Liverpool can unearth Robertson 2.0 in Ramsay

Liverpool have been heavily linked with Calvin Ramsay ahead of the summer transfer window, and now a new update has emerged that may encourage the club to step up their pursuit.

What’s the latest?

According to Scottish news outlet The Scotsman, Serie A club Bologna are set to reignite their interest in Ramsay following a £4.8m bid falling through in January.

[snack-amp-story url=”https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/read-the-latest-liverpool-news-transfer-rumours-gossip-salah-gnabry-isak-romano” title= “Read the latest Liverpool news!”]

As per the report, the publication understands that the Italian club are set to return to negotiations for a second time this summer to secure Ramsay’s signature over Liverpool and Leeds United who are both named as potential suitors for the defender.

Andy Robertson 2.0

Andy Robertson was a major coup for Jurgen Klopp back when he signed him from newly relegated Hull City back in 2017 for £10m, and since then, he has gone on to be a Champions League, FA Cup, Carabao Cup and Premier League title winner over the last five seasons and Ramsay could be the second coming of the full-back.

Labelled an “unbelievable” player by sports journalist Ryan Taylor, the 18-year-old recently won the SPFL Young Player of the Year award after an impressive season for Aberdeen which has obviously caught the attention of the powers at Anfield.

The £6m ace who was tipped for a “massive future” by Brian Rice, has scored one goal and contributed three assists, creating three big chances, making 1.8 key passes and 1.3 clearances on average per game, whilst winning the majority of his duels (51%) combined in 24 league appearances this season, proving he is showing huge potential.

In total this term, he has racked up a supremely impressive nine assists so it’s easy to see why Klopp wants to add the full-back to his options.

There are many comparisons capable of being drawn between Robertson and Ramsey, with the Liverpool left-back winning the same SPFL Young Player of the Year award back in 2014 when he was at Dundee United and have both been discovered as upcoming talents during their time playing Scottish football.

In terms of similarities on the pitch, despite playing on opposite sides of the backline the pair offer similarities in their ability to not only offer consistent defensive performances but also pose a deadly attacking threat that can cause all sorts of problems for their opponents.

The youngster has even claimed that he looks up to the Liverpool star in an interview back in April (via The Scotsman):

“Andy Robertson at Liverpool and Tierney at Arsenal, they’ve all been brilliant and they’re players I look up to, especially as they are full-backs like me.”

With that being said, Liverpool should do everything they can to get the signing over the line as the player can not only learn a lot from the influence of Robertson but can also be a great back up for Trent Alexander-Arnold in the future when the side are competing for multiple trophies.

AND in other news: “Very soon”: Fabrizio Romano drops exciting Liverpool update, supporters will love it

'Best batsman I had the pleasure to play with' – Vaughan

The reactions on Twitter to Kevin Pietersen’s retirement

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Mar-2018Kevin Pietersen has called time on a legendary and, at times, controversial career. And, as you would expect, the tributes are coming in on social media

A timeline of the BCCI and Lodha Committee reforms case

The Supreme Court ruled in favour of implementing a majority of the Lodha proposals, setting in motion a major revamp of the way cricket is run in India

Nagraj Gollapudi29-Jun-2016On July 18, 2016, the Supreme Court passed its final order on the case involving the BCCI and its implementation of the Lodha Committee’s recommendations.The Court had appointed the committee in January 2015 to look into the functioning of the Indian board and suggest changes to its constitution.On January 4, 2016, RM Lodha, the former Chief Justice of India, unveiled the three-man committee’s recommendations, which shook the hierarchy of BCCI and its member associations. Consequently, the BCCI and various state associations approached the Supreme Court raising objections to the recommendations.The final order of the two-judge bench comprising TS Thakur, the Chief Justice of India, and Justice Ibrahim Kalifulla, signed off on most of the Lodha proposals, setting in motion a major revamp of the way cricket is run in India.The following is a summary of the case from the time the committee was appointed.Apr 14, 2015 – 82 questions for BCCIThe Lodha panel sends an 82-point questionnaire to the BCCI to understand how it functions and how it runs cricket in India.The questions were split into eight sections and covered an exhaustive set of topics from the role of the BCCI’s stakeholders to the board’s election processes, the basis and formation of its various committees, player welfare, conflict of interest and transparency in the IPL’s functioning.Jan 4, 2016 – Sweeping reforms unveiledThe Lodha committee recommends a complete overhaul of Indian cricket – from the very top down to the grassroots – affecting all its stakeholders.With special focus on BCCI’s governance and administrative structures, rather than its cricketing operations, the most important set of recommendations aims at transforming the board’s power structure. The committee recommends one-state-one-vote, suggests clear and stringent eligibility criteria for the board’s office bearers and sets limits on their tenure in office. Serving ministers and bureaucrats or those above 70 years of age are not allowed to hold positions on the board nor in their state associations.Setting up of a players’ associationTaking cognizance of the fact India are the only country to not have a players’ body, the Lodha committee recommends the formation of a players’ association.A four-member standing committee chaired by former union home secretary GK Pillai and comprising former India cricketers Mohinder Amarnath, Anil Kumble and Diana Edulji, is appointed to “identify and invite all eligible ex-cricketers to be members, to open bank accounts, receive funds from the BCCI, conduct the first elections for office bearers, communicate the names of BCCI player nominees to the board.”Jan 7, 2016 – BCCI takes the first steps to acknowledge Lodha reportThree days after the Lodha committee report became public, Anurag Thakur, BCCI secretary at the time, sends an e-mail to all state associations asking them to study the report, determine how it affects each of them individually and submit their findings to the board by January 31.Feb 4, 2016 – Supreme Court sets deadline for BCCIHaving noticed the BCCI and the state associations delaying their formal response to the Lodha committee recommendations, the Supreme Court sets March 3rd as the deadline for the board to make their stance clear one way or another. “If you have any difficulty in implementing it [the reforms] we will have the Lodha Committee implement it for you,” Justice Thakur tells the BCCI counsel, a view he repeated several times.Anurag Thakur and the BCCI had accepted some of the changes that were recommended, but were adamantly against others like the one-state-one-vote and an age cap on administrators•PTI Feb 5, 2016 – BCCI continues to drag its feetWithout spelling his exact reservations, Thakur says the board is justified in taking time to study the Lodha committee’s report.”We need to understand it is not a one-page report. It is a detailed report, which will have a lot of consequences on the working and the functioning of the BCCI. A committee has taken close to 12 months to come up with it. We are taking close to two months to discuss, debate, and after deliberations come to a consensus to implement that report.”When the report came, I wrote a letter to all the state associations to call their meetings. Many state associations have already held their managing committee or working committee meetings. They are going to have their special general meetings before the BCCI’s special general meeting in the third week of February. So I think it is a due process. We are not slow at all. We are not shying away. We are not looking at any escape route.”Two days later, the BCCI finally calls for an SGM to discuss the Lodha reportFeb 19, 2016 – BCCI points out ‘anomalies’ in Lodha reportMore questions than answers arise when BCCI responds to the Lodha report. Its members cite “anomalies and difficulties” in implementing the recommendations. Thakur is asked to file an affidavit to counter the Lodha report in the Supreme Court.Feb 22, 2016 – Mumbai Cricket Association approaches SCThe state associations prepare to fire salvos against the Lodha commmittee. Mumbai Cricket Association, one of the oldest members of the BCCI, files an intervention stating the one-state-one-vote recommendation hurts the MCA. Mar 2, 2016 – BCCI details reservations against Lodha reportTwo days before the Supreme Court deadline, the BCCI files its affidavit, stating it has implemented some of the recommendations – appointing an ombudsman, addressing the issue of conflict of interest and advertising for a chief executive officer, a chief financial officer and other top management positions – but also lists several it does not agree with – the one-state-one-vote rule, age cap of 70 years for an office-bearer or a board official, limits on an office bearer’s and restriction on advertisements during Tests and ODIs.Mar 3, 2016 – Court takes exception to BCCI viewsAlthough the Court says it will ask the Lodha committee to reconsider some of the suggestions, it does not take pleasantly to the BCCI’s continued reluctance to change.On Thakur saying he was not consulted before the recommendations were finalised, the bench asks: “It was international news that we had formed the Justice Lodha committee to suggest reforms in cricket. The whole world knew it. Now you come to us and say the recommendations were a bolt from the blue for you and you were not consulted… What were you doing? Waiting at the fence for a written invitation?”Responding to the BCCI counsel’s argument that a cap on advertisements during a match would “cripple” the board’s income, Justice Thakur asks: “Do you mean that your commerce should overtake the enjoyment of the game?”Apr 5, 2016 – Court slams BCCI’s method of disbursing fundsHaving asked the BCCI and its state associations for an audited account of their books over the last five years and finding disparities in the distribution of funds between members, the Court slams the Indian board. “You function like ‘show me the face; I will make the payment…’ [The] impression that one gets is that you are practically corrupting the persons by not demanding how the money is spent… [It’s] like the moment you want a vote and their hands will go up,” Justice Thakur says.The BCCI appointed Justice AP Shah as ombudsman in November 2015•Hindustan TimesApr 8, 2016 – ‘Are you refusing to be reformed?’When BCCI counsel KK Venugopal says the board is beyond the purview of the Supreme Court since it is a trust, Justice Thakur counters, “What we understand is that you are suggesting that ‘I am answerable to Registrar of Societies. I will be accountable only to Registrar of the Society. I will be amenable to criminal law but I will not reform. Don’t ask me to reform.'”Is it possible? What have you done? We have seen the allegations of match-fixing and betting. You have no control over these. But you give money in crores. The Lodha committee has said something. It has been said to make the functioning more transparent and visible and the effort is to reform the BCCI.”Apr 19, 2016 – Court rebuffs BCCI take on one-state-one-voteWhen counsel for Baroda Cricket Association says implementing the one-state-one-vote recommendation would lead to “enormous politics” within the board, the bench disagrees. “You are right. Seven votes will come to northeast where there is no cricket that we know [of]. But we don’t know the game of seven votes. Can you elaborate what the politics will be?”Apr 26, 2016 – BCCI ‘running a prohibitory regime’The Court continues to use stern language with regard to BCCI and its state associations. “You are running a prohibitory regime, which is spread across the country,” it says. “You have complete monopoly. If any cricket club or association wants to do anything, we are least bothered. We are not here to reform every cricketing club. But if any institution which is discharging public duty like BCCI, then any organisation or association associated with it will have to reform itself.”Apr 29, 2016 – Court firm on the age cap of 70 for administrators”Why do you want to hold on to the reign for such a long time? Even the Supreme Court judges retire at 65,” Thakur tells Arvind Datar, senior counsel for the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association (TNCA). “You have been given five more years. You had a president [the late Jagmohan Dalmiya] who could not speak, could not communicate. Those who elected him [in 2015] did not see whom they were electing? These days, even in politics people are retiring.”Saying the Lodha committee is competent and can perform the “surgery” to repair Indian cricket administration, the court tells the counsel for Odisha Cricket Association: “After a certain age they [people over 70] must retire and do something else. They cannot head a society managing sports.”May 2, 2016 – ‘State associations will have to fall in line with Lodha reforms’The Court makes it categorically clear that the BCCI and all of its state associations will have to implement the Lodha reforms.”Once the BCCI is reformed it will go down the line and all cricket associations will have to reform themselves if they want to associate with it. The committee constituted in the wake of match-fixing and spot-fixing allegations was a serious exercise and not a futile exercise,” the two-judge bench says in response to an intervention plea filed by the Haryana Cricket Association stating the Lodha Committee’s remit was to only recommend changes.May 3, 2016 – ‘BCCI constitution incapable of achieving transparency’The Court says the BCCI constitution is “highly incapable of achieving the values of transparency, objectivity and accountability [such] that without changing its structure it can’t be done so.”June 30, 2016 – SC decision on Lodha panel report likely in three weeksThe Supreme Court reserves its judgement in the case concerning implementation of the Lodha Committee recommendations by the BCCI. There is to be no further hearing in the case and the two-judge bench will submit the written judgement to the concerned parties before July 22.July 18, 2016 – SC accepts majority of the Lodha recommendationsThe Supreme Court rules in favour of implementing a majority of the Lodha Committee proposals, and gives the BCCI between four and six months to implement them. Lodha, the court says, will oversee the implementation process.July 20, 2016 – CAB, KSCA call off electionsThe Lodha Committee asks the BCCI to direct all state associations to put their annual elections on hold. Consequently, the Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) and the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) postpone their elections.The Lodha Committee had written to BCCI CEO Rahul Johri that only routine affairs could be handled at the AGM•Sajjad Hussain/AFPJuly 21, 2016 – Lodha Committee clarifies nine-year cap for state administratorsThe Lodha Committee makes it clear that office bearers, across the BCCI and state associations, who have completed nine years in the job cumulatively stand disqualified and cannot contest for another term.July 24, 2016 – Sharad Pawar announces he will step down as Mumbai Cricket Association presidentSharad Pawar becomes the first high-profile name to say he will step down as MCA president in accordance with the Lodha Committee recommendations.August 2, 2016 – BCCI appoints legal panel to liaise with Lodha CommitteeThe BCCI’s working committee approves a new legal panel as a “single point interface for the BCCI to interact with the Justice Lodha Committee” during the implementation of the report. Former Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju is appointed head the panel, which also includes BCCI’s counsel Abhinav Mukerjee.August 7, 2016 – Katju terms Supreme Court order “illegal”Five days into his new role, Justice Katju calls the July 18 order of Supreme Court “unconstitutional and illegal”. “There has been violation of principles of the [Indian] Constitution. Under our Constitution, we have legislature, executive and judiciary. There is broad separation of functions. It’s the legislature’s prerogative to make laws. If judiciary starts making laws, one is setting a dangerous precedent,” he says. The following day, the BCCI files a review petition in the Supreme Court against the July 18 order.August 9, 2016 – Lodha Committee issues first set of timelinesBCCI secretary Ajay Shirke meets the Lodha Committee and says the board will follow the timelines set by the Committee. He also states that the board has already begun implementing reforms. The deadline for the first phase is September 30.August 22, 2016 – BCCI announces AGM on September 21The BCCI announces it will conduct the annual general meeting on September 21. Lodha Committee says the AGM is “meaningless” unless the BCCI implements the recommendations.August 31, 2016 – Lodha Committee amends IPL Governing Council recommendationThe Lodha Committee withdraws its recommendation to have nominees of two franchises sit on the IPL Governing Council on a rotational basis. The BCCI had earlier pointed out that this move could lead to conflict of interest, which the Court said was “evident”.September 1, 2016 – Final set of deadlines for the BCCIThe Lodha Committee issues a second set of guidelines. The BCCI is directed to hold elections for the Apex Council – to replace the board’s highest-decision making body, the working committee – and conduct its AGM by December 15. The BCCI also has to form a fresh IPL governing council by December 30.September 12, 2016 – ICC refuses to get involved in BCCI-Lodha tussleICC’s chief executive David Richardson says that BCCI president Anurag Thakur had asked the global body to send a letter, asking the world governing body to clarify whether the reforms of the Lodha Committee did not amount to government interference in the running of the Indian board. However ICC chairman Shashank Manohar asks BCCI to “formally” send the request in writing.September 21, 2016 – BCCI defies Lodha Committee, pickes 5-member selection panelThe BCCI conducts its AGM and defies one part of the Lodha Committee’s order by picking a five-member selection pane for the men’s, women’s and junior teams as opposed to a three-member panel recommended by the Committee.September 28, 2016 – Lodha Committee asks Supreme Court to ‘supersede’ BCCI top brass, Court warns the boardThe Lodha Committee’s status report to the Supreme Court says that the BCCI has created “serious impediments” in the implementation of reforms and recommends that all existing office-bearers of the board be replaced by a caretaker panel of administrators.Chief Justice of India TS Thakur warns the board to implement the recommendations. “BCCI thinks it is law unto itself. We know how to get our orders implemented. BCCI thinks it is the lord. You better fall in line or we will make you fall in line,” Thakur says, giving the board a week to respond.The BCCI files a new application, pleading for the Court’s July 18 order to be suspended until the Court hears the board’s review and curative petitions against the mandatory implementation of most of the recommendations.September 30, 2016 – BCCI misses first Lodha deadlineThe BCCI misses the first deadline of September 30, and fails to adopt the Memorandum of Association and Rules and Regulations at its SGM, which would trigger the implementation of the Lodha recommendations. Meanwhile two full members of the board, the Tripura Cricket Association and the Vidarbha Cricket Association, unanimously adopt the reforms. The board SGM is pushed to October 1.October 1, 2016 – BCCI cherry-picks Lodha recommendationsAt the SGM, the BCCI agrees to implement important recommendations, but key reforms – the age restriction of 70 years for board officials, the tenure cap of nine years with cooling-off periods, and the one-state-one-vote policy, among others – are missing from the list.October 3, 2016 – Lodha Committee asks banks to halt two BCCI transactionsThe Lodha Committee asks two Indian banks – Yes Bank and Bank of Maharashtra – not to disburse funds from the BCCI accounts to the state associations with regard to two financial decisions taken at the board’s emergent working committee meeting on September 30.October 6, 2016 – BCCI given a day to fall in lineThe Supreme Court asks the BCCI to submit an undertaking that it will “unconditionally” implement all the court-approved recommendations of the Lodha Committee by October 7. The court indicates that if the board fails to do so, its office bearers could be replaced with a panel of administrators.October 7, 2016 – Defiant state associations face funding cutsIn an interim order, the Supreme Court says no further money should be given to state associations unless they pass a resolution to implement the Lodha committee’s recommendations.The interim order stated BCCI had adopted an “an obstructionist and at times a defiant attitude which the Committee has taken note of and described as an impediment undermining not only the Committee but even the dignity of this Court with several statements and actions which according to the Committee are grossly out of order and may even constitute contempt.”BCCI president Anurag Thakur is also asked by the court to submit a personal affidavit clarifying whether he had sought ICC intervention against implementation of the Lodha Committee’s recommendations.October 15, 2016 – BCCI opposition continuesAt an emergency meeting in Delhi, the board and its members cited “practical difficulties” in implementing the Lodha Committee’s recommendations. It is learnt that neither the BCCI nor its state associations could pass a resolution without a two-third majority.October 17, 2016 – Court reserves order on Lodha Committee status reportThe Supreme Court reserves its order on the Lodha Committee’s status report, which recommended the BCCI office bearers be “superseded” and a panel of administrators appointed to implement the court-approved recommendations. The court calls such a measure “extreme” but does not relent to the BCCI’s request for more time.Anurag Thakur files an affidavit denying he had sought a letter from the ICC saying the Lodha Committee’s recommendations were “tantamount” to government interference in the working of the board.October 18, 2016 – Supreme Court adjourns review petition hearingThe Supreme Court adjourns the hearing of the review petition filed by the BCCI in August challenging the July 18 order that approved the recommendations of the Lodha Committee.October 21, 2016 – Supreme Court limits BCCI’s financial freedomThe Supreme Court passes an order that limits the BCCI’s financial freedom and power until the board and its state associations comply with the Lodha Committee’s recommendations; it directs the BCCI not to distribute funds to its state associations until they submit affidavits stating compliance with the recommendations to the court and the Lodha Committee. It also asks BCCI president Anurag Thakur and secretary Ajay Shirke to meet the Lodha Committee before November 3.November 21, 2016 – Lodha Committee seeks SC nod to remove BCCI office bearersThe Lodha Committee proposes to the Supreme Court that all existing office bearers of the BCCI as well as the state associations who do not satisfy the approved criteria be “disqualified” with immediate effect.December 2, 2016 – BCCI continues to oppose certain reformsNotwithstanding the strong missive sent by the Lodha Committee to the Supreme Court asking it to disqualify all ineligible office bearers with immediate effect, the BCCI and its members reiterate, in a Special General Meeting, that they continue to oppose some of the committee’s recommendations.December 15, 2016 – Anurag Thakur faces possibility of perjury chargeThe Supreme Court of India says there is, on first impression, a charge of perjury that can be laid against BCCI president Anurag Thakur and the board’s general manager of game development Ratnakar Shetty for lying under oath.January 2, 2017 – Supreme Court removes Thakur, Shirke from top BCCI postsBCCI president Anurag Thakur and secretary Ajay Shirke are removed from their posts by the Supreme Court of India at a hearing in Delhi. The court says a committee of administrators would be appointed on January 19 to oversee the business operations of the BCCI. That committee will be finalised by the pair of amicus curiae Gopal Subramanium and Fali S Nariman.January 30, 2017 – Supreme Court names administrators to supervise BCCIThe Supreme Court appoints four eminent personalities from varying backgrounds to oversee the running of the BCCI until the board can hold fresh elections for office bearers as per the Lodha Committee’s recommendations. The panel consists of Ramachandra Guha, the historian and cricket writer, Diana Edulji, the former India women’s captain, Vinod Rai, the former Comptroller and Auditor General of India, and Vikram Lamaye, CEO and managing director of IDFC (Infrastructure Development Finance Corporation).

Young, confident and hard to ignore

Shreyas Iyer has opened the innings in nine of the ten games so far and is the only uncapped batsman in the 300-run club this season

Amol Karhadkar06-May-2015″Be so good that no one can ignore you!!”Shreyas Iyer is living up to his WhatsApp status quite literally. The 20-year-old has followed an impressive maiden first-class season with an even more notable debut in the Indian Premier League.The Delhi Daredevils batsman has opened the innings in nine of the ten games so far and is the only uncapped batsman in the 300-run club this season. He sits in the company of some of the established names in world cricket. The achievement is the first tick in the box for Iyer.”At the start of the IPL, I had set a target that I should reach at least 300 runs. Now that I have reached there, with four more matches in hand, I would love to add a few more. Next target is 400 now,” Iyer says in a chat with ESPNcricinfo.In his first ten games of the IPL, Iyer has faced some of the most fearsome pace bowlers. Barring the two Mitchells, Johnson and Starc, from Australia, he has dealt with the likes of Morne Morkel, Dale Steyn, Trent Boult and Lasith Malinga quite well. It reflects in the fact that two of his fifties this IPL have been scored against Sunrisers Hyderabad and Mumbai Indians.Asked which was the toughest over or spell he has faced so far, Iyer responded with a straight face. “I don’t remember any over which was tough for me.” He isn’t joking. Prod him further about the most challenging bowler he has faced and the batsman thinks for almost half a minute. Then comes the answer.”If I have to pick one, I would say it was Sandeep Sharma. He swings it both ways so you need to take some time to settle,” Iyer says, referring to the over that he faced against Kings XI Punjab early on in the season.Iyer’s highest score – 83 – came against against Mumbai Indians, where he dealt with Malinga cautiously but went after Harbhajan Singh’s offspin. Iyer stressed that he had little problems while picking the ball coming off Malinga’s slinging action.”We all know he is a really good bowler,” he says. “I visualised before the game. I have heard that he becomes difficult to bat against because of his round-arm action, but it wasn’t difficult for me to pick him. The only thing is that he bowls a good slower one, that’s the only problem I faced. Picking his release point wasn’t a big problem for me.”Mention Steyn to him and the confident eyes light up. “I had always dreamt of facing Steyn. It was a dream come true and I really enjoyed the way I played him. Steyn is the fastest bowler I have faced so far,” he says.Iyer hasn’t faced Mitchell Johnson as yet. He was dismissed before Johnson came on to bowl in the first game while the bowler didn’t feature in the return leg when Iyer scored his third fifty of the season.The only time Iyer faltered against pace and swing was against Royal Challengers Bangalore when he was trapped in front off first ball he faced from Mitchell Starc. Iyer maintains he was unfortunate to have been adjudged lbw. “That wasn’t out. It was going down the leg. He was quick, had some swing in the ball but I was not out,” he says.Despite having overcome most of the bowlers he has faced so far, Iyer’s real challenge has been against himself. “IPL is a mental game. No matter how your technique is, it all boils down to how strong mentally you are. If you are tough mentally, the result will go your way,” Iyer says.He cites an example at the start of the season. In his debut IPL game, against Chennai Super Kings, playing in front of a huge crowed, he admits the occasion got to him. Not once before that day at Chepauk had he played in front of “a stand full of spectators, at the most”.”There wasn’t much pressure on me but I was really nervous playing in front of such an arena, in front of so many people. I was so nervous in Chennai, didn’t really know how to approach the game,” Iyer admits.But before the next game against Rajasthan Royals, he figured out a plan that has helped him since then. Once Daredevils coach Gary Kirsten “walked up to” him “after the first game” and asked him if was willing to open the innings, Iyer decided to give himself some time at the start of the innings. To get used to the conditions and to settle nerves.”I realised it’s nothing big. You just have to play your natural game, stick to the basics. I realised even if I play some dot balls initially, I can make up for it later. I had a slow start against Royals and then I recovered well,” he says.His 30-ball 40 gave him the confidence that he belonged at the highest stage. Since then, he hasn’t looked back, emerging as Daredevils’ batting mainstay along with captain JP Duminy.In the first month of the IPL, Iyer has been able to analyse his game better and has zeroed in on the improvements needed in his batting. “I get fours easily but I play a lot of dot balls. Instead of those dot balls if I could get some singles it would be great for the team and for me too. So that’s the biggest task for me at the moment, playing with soft hands,” he says.Iyer admits that besides the presence of his coach Pravin Amre in the Delhi Daredevils dugout, he has been making the most of the opportunity to interact with the seasoned international cricketers. While he hasn’t been able to pick brains of those from other teams, he has been learning tricks of the trade from seniors including Duminy, Zaheer Khan and Yuvraj Singh.Duminy sits next to him on Daredevils’ bus rides, while Yuvraj and Zaheer have been available whenever he wishes to discuss anything with them. “Zaheer is really good in giving tips. He knows how a bowler’s mind plays, so before every game I approach him how this guy will bowl at me and he advises me. Good to learn from them,” Iyer says.

India's worst batting venue

The Wankhede Stadium has been India’s most result-oriented Test venue, but in the last 13 years it hasn’t been kind to the home batsmen

S Rajesh12-Nov-2013Sachin Tendulkar’s last Test will be played at a venue which has been a wretched one for Indian batsmen over the last 13 years and more. Since the beginning of 2000, India have a 2-4 win-loss record from seven Tests at the Wankhede Stadium, the worst among all home venues where they’ve played at least five Tests. In these matches, the batsmen have averaged 24 runs per wicket, easily the lowest among all Indian grounds: at no other ground is the average less than 35.Four times in these seven Tests, India have been bowled out for less than 300 in their first innings, and their average in the first innings is 29.71 runs per wicket. Last year against England, India scored 327 and still ended up losing by ten wickets, because England replied with 413 and then bowled India out for only 142.In fact, India’ second innings at the Wankhede has been much worse than their first: their last six such innings read as follows – 142, 242 for 9, 100, 205, 219 and 113. The average runs per dismissal in the second innings: 17.30. The only time they didn’t have to bat a second time during this period, though, was against West Indies in 2002, when they scored 457 and won by an innings and 112 runs. Their last Test here against West Indies, in 2011, was much tighter, though: India, chasing 243 for victory, finished on 242 for 9, a run away from victory and a wicket away from a tie.During this period, only four centuries have been scored by Indian batsmen at this venue: 147 by Virender Sehwag and 100 not out by Rahul Dravid against West Indies in 2002, 103 by R Ashwin against the same opponents in 2011, and 135 by Cheteshwar Pujara against England last year. That’s an average of 0.57 centuries per Test by an Indian batsman.In contrast, the average runs per wicket in Kolkata, the venue for the first Test, is 51.62 runs per wicket, with 18 centuries in nine Tests – an average of two per game.

India’s Test results at home venues since 2000 (Min 5 Tests)

VenueTestsWon/ lostRatioBat aveBowl aveDelhi76/ 0-42.6327.86Mohali85/ 0-44.5832.88Chennai74/ 0-40.6033.40Kolkata96/ 16.0051.6232.72Ahmedabad72/ 12.0042.5240.22Bangalore82/ 30.6735.8840.41Mumbai72/ 40.5023.9927.26Tendulkar has scored one Test century in 18 innings at this ground, but that came way back in 1997, when he scored 148 against Sri Lanka. He has come close on a couple of other occasions, scoring 97 against South Africa in 2000 and 94 against West Indies in 2011 – when he was searching for his 100th international hundred – but the landmark has eluded him for his last 14 Test innings at the Wankhede Stadium.In fact, his Test career at his home venue can be neatly divided into two compartments of five Tests each. Till 2001, Tendulkar was prolific here, scoring 604 runs in nine innings, including six scores of 50 or more. Since then, runs at his home ground have been far tougher for Tendulkar: in his last five Tests he has scored 243 runs at 27, with only two fifties. In his most recent Test here, against England last year, he scored a total of 16 in two innings, his lowest aggregate from a Test at the Wankhede.

Tendulkar’s Test career at the Wankhede Stadium

PeriodTestsInningsRunsAverage100s/ 50sFirst 5 Tests (Till 2001)5960467.111/ 5Last five Tests (2002 onwards)5924327.000/ 2Total101884747.051/ 7One of the milestones that Tendulkar hasn’t achieved in his career so far is scoring 1000 Test runs at a venue: his highest is 970, at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai, at an average of 88.18. Before the start of the Kolkata Test, Tendulkar had an aggregate of 862 there, but he added only ten runs to that tally. In Mumbai, Tendulkar will need 153 runs to touch 1000 runs at the ground; in the ten Tests he has played here, only once has be aggregated so many in a match.As it stands, Tendulkar’s 847 is the second-highest Test aggregate at the Wankhede Stadium, next only to Sunil Gavaskar’s 1122 runs from 11 Tests at an average of 56.10. However, while Gavaskar managed five hundreds in 11 Tests, Tendulkar has only one so far.

Batsmen with the most Test runs at Wankhede Stadium

BatsmanTestsRunsAverage100s/ 50sSunil Gavaskar11112256.105/ 3Sachin Tendulkar1084747.051/ 7Dilip Vengsarkar1063148.532/ 2Rahul Dravid761956.271/ 4Syed Kirmani947747.702/ 1Ravi Shastri645757.122/ 1While this ground hasn’t been a favourable one for India over the last decade and more, it hasn’t been a favourite for West Indies either: in seven Tests they’ve won only once, and that was way back in 1975. In their last three Tests they’ve lost twice – in 1994 and 2002 – and were close to defeat in 2011 as well (though they had a chance to win that one as well).India’s most result-friendly groundAmong Indian venues which have hosted at least five Tests, the draw percentage at the Wankhede Stadium is the least: only seven out of 16 Tests haven’t had a decisive result (30%); the next-lowest, among current grounds, is the MA Chidambaram Stadium with 35% draws. Since 2000, only one out of seven Tests have been drawn, and even that match was potentially one ball away from a result, as India finished on 242 for 9 chasing 243 for victory. (Click here for a full list of draw percentages in Indian grounds.)In these last seven Tests, the Wankhede pitch has been at its best in the first innings of the Test – as is the norm at most grounds – but even there the average scores haven’t been too high. The average runs per wicket in the first innings is only 33.02 (which translates into a team score of 330); it’s 29.41 in the second innings, 17.02 in the third and 20.11 in the fourth.The conditions at Wankhede have generally helped both fast bowlers and spinners: in the seven Tests since 2000, pace bowlers have conceded 27.87 runs per wicket, compared to the spinners’ average of 24.06. However, in the two Tests – against West Indies and England – since the pitch was relaid, fast bowlers have taken only 15 wickets at 52.60, compared with 52 wickets by the spinners at an average of 29.63. In the most recent Test here, against England last year, spinners accounted for 28 out of 29 wickets that fell to bowlers in the match. Given the composition of the bowling attacks in this match, though, it’s highly unlikely spinners will dominate to the same extent over the next five days.

'Amateurism endures, and mightily'

Gideon Haigh’s speech at the Bradman Oration in Melbourne, during which he spoke about the the importance and pleasures of club cricket, and the impact it has had on Australia as a country

Gideon Haigh24-Oct-2012I need hardly say what an honour it is to deliver the tenth Bradman Oration. I won’t say it’s daunting. That would be unfaithful to the spirit of perhaps the most dauntless cricketer who ever lived. But it is a privilege and an onerous one.Last year, Rahul Dravid delivered perhaps the best and certainly the most-watched of all Bradman Orations, a superbly crafted double-century of a speech on which, I remember thinking at time, it would be hard to improve.Now I find myself coming in after Rahul, a job so huge that India has traditionally left it to Sachin Tendulkar. By that marker, I can really only disappoint. All I have in common with the Little Master is that we are both grimly staving off retirement – although, of course, the potential end of Tendulkar’s career is a matter of moment to 1.2 billion Indians, while the potential end of mine concerns only my wife who would then need to find something for me to do around the house at weekends.I’m a cricketer. The game is the longest continuous extrafamilial thread in my life, and I’m attached to it as tightly as ever. I started pre-season training in April. I own a cat called Trumper. And while it’s hardly uncommon to have a cricket bat in the house, not everyone can claim to have one in the kitchen, one in the living room, one in the bedroom and one in the outside dunny.I represented my first club, the St James Presbyterian under-12Bs in Geelong, when I was 9; I played my first game at the mighty Yarras in 1993, and I’ll play my next one this weekend. The rest of my life has been contoured accordingly. I married my wife during a Christmas break; we became parents during the next Christmas break; on neither occasion did I miss a training [session], let alone a game. We delayed our honeymoon until it was a bit more convenient. Until an Ashes series in England, anyway. certainly thought it was convenient.They do say that the first step to dealing with addiction is admitting you have a problem. Okay, here’s my problem. I’m no bloody good. Oh, I’m not terrible. But, I mean, you can be terrible in a hilarious and companionable kind of way. Me, I’m just mediocre in a hanging-on-for-dear-life-oh-God-let-it-end-soon kind of way, one of those park cricketers who answers to the designation ‘allrounder’ because I basically do nothing very well, everything equally badly.The ineptitude, moreover, is now exacerbated by physical decrepitude. I don’t even need to playing now to be reminded of my age. This was brought home to me a few years ago when the Yarras were joined by a gangling youth, [by the] name of James Harris. Following my time-honoured philosophy that the lamest and most obvious nickname usually has the best chance of sticking, I naturally dubbed him Rolf – which I quickly regretted, as a look of incomprehension crossed his face.Anyway, I’m hanging in there. Sir Donald’s contemporary Ernie McCormick once said that the moment to retire came when you took off one boot, then the other 15 minutes later. I’m stable at around about 10 minutes.And, you know, lack of ability can add something to one’s cricket experience. When Michael Clarke hits one through the covers, he’s simply doing what he and everyone else expects; me, I’m getting a pleasant surprise. The top level player inhabits a world of pitiless absolutes; for me, and the likes of me – for we are legion – we’re in the realm of the relative, where ‘not-so-bad’ is good enough.That’s particularly so because of what I might call the compensatory pleasures. A few seasons ago, I broke the Yarras’ games record – a triumph of availability over ability if ever there was. On doing so, I was forwarded a spreadsheet of all the guys I’d played with in that time: about 400 of them. A few brought back no memories at all – that’s another function of getting older. But so, so many brought back happy memories, of shared struggles, shared gags, moments of joy, of disappointment, of relief, of redemption. There were a couple of d**kheads in there too – no club is without them, I dare say. But the proportion I’ve encountered at the Yarras has been vanishingly small.And, well, as we also know, that a club d**khead might be a d**khead, but he’s your d**khead. I’ve always liked a remark by Freddie Jakeman, who played for Nottinghamshire in the 1950s. He said: “Out of every hundred cricketers there’s probably two sh*ts. And if the 98 of us can’t look after those two, we’re a poor bunch.”I’m sure you understand what I mean. The club. We all have one. We might not see it much any more. But it’s like a first love – never forgotten.As a junior cricketer, I always took for granted that there would always be a game for me. As a senior, the most rewarding parts of cricket have been keeping the show going at a club that’s mainly had moths in its trophy cabinet and IOUs in its till.For grassroots cricket in the twenteens, I can tell you, is as precarious as it ever was. It’s not so long since we had a $3500 utilities bill turn up when we had $50 in the bank. Could we, wondered the president, become the first club to operate without electricity? Really, added the treasurer, the most profitable option would be to play no games at all, and simply to hold barbecues. The secretary rather liked the sound of this, having himself been unanimously elected at the annual meeting while on his honeymoon in Bali, and still to evolve an exit strategy. Alas for him anyway, we dug deep and found a way, which you tend to over time.Clubs are dependent on the goodwill of sponsors, who ask for little, offer much, and deserve whatever exposure you can give them. And I think everyone gains from knowing that the friendly staff at the Windsor Community Bank can assist with all your financial needs, that the calamari at the Union Hotel is delicious, that Lachlan Fisher at Fisher Cricket Bat and Willow is a prince among men … and that FlosFlorum is not only tops for flowers but lent us their van so we could retrieve our new bowling mats. Of course I may be wrong about that, but when you’re personally in charge of your club’s sponsorships you have to be a bit shameless, don’t you think?Clubs are likewise dependent on the good offices of their local council. Sometimes these remind me of an old gag. How many council recreation officers does it take to change a lightbulb? Answer: none because it’s no longer their job to change lightbulbs; there’s an independent contractor for that, but his tender was so low that you’ll get a candle only if you ask nicely. Actually that’s not an old gag – I made it up. But it sounds like it resonates with a few people.Mainly, of course, they’re dependent on people, and it’s often where you find those people at their best, because they are putting others’ interests first, and giving the gift of time, in which we generally these days feel so poor.I find the generosity of people towards their fellow man and woman through the medium of cricket deeply moving, and motivating. Behind the apparently ordinary individuals who volunteer their aid to the cause of sport, furthermore, unsuspected gifts can also lie.I like that story that Tony Greig tells about arriving in Adelaide for the Rest of the World tour in 1971, and being met at the airport by this dowdy, bespectacled old chap whom he took as some local association gofer there to carry his bag. When they had a bit of a chat, the old codger seemed to know a thing or two about the game. (South African accent) ‘Play some cricket, did you, old man?’ Greigy asked. (Reedy voice) “Oh, y’know, a bit,” said the old bloke. Just then Garry Sobers arrived and headed straight towards Greigy’s companion. “Hello Sir Donald,” he said.Sir Donald’s epic career, in fact, was bookended by administrative roles. Some of you will know that his first job at Bowral Cricket Club was as the first team scorer; I dare say that his books added up too. He was picked for his first game as a 12-year-old, in the time-honoured tradition, when the XI was a man short.When Sir Donald’s playing day was done, the master of the game became its foremost servant. While everyone revels in 6996 and 99.94 – and we were never going to get through the evening without an invocation of those totemic numbers – a stat love is that he also attended, for nothing, 1713 meetings of the South Australian Cricket Association. I also love the fact that someone bothered to make that into a stat.We inhabit a modern world in which vast and minute attention falls on a very thin layer of highly paid, wildly promoted and hugely glamourised elite athletes who regard the attribute of ‘professionalism’ as the highest praise. I mean, wants to be a professional nowadays: to do a professional job, to obtain professional standards, to produce work of professional quality, to exhibit professional pride. The porn star Randy Spears has explained that he manages to work up some lust for 30% of the women he has sex with in X-rated movies; the rest of the time, he is “just being a professional”.Yet even now, amateurism endures, and mightily. About a quarter of Australians participate in a sport organised by a club, association or other organisation each year. What proportion are paid for it, do you think? Probably closer to 0.1% than 1%.Club cricket remains our game’s biggest participation sector, with 3820 clubs in 570 associations enumerated at the most recent cricket census. And I suspect there’s something about battling through and totally ar*eing everything, just scraping teams together and barely making books balance, that becomes part of the pageant. You’re aiming to keep petrol in the roller, beer in the fridge and change in the till. But you’re maintaining a preparedness to laugh when, due to a breakdown in communication, it ends up that there’s change in the fridge, the till’s full of petrol and the roller’s full of beer.We like our clubs to be successful, of course, but maybe not so successful that they become big, rich, complex, impersonal. That might become a little too much like everyday life – from which, when we take the cricket field on the weekend, we are usually seeking some distance. There’s an interesting contrast, I fancy, between those groups we form ourselves, for our own enjoyment and beneficiation, and those formed for us, for maximum economic efficiency. The modern corporate world has developed to a fine art the act of building empires of strangers. For our own parts, we seem to prefer environments where it remains possible to know everyone’s name, where we’re connected by the intangibles of friendship and mutual reciprocity rather than by the formality of titles, ranks, reporting lines and organisational matrices.I’d go further. This is something Australians have historically been good at. The theory and practice of forming cricket clubs is in our blood and in our history. Within two years of this city’s settlement, citizens had founded the Melbourne Cricket Club, dedicated by one of its founders to ‘men of all classes, the plebian mingling with the peer, in respectful feeling and good fellowship’ – a character which it’s arguable it has maintained … assuming you can wait 20 years to find out.Melbourne’s first significant rival was Brighton Cricket Club, still prospering, 170 years young. Tasmania’s oldest surviving clubs date from round the same time, South Australia’s oldest surviving clubs from about a century and a half ago. They are older, therefore, than a majority of Australia’s legislatures, an overwhelming number of our municipalities, and all but a tiny handful of our commercial enterprises.

This is something Australians have historically been good at. The theory and practice of forming cricket clubs is in our blood and in our history

The overwhelming proportion of clubs, of course, do not endure anywhere near so long. They rise and fall because of geography, demography, availability of participants, accessibility of organisers, facilities and funds. But the habits they instil are those that build communities: of giving and sharing, of volunteering and responding, of balancing interests, nurturing culture, respecting history and generally joining in common purpose. Grassroots cricket can even, I fancy, claim an influence on the foundation of the Australian commonwealth.Cricket has always taken a certain pride in having provided an inspiriting example to the inchoate nation, the idea of a unified Australian team pre-empting that of a unified Australia. But there’s more to this. When you focus on the political actors in the period around federation, it is striking how varied and how deep were their cricket connections.Four key figures in federation, George Reid, Edmund Barton, Charles Kingston and Thomas Playford, also served as at least vice-presidents of the cricket associations in their respective states. Whilst a 22-year-old assistant accountant in the colonial treasury, Reid was elected delegate to the New South Wales Cricket Association by the Warwick Cricket Club – the same club, incidentally, as Dave Gregory, Australia’s first captain.After nine years, Reid became association treasurer, and he continued serving as association president whilst he was the premier of New South Wales, resigning only in the year before he became prime minister. Reid was not himself a noted player although he might have made a handy sight screen, being roughly as wide as he was tall, and he certainly sledged like an Australian cricketer. Once while addressing an audience from a hotel balcony in Newcastle, he nonchalantly propped his belly on the balustrade. “What’ll you name it, George?” called a heckler. Reid replied: “If it’s all p**s and wind as I expect, I’ll name it after you, young feller.”Consult the NSW Cricket Association annual reports in Reid’s time, furthermore, and you’ll find three future premiers, James McGowen, Joseph Carruthers and John Storey, acting as delegates for their clubs, Redfern, University and Balmain respectively. Carruthers and Storey, interestingly, were born rivals: Carruthers a hot-shot lawyer and dyed-in-the-wool conservative, Storey a state-school-educated boilermaker and a self-described ‘evolutionary socialist’. What made them unlikely lifelong friends was representing the same parliamentary XI. As Carruthers wrote in his memoirs: ‘There were other men of different shades of political belief in the cricket team, and I can say of them as I say of Storey and myself, that the bitterness of party strife disappeared during contact with one another in the cricket field.”In this city, around the turn of the century, the presidents of the St Kilda, East Melbourne, Richmond and Prahran Cricket Clubs were respectively also Australia’s first treasurer (Sir George Turner), Melbourne’s first federal member (Sir Malcolm McEachern), and the local members for their suburbs (George Bennett and Donald Mackinnon). Again, cricket exerted a surprisingly broad appeal: Turner was a stolid bookkeeper, McEachern a bold entrepreneur, Bennett a radical Catholic from Banffshire who championed the eight-hour-day, Mackinnon a silver-haired Presbyterian educated in classics at Oxford, later to become both president of the Victorian Cricket Association and Australia’s wartime director-general of recruiting.Admittedly, the era’s foremost political figure, Alfred Deakin, professed no great love for cricket. But when he wanted to describe Australian politics in the era of its split between Labour, free traders and protectionists, Deakin deployed a famous cricket metaphor: it was, he said, like a cricket match featuring three XIs – an idea so outlandish that it has not even occurred to Mike McKenna yet.In Deakin’s ministry, meanwhile, was a Queenslander rejoicing in the name Colonel Justin Fox Greenlaw Foxton, who in cricket rose highest of all: he was simultaneously chairman of the Australian Board of Control and Grand Registrar of the United Grand Lodge of Queensland after nearly 30 years in local and federal politics.While researching this oration, I dug out press reports of the Athenian Cricket Club which Foxton helped to found in Ipswich in the 1860s when he was a teenaged articled clerk. There obviously wasn’t much happening in Queensland a hundred and fifty years ago, because Brisbane’s gave extensive coverage to the Athenians’ inaugural annual meeting, held in Ipswich’s Church of England schoolroom in March 1867, where Foxton, then just 17, presented the treasurer’s report, which was deemed ‘most satisfactory’.The report continued: ‘There has been a decided improvement in the play in the last 12 months both on account of the accession of new members and the natural result of practice. It is to be regretted that practice is not more numerously attended; the ground has not been in good order and this has rendered play unsteady.’ Colonel Justin Fox Greenlaw Foxton would not have recognised what cricket has become today, but he would have been right at home at the Yarras committee meeting I attended last week. Ground’s a bit rough – tick. Attendance at training a bit spotty – tick. Unsteady play – big tick. Otherwise, ticking over well.Cricket and politics have never interpenetrated in this country as deeply as in others – thankfully so. But there is something significant, I think, about club cricket having loomed so large in the lives of so many involved in the early fashioning of this nation. As I observed previously, in order that everyone bats, bowls and fields in club cricket, some must get organised, elect officials, hold meetings, weigh interests, manage finances, and delegate responsibilities – skills readily transferable to wider fields.We can couch this more generally too. For numberless millions of Australians since, a sports club has been their original and most tangible experience of day-to-day democracy, and their greatest means of investment in civic amenity. The historian John Hirst has called Australia’s a ‘democracy of manners’. Australia, he observes, is short on inspirational rhetoric where democracy is concerned: our constitution is silent on citizenship; our curricula have no great tradition of civic education. What we have instead, says Hirst, is a way that ‘Australians blot out differences when people meet face to face’ and ‘talk to each other as if they are equals’. In no environment has this tended to happen more spontaneously than when individuals band together in pursuit of a sporting goal. Club sport remains, I would argue, the most inclusive, evolved and constructive means by which Australians express their instinct to associate.Better yet, our clubs are distinguished to this day by actually working. In our daily lives we are regularly beset by institutions that leave us feeling powerless, voiceless, helpless. Government institutions. Commercial institutions. Financial institutions. Religious institutions. Media institutions. It’s easy to think: What does it matter what I do? What influence can I possibly have? At the little sporting institutions we make for ourselves, we aren’t powerless; we can and do make a difference; we can put a shoulder to the wheel and feel the thing move.It’s a sorry reflection on the times that so few, outside an immediate circle, seem to grasp that. As if the thrall of the television remote and the atomisation of the working week were not enough, community sport has suffered gravely from the climate of financial stringency and sterile users-pays philosophies.’But we subsidise sporting clubs in our community,’ complain local governments, oblivious to the way sporting clubs subsidise local governments by mobilising free labour and local expertise, contributing to social cohesion and civic texture. In fact, the minuscule funding support local sport receives has colossal multiplier effects. And if this can’t readily be ascertained by economic models, then the answer is new models, because the old ones aren’t working any more.But I can’t hold local governments wholly responsible. I also fear that from time to time a sort of mechanistic view of grassroots cricket prevails within cricket itself. It is regarded simply as kind of squeaky and unpainted front gate to one of those glorious ‘pathways’ one hears so much of – ah, the pathway, paved with gold, strewn with primrose petals. ‘New markets’ is the clarion call; but what of the old? All we’ve got to recommend us is that we love the game – and we wonder, from time to time, whether the game still loves us.Some of you would have seen the figures of the recent Australian cricket census, which were touted as showing cricket to be the country’s biggest participation sport at the same time as it disclosed a 3.5% decline in the club cricket population.We don’t have the advantage of exist interviews, of course, but I wonder how many of those individuals passed out of the game because they don’t like the way it is run, and promoted, and headed. I don’t wish to spread alarm, but this would not wish to be remembered as the cricket generation that grew so obsessed with flogging KFC and accumulating Facebook likes that it let its core constituencies fade away.Tomorrow, an annual meeting of Cricket Australia will finally phase out the system by which it has been governed since 1905, under which its board has been composed of the nominees of state associations drawn from the delegates of their premier, district and grade clubs. It’s a system that has had a lot of critics, me among them, and I’m not about to mourn its passing. But it has always exhibited one particular virtue – that of recognising the integral role of the club in the cricket of this country, and the value of the volunteer in a sporting economy that could not otherwise function. And it would be remiss of cricket if it simply marched into its corporatist future without a backward glance, or a sideways acknowledgement of cricket’s hardiest faithful.In that spirit, I’d like to close this speech the old-fashioned way, by proposing a toast. To the club. It’s the beginning of us all. To your club. For all that it has done for you; to all that you have done, and might yet do, for it.Ladies and gentlemen: to the club.

The hot-seat experience

Artist Paul Trevillion’s beautiful panels pose questions that will puzzle all would-be umpires, from the novice to the wizened expert

Martin Williamson09-May-2009Growing up as I did in the 1970s, I remember avidly reading Shoot, a popular football magazine, every week. In it one of the features my friends and I most enjoyed was You Are The Ref, a comic strip that posed refereeing scenarios, some likely, some highly improbable, for you to argue over. Some of those often heated debates lasted hours.I had all but forgotten about the strip when it was resurrected in the Observer‘s excellent monthly sports magazine in 2006. Soon after, a cricket version, You Are The Umpire, appeared to fill in the decreasing gap between football seasons.While the series relies on an expert (in the case of cricket, Test umpire John Holder) to deal with the nitty-gritty of the laws, the genius behind the idea, and the one who makes it work, is 75-year-old artist Paul Trevillion.Trevillion is more than just drawer of cartoons. He has an almost unique ability to bring character and movement to life (comic-art realism to use the technical jargon). Among his other claims to fame are holding the world speed-kissing record (25,009 in two hours if you must know), inventing the tags on the Leeds United socks of the 1970s (which almost drove Brian Clough to acts of violence), and creating a national row by drawing Wimbledon champion Evonne Goolagong nude for the Sun.The formula for Trevillion’s strips is simple but effective. Three beautifully drawn panels, each with a recognisable face from the relevant sport, each posing a question about the laws – in essence, what would you do? On the surface they are simply entertainment, but by using experts to give their opinions, they also serve as an excellent learning aid to anyone who plays the game.



It’s not just aimed at novices either, and I suspect some long-in-the-tooth officials could learn a thing or two. Do you know if a wicketkeeper is allowed to eat a hot dog at a drinks break, or if a fielder can catch a ball deflected off a cow?This book, which is essentially a collection of the last three summers’ worth of Observer strips, offers more, in that each cartoon is accompanied by a brief profile of the players involved. A few more general sections about the laws and the history of the game are also included, but while of interest to beginners add little.Overall this is an outstanding collection and one well worth the price. And even if you care little for the laws, it will still appeal to cricket fans because of the care and accuracy of Trevillion’s drawings.You Are The Umpire
by Paul Trevillion and John Holder
Guardian Books, 2009, hb, £9.35

Jason Roy, Dawid Malan, Amy Jones in Hundred 2024 draft

Jason Roy, Dawid Malan and Amy Jones are among the England players who will on the block in next month’s draft for the 2024 Hundred, after player retentions for the eight teams were confirmed.Roy was one of the most high-profile names among those released, having helped Oval Invincibles to win the men’s competition last year. Roy averaged 17.11 with a strike rate of 128.33 and his expected involvement in Major League Cricket – which will clash with the Hundred in 2024 – is likely to have been a factor. Invincibles also opted not to retain two of their overseas players, Sunil Narine and Heinrich Klaasen, both of whom featured in the first edition of MLC.There will, however, be an overlap of talent at the Hundred and MLC, with Rashid Khan (Trent Rockets), Finn Allen (Southern Brave), Haris Rauf (Welsh Fire), Adam Zampa and Spencer Johnson (both Oval Invincibles) all retained for this summer despite their involvement in the US, and other names likely to appear in the final draft list, which will be confirmed on Monday.Related

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Malan and Tom Kohler-Cadmore were among the top earners at Trent Rockets but both will go back into the pool, as will Tom Banton, who was not retained by Northern Superchargers. Ollie Pope, who has an ECB red-ball central contract, was not retained by Welsh Fire.In the women’s competition, where the three highest pay bands have received a significant boost, there will be seven spots to fill in the top £50,000 bracket. Jones, England’s first-choice wicketkeeper, was let go by Birmingham Phoenix, while the retirements of Katherine Sciver-Brunt and Anya Shrubsole have opened up spaces at Rockets and Southern Brave respectively.Ellyse Perry, Sophie Devine (both Phoenix), Marizanne Kapp (Invincibles), Phoebe Litchfield (Superchargers), Hayley Matthews and Shabnim Ismail (both Fire) are among the overseas players who will be coming back.In all, 137 players have been retained – men’s teams could retain up to 10 players, women’s teams eight – with 75 spots to be filled via the draft on the March 20. Northern Superchargers, who finished last in 2023, will have the first pick in the men’s draft, with Birmingham Phoenix starting things off in the women’s.Teams will each have one Right-to-Match card at their disposal, allowing them to re-sign a player who was in their squad last year, as long as they match the salary band of the rival team bidding in the draft.The Hundred will get going on July 23 with a double-header at The Oval and run for four weeks, with the finals to be held at Lord’s on August 18.

Retained players

Birmingham Phoenix Women: Sophie Devine, Ellyse Perry, Issy Wong, Emily Arlott, Hannah Baker, Sterre Kalis, Charis PavelyBirmingham Phoenix Men: Chris Woakes, Liam Livingstone, Moeen Ali, Ben Duckett, Benny Howell, Adam Milne, Jamie Smith, Will Smeed, Tom Helm, Jacob BethellLondon Spirit Women: Heather Knight, Grace Harris, Danielle Gibson, Charlie Dean, Sarah Glenn, Georgia Redmayne, Sophie Munro, Tara NorrisLondon Spirit Men: Zak Crawley, Nathan Ellis, Dan Lawrence, Dan Worrall, Liam Dawson, Adam Rossington, Olly Stone, Matt Critchley, Daniel Bell-DrummondManchester Originals Women: Sophie Ecclestone, Laura Wolvaardt, Emma Lamb, Mahika Gaur, Fi Morris, Kathryn Bryce, Ellie Threlkeld, Liberty HeapManchester Originals Men: Jos Buttler, Jamie Overton, Phil Salt, Paul Walter, Tom Hartley, Usama Mir, Wayne Madsen, Josh Tongue, Max Holden, Fred Klaassen, Mitchell StanleyNorthern Superchargers Women: Phoebe Litchfield, Georgia Wareham, Kate Cross, Bess Heath, Linsey Smith, Alice Davidson-Richards, Hollie Armitage, Marie KellyNorthern Superchargers Men: Ben Stokes, Adil Rashid, Harry Brook, Reece Topley, Matthew Short, Brydon Carse, Adam Hose, Matthew Potts, Callum Parkinson, Ollie RobinsonOval Invincibles Women: Marizanne Kapp, Alice Capsey, Lauren Winfield-Hill, Tash Farrant, Mady Villiers, Paige Schofield, Sophia Smale, Ryana MacDonald-GayOval Invincibles Men: Sam Curran, Tom Curran, Will Jacks, Adam Zampa, Jordan Cox, Gus Atkinson, Sam Billings, Saqib Mahmood, Spencer Johnson, Nathan Sowter, Tawanda MuyeyeSouthern Brave Women: Danni Wyatt, Chloe Tryon, Lauren Bell, Maia Bouchier, Freya Kemp, Georgia Adams, Rhianna Southby, Mary TaylorSouthern Brave Men: Jofra Archer, James Vince, Chris Jordan, Tymal Mills, Leus Du Plooy, Rehan Ahmed, Craig Overton, Finn Allen, George Garton, Alex DaviesTrent Rockets Women: Nat Sciver-Brunt, Alana King, Bryony Smith, Kirstie Gordon, Alexa Stonehouse, Grace PottsTrent Rockets Men: Joe Root, Rashid Khan, Alex Hales, Lewis Gregory, Luke Wood, John Turner, Sam Hain, Sam CookWelsh Fire Women: Hayley Matthews, Sophia Dunkley, Shabnim Ismail, Tammy Beaumont, Georgia Elwiss, Sarah Bryce, Freya Davies, Emily WindsorWelsh Fire Men: Jonny Bairstow, David Willey, Joe Clarke, Haris Rauf, Tom Abell, David Payne, Glenn Phillips, Luke Wells, Roelof Van der Merwe, Stephen Eskinazi, Chris Cook

Lucas Barbosa recebe testes como titular nos treinos do Santos, e tem alta estatura como trunfo

MatériaMais Notícias

O Santos se prepara para a continuação da temporada e deve chegar com novidades. Nos treinos realizados por Odair Hellmann nesta semana, o treinador testou Lucas Barbosa no ataque titular do Alvinegro Praiano.

A entrada do atleta é uma opção por causa da falta de condições de jogo dos atacantes Soteldo (transição após uma ruptura total do tendão do músculo peitoral esquerdo), Mendoza (lesão no bíceps femoral da coxa esquerda) e Ângelo (edema muscular). Além desses jogadores, Lucas Braga não está treinando, pois passa por um processo de fortalecimento do púbis.

RelacionadasSantosDe virada, Santos vence Flamengo-SP em jogo-treino no CT Rei PeléSantos18/03/2023SantosGoleiro do Sub-20 do Santos projeta próximo confronto do BrasileirãoSantos18/03/2023SantosFelipe Jonatan e Rodrigo Fernández ganham pré-temporada no Santos e conquistam espaço no time titularSantos17/03/2023

+Estudo aponta os elencos mais valiosos do mundo; veja as posições dos times brasileiros

Com Lucas Barbosa herdando a vaga, o jovem, de 1,93m de altura, aumenta bastante a estatura do ataque santista. No elenco Alvinegro, Soteldo (1,59m), Ângelo (1,73m) e Mendoza (1,72m), que são frequentemente utilizados entre os titulares, não são especialistas no jogo aéreo.

É possível ser baixo e bom neste tipo de jogada. Rony, do Palmeiras, que tem apenas 1,66m, é prova viva disso, com 5 gols de cabeça no ano. Mesmo assim, ter alguns metros de vantagem é bastante valioso.

Lucas Barbosa já estufou as redes de cabeça em duas oportunidades no ano e pode aumentar o aproveitamento dos cruzamentos do Santos. De acordo com dados da Footstats, mesmo não passando para a fase mata-mata do estadual, o Peixe é a 5ª equipe que mais cruza na competição.

Flamengo define programação de retorno de Arrascaeta, Pedro e Everton Ribeiro

MatériaMais Notícias

Enquanto a maior parte do elenco do Flamengo se reapresentou na segunda-feira, dia 26, os quatro jogadores do clube que disputaram a Copa do Mundo do Qatar ainda curtem os últimos dias de férias. As datas de reapresentação estão definidas. Arrascaeta e Varela são aguardados no Ninho do Urubu na próxima segunda, dia 2 de janeiro. Everton Ribeiro e Pedro se juntam ao grupo no dia 4.

A diferença nas datas ocorre pela Seleção Brasileira ter sido eliminada do Mundial depois do Uruguai. Assim, Arrascaeta e Varela iniciarão os trabalhos em 2023, no Ninho, no mesmo dia que Vitor Pereira, treinador contratado para dirigir o Flamengo na próxima temporada. A comissão técnica do português já está trabalhando com os jogadores desde a última segunda-feira, no CT.

RelacionadasFlamengoEm seis meses, jovem se destaca no Flamengo e assina contrato com multa milionáriaFlamengo29/12/2022FlamengoDavid Luiz confirma conversas com jogadores do Corinthians sobre Vitor Pereira, novo técnico do FlamengoFlamengo28/12/2022FlamengoÍdolos do Flamengo avaliam chegada de Vitor Pereira e projetam Mundial de ClubesFlamengo28/12/2022

O Flamengo atuará nas primeiras rodadas do Carioca com uma equipe formada por jovens das divisões de base. A estreia será no dia 12 de janeiro, contra o Audax. O foco do clube no primeiro trimestre é o Mundial de Clubes, no Marrocos, que terá início no dia 1º de fevereiro. Confira a movimentação do Rubro-Negro no Mercado da Bola!

Mesmo de férias, Everton Ribeiro e Arrascaeta participaram do Jogo das Estrelas, evento beneficente promovido por Zico, no Maracanã, nesta quarta-feira. O centroavante Pedro não esteve presente pois ainda está na Europa, onde está curtindo as férias ao lado da esposa e de familiares.

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