West Ham in pole position to sign midfielder who won 120 duels in 2024/25

West Ham United are on the hunt for arrivals and now find themselves in pole position to sign a talented midfielder from the continent, according to a report.

West Ham look for improvement ahead of next season

There are a lot of mitigating factors behind the Hammers’ poor campaign last time out, and James Ward-Prowse believes West Ham need to reflect ahead of the new season to ensure there is no repeat scenario next time out.

He stated: “We know it’s not been anywhere near the level that we know we can produce. In the years gone by, the club’s been used to European triumphs and the campaigns they’ve had.

“So for us not to be able to do that or deliver that again is disappointing. I’m sure we’ll have a period of reflection over the summer to look at what we can improve for next season.”

Inevitably, signings will be necessary for Graham Potter and company to navigate another full-on Premier League campaign, so who have the Hammers got their eye on with the window now well underway?

AC Milan midfielder Yunus Musah is said to be a West Ham target despite interest from Serie A champions Napoli amid reports that they have cooled their admiration for the United States international.

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Plenty of work is there to be done as the Irons’ hierarchy look to bring the good times back to the London Stadium. However, rebuilds require patience, so it remains to be seen how Potter opts to reshape his side.

Stepping into the market, West Ham are now reportedly in pole position to sign a powerful midfielder who is attracting plenty of interest from elsewhere.

Tavolieri: West Ham in pole position to sign Raphael Onyedika

According to journalist Sacha Tavolieri, West Ham are in pole position to sign Club Brugge midfielder Raphael Onyedika despite rival interest from Everton in the Nigeria international.

The Jupiler Pro League outfit want around £25.5 million before agreeing to any sale, and it is said that the Hammers have the most concrete attachment to the 24-year-old at this point.

Operating as a protector of the back four, Onyedika registered two goals and two assists in 52 appearances across all competitions last term, and he also won no fewer than 120 duels on league duty.

Freshening up the engine room will be a key priority for Potter this summer and the man in question certainly fits the bill as someone who could help to elevate the Hammers should they manage to push a deal over the line.

الاتحاد الدولي لليد يكشف كيف تفوقت مصر على إسبانيا في نصف نهائي كأس العالم تحت 17 عامًا

أشاد موقع الاتحاد الدولي لكرة اليد بفوز منتخب مصر الدراماتيكي في الدور نصف النهائي على حساب منتخب إسبانيا بنتيجة 31-28 ليصعد إلى نهائي كأس العالم لكرة اليد تحت 17 عاماً لعام 2025.

وكان منتخب مصر ونظيره الإسباني قد تزعما مجموعتيهما، وتنافسا على مكان في نهائي البطولة، ليضرب الفائز موعداً مع منتخب ألمانيا بالفعل.

وكتب موقع الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم عبر موقعه الرسمي: “أظهر منتخب إسبانيا أفضليته على حساب منتخب مصر في الدور التمهيدي، حيث تفوق عليه بـ42 هدفاً لكن المنتخب الوطني أظهر قدرته على صناعة المفاجأة وتفوق في أول 30 دقيقة” .

وأضاف أيضاً: “بدأ منتخب مصر المباراة بشكل أفضل، حيث منع إسبانيا من التسجيل في أول أربع دقائق وثلاث ثواني، وامتلك المنتخب الأوروبي حارس مرمى رائع وهو ألفارو كيسادا الذي قدم شوطا أول رائعا بنسبة تصديات بلغت 43%”.

أقرأ أيضاً..منتخب مصر يهزم إسبانيا وتأهل إلى نهائي كأس العالم لكرة اليد تحت 17 عامًا

وحول حارس منتخب إسبانيا ذكر موقع الاتحاد: “أنقذ كيسادا أربع فرص متتالية وغطى على افتقار منتخب اللاروخا للكفاءة الهجومية التي توقفت عند 39% في الشوط الأول، وارتكبت مصر بعض الأخطاء حيث بلغت كفاءتها الهجومية 36% وقد استحوذ المنتخب الوطني على الكرة لفترة أطول”.

وواصل أيضاً: “أهدر الظهير الأيمن لمنتخب مصر يوسف أحمد ست تسديدات من أصل سبعة في الشوط الأول، وسجل عبد الرحمن الجمل ومؤمن بكير سبعة أهداف معاً، بينما كان لمنتخب إسبانيا سبعة هدافين مختلفين، وسجل بابلو سانشيز خمسة أهداف وقد تعادل الفريقان بعد 30 دقيقة بنتيجة 12:12”.

وتابع موقع الاتحاد الدولي: “في الشوط الثاني تغير مجرى المباراة ولم ينجح حارس مرمى منتخب إسبانيا في التصدي لأي فرصة وازدادت ثقة مصر، في الوقت الذي بدأ فيه الظهير الأيمن أحمد بالتسجيل فقد أضاف بكير هدفين آخرين لتفتتح تقدمها بنتيجة 20:18”.

وسلط موقع الاتحاد الدولى على نقطة تحول أخرى في المباراة: “جاءت نقطة تحول أخرى لإسبانيا استمرت لأكثر من سبع دقائق، وقد استغلتها مصر على أكمل وجه وتعرض مدافع إسبانيا إيريك أنسلمو للطرد مباشرة بسبب ارتكابه خطأ قوي وهو ما أعاق زملاءه في الدفاع أيضاً.

وأشاد موقع الاتحاد بأداء منتخب مصر: المنتخب المصري لعب هذه المباراة بإتقان، وقاموا بتغطية المساحات بشكل ممتاز وشهدت المباراة تألق حارس المرمى عبد الملك مبروك حيث تصدى 10 تصديات بنسبة نجاح تصل إلى 27%، وقام ببعض التصديات في الوقت المناسب مما عزز فرص مصر في التأهل للنهائي” .

وأكد موقع الاتحاد الدولي: “حقق منتخب مصر الفوز بنتيجة رائعة بعد أن فات الآوان لمنتخب إسبانيا، وجاء أداء المنتخب الوطني بشكل متكامل ومثالي وناضج وجاء الفوز بنتيجة 31:28 ليكون الرابع على التوالي” .

وسيلتقي منتخب مصر مع منتخب ألمانيا في النهائي وهو الثالث لها في بطولة العالم بعد نهائي بطولة العالم للشباب عام 1993 ونهائي بطولة العالم للشباب عام 2019.

Diniz prepara três mudanças na Seleção para enfrentar o Uruguai; veja provável time

MatériaMais Notícias

da brwin: A Seleção Brasileira treinou em Montevidéu-URU na tarde deste domingo (15), de olho no duelo com o Uruguai, nesta terça-feira (17), pela quarta rodada das Eliminatórias da Copa do Mundo de 2026. E o time titular de Fernando Diniz terá novidades, já que o treinador apontou três mudanças para o clássico sul-americano.

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da betway: + Veja tabela e classificação do Brasileirão-2023 clicando aqui

O Brasil, que está na capital uruguaia desde sábado (14), treinou novamente no estádio do Peñarol e o técnico novamente não escondeu o esboço da escalação que pretende usar na próxima partida.

+ Você quer trabalhar no seu clube do coração? Matricule-se no curso Gestor de Futebol e entenda como!

Uma das alterações já era esperada, que é a entrada de Yan Couto no lugar de Danilo, cortado por lesão muscular. Emerson Royal, que foi convocado para essa vaga, vai ficar no banco de reservas.

Já as outras duas mudanças serão por opção técnica. Guilherme Arana deve perder a posição para Carlos Augusto, assim como Richarlison deve ceder lugar para Gabriel Jesus. Tanto Carlos quanto Gabriel treinaram entre os titulares neste domingo (15).

+ Lesões forçam Fernando Diniz a montar ‘nova Seleção Brasileira’

Casemiro, que ficou fora do treino de sábado (14), trabalhou sem restrições e deve seguir como titular para enfrentar o Uruguai. Outra novidade na atividade foi a presença de Adryelson, que foi convocado para a vaga de Nino, cortado por lesão.

O provável Brasil para esta terça (17) é: Ederson; Yan Couto, Marquinhos, Gabriel Magalhães e Carlos Augusto; Casemiro, Bruno Guimarães e Neymar; Rodrygo, Vini Jr e Gabriel Jesus.

+ Rodrygo comenta sobre camisa 9 e recentes críticas: ‘Não gosto, mas tenho que fazer’

Para encerrar a preparação, a Seleção treina na tarde desta segunda-feira (16). O Brasil é o segundo colocado nas Eliminatórias com sete pontos em três jogos, atrás apenas da Argentina, que tem nove pontos e 100% de aproveitamento.

Debutant O'Connor lifts Tasmania but Victoria take early honours

The visiting attack shared the wickets around while they were gifted two run outs by Tasmania

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff08-Feb-2025Tasmania teenager Aidan O’Connor posted a half-century on debut but couldn’t prevent Victoria taking honours on day one of their Sheffield Shield clash in Hobart.O’Connor top-scored with 53 as the hosts were bowled out for 236 on Saturday after being sent in to bat. The 18-year-old allrounder struck six fours and a six in his 92-ball innings.Tasmania opener Jake Weatherald (41) and Tim Ward (45) both got starts but couldn’t go on with the job as regular wickets fell. Ward’s dismissal – run out from cover after a horrid mix-up with Jordan Silk – sparked a middle-order collapse, with Tasmania losing 4 for 31 in the space of 10 overs.Victoria’s bowlers spread the workload. Captain Will Sutherland, veteran Peter Siddle, Sam Elliott and Fergus O’Neill all claimed multiple wickets.Siddle had Silk caught at second slip shortly after he was involved in the run out of Ward. Jake Doran was bowled when he shouldered arms at Will Sutherland.O’Connor is one of two first-class debutants for last-placed Tasmania alongside 20-year-old Raf MacMillan.

T20 Blast South Group: Will Kent make it back-to-back titles?

As the 20th season of English domestic T20 gets underway, we assess the runners and riders in the South Group

ESPNcricinfo staff24-May-2022Essex Last season: 7th in South Group
Coach: Anthony McGrath
Captain: Simon Harmer
Overseas players: Harmer (South Africa), Daniel Sams (Australia)Daniel Sams recovered from a chastening start to the IPL•BCCIKey man: Daniel Sams recovered from an iffy start to his IPL to end up as Mumbai Indians second-highest wicket-taker. But with his Test ambitions seemingly on hold for now, Dan Lawrence could be the player to sprinkle a bit of stardust on Essex’s season (assuming he makes a swift recovery from his hamstring strain).One to watch: There are a clutch of young batters vying for opportunities at Chelmsford, with Michael Pepper due a decent shake in T20. He quietly led Essex’s run-scoring last year, with 260 at a strike rate of 131.31, and warmed up for the Blast by hammering 117 off 41 balls, with 14 fours and eight sixes, against Hampshire 2nd XI last week. Keep an eye out for Will Buttleman, too.Verdict: Having not strengthened significantly, it’s hard to see Essex as much more than an outside bet to reach the quarter-finals. But then many would have said the same in 2019, when the team clicked at the right time under Harmer to lift their first T20 title. bet365: 14/1Glamorgan Last season: 9th in South Group
Director of cricket: Mark Wallace
Coach: Matthew Maynard
Captain: David Lloyd
Overseas players: Marnus Labuschagne, Michael Neser (both Australia), Colin Ingram (South Africa)Dan Douthwaite’s form was a rare positive for Glamorgan in 2021•Getty ImagesKey man: Dan Douthwaite became Glamorgan’s talisman in 2021, finishing the season as their leading wicket-taker – including several scalps in a new role as a death bowler – and their only frontline batter with a strike rate above 150. He will need the middle order to do a better job of shielding his weakness against spin but is a destructive hitter against seamers and will push for a Hundred wildcard gig after he was surprisingly overlooked in the draft last month.One to watch: Kiran Carlson has shown himself to be a hugely talented attacking player in other formats but has an inexplicably poor T20 record, with a single half-century in 30 career innings and an average of just 16.55. Last year, he was initially used in the middle order then as an opener; neither worked. At 24, the time is right for a breakout season if Glamorgan can find him a clear role.Related

T20 Blast North Group: Nottinghamshire fancied for another title run

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Behrendorff, Green join Middlesex as Shaheen, Mujeeb bow out

Wright captains ESPNcricinfo's all-time T20 Blast XI

Can the T20 Blast still thrive in the world of the Hundred?

Verdict: Glamorgan have won eight T20 games in the last three seasons, the fewest of any county by far, and there are few signs that their fortunes will turn in 2022. With Marnus Labuschagne on Australia duty in Sri Lanka for much of the Blast, the onus will be on Colin Ingram and Michael Neser to step up in his absence. bet365: 25/1Gloucestershire Last season: 6th in South Group
Coach: Dale Benkenstein
Captain: Jack Taylor
Overseas players: Naseem Shah (Pakistan), Glenn Phillips (New Zealand), Marcus Harris (Australia)Glenn Phillips returns for a second season•PA Images/GettyKey man: Glenn Phillips starred last year, scoring exactly 500 runs in his 12 innings while striking at 163.39, but did not find enough support and Gloucestershire’s final-round defeat to Somerset saw them miss out on the quarter-finals. He returns for the full season after warming the Sunrisers Hyderabad bench at the IPL and, alongside Ian Cockbain, will be the key to their middle order’s success.One to watch: Naseem Shah has proved his fitness playing for the second XI and should be available to start the season. He is still a raw talent but was Quetta Gladiators’ leading wicket-taker at the PSL earlier this year; with Tom Smith and Benny Howell operating through the middle overs he will bowl at both ends of the innings. Pakistan have resisted the temptation to pick him for their ODI series against West Indies and can instead watch him develop across a full Blast season.Verdict: Gloucestershire ended a three-year streak of knockout qualification when they slipped up in their final group game last year and will be in the quarter-final hunt again. Their attack is set up to thrive on slower pitches but their batting line-up cannot rely so heavily on Phillips if they are to finish in the top four. bet365: 18/1Hampshire Last season: 4th in South Group, semi-finals
Director of cricket: Giles White
Coach: Adi Birrell
Captain: James Vince
Overseas players: Ben McDermott (Australia), Nathan Ellis (Australia)Tom Prest is eyeing a breakout season•ICC via Getty ImagesKey man: A veteran of eight Finals Days, James Vince will likely have a big role to play if Hampshire are going back to Edgbaston once again. Only three players have scored more runs in the history of England’s domestic T20 than Vince – who is still only 31 – and last year he was again a lynchpin atop the order.One to watch: Tom Prest was already making waves down Solent way before he led England to the final of the Under-19 World Cup over the winter. An unbeaten 59 in only his third T20 innings set up victory over Gloucestershire last year and the 19-year-old looks ready to bring out his full repertoire.Verdict: Ben McDermott, who led the 2021-22 Big Bash’s run-scoring with 577 at a strike rate of 153.86, could be one of the more impressive overseas signings while Aneurin Donald’s return from injury and the arrival of Ross Whiteley from Worcestershire adds further power. Throw in a varied bowling attack and they will be hoping for more knockout success on the south coast. bet365: 12/1Kent Last season: Winners
Director of cricket: Paul Downton
Coach: Matt Walker
Captain: Sam Billings
Overseas players: Qais Ahmad (Afghanistan), George Linde (South Africa)Qais Ahmad celebrates•PA Images via Getty ImagesKey man: Captain, talent scout, England man, T20 globetrotter: Sam Billings is many things to Kent cricket, but nothing less than a driving force in the shortest format. Straight back into the thick of it from the IPL, he will relish setting the tempo for Kent’s title defence – as well as sticking it to his occasional critics.One to watch: Normally this section is reserved for young talent – but how can you take your eyes off Darren Stevens? He forced his way back into Kent’s T20 plans after three years on the fringes, and promptly helped them to the title, playing all but one game. Don’t rule out the ever-youthful 46-year-old repeating the trick.Verdict: Stevens and Joe Denly aside, Kent largely bucked the “old blokes win stuff” mantra – meaning a squad powered by the dynamism of Billings, Daniel Bell-Drummond, Jordan Cox and Matt Milnes should produce another energetic campaign. But the fact no county has ever won back-to-back T20 titles could be a worry. bet365: 10/1Middlesex Last season: 8th in South Group
Head of men’s performance: Alan Coleman
Coach: Richard Johnson
Captain: Stephen Eskinazi
Overseas players: Jason Behrendorff (Australia), Mujeeb Ur Rahman (Afghanistan), Chris Green (Australia)Key man: Stephen Eskinazi has been Middlesex’s best T20 batter over the last couple of seasons, scoring more than 800 runs at a strike rate in the 140s. He has added power to an otherwise classical technique and should be a banker for consistent returns at the top of the order. He also takes over as captain.One to watch: The emergence of Blake Cullen was one of the reasons that Middlesex were happy to let Steven Finn leave for Sussex at the end of last season. A tall, rangy seamer, he took 20 wickets (one more than Finn) in his maiden Blast season as a 19-year-old, earning himself a wildcard pick for the Hundred.Verdict: The club’s marquee signing, Shaheen Shah Afridi, pulled out days before the start of the competition and fear is that with him will go the wind in their sails. Jason Behrendorff is a solid replacement but Eoin Morgan has long struggled to get a tune out of Middlesex in the way he has done with England; he has given up the captaincy and will not play every game. Their unequalled run of 13 seasons without a trip to Finals Day seems unlikely to end this year. bet365: 16/1Somerset Last season: 2nd in South Group, runners-up
Director of cricket: Andy Hurry
Coach: Jason Kerr
Captain: Tom Abell
Overseas players: Rilee Rossouw, Marchant de Lange (both South Africa), Peter Siddle (Australia)Tom Abell is the lynchpin of Somerset’s batting line-up•Getty ImagesKey man: Tom Abell has been club captain since 2017 but is only now taking the T20 reins after replacing Lewis Gregory in the role over the winter. Abell is among the best player of spin in the competition – only Ben Duckett has scored more runs against spin at a faster strike rate than Abell’s 149.59 over the past three seasons – and his background as a youth hockey player is evident in his scoops and deflections against the quicks. With four half-centuries in six innings last season (he missed most of the Blast through injury) he will be the lynchpin of Somerset’s destructive batting line-up.One to watch: A single wicket would take Max Waller clear of Alfonso Thomas as Somerset’s all-time leading T20 wicket-taker this season but he comes into the Blast uncertain of his future. An uncharacteristically poor 2021 saw him left out of the final four games, including the knockout stages and he has not been included in their squad for the opening night against Kent and is in the final year of his white-ball contract at 34; if selected, he has a point to prove.Verdict: Somerset’s talented homegrown batting core will put them in contention for the knockout stages but with Craig Overton – who has made significant improvements as a T20 bowler – missing on England duty their attack looks light. Expect high-scoring games – especially at Taunton, billed by the club as the world’s highest-scoring T20 venue. bet365: 8/1Surrey Last season: 5th in South Group
Director of cricket: Alec Stewart
Coach: Gareth Batty
Captain: Chris Jordan
Overseas players: Sunil Narine, Kieron Pollard (both West Indies)Will Jacks and Jason Roy form a destructive opening pair•Getty Images for Surrey CCCKey man: Having pulled out of the IPL and opted to take an “indefinite break” from cricket, Jason Roy looks likely to return in time for the start of Surrey’s Blast campaign. If he is refreshed and ready to contribute in as many as ten group games, his presence will be a significant boost.One to watch: He was compared to Moeen Ali earlier in the season, and it is in the shortest format where Will Jacks comes closest to such premium allrounder status. Surrey’s leading run-scorer last season, with 393 at a strike rate of 170.12, Jacks also plays a vital role balancing the side with his offbreaks and a strong season would propel him towards England contention.Verdict: Surrey were beaten finalists in 2020, under the captaincy of Batty; now in charge as interim head coach, he has an enviable squad with which to try and go one better. As ever, they might suffer from England call-ups, but two top-tier overseas signings in Kieron Pollard and Sunil Narine will enhance their status as contenders. bet365: 8/1Sussex Last season: Semi-finalists
Coach: James Kirtley
Captain: Ravi Bopara
Overseas players: Mohammad Rizwan (Pakistan), Josh Philippe (Australia), Tim Seifert (NZ), Rashid Khan (Afghanistan)Archie Lenham made a name for himself last year•Getty ImagesKey man: Any one of Sussex’s four overseas signings for the competition could turn out to be pivotal, though complications around availability make that hard to predict. Mohammad Rizwan is the ICC’s No. 3-ranked T20 batter, Rashid Khan the No. 5-ranked bowler, although they will only play a maximum of five games together.One to watch: Few outside of Sussex knew anything about Archie Lenham this time last year. But the then 16-year-old – the first player to debut in England’s T20 competition having been born since it started – produced any number of memorable moments to go with raw figures of 11 wickets at 17.63, making him the club’s joint-second most-successful bowler.Verdict: Among the favourites, but there are a number of question marks. Phil Salt and Chris Jordan have gone from the squad that reached Finals Day last year, and several bowlers – Tymal Mills, Finn, George Garton, Ollie Robinson – have either been ill or injured recently. Much may depend on Ravi Bopara juggling the captaincy with his all-round commitments. bet365: 7/1

Kuldeep Yadav: 'I have seen failure. I feel I understand things better now'

The spinner has not had the best time over the last two years, but he’s itching to wear his Test jersey again

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi03-Feb-20214:39

Kuldeep Yadav: ‘Perhaps it is now my time to stand up for the team’

It is close to 760 days since Kuldeep Yadav bagged a five-for at the SCG on the 2018-19 Australia tour. That was also the last time Yadav bowled in a Test for India. Since then India have played 13 Tests, including a return trip to Australia recently, during which Yadav watched them win the series 2-1 from the sidelines. With Ravindra Jadeja ruled out of the forthcoming England Tests series due to a finger injury, Yadav is a frontrunner to share spin bowling duties for India with R Ashwin. In this interview, conducted during India’s six-day quarantine in Chennai, Yadav says he is now ready to make a comeback – one that will feel like a second Test debut.“Kuldeep, it was tough for you. I know you didn’t play a game here, but I think your attitude was really good.” Ajinkya Rahane said that during his speech to the dressing room after India’s win in Brisbane recently. It must have been good to hear that?

It is very important when your captain sees you work hard. It was very difficult for [Rahane] as well as the team management [to leave me out of the side during the Australia Test series]. But there was no difference in my process and my work. I believed in both. I felt really good about the words he [Rahane] said because if your captain is backing you and appreciating you [when you are not in the side], it counts a lot and motivates you very much.Both Ajju and the team management completely backed me and I never felt I was sitting out. From the support staff to Ravi bhai [Shastri] to the captain, all kept a close watch on me. When you are not playing it is not easy for the team management to focus on the player who is sitting out [but they did it].Related

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It has been a while since you took your first Test wicket, David Warner, in 2017 against Australia in Dharamsala. It was Rahane you happened to hug first after that wicket.

I remember. When you make your Test debut and you get your first wicket on the first day itself, it is a different feeling, a lot of emotions pour out. My journey started that day and since then I have had a good understanding with my captains and coaches and that is a good thing for me. You have played six Tests in nearly four years. Your last Test was in January 2019. Does it now feel like you are going to make a second debut now if you get to play against England?

I would be playing a Test match after nearly after two years, so it would be similar to making your debut. I want to perform for the team and give 100%, like always. You will naturally feel the same nervousness [as on debut]. There will also be pressure to do well. Everyone is watching you, expectations are big, and when the team is playing well, you want to contribute – big or small, put in the effort, and when you do that, your role is praised. When you don’t play you feel like, yes, you should be playing. But then for the sake of team you have to understand that you need to sit out.”In cricket you can’t perform at all times, but if you carry on doing the hard work, you create better chances to become successful”•Daniel Kalisz/Getty ImagesThough you’ve been out of teams for a while, you always seem to wear a smile, whether in the IPL dugout or the Indian dressing room. How do you manage that?

I learned one thing from my dad – that you should not think about the thing that is not in your control. He said, 100% you feel bad that you are not playing, but when you get the opportunity, to perform and bowl well are things that are under your control, so focus on that. It is tough, no doubt. But if your team is winning 2-1 in Australia, I have no problem sitting out. The big achievement for me is that I have been part of teams that have been successful in Australia in back-to-back series.How much do you miss playing Test cricket?

A lot. Missed it very much. Because there were times I felt I could play, but the team combinations sometimes, and the conditions at other times, did not allow that.What was the lowest point over these two years?

Personally I felt the 2020 IPL did not got well for me. I should have played more matches [for the Kolkata Knight Riders]. I felt I was in pretty good rhythm, I was bowling well, but just that I did not get many overs. So, perhaps, if I got more opportunities then it would have been good. I am not saying that was the lowest, to be honest. Even in 2019 I did not have a good IPL. Until you fail, you can’t handle the pressure. Now I feel I understand things better – I have seen failure in my life now, so even if I don’t perform, it will not be new. In cricket you can’t perform at all times, but if you carry on doing the hard work, you create better chances to become successful.It is possible now that you might play all four Tests against England. Something like that has not happened for you yet in your short Test career. How do you prepare mentally?

When you play regular cricket, the confidence comes automatically. If I play the first match, I will be in a better position to play the next game. Mentally I have kept myself very relaxed. Accordingly, my confidence level will be peaking.England recently won 2-0 in Sri Lanka. Some of their batsmen are in good rhythm. But you must have plans against them?

England have definitely played pretty good cricket in Sri Lanka. The way they countered spin bowling in Sri Lanka, they are in pretty good rhythm and touch. It will be a little challenging for me to execute my plans because I am playing after such a long time. But having seen these batsmen play in one-day cricket and having seen them play against Sri Lanka, I do have good plans. I hope I can execute them. Joe Root, Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes will be England’s key batsmen. How do you assess them?
Root has time to play his strokes. He also plays spin well off the back foot. Buttler dominates the bowlers really well. That is his strength. Stokes too is similar and keeps the bowler under pressure. Having said that, it will not be so easy for them to perform in India considering they are playing in India [in Test cricket] after a long time. That also matters. If they perform, then credit will go to them.Yadav, far right, on the sidelines during the Sydney Test in January: “I never felt I was sitting out”•Getty ImagesYou have been working on the loading part of your bowling action, including using the right hand better. Can you talk about that?

During the lockdown I worked really hard with my coach [Kapil Pandey]. He told me at the time of loading in my run-up, to try and bring my right arm towards third man [for the left-hand batsman]. If it comes from there, he felt my right hand would be straighter. I did a lot of drills to get into that position. I started initially by standing still and getting the right arm in that position and then steadily practised with the run-up.Using the right hand is very important – basically I can generate pace, I can get a lot of control, because my body is always [moving] forward, facing the batsman. When the right arm drops to the side, the pace drops and you don’t get the required bounce. That is why, by keeping the right arm straight, by bringing it [down towards] the third man region, I can generate extra bounce and pace.In late 2019, India bowling coach Bharat Arun told us about one change he wanted you to work on which he thought would make you a more attacking spinner. “As a coach I would love him to add a yard of pace into his delivery, without compromising on the revolutions on the ball, and he is working hard on it. He’s bowling early 80s [kph]. Ideally if he’s bowling between 85 to 90, he’ll be outstanding.” Where are you with that?

I have had a lot of discussions with Arun sir and we have worked on that aspect a lot. At the time my pace was slow, around 77kph. The fastest I would get to would be 80kph at times. In the Australia tour [in the nets] I was getting a nice pace, close to 84-85kph, with good revolutions on the ball. That will help me on slower pitches.The SG Test ball, which turns soft relatively quickly, will be used in the England series. Is that a challenge?

Actually it looks like we have a new set of SG Test balls now. These are good ones. They are similar to the SG balls I bowled with when I started playing cricket. You will see in the Test series. The leather on the ball is very good, the grip is good. When I returned home after Australia, I got the new SG Test ball. It was pretty good. I felt it will be pretty helpful for spinners.Tail-end batting is an area India’s batting coach, Vikram Rathour, has said he has set himself a target for the team to improve in. He said that you have been batting the most in the nets, and he hoped that it will come in handy against England.

I was fulfilling my tasks and batting after that. Every day I would ask Vicky paaji [Rathour] to let me bat and he would give me the opportunity, be it only for five or ten minutes. So I worked a lot on my batting because when you bat No. 8 or 9 in Test cricket, the 25-30 runs you make has a lot of meaning. They are important runs. I feel I can contribute to the team with the bat.You have a first-class hundred and six fifites.

Yes, that is what I am saying: if I carry on working on my batting, it can be important for me in Test cricket.Yadav with Bharat Arun (second from right), with whom he worked on boosting his bowling pace•BCCIDuring the Australia tour, did you manage to speak to anyone there about your bowling?

I did speak quite a lot to Nathan Lyon. I asked him about his routines. He told me he maintains simple drills, what his skills are, how he runs the fingers over the ball while spinning, which is his strength. He asked me to follow my routines, find the spot where I should be pitching and enjoy my bowling with a smile.What about R Ashwin? Do you speak to him about your bowling?

He has given me quite a few ideas. He said at times I should quicken my rhythm, try bowling straighter, make slight tactical changes. He has a lot of knowledge not just about bowling but also game plans. During the Australia tour we spoke about plans for the England series – if Joe Root is batting, which fielders should be close, what areas to bowl. When he did not play in Brisbane I had good discussions with him.Talking with Deep Dasgupta during the lockdown for Cricketbaazi, you singled out Steve Smith as the best batsman you had bowled against because he plays you off the back foot. Is that something batsmen have started doing more, in limited-overs cricket too – play you off the pitch mostly off the back foot?

I am not sure that batsmen have picked me off the pitch. Shane Warne had 700 wickets – he [basically] bowled just one ball, the legspinner. Batsmen used to read him too, but he still got wickets. If I am bowling the wrong’un, it is not like the batsmen is unable to read me – 100% he can read me, but mistakes happen. As you play more and more, the batsman gets an idea about your bowling plans.
I have worked on my variations during the lockdown. I have learned that I should not give the batsman too much time to play shots, especially in India, where the pitches are slower and such things can come in handy.
“You are going to India now. Your time will come. Just keep working hard.” Those were Rahane’s parting words to you in that Brisbane speech. Do you feel your time has come?

I have worked hard a lot. I feel that perhaps it is now my time to stand up for the team, to perform for the team. I am ready completely.What is your jersey number?
Jersey No. 23. If I play it will be my first Test match with this jersey. So it is like a debut ().

Nathan Ellis on final-over drama: 'It was a little bit of cat-and-mouse'

“I was conflicted in my own mind. I knew they were expecting the slower ball, but I didn’t know when to bowl it”

Matt Roller17-Jul-2022It is hard to comprehend the contrasting emotions that Hampshire’s players experienced at 9.48pm on Saturday night in Birmingham. Nathan Ellis yorked Richard Gleeson and charged towards the Hollies stand, roaring “COME ON!” as he peeled away in celebration. His team-mates sprinted over and engulfed him, and the Edgbaston events staff set off the fireworks to mark Hampshire’s record-levelling third T20 title.And then, umpire Graham Lloyd held his arm out and called them back from the deep-point boundary: Paul Baldwin, the TV umpire, had spotted that Ellis had over-stepped. James Fuller sank to his knees. Chris Wood flung the stump he had pulled out as a commemorative souvenir back towards the pitch. “My heart sank,” Ellis said. “All I could think about was the fact that we’d just carried on like that, and I’d carried on celebrating for the last 30 seconds. And now we were in trouble of losing the game.”Related

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The equation had shifted into Lancashire’s favour. With two runs awarded for a no-ball in English domestic cricket, they needed only two runs off the last ball to lift the trophy by virtue of a higher powerplay score. After James Vince, Hampshire’s captain, delivered a team talk, Ellis stood at the top of his mark and tried desperately to clear his mind enough to make a decision as to what he should bowl.”I hadn’t bowled a slower ball to him [Gleeson],” he explained. “My thought process was: ‘what’s the best way to try and get a play-and-miss?’ That was it. Once I’d made that decision, it was just try and execute.” His back-of-a-length, back-of-the-hand slower ball flew past Gleeson’s outside edge, bounced over the top of the stumps and through to wicketkeeper Ben McDermott on the half-volley.Despite Lancashire’s protestations, Hampshire celebrated for a second time. Ellis finished wicketless but his spell, conceding 23 runs from his four overs, must rank among the best none-fors in T20 history. Even before closing out the win (at the second attempt) he had conceded only nine runs across the 15th and 17th overs as Lancashire froze in their chase; all told, he bowled 10 dot balls and conceded a single boundary, which came during the powerplay.Ellis’ strategy at the death was a microcosm of the planning behind modern T20 cricket, and illustrated the unique challenges of the Blast’s Finals Day. After winning their own semi-final at the start of the day, Lancashire had watched Hampshire beat Somerset immediately before the final; Ellis realised that they would have seen how many slower balls he had bowled during his spell of 3 for 30.Ellis – “My role in T20 cricket has never been as a wicket-taker”•Getty Images”It was a little bit of cat-and-mouse,” he said. “I was conflicted in my own mind. I’d bowled three on-pace attempted yorkers and I knew they were expecting the slower ball, but I didn’t know when to bowl it. I was fully aware that I’d bowled a lot of slower balls in the semi-final earlier in the day, and aware that they [Lancashire] were probably watching.”Ellis is shorter than most fast bowlers and has a whippy action, bowling at good pace from tight to the stumps. His back-of-the-hand slower ball, honed playing Sydney club cricket for St George, is difficult to pick since the seam stays upright throughout and he has been a revelation for Hampshire, conceding just 6.87 runs per over across the season.He was only their fifth-highest wicket-taker, with 15, but his death-over economy rate (6.61) was the best in the competition by a distance. “My role I’ve played in T20 cricket has never been as a wicket-taker,” he said. “It’s not something I even think about or look at: it’s probably more damage control or defend. Those moments to me are way bigger than wicket tallies or anything like that. If we get the win, I couldn’t care less.””The way he regrouped and then his confidence to go to that slower ball in that situation… he’s executed so well at the death so a lot of credit has to go to Nelly,” James Vince, Hampshire’s captain, said. “All the other guys were there spectating on the off-chance it came to them but for him to re-group and have the ball in hand and be as calm as that was outstanding. He’s played a bit for Australia, but I’m sure he’ll play a lot more.”ESPNcricinfo LtdAlong with McDermott, his Hobart Hurricanes team-mate, Ellis was signed on the back of his BBL form which Vince has experienced as an opponent, playing for Sydney Sixers. “We’ve got a good relationship with George Bailey, the Australian selector, from when he played at Hampshire,” Vince said. “Although there was [Australia] A cricket and other squads going on, we had good confidence that we’d have him for the whole competition. That makes a big difference.”Ellis was a travelling reserve when Australia won the T20 World Cup in the UAE last year and will now come into consideration as a squad option for their title defence in October – particularly if he can secure a replacement deal in the Hundred and continues to impress in that competition.But those thoughts can wait. Finals are not about the future, but the unfiltered emotion of the present. And as Ellis, still in his full kit and wearing a Hampshire bucket hat, sat in the dressing room with his team-mates deep into the small hours on Sunday morning, he was left to reflect on the surreality of a final that he won twice

Middlesex's Thilan Walallawita: From escaping the 2004 Sri Lanka tsunami to setting sights on England

Young left-arm spinner aiming to build on impressive debut during Covid-wrecked 2020 summer

Andrew Miller25-Mar-2021In society at large, you’d be hard pressed to pick many silver linings out of a year of Covid-induced lockdown. But on the very local level of English domestic cricket, there have been more than a few upbeat tales – most notably, a glut of young players up and down the land, who were handed unexpected opportunities in 2020 due to the rejigged season, and who seized them with an alacrity that has fast-tracked their development.One such player is Middlesex’s Sri Lanka-born left-arm spinner, Thilan Walallawita – an ever-present member of last year’s Bob Willis Trophy campaign, and a captain’s delight according to his club skipper, Stevie Eskinazi. With just six first-class wickets at 40.83 in five games – and three more in a richly promising T20 Blast debut at the Ageas Bowl – it would be easy to overlook his impact to date, but few who have witnessed him doubt his potential. Not only for Middlesex, but maybe even for England too.”I was talking to my friends about how the pandemic helped me a lot,” Walallawita tells ESPNcricinfo. “It opened a few doors for me to play in the first team. Last year was a good start, and I was surprised how quickly it happened, but if you have a lot of confidence in life, and believe in yourself, it doesn’t have to be a massive jump.”Walallawita’s tale is extraordinary on several levels – not least because it could so easily have been over before it had begun. On Boxing Day 2004, aged five, he and his family were travelling back from a Buddhist temple in Galle when they encountered the full force of the devastating tsunami that struck Sri Lanka’s coastline, killing more than 30,000 people.”I have clear memories of that day,” he says. “That’s the kind of memory that will never go away.”We were coming back from the temple and decided to stop for a coffee. All of a sudden, we could hear some weird noises. My dad went outside to check, and he rushed back to tell us the waves were going back and building up, and getting higher and higher.”We jumped in the car, and tried to cross a bridge to escape, but as soon as we got to it, it collapsed. So we parked our car in the front garden of a nearby house, and started running up the nearest hill. I can remember I was trying to be brave, but the same time I couldn’t hold my tears back.”My parents went back the next morning to check where the car was. There were dead bodies and cars everywhere, it was horrible.”They found the car inside a house, and there was another car inside that house too. But the funny thing is, that car is still up and running to this day. We spent a lot of money to repair it, but it’s still working.”

His story is one that will warm the hearts of cricket lovers across the country, but more than that, he’s an incredible bowler, with a mature head on very young shouldersMiddlesex captain Stevie Eskinazi

Six years later, the family emigrated to North London, where Thilan’s father Ajith had been a long-standing club professional for Potters Bar CC. “He always wanted to come to England, and build our life here,” he says. “We came for the education, and the better standard of life, and it’s been extraordinarily good for us.”Now, at the age of 22, and after a period of stacking shelves in Sainsbury’s in between sessions at Middlesex’s academy, Walallawita stands on the verge of securing his British passport, and beginning the qualification process that might one day see him returning to his native Sri Lanka as an England Test cricketer.”One hundred percent, I definitely want to play for England,” he says. “That’s been one of my dreams since I moved here as a young kid, and hopefully if I have a few good seasons in the next few years, there will be a chance of me playing in the English team. That’s the goal and the dream.”It’s been a long process to get my British citizenship, but it should happen by the end of next month, and that will be a huge weight off my shoulders.”Related

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The lot of the young English spinner has been much discussed in recent times – Walallawita is just a year younger than England’s Dom Bess, who recently endured a rough tour of India. But despite the huge challenges faced by his ilk, Walallawita’s impact to date is best expressed by his impressive economy rate of 2.77, a testament to the control that his game already possesses.”We have high hopes for Thilan, he’s a wonderful young man,” Stuart Law, Middlesex’s head coach, says. “He’s still very much on the development phase, but the way he bowls, he can control a run rate, he’s got good skill, he’s very repetitive in his action, and can land the ball wherever he wants, which is probably the key being a finger-spinner.”The red ball doesn’t really spin a great deal in this country until later in the summer, but he is persistent with lines, lengths, and changes in pace. He’s working out how to get batsmen out, so he’s a fast learner.”Walallawita has a high-calibre idol on whom to model his game. His hero growing up was Sri Lanka’s legendary left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, and though he has not yet had the chance to pick his brains, it is surely only a matter of time – Bess, after all, was among the beneficiaries of Herath’s wisdom on an ECB spin camp in India last year.”He played Test cricket for 19 years so the amount of experience he had is just unbelievable,” Walallawita says. “The main thing I’d want to pick his brains for is his tactical side. It would be a great opportunity for me to meet up with him if I go back to Sri Lanka.”And as Eskinazi points out, any such opportunity would not go to waste. “Thilan’s basically a sponge,” he says. “He is honestly one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. No one’s ever got a bad word to say about him.”His story is one that will warm the hearts of cricket lovers across the country, but more than that, he’s an incredible bowler, with a mature head on very young shoulders. Accurate finger-spinners who can put the pressure on the batters, like he did last year in August and September, are worth their weight in gold in the UK, both to give the big boys a bit of a break, but also to make a big impact.”Walallawita proved that aspect of his game on debut against Surrey at The Oval last summer, and in each of his appearances thereafter. Only days after being registered with the ECB as an “unqualified” player, he picked off a Test cricketer in each innings – Mark Stoneman and Scott Borthwick – for match figures of 2 for 109 in 29 overs in Middlesex’s 190-run victory over their London rivals.Thilan Walallawita made a positive impression in his debut season•PA Images via Getty Images”The Oval was probably one of the best grounds I could have asked to play at,” he says. “All my team-mates were very welcoming, and I felt more confident than nervous playing there.”When I was playing in the second team, I always got the ball early doors and tended to bowl about 15 to 20 overs a day. The first team is a completely different story. When the captain needs me I need to be ready.”Last year I got some opportunities. I’ve got to bowl 17 overs straight at Hampshire which I loved, and I’ve been working on getting my shorter format game-plans ready. As soon as my coaches gave me the opportunity, I said I will never let you down.”Walallawita’s opportunities in 2021 may have to wait a while yet – partly because spin bowlers rarely get a chance for a starring role in early-season England, but also because he is currently Middlesex’s one injured player, after sustaining a hamstring problem in pre-season.”His injury’s come at a bad time because he wanted to get out and play cricket, but he’s got to learn that that’s part of professional sport as well,” Law says. “These injuries do happen, but he’ll be all right, and on the table for selection soon, I’m sure.”There is, however, one aspect of Walallawita’s game that may require some extra attention if he wants to ensure he remains in contention when conditions are not in his favour. As his Middlesex predecessor Ollie Rayner once admitted, the key advice he would give to any aspiring English spin bowler is “learn to bat”.A fallibility in that department has held back many talented spinners in the past, notably Monty Panesar and more recently, the Surrey prospect Amar Virdi, and it’s an issue that Law is already keen to address.”We’re trying to turn him into a hitter down the order,” he says. “His best defensive shots are cover drives and pull shots, which admittedly is not a bad defence to have.””I couldn’t agree more with Ollie Rayner,” Walallawita adds. “But I’m very confident that my batting is coming along nicely this year. Every day is a learning curve for me, but yes, I like to play my shots, and entertain the crowd a bit!”With a fair wind, and fairer weather this summer, perhaps he’ll have both a crowd to entertain in the first place, and a chance to do it with the skills that have marked him out as such a richly promising talent.

Wasim Akram: 'I request everyone to read Qayyum report again and then make up their mind'

Former Pakistan captain talks to Osman Samiuddin about his upcoming autobiography ‘Sultan’

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Nov-2022In the latest episode of , Wasim Akram sits down with Osman Samiuddin ahead of the release of his new autobiography and talks bout his post-career cocaine addiction, the Qayyum report, the 1996 World Cup quarter-final, and when the “Greek God” Imran Khan ordered a pint of milk at a nightclub in Sydney.

Unshackled Kohli brings the joy factor back to his batting

He ended his 1020-day century drought with relentless, pressure-free and unhurried batting taken to the next level

Shashank Kishore08-Sep-20223:08

Is Kohli back to his absolute best?

It had a ‘ vibe to it. Except, there weren’t too many in the aisles in Dubai. Yet, when Virat Kohli swatted Fareed Ahmad over deep midwicket to bring up his 71st international century, the monkey that had probably grown into a giant-sized dinosaur was off his back.Just like that, Kohli had rendered all those who kept count of the days between No. 70 and this one, jobless. The count ended at 1020 days, a period that was intercepted by a full-blown pandemic, and one that had taken Kohli, and many others, down dark alleys of lockdowns, quarantines and isolations and bio-bubbles.Related

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When the moment arrived in the 19th over of India’s innings, Kohli was as free-spirited and expressive as you’d seen him in recent times. He carefully unlocked his helmet and belted out a big smile towards his applauding team-mates. There was this distinct look of disbelief on his face, as if he was suggesting this was the format he was least likely to break that deadlock in.All the while, Rishabh Pant stood still with a smile, allowing Kohli to soak in the moment and then embraced his former captain with a hug. Kohli didn’t stop there. He looked up at the skies, then yanked his gloves off to pull out to kiss his ring that had the initials of his wife engraved on it. By now, the shutter bugs who had frantically positioned themselves at appropriate angles, besides each other by the boundary rope, were clicking away to capture that ‘perfect’ moment.Before the moment passed, Kohli looked around the ground with a big smile, scanned his eyes towards pockets that had maximum fans and raised his bat. For all the ferocity he can display on the field, with his nerve-popping celebration and yelps, angry growls and send-offs, this was a moment of pure, unadulterated happiness.Once Kohli had regathered himself, it was business as usual. No dropping of guard, no ugly slogs suggesting he was done. He was going to carry on. Early in his innings, he trusted the good balls on merit, even defending them or nudging them around until he got his eye in. Now, he was in that batting zone players often talk of where they’re so in the moment that they let their instincts take over and muscle memory dictate their game. It was as if Kohli has transported himself to his 2016 vintage.This was fearless, pressure-free, relentless and unhurried batting taken to the next level. He uncorked his wrists to scythe wide yorkers behind point, got into positions quickly to sweep bowlers off their lengths. It’s a shot he almost never plays, but had seemingly pushed boundaries here, willing himself on to replicate shots he’d been training for. And when he wasn’t going down on his knees to sweep, he was slicing wide deliveries behind square, decking low full tosses deep over the extra-cover fence with his solid bottom-handed power.Kohli was having fun, he was toying with the bowling. He was backing away slightly, as if to ask the bowlers to follow him. When they didn’t, he’d bring his left foot back in line and play the most awe-inspiring cover drive. So what if there was sweeper cover? So what if the fielder had anticipated the shot and started running to his right as the shot was hit? He had no chance. This was Kohli at his regal best.As Kohli’s innings progressed, the gum-chewing aggression that brings with it the typical swagger was back in full view. Kohli wasn’t just seeing ball and hitting ball, he was enjoying that pristine feeling of finding that sweet spot and balls flying off in different trajectories. For a change, not many were looking at scores or runs or overs remaining. The small crowd had lost their voice in cheering for a majestic hundred. At that moment, nothing else mattered. Not India’s score, and most definitely not their early exit from the Asia Cup.The return of the King: Kohli’s maiden T20I ton was a magical one•Associated PressHis innings was magical. It was a display of the level he’d cranked his batting intensity to. All the while having a big smile. He was stepping out to deliveries as if he had the free license to bat the way he liked, and hitting them to different corners, as if he was merely listening to chants of the fans.And when you thought you’d seen it all, he played one of the most majestic no-look sixes you’d see. He got into position no sooner than Fazalhaq Farooqi had released the ball, knowing fully well what was coming, and sent it soaring over deep square. The glove punch with Pant that followed told you how much he enjoyed it.This was Kohli having fun. This was Kohli unshackled by expectation. There was a glistening smile that you couldn’t take off his face, litres of sweat dripping off his shirt as he walked off bat raised, gloves up, giving a victory sign and then a beautiful namaste.The joy factor in his batting was well and truly back. He had threatened all tournament, and on Thursday, all that positive energy that had been brimming on the surface had burst open like confetti on a grand stage. The giant screen flashed a message: welcome back, King.The King was indeed back.

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