مجلس الزمالك يوجه رسالة للاعبي الفريق والجهاز الفني وجون إدوارد

وجه مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك، برئاسة الكابتن حسين لبيب، رسالة شكر وتقدير لإدارة الكرة بالفريق الأول لكرة القدم، بقيادة جون إدوارد المدير الرياضي، وعبد الناصر محمد مدير الكرة، ويانيك فيريرا المدير الفني والجهاز الفني.

ويستعد الزمالك لمواجهة فريق الجونة، مساء غدًا الثلاثاء، في المباراة التي تجمع بينهما ضمن لقاءات الدوري المصري.

طالع | لاعب الزمالك يغيب عن مباراة الجونة في الدوري للإصابة

وجاء بيان مجلس إدارة الزمالك، قائلا: “يتوجه مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك برئاسة الكابتن حسين لبيب بالشكر لإدارة الكرة بالفريق الأول لكرة القدم  بقيادة جون إدوارد المدير الرياضي، وعبد الناصر محمد مدير الكرة ، ويانيك فيريرا المدير الفني وجهازه المعاون واللاعبين على الروح التي أظهرها الجميع منذ بداية الموسم”.

وأكمل: “تجلت هذه الروح في المواقف الصعبة التي يمر بها الزمالك لاسيما سحب أرض النادي بمدينة السادس من أكتوبر مما أثر على التدفقات المالية الخاصة بمنظومة كرة القدم”.

وواصل: “ويُقدر مجلس الإدارة نجاح جهاز الكرة في عزل الفريق عن هذه الأزمة، والتحلى بالعزيمة والإصرار من عناصر منظومة الكرة لتحقيق الهدف الذي تم وضعه منذ بداية الموسم وهو الدفاع عن شعار الزمالك بكل إخلاص مهما كانت التحديات والمعوقات”.

وأردف: “كما يُشيد مجلس إدارة الزمالك، باحترافية وإخلاص اللاعبين خلال الفترة الماضية وتحملهم الظروف التي يمر بها النادي، ويؤكد المجلس أن العمل جاري على حلها من خلال القنوات الشرعية وانهاء تلك الأزمة مطلع الشهر المقبل بصورة نهائية”.

وأتم: “ويطالب مجلس إدارة الزمالك الجهاز الفني واللاعبين بمواصلة العمل الجاد وبذل كل نقطة عرق من أجل القلعة البيضاء، لتحقيق طموحات جماهيره في كل مكان”.

Blow for Mikel Arteta as Arsenal prepare to lose first-team coach with 29-year-old Carlos Cuesta set to become youngest manager in Serie A history

In a massive blow to Mikel Arteta, first-team coach Carlos Cuesta will leave Arsenal to become the youngest manager in Serie A history with Parma.

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  • Cuseta set for a fresh challenge in Italy
  • Had been working with Arteta since 2020
  • Will become Serie A's youngest coach at 29
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to Arsenal are bracing for a significant backroom reshuffle as highly-regarded first-team coach Cuesta is poised to leave the club. The 29-year-old Spaniard is set to take charge of Parma, becoming the youngest head coach in Serie A history. This move marks a major milestone in Cuesta’s rapidly rising career and a potential headache for Arteta, who has relied on the coach’s insight and tactical input for the past five years.

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    Parma are understood to have formally requested permission from Arsenal to finalise negotiations, although the Gunners have yet to officially respond. reports that Cuesta is due to travel to Italy on Wednesday to wrap up the move. Should the deal go through, Cuesta will step into the managerial role vacated by Cristian Chivu, who only recently took over at Inter from Simone Inzaghi.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Before joining Arsenal, Cuseta cut his teeth in youth coaching roles at Atletico Madrid and Juventus. Yet, the appointment will be a bold statement by Parma, trusting such a young and relatively inexperienced coach with first-team responsibilities in one of Europe’s top leagues.

  • AFP

    WHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

    For Arsenal, Cuesta’s likely departure creates a void that Arteta must now fill ahead of the upcoming campaign. With pre-season preparations set to get underway in July, the Spaniard is racing against time to find a suitable replacement.

Missing Dale-a in the time of India v South Africa

Scenes from an alternate universe where Dale Steyn is playing Tests, and charging in to bowl at Virat Kohli

Alagappan Muthu29-Sep-2019He looked so tiny. Until he started running in. Then he was a blur. And so was the ball. Eventually he made his way down to the boundary and suddenly he was larger than life. So close to the crowd and me that the only sensible thing to do was that old third grade trick. “Tell him to tell her to tell him to tell her to tell that guy in the green shirt that I love him”.Dale Steyn was right there, within throwing distance of a piece of paper with the words, ‘Will you be my bowling hero?’ and yes or no check boxes. The message tree technique wasn’t quite as foolproof as I thought. One ill-timed glass of champagne had been enough for it to crash and burn. He was probably too busy to notice anyway.But maybe now he has a little more time on his hands. Isn’t it ironic that the greatest fast bowler of our generation had to retire just when things are starting to get awesome? Helpful pitches. Insane new talents. Riveting head-to-heads. We’ve already been spoiled rotten but to think we could have had Dale Steyn v Virat Kohli to follow Jofra Archer v Steven Smith… Come on, Dale-aaa. Ambati Rayudu un-retired. Couldn’t you? I want to see you at the top of your mark again, and the batsman trying so very hard to look everywhere but in your eyes.Everyone has their own reasons to be swept away by genius. And Steyn, in 14 years of playing Test cricket, offered us a free for all. The wickets (439). The skill (an outswinger nicked from the gods). The aura (even the great Michael Holding rates him one of the best ever). The wit (Rohit Sharma: Come to India, we’ll show you. Steyn: Shut up, I have more runs than you. Rohit: X-over-mouth emoji. Us eavesdropping: jaw-drop emoji) But for me, the thrill of Steyn was in the anticipation.Watch cricket on ESPN+

India v South Africa is available in the US on Hotstar and ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the three Tests.

Back when I had an arm that didn’t turn into soggy rice pudding every time I bowled, I’d go out to the backyard, little brother in tow, to mimic/mutilate his action, his celebrations, his stare, and, on a good day, his vein. There was one time when I rode this high for weeks: the 2009 Australian summer when South Africa went over with Steyn as the ICC’s Test Player of the Year, won and then invited them back home for the re-match. That series got done in January and the return bout was only in February and I dragged lil bro out every single evening until eventually he threw his bat into the bushes, picked up a stray rock, drew three squiggly lines on the wall and yelled, “What the eff do you need me for?! Hitting that is all you care about.”I felt a semblance of this rush taking hold again as this India v South Africa series approached. Steyn had broken down again at the World Cup and, until the announcement, everything was lining up to make his comeback perfect. We were all hopped up on quality fast bowling thanks to Archer, Jasprit Bumrah, Pat Cummins and more. And as fun as it was watching the pretenders, I couldn’t wait until it was time for the king to reclaim his throne.It was destiny that it was India, too. This rivalry, though never cutthroat, has been endlessly compelling because it plays out in conditions that are almost always bowler-friendly. And while even the prospect of walking onto those sun-roasted turners at Visakhapatnam, Pune and Ranchi has to be exhausting for most seamers, it seemed the most natural backdrop for a man who has never needed any help from any pitch.All it ever took to turn Dale Steyn on was putting a cricket ball in his hand.Now just close your eyes and imagine the first day of this series. India two down early (Che’s still at the crease, obviously) and runs out into the sunshine. That bat is just gleaming in his hands, hungry for runs, and he soothes it by practicing a couple of punchy straight drives. Bam! Four! Bam! Four again!And over by the pitch, is impatiently waiting, his body in proper fighting order. It feels like the one that helped him play 85 of the 111 matches that South Africa played since his Test debut in December 2004 all the way up to that day in Perth when he walked away clutching his shoulder. The crowd has gone quiet. The tension keeps building. Eventually that bat starts tapping on the ground and those feet start pounding the turf.Kohli v Steyn. One of the best now v One of the best ever. And it doesn’t even need actual cricket to be gripping.Would’ve been nice though. Especially considering the other subplot. It took shape in the West Indies earlier this year. The birth of a new outswing demon. Jasprit Bumrah says he always had it, that he just needed time to polish it so that it fit at international level. Well it does. There’s a brow-beaten off stump somewhere in Antigua that is non-living proof of that. How cool would it have been to watch him square off against Steyn? Stupid frail human physiology. You’ve robbed us of not one but two absolute superstars. Sigh. At least we still have Kagiso Rabada, the bowling armada.So where was I? Ah yes. Constructing an elaborate alternate universe where Steyn is still playing Test cricket. Come back, Dale-a. I miss you so much I started making weird memes and posting them on reputable cricket websites.Come back, Dale Steyn•ESPNcricinfo LtdSee.#PostYourSteynMeme #BringHimBack

Arsenal now shortlist "sensational" £42m PL forward; Arteta's a big fan

Arsenal have now shortlisted a “sensational” Premier League forward for a potential transfer swoop, as they continue to gear up for a big summer transfer window.

Arteta set to bolster attacking options

Injuries have no doubt hindered Mikel Arteta’s side in their pursuit of the Premier League title, with Bukayo Saka’s spell on the sidelines arguably of the most significance, given a lack of depth in the squad.

Given that he has only just turned 18, Ethan Nwaneri has done a good job filling in for Saka, scoring three Premier League goals, but inexperience is not an ideal quality in a title race, as Arteta’s side have discovered in the past.

As such, Arteta is keen on bolstering his attacking options in the summer transfer window, with Wolverhampton Wanderers’ Matheus Cunha of interest at striker, while versatile Atalanta forward Ademola Lookman is also well-liked.

Berta now determined to sign "world-class" £113m duo for Arsenal this summer

The incoming sporting director is intent on bringing two stars to the Emirates Stadium.

By
Dominic Lund

Mar 25, 2025

Both Cunha and Lookman have Premier League experience, as does another winger who has now emerged as a target, with a report from TEAMtalk revealing Arsenal have now shortlisted AFC Bournemouth winger Antoine Semenyo ahead of what could be a big summer transfer window.

Semenyo could potentially be targeted as a cheaper alternative to Bryan Mbeumo, given that he is valued at around £34-42m, while the Brentford star has an asking price of around £50m.

AFC Bournemouth's AntoineSemenyolooks on

However, there could be stiff competition for Semenyo’s signature this summer, with Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur also being linked with moves, given his impressive performances for a Bournemouth side pushing to qualify for Europe this season.

"Sensational" Semenyo may now be entering his prime

It has been a steady rise to the top for the Chelsea-born winger, spending time out on loan at the likes of Bath City and Newport County before impressing in the Championship with Bristol City and eventually working his way up to the Premier League.

There are signs the 25-year-old may now be entering his prime, as this season he has recorded his best numbers to date since signing for the Cherries, having regularly weighed in with goals and assists.

Season

Appearances (all competitions)

Goals

Assists

2022-23

11

1

0

2023-24

36

8

2

2024-25

32

9

5

The Ghanaian, who Arteta is a big fan of, has been described as “sensational” by members of the media this season, and he is showing signs he could be ready to take yet another step-up in his career by moving to the Emirates Stadium.

That said, it could be wise to target Mbeumo as a priority, given that the Cameroon international has proven himself in the top flight over a longer period than Semenyo, and he has been in remarkable form this season, with 20 goal contributions to his name in the Premier League.

Root to make Yorkshire red-ball return after almost two years

Joe Root is set to make his first red-ball appearance for Yorkshire in almost two years as he prepares to line up against Gloucestershire this week in the second round of the County Championship.Root, whose only domestic cricket last year came in the Hundred for Trent Rockets following the Ashes, was announced in Yorkshire’s 13-man squad for the trip to Bristol. After missing the opening fixture against Leicestershire following the two-month tour of India, Root will play the next four rounds, followed by a trip away to Northamptonshire for the seventh round which begins on May 24. The 33-year-old last played first-class cricket for his home county in May 2022 against Warwickshire, a month after stepping down as Test captain, before playing three times in the T20 Blast up to June.It is a further boost to Yorkshire’s promotion hopes after they welcomed back Harry Brook for the first of his five-game stint last week. Brook, who had not played since England’s white-ball tour of the West Indies in December after withdrawing from the India series following the death of his grandmother Pauline, returned to action with a crisp unbeaten 100 off just 69 deliveries. Brook’s last fixture will be against Glamorgan at home, starting May 3, before taking a break ahead of England’s T20 series against Pakistan that leads into the T20 World Cup.Following an indifferent tour of the subcontinent, during which he scored 320 runs at 35.55, with just one century coming in the fourth Test as India triumphed 4-1, Root will use the next month to tune up ahead of a bumper six months. England welcome West Indies and Sri Lanka for three-Test series this season, the first of which begins at Lord’s on July 10. They then travel to Pakistan and New Zealand before the end of the year.Yorkshire will hope to make the most of the availability of both their stars as they look to return to Division One, having suffered relegation in 2022. They were hamstrung last summer by a 48-point deduction that decimated any hopes of an immediate return but are considered favourites to re-emerge from Division Two this time around.

Pathirana to miss initial stages of IPL 2024 due to hamstring injury

He will join CSK after clearance from Sri Lanka Cricket, while Shivam Dube has linked up with the side after rehab at NCA

Deivarayan Muthu and Andrew Fidel Fernando21-Mar-2024Chennai Super Kings’ designated death bowler Matheesha Pathirana will miss the initial stages of IPL 2024 with a hamstring injury. The 21-year-old Sri Lanka slinger sustained the injury during the second T20I against Bangladesh in Sylhet earlier this month, when he was unable to finish his spell.ESPNcricinfo has learned that Pathirana is likely to be unavailable for at least two weeks and will travel to the IPL only after getting clearance from SLC medical staff. Currently, he is undergoing rehab at the high performance centre in Colombo. With the T20 World Cup set to begin on June 1 in the USA and the Caribbean, just days after the end of the IPL, SLC want to manage Pathirana carefully. Pathirana is the second Sri Lanka fast bowler on the sidelines, with left-armer Dilshan Madushanka, who was due to make his IPL debut for Mumbai Indians, ruled out of the entire IPL season.Pathirana’s injury is a major blow to CSK, who are already without New Zealand opener Devon Conway, who has been sidelined until May with a thumb injury. Pathirana’s economy rate of 8.00 at the death (between overs 16 and 20) was the best among bowlers who had bowled at least 90 balls during this phase in IPL 2023. He also emerged as the leading wicket-taker during that phase, with 18 strikes in 12 innings.Related

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On the eve of the IPL season-opener against Royal Challengers Bengaluru, head coach Stephen Fleming focused on the positives, pointing out that CSK had gone through a far bigger injury crisis last season.”Injuries-wise, we’re going pretty good. Compared to last year, we’re flying,” he said. “But we’re a practice [session] away from a couple, so we’re always realistic. But what we do like is the depth of our squad, in particular, in the bowling this year. And the challenge will be getting those combinations right, based on form. But at this point, Pathirana is not with us [at the moment], but everyone else is going pretty well.”Pathirana’s absence could potentially open up a slot for Bangladesh left-arm seamer Mustafizur Rahman, who also operates at the death. Mustafizur had suffered cramps, and a stretcher was required to carry him off the field in the third ODI against Sri Lanka in Chattogram on March 18. But he has since recovered to join CSK in Chennai, and is available for the IPL 2024 opener against Royal Challengers Bangalore on March 22. If the Chepauk pitch is a turner, though, CSK also have the option of including Moeen Ali in their team ahead of Mustafizur, along with Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell and Maheesh Theekshana.Dwayne Bravo, CSK’s bowling coach, had stressed on the importance on death bowling in the lead-up to the tournament. Shardul Thakur, who has returned to CSK after two seasons, is among their options in Pathirana’s absence.”Death bowling is my speciality. I believe that in T20s, [death overs] is a very important segment of the game,” Bravo had said at an event in Chennai last week. “It requires a lot of skill, bravery and planning – from preparation in practice to the games, match awareness, and situations.”You have to implement it in practice and get these guys to believe in philosophy and work towards it. Last year, we had the best death-bowling team, and we look forward to repeating it… Shardul [Thakur] is also back, which gives more depth. It is always good to have depth in the squad.”Meanwhile, CSK’s designated spin-hitter Shivam Dube, who had missed the Ranji Trophy knockouts with injury, has also linked up with his IPL side after completing his rehab at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru.CSK, the defending champions, begin their IPL 2024 campaign with back-to-back home games against Royal Challengers (March 22) and Gujarat Titans (March 26).

Sporting CP break first! Portuguese side make key Viktor Gyokeres decision as striker continues pursuit of dream Premier League move

The transfer saga around Viktor Gyokeres has taken another twist, as Sporting CP make a key concession with the striker's future uncertain.

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Gyokeres has been linked with an exitThe striker dreams of a PL moveAllowed to join pre-season a week lateFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Gyokeres has been granted permission to join Sporting's pre-season camp a week late, according to . The Swedish international has been heavily linked with a move to the Premier League and the decision comes after reports he was prepared to go on strike to force through a transfer.

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While this does not necessarily indicate that Gyokeres is any closer to a move, it does give both club and player more time to resolve the situation surrounding the 27-year-old's future. Sporting want a reported £68 million ($92m) for their top scorer, which goes against a reported 'gentleman's agreement' that he can leave for less. This agreement was denied by club president Frederico Varandas, leaving Gyokeres furious.

Portuguese publication claims that the reason for Gyokeres' delayed arrival to the pre-season camp, which begins on July 1, is his involvement with the Swedish national team earlier this month. But he in fact dropped out of Jon Dahl Tomasson's squad for a minor fitness issue and it has not been confirmed whether this was the reason for Sporting's decision.

DID YOU KNOW?

Gyokeres has recently been spotted enjoying a holiday away in Greece as talk surrounding his future intensifies.

Getty WHAT NEXT FOR GYOKERES AND SPORTING?

It is in the best interests of both player and club for this saga to be resolved soon. It is evident that Gyokeres wants to move on, but the likes of Arsenal, Manchester United and Liverpool may be unwilling to meet Sporting's asking price. The 27-year-old is likely to be at his peak value this summer, so it remains to be seen whether player or club are to soften their stance as the situation develops.

Ben Stokes confirmed for Durham Championship return

England captain will continue to build towards Test summer by turning out against Lancashire in Blackpool

ESPNcricinfo staff14-May-2024

Ben Stokes has been building up his bowling loads with Durham•Getty Images

Ben Stokes will make his first appearance for Durham in the County Championship since May 2022 against Lancashire this week as he steps up his return as an allrounder.The England Test captain’s last competitive match came in the final match of the tour of India at the start of March. Having pulled out of the IPL, Stokes subsequently made himself unavailable for next month’s T20 World Cup to ensure he can play a full part in the Test summer, with bat and ball, following surgery in November to clear out a troublesome left knee that prevented him from doing the latter.With almost two months to go before the first Test against West Indies, which begins at Lord’s on July 10, Stokes will begin his tune-up at Blackpool on Friday. With Durham sitting fifth in Division One with one win and three draws, head coach Ryan Campbell was understandably buoyed by the influence Stokes’ will have on his squad and the competition as a whole.Related

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“We’re looking to kickstart our season and we’re looking forward to welcoming England captain Ben Stokes back into our team for the first time – it will be absolutely awesome,” Campbell told BBC Radio Newcastle.”I suggest if you’ve got a few days over the weekend you get down to Blackpool and watch the great Ben Stokes return for Durham.”Players always want to play against the best players in the competition. To have one of those players in our own team to show us the way, his experiences, it’s unbelievable.”Suddenly, there’s an air of excitement around the place just because he walks in the room.”Stokes, 32, played all five matches of England’s 4-1 loss in India, but only bowled in the final Test. He removed Rohit Sharma with his very first delivery, eventually bowling just five overs.Having initially ruled himself out of bowling on the trip, such was the speed of his recovery behind the scenes that he decided to turn his arm over in Dharamsala. He subsequently left the tour with his sights set on building his bowling back up, not least because England struggled to balance their team without a seam-bowling allrounder.Though Stokes has had time off, he has ticked over with his bowling, slowly increasing the intensity of sessions with six Tests to come this summer – three against Sri Lanka after the West Indies series – and tours of Pakistan and New Zealand before the end of the year. Speaking to the BBC’s podcast on Monday, men’s managing director Rob Key said he was encouraged by Stokes’ progress.”Ben in particular is feeling, for the first time in quite some time, that he is bowling pain free, and is able to bowl almost, straight away, into his top end speed,” Key said. “And he’s not having to go through pain barriers all the time to do it. I think he feels liberated by the fact the knee op has been a success and he feels he can now look to this part of his career being able to do both things, which is always a big thing for an allrounder.”It’s one thing if you’re batting; if you fail with the bat you feel you can contribute with the ball. If you take one of those away, it becomes a trickier game for allrounders.”The trip to Blackpool is one of four red-ball matches for Durham that Stokes could play between now and the first West Indies Test. It is still to be determined whether he will be available for Durham’s Vitality Blast campaign, which begins on May 30. Whether with the red or white ball, Stokes and the England management will aim to ensure he has the necessary overs under his belt before the Test summer begins.”Even Ben Stokes, as indestructible as we always think he is, he needs to build up slowly and then hopefully peak at just the right time to go on and not have to worry,” said Key.”Because it’s not just about your back, your knee and the knee you had operated on – you just lose that bit of resilience and robustness that bowling requires. I don’t think there’s any other force you can put your body through like what it does when you bowl, so he just needs to build up into that again.”

Warner on Wood and Archer: 'Just have to use their pace'

The Australia opener could be facing England for the last time as his career draws to a close

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff07-Jun-20241:53

Warner relives Australia’s T20 World Cup triumph in 2021

David Warner has predicted England’s last two Ashes destroyers loom as far different prospects on the slower T20 World Cup wickets of the Caribbean.Australia will meet England for the first time in any format since last year’s tense Ashes series on Saturday [Sunday AEDT] in Barbados, in each side’s second game of the World Cup.Related

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Mark Wood and Jofra Archer are expected to play for an England side desperately needing a win after a washout against Scotland.Archer has not played Australia since the 2020 white-ball series in England, which took place during Covid, having made his mark against them in his debut Test series in 2019. Wood was also England’s most hostile bowler in the 2023 Ashes, coming in at Headingley and helping the hosts go from 2-0 down to a 2-2 draw.Both are among the quickest in the world at their best, but the slow pitches of the Caribbean are far removed from their home conditions. Throw in the fact it is a T20 rather than a Test match, and Warner believes this is a very different scenario.”You just have to use their pace,” Warner said. “Test cricket they set different fields, different balls. In Twenty20 cricket, you only have to get half an edge on it and it can go. So there’s a fair difference.”David Warner played an important innings against Oman•Getty Images

Warner also does not expect consistently high bounce as seen elsewhere in the world.”I’ve played a lot of cricket over here,” Warner said. “You are expecting it to be low rather than bounce, unless it is real short. The variation in bounce is what surprises you. Because when they pitch the ball that eight-metre [from the stumps] length, your natural instinct is to pull it. But you have to go back to targeting straight, backing yourself, and if it does bounce, so be it.”Warner hit a steady 56 from 51 balls to guide Australia to a winnable score in their first match against Oman to begin his last international tournament. The runs came after a disappointing IPL, prompting questions from critics over whether he deserved a final hurrah ahead of rising star Jake Fraser-McGurk.”It [the criticism] doesn’t fuel me. It’s in one ear, out the other,” Warner said. “I don’t understand why it’s all about myself. There are 11 players in the team. I don’t get it.”People feel like they have to keep criticising the way I play. I don’t know what it is. I have no answer as to why people write that. I have had it my whole career. I don’t listen to it.”Sunday’s Group B clash has gone from near irrelevant to crucial for England, after their shared points with Scotland. A loss to Australia would spell disaster for the defending champions, after Scotland beat Namibia on Friday. If England are beaten, it would leave open the prospect of a net run-rate shootout between them and Scotland to be the second team to advance from the group.

Infamy, redemption entwine for Smith and Warner

Even as a reckoning awaits CA and the Australian team on the culture front, public opinion of the banned players have already softened

Daniel Brettig22-May-2018Paul Kelly’s plaintive wish for redemption, , could almost have been written for Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft.Whether in Cape Town, Perth or Sydney, all carried the heavy weight of the Newlands ball-tampering scandal, with a governing body in Cricket Australia all too eager to turn the screw on the trio in order to contain any wider damage to the game in the weeks before signing a new broadcast rights deal. “They haven’t been charged by Cricket Australia for ball tampering,” the board’s chief executive James Sutherland said. “It relates to contrary to the spirit of the game, it relates to denigrating the game or having an impact on the reputation and image of the game, causing damage to the game, all of those things have quite clearly happened in a short space of time as a result of those actions.”

Smith, Warner in Fame top 10

Famous or infamous? The question hangs in the air above Steven Smith and David Warner as they both make ESPN Australia’s fame top 10 in the wake of a year that featured the Newlands ball-tampering scandal but also the regaining of the Ashes at home. Both will be eligible by the time the national team begins preparing for the 2019 Ashes and World Cup double; the question is whether Australian cricket will still be as needy for their talents as would appear the case right now.

Smith’s two airport tableaux, manhandled through O.R. Tambo International Airport in South Africa, then crying his eyes out at Kingsford Smith in Sydney, could not cease to stir the emotions of even the most cynical observer. If Warner’s visage attracted less sympathy, his words were more definitively bleak. “In the back of my mind I suppose there is a tiny ray of hope,” Warner said, “that I may one day be given the privilege of playing for my country again, but I am resigned to the fact that that may never happen.”Their actions at Newlands, as defined by CA’s comprehensive code of conduct charge sheet, were indefensible. Bancroft received some measure of leniency on account of his inexperience, but there was no such consideration for Smith and Warner. In a trice, Australia’s two best and most prominent cricketers were cast out of the game, with many more ramifications to follow CA’s judgment. First, a matter of hours after being handed their CA bans, they were culled from this year’s IPL. Sponsors deserted them, and fans both at home and abroad expressed their outrage in terms that grew increasingly shrill.Amid the public maelstrom and their private senses of turmoil, all pondered whether or not to take their CA charges and penalties to code of conduct hearings. Each player had grounds for doing so, and it may be a long time before further details of exactly what took place at Newlands, before and after Bancroft was seen roughing up the ball before trying to hide sandpaper down his trousers, emerge. But one by one, all chose to waive their right to this process, accepting the “umpire’s” verdict, however harsh it seemed, to allow the healing of their reputations to begin.Right now, a little less than two months later, much has already changed for Smith and Warner. They have returned, carefully, to the public eye – Smith announcing his arrival back home in Australia after a trip to the United States, Warner turning up doing community work in the Northern Territory. They are being offered all manner of opportunities to make their returns to the game, beyond the bounds of the ban on international and first-class cricket imposed on them by CA. And the public rhetoric around them has softened noticeably, a process that began when the national team coach Darren Lehmann resigned upon witnessing Smith’s tearful return home.In recent weeks, Lehmann’s successor Justin Langer has increased the level of verbal compassion, speaking of the Cape Town trio in terms of mistakes and learning. “They’ve made mistakes. We have all made mistakes and we can all get better,” he said. “David Warner made a mistake. Has he got areas to get better at? Yes. Has Steve Smith? Has Cameron Bancroft? Has every single person in Australian cricket? Yes. They have all got areas in we keep helping and mentoring them and if they meet the standards of the Australian cricket team, of course, they will be welcomed back.”Similar noises have emanated from Tim Paine, the man thrust into the captaincy. In a recent interview with , he even stated that the Australian team he now leads is still Smith and Warner’s – he is merely keeping the seat warm. “Once they’ve served their sanctions they’ll be welcomed back into our team with no issues whatsoever,” Paine said. “Everyone wants to move past South Africa. In a way, I see it as their team, and I want to do the right thing by them, but I also want to move our culture and behaviour forward and I want them to be part of it.”Sport, of course, is replete with stories of redemption. Google “sporting redemption” and click through any one of 459,000 results to see it. The comeback narrative is so deeply entrenched in sporting lore that it would feel oddly incomplete without such tales, whether they are played out to a glorious conclusion in the manner of the Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs breaking their long droughts without ultimate baseball success, or left hanging on the many what-ifs of, say, Greg Norman at the Masters. This sense of desire for a happy ending is key to understanding how Smith and Warner may yet find themselves back on the dais of cricketing success, surrounded by teammates who, in the horrid days immediately after the Newlands Test, found themselves very much at odds with Warner in particular.But there is also a pragmatic element to much of the warming rhetoric and sense of change. CA, having pushed the issue from bad publicity to investigation, charge and acceptance of sanctions in little more than two weeks – compare that to the Essendon AFL drugs scandal which dragged on for years – wants a rejuvenated image for the game and the national team. The sport’s new Australian broadcasters, and , want viewers in their many hundreds of thousands, and the strong returns of Warner and Smith can only add to those figures. Fox’s part owners at News Corporation want to sell newspapers and digital subscriptions, something far more likely to happen as followers are drawn into the long road back for the former captain and his deputy. And supporters of the game wish to feel good about it again, after all the opprobrium of March and April.A reckoning still awaits CA and the national team, in terms of the way the organisation has been run in recent times, and the way in which the men clad in the baggy green had built up plenty of ill will among opponents over numerous years of caustic behaviour on the field. Both elements are the subject of separate reviews, expected to report back to CA before the start of next summer. With questions having already been asked about the links between CA and both organisations carrying out these reviews, the release of any kind of “whitewash” style findings would likely send the board back into the realms of disrepute, even as Warner and Smith slowly return to the game after serving their punishments.What’s likely, however, is that Smith and Warner find themselves welcomed back into the fold, if for no other reason than the fact that Australia’s cricket team will struggle to secure the desired results – overseas in particular – without the runs they can provide. When their playing bans expire in March 2019, it will be a matter of weeks before the start of the 50-over World Cup, and a matter of months before the Ashes tour that follows it. These assignments loom as the moments when, unlike the forlorn figure in Kelly’s song, Smith and Warner will get their chance to start today again.

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