked had we won in Barbados? You’ll have to ask the people who made the decision”

The “we were getting there” phrase is another recurring theme. Moores felt his England side were on the right track. While he accepts the World Cup was wretched, there was evidence in Test cricket, that they were making progress. At the time he was sacked, England – a side containing half-a-dozen young or inexperienced players – had won four and lost one of their last six Tests.Against relatively modest opposition that is perhaps decent rather than exceptional. But Moores did inherit an England side that had just been beaten 5-0 in the Ashes and was clearly in a transitional phase. It was always going to take time.”In Test terms, we felt we had turned a corner,” Moores says. “We were getting there. Would I have been sacked had we won in Barbados? You’ll have to ask the people who made the decision. I was aware that things were building but I wasn’t expecting it.”The frustration is not being able to carry something through. When I took the job, I knew we would go through this period of trial. And transition is difficult. You will lose sometimes.”The evolution, of a team, of a player, is that you’re going to be inconsistent. You’re going to lose. But in Tests we were moving and moving quite fast. You could see it happening. Young players were developing fast. And you know there is a timeframe for that.”I’m also confident in my ability to evolve teams to become very good teams. And, given time, I’ve always gone on to be successful. And you’re not trying to be successful for a short time, but for a long time.”So to not have time to finish the job with England… I thought we were getting there. I was genuinely excited when we got back from the Caribbean.”Moores denies any mixed emotions at watching England’s improved showing against New Zealand. But it has not gone unnoticed that, just as he built the side that Andy Flower went on to lead to such success (Flower, it should be noted, was always the first to praise Moores’ contribution), he will spend the next few years seeing some of those he selected this time flourish in international cricket.It was, after all, Moores that replaced the new-ball pair of Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard with James Anderson and Stuart Broad. He installed Graeme Swann as first-choice spinner and Matt Prior as wicketkeeper. He laid many of the foundations on which Flower built.This time, his commitment to Jos Buttler, Moeen Ali, Gary Ballance (originally selected by Flower), Joe Root (who had been dropped by the time Moores took over) and others could have similar long-term benefits.Moores brought new faces into the England side during both spells in charge•AFP”I didn’t go into the job to get the credit,” he says. “But yes, history probably has repeated itself a bit. I’d love it if England won the Ashes. I’m an England fan.”I’ve probably debuted more players than most England coaches. You hope when you introduce players that they’ll carry on in the long term. I think we picked some good players who will become good England players over time. They’ll go through ups and down.”I know I left a united group of people – players and coaches – with a clear vision of where we were going and working towards it. I don’t have regrets. I look back with quite a lot of pride.”It seems he was rated in his second spell as England coach, in part, by the mistakes he made in his first. Famously described as “the woodpecker” by Kevin Pietersen – an image that suggests a man forever tapping away at players and, as a result, preventing them from relaxing – Moores admits he made some mistakes the first time around.”I don’t think there was any truth in the woodpecker thing, no,” he says now. “But I do think the version of me as a coach now to the version that first coached England is a better version.”I evolved quite a lot as a coach, as a player would. It’s no different. This time I knew what I was going into. You understand the real challenges for players, as you’ve been there before.”I’ve reflected on that first time. We needed to change. And I look back and think, yes, in my enthusiasm, I pushed too hard. You should allow that to happen. I wanted them to be fitter and, yes, you can push too hard.”So I knew when I came in this time, there had been mistakes made. I wanted to allow captains to evolve themselves and create a place where the players felt supported.”Part of the skill of a coach is to disappear. You’re in the room but it’s as if you aren’t. You’re not making anyone nervous. Because if you need 40 to win in four overs, nobody wants a coach who is twitchy.”Look, I’ve made loads of mistakes as a coach. But you make fewer as you learn. That side of my coaching, I know, I’ve got better.”England’s performance – or lack of it – at the World Cup does not reflect well on anyone, though. While they went into the event talking an aggressive game, they played pretty timid cricket, with Moores’ selections – Ian Bell as opener and Gary Ballance at No. 3 – contrasting starkly with the approach in the recent ODI series against New Zealand.So does he accept that either the selections were flawed or he was unable to coax the best out of the players?

“This is the first summer for 33 years I’ve not been involved in the game in a professional way. But I’m a coach, it’s what I do. I love England and I love cricket”

“In terms of selection, we got to the final of the tri-series with Ian Bell playing very well. I think he made two centuries and we made 300 against Australia. And Moeen was playing with freedom.”We moved James Taylor down the order as we felt he was a good finisher and brought Gary in as he has a very good record in limited-overs cricket. He’s a very good player. Ravi Bopara was struggling a bit and not really getting a bowl. It all felt natural at the time and we tried to stay consistent in selection.”As to getting it out of them… great players don’t always play great cricket. It didn’t happen for them. Senior players didn’t grab the game by the scruff of neck. But you learn from failure and the reaction of those players who went through it is encouraging.”But yes, I felt hollow at the end of the tournament.”The one thing Moores will not ever do is blame the players. Never, in public or private, does he seek to do so. In fact, it is notable that, on or off the record, he does not criticise anyone. Not Andrew Strauss, not Kevin Pietersen (about whom he says, “he’s a funny mix. There are things I admire”) and not Colin Graves, who was in Barbados at the time of Moores’ last Test but didn’t find the time to tell his coach he was about to be sacked. His only gripe, really, is with his public image as a stats-driven, robotic coach and the interview that may have cemented that reputation.It is notable, too, that several of the players have made their support of Moores public. Joe Root, who called him “brilliant” and praised him as knowing “how to get the best out of me”, crediting Moores for his “drastic improvement”, was the most vocal but also far from atypical. Whoever Strauss consulted before making his decision, it certainly was not the England Test squad. Many of them remain in touch with him. “Once your coach, always your coach,” Moores says with a smile. “They know they can call me.”Joe’s words were appreciated. It was brave of him to say that at that time.”And yet, after two sackings and some treatment that can only be described as shoddy, Moores says he would still work for the ECB again. While he has not yet been approached for a role at Loughborough – an organisation that is about to have a radical overhaul – it remains highly probable that he will be. His eye for young talent, his record as a developer of that talent, and his ability to impart knowledge to other coaches, remain assets.”Yes, I’d work for the ECB again,” he says. “A role at Loughborough would be exciting. I love coaching and that would be working with the best players and coaches. Yes, it appeals.”Professional sport can be cruel. Or maybe ruthless is a better word. You know that when you go into it. You are immersed in it.”His fault, as much as it is one, was his inability to play the media or political game. His failure to understand that style is as important as substance when it comes to selling yourself to the public. His failure to understand the dark side of the organisation that had employed him.While a perception that he was closely aligned to an unattractive ECB regime – the regime of Downton and Giles Clarke that talked of people being “outside cricket” – no doubt hurt him, his main fault may well have been simply being a decent man in an increasingly indecent world. A man who thought that, if he worked hard, planned for the future and forged a strong relationship, it would be enough.And that’s the lasting impression of Moores. For whatever you think of his coaching – his international record is modest; his county and development record excellent – as a man, he has a dignity that is rare in professional sport.A sense of perspective, too. After England lost to India at Lord’s last summer, Moores was asked if he was at “rock bottom”. His reply – “who knows what rock bottom is, but it isn’t losing a cricket match” – sums him up better than anything else he said in his period at the helm. Even after his second sacking, he found a positive. “If feels as if I’ve got my wife and kids back,” he said.Following this interview, he went to see his son, Tom, a hard-hitting wicketkeeper-batsman, play for Nottinghamshire seconds against Warwickshire. The sacking has hurt, but he will cope. “A glass of wine helps,” he says.”I don’t put this on,” he says as the interview draws to a close. “I don’t know if it’s from my mum or what. But I am a calm person who can see the value of looking at people in their best light. It was such a slanging match last time. There were so many opinions. And so much of it was wrong. I didn’t want to get involved. It’s all so easy to do that. I’m not going down that route.”I’ve been offered book deals, but it’s not who I am. And if I did one, I would want it to be things I’ve learned and stories to help people get the best out of themselves and others. I have to be true to what I am. There’s not a lot of mileage in negativity, you know.”Of course it’s been tough. This is the first summer for 33 years I’ve not been involved in the game in a professional way. But I’m a coach. It’s what I do. I love England and I love cricket. The game doesn’t owe me anything. It’s been great fun working in it. And the hunger… it’s just starting to come back.”

Slot must axe 5/10 dud who’s "the biggest threat to Liverpool’s title push"

da roleta: For the first time in ten years, Manchester United scored two goals at Anfield. Could it be a defining moment in Liverpool’s title charge? Perhaps, but they’re still streets ahead of the pack.

da esoccer bet: The narrative heading into this match was that Ruben Amorim’s men didn’t stand a chance. Liverpool were going to rock up amid a snowy storm and dismantle their arch-rivals. That did not happen.

Instead, United delivered their best display of the Amorim era yet to deal Arne Slot’s side a mini blow in the title race following a 2-2 draw.

Cody Gakpo equalised following Lisandro Martinez’s thumping opener and when Mo Salah found the net from a penalty, it looked as though Liverpool would run away with it.

That was far from the case as Amad Diallo, the scorer of a late winner against Manchester City a few weeks ago popped up again in a big moment, scoring with just ten minutes remaining.

While Salah and Gakpo will get plaudits for their displays, not many others in red will have pleased the manager on Sunday.

Liverpool's worst performers against Man United

This was meant to be a breeze. It was a straightforward win. Oh, how we were wrong.

Man United were written off but to their credit were brilliant, notably causing all sorts of problems for Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back.

The England international has been linked with Real Madrid of late but as Roy Keane said on Sky Sports, this was a performance that more warranted a move to Tranmere Rovers.

Alexander-Arnold was caught out numerous times with Martinez’s goal coming from his side of the pitch.

Furthermore, the 26-year-old was dribbled past twice, failed to complete an accurate cross and also failed to win a single duel. Not ideal.

Curtis Jones was another who “really struggled” in the words of Gary Neville during commentary. Hauled off just after the hour mark he did so having failed to produce a key pass, have a shot or attempt a single dribble. The numbers didn’t make for good reading.

That said, there was another player, someone who could cost Liverpool the title if he continues playing like he has done this season.

Andy Robertson's performance in numbers

The Scot has been a brilliant servant to Liverpool, chiefly throughout the Jurgen Klopp era. He will go down as a Reds icon when he finally leaves and sadly, that must be soon.

Chalkboard

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

Should he stay any longer he may well damage his legacy at Anfield. He’s played 321 times for Liverpool but if they are serious about winning the league, they must ensure there aren’t too many games added to that tally.

The likes of Milos Kerkez and Antonee Robinson have both been linked and they would no doubt be an upgrade on the 30-year-old who is a shadow of his former self.

As European football expert Zach Lowy put it, he has become the “biggest threat to Liverpool’s title push” and he showed as much against United.

Robertson vs Man Utd

Minutes played

90

Touches

58

Accurate passes

36/42 (86%)

Key passes

2

Crosses

2/6

Long ball accuracy

0/4

Blocked shots

1

Clearances

0

Interceptions

3

Tackles

1

Duels won

1/4

Possession lost

11x

Stats via Sofascore.

Robertson lasted the full 90 minutes but in doing so, completed just two of his six crosses, won only one of his four duels and gave away the ball 11 times from 58 touches.

It was the Scotland international who didn’t get close enough or react fast enough to get out to Amad for the late equaliser and his woes compounded when he fed Ryan Gravenberch a horrible pass that bobbled out of play as Liverpool looked to mount a late charge for a winner.

Handed a 5/10 player rating by the Express’ Charlie Gordon, he picked out the “costly mistake” for his role in Amad’s goal as the defining moment of Robertson’s afternoon.

For so long the two full-backs have been incredibly trustworthy for Liverpool but this was a match to forget for the both of them. While Trent is likely to depart, Roberson must do too. A younger alternative is required.

Suarez repeat: La Liga giants want Liverpool star in next Trent disaster

Liverpool are battling to keep some of their prized players at Anfield this year.

ByAngus Sinclair Jan 3, 2025

Fakhar, bowlers maul Islamabad in PSL's heaviest defeat

In a performance that consolidates Qalandars’ credentials as the favourites to retain this title, United were swept aside by 119 runs

Danyal Rasool09-Mar-2023

Fakhar Zaman hits out during his innings•PCB

</bIf Lahore Qalandars' thrashing of Islamabad United the first time these sides met this season read like an aberration, Qalandars gave them another one, just for good measure. In an imperious performance that consolidates their credentials as the favourites to retain this title, United were swept aside with disdain in Rawalpindi by 119 runs. It is the heaviest defeat inflicted on any side in PSL history.Fakhar Zaman's 115 in the first innings set them up for an imposing total – 226 is the Qalandars' second-highest score. But after Quetta Gladiators chased down an even bigger score the previous night, a chase felt very realistic. This is where Qalandars' bowlers shone, running riot through Islamabad's storied batting line-up and skittling them out for 107. In the end, Fakhar's individual score was higher than Islamabad's collected final tally, another PSL first.After 240 hadn't proved enough for Peshawar Zalmi the previous night, Lahore's decision to bat first was intrepid, but showed the faith they place in their bowlers, even on a surface like this. The start was wobbly, though, with Abdullah Shafique squeezed down leg in the first over. Crucially, Asif Ali dropped Fakhar Zaman when he was on one, and even as early as that in the game, it was a sliding doors moment.After a tight couple of overs, Fakhar walloped Fazalhaq Farooqi for three boundaries, before plundering 16 in Faheem Ashraf's first over. Despite Kamran Ghulam struggling for rhythm at the other end, he only needed to keep turning the strike over, and Fakhar was happy to do the damage. By the end of the powerplay, Lahore were up to 65.But they knew they needed a huge score against a batting line-up like United's, and they kept going. Fakhar took apart Shadab Khan in a seminal moment of the contest, while Ghulam came to life against Mubasir Khan. And Fakhar continued the onslaught against the United captain in a passage of play where 49 runs came off 14 balls, and the run rate ballooned.Zaman Khan checks on Rahmanullah Gurbaz•PCB

United nailed the Qalandars down after Mohammad Wasim dismissed Ghulam, and briefly even threatened to keep the target around 200. But once Fakhar survived an extremely narrow lbw call – with HawkEye deeming a delivery crashing into the stumps to have pitched fractionally outside leg – he was rejuvenated once more. Alongside Sam Billings, he smashed Wasim for 20 runs in the 16th over, and thereafter United’s death bowling fell apart. He brought up the hundred in that over, and in a blizzard of boundaries Lahore helped themselves to 72 in the final five.The notion almost seems quaint now, but on a Pindi surface that has helped batters out to the extent it has this week, the game wasn’t over then. After seeing off Shaheen Afridi’s first over respectfully, the United machine began to whirr, taking 27 runs off the two following overs.It was Zaman Khan who broke the game open for the Qalandars with the wicket of Rahmanullah Gurbaz, who he’d tormented through the over, before finally putting him out of his misery with a short ball. A full delivery shaping away drew the curtain on Colin Munro’s innings, and from thereon it was the Rashid Khan show.Shadab Khan struck one six off him before the Afghan hit back, a top edge removing the United captain cheaply once more. The wickets were falling in clumps now; David Wiese soon got rid of Alex Hales as he miscued a slice right at the keeper. Islamabad United’s own keeper, and middle order talisman Azam Khan, was unavailable following a finger injury he’d picked up in the first innings. In this kind of form, those are big shoes to fill, with the lower middle order hopelessly ill-equipped for the task against bowling of this quality.That skill was crystallised in a glorious Rashid delivery to Mubasir Khan, drifting in around middle and whooshing past the outside edge to trim the outside of off stump. Faheem Ashraf was trapped dead in front, and by now an Islamabad mauling was inevitable. Rashid made it four wickets by cleaning up Asif Ali, and finishing with 4-21 on a surface every other batter had found to be a paradise.Haris Rauf wrapped up the game with the final two wickets in a chastening evening at home for Islamabad to seal a top-two spot for his side. Both of these sides will go through to the playoffs, but on current evidence, the gap between them is a chasm.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus