The prodigious journey of Smriti Mandhana

At the age of 15, Smriti Mandhana wanted to forego a career in cricket and instead study science. By the age of 19, she was the key batsman of an Indian side that had completed historic wins in England and Australia

Shashank Kishore18-Mar-2016At an age where her friends are just starting to contemplate a career, Smriti Mandhana, 19, has already established herself as a pivot around which the Indian batting revolves. Her maturity, which has become a hallmark of her game, shines through as she talks about breaking “female stereotypes” and “changing perceptions.”The picture of a very serious and focused character may emerge, but while she is a model of concentration on the field, she is quite a prankster off it. Her room is often branded as the “play station arena”, where she throws open challenges – “Come and get me. If you can, the meal is on me.” Dancing sessions are a no go because the others are “much better,” but songs, especially those of Arijit Singh, have her reaching out for the loop button.Mandhana’s mindset and personal space is a reflection of how much things have changed in the Indian dressing room since she made her international debut as a 16-year old in 2013. Professionalism, recent results and team bonding sessions have helped break the ice.”We are a family now, this is the closest we have ever been because we have spent more time together in the last three months than we have at home,” Mandhana tells ESPNcricinfo. “The Australia tour helped many of the girls break the ice. The vibe is so positive and energetic, can’t remember a dressing room like the one we have now since my debut.”While she talks about her journey with fondness, there is a hint of disbelief at how things have panned out so quickly. After all, her life is not quite like that of an average teenager growing up in India. But that she is measured is not lost upon anyone.

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There is a bat that Mandhana carries in her kit that is almost as big as her. She drags it to training, but does not use it. It is a bat that was autographed by Rahul Dravid for her older brother Shravan, an aspiring cricketer who made it as far as Maharashtra Under-19s before the pursuit of academic excellence resulted in a promising career coming to a halt. He is now employed with a private bank in Sangli, a small town in Maharashtra, as a branch manager.When Shravan was briefly scorching the domestic scene for Maharashtra Under-16s, Mandhana used to tag along with her father to watch him play. While Shravan used to reel off runs and see his name printed in the local papers, Mandhana used to carefully cut and collect those clippings. “One day, I thought I should also be scoring runs like this,” her eyes light up. “My father never said no to me, so whenever my brother went for a net session, he used to lob balls at me gently.”What Mandhana does not tell you is at first, she hated the ball being lobbed at her gently. “Then my father started bowling from 15 yards, and he noticed I could hit the ball well. I didn’t even know what a cover drive or square cut was. I am a right-hander otherwise, but because my father had a fascination for left-hand batsmen, my brother and I played left-handed. So that is how it started.”Young Mandhana was all of nine when she was first picked in Maharashtra’s Under-15 state side. But the confidence with which she would face up to bowlers older than her convinced her father that she had a future, even though he was not sure how to channelise it. Long work hours at a textile company, where he worked as a chemical distributor, left him little time on weekdays. But he put her under the watchful eyes of Anant Tambwekar, a junior state coach.”I used to train in the morning, then go to school, and then have nets in the evening,” she says. “Sometimes, if the teachers let me go early, I used to finish evening nets and then go home and watch TV.” Wasn’t running around difficult? “No, in Sangli everything is easy,” comes her swift reply.”Unlike Mumbai or Pune, there’s not much time spent on the road. Even at the ground, once the boys finished training, I could get someone to bowl at me for as long as I wanted. I couldn’t have had that kind of practice in big cities.”At 11, Mandhana was fast-tracked into the Maharashtra Under-19s side, but an opportunity in the playing XI did not come about for the first two years. When she finally had the chance, she could not quite make the most of it. At 15, Mandhana had a big decision to make. “Class X boards,” she laughs. “I wanted to study science, but my mother dissuaded me because she knew I wouldn’t be able to balance studies and cricket then.””That [England] tour changed me as a cricketer. To score a fifty and win the Test, which was our first win in eight years, was extremely special”•Getty ImagesScience clearly was not her thing, and her mother’s decision, which she is thankful for now, stood vindicated as Mandhana scored three centuries and a double-century – an unbeaten 224 against Gujarat Under-19s in Vadodara – in the Inter State Under-19s one-day competition. She followed that up with tall scores in the two Under-19 limited-overs tournaments which paved way for her inclusion in the Challenger Trophy. Against the country’s best bowling crop, Mandhana clearly towered over the rest, leading the run-charts that brought her into the national reckoning.At 15, Mandhana had most things going her way. But the quest for more cricket kept her edgy, even as she saw her peers in Mumbai and Bangalore train at big grounds on turf wickets. While moving out was not even an option, Mandhana built a concrete pitch with her savings to facilitate her batting sessions under Tambwekar’s watch.All those sacrifices paid off when she earned her India call-up in 2013, after a number of senior players were rested for a short limited-overs series against Bangladesh in the wake of a disappointing World Cup campaign. But it was not until 2014 that she left her imprints. A call-up to the World T20 meant she had to skip her Class XII board exams; a tour of England later that year meant a she would have had to miss a year, and forego admissions into a hotel management course she wanted to enroll for.”Whatever little doubts I had, vanished after the England tour,” she says. “That tour changed me as a cricketer. To score a fifty and win the Test, which was our first win in eight years, was extremely special. After that, we started getting more matches. So now, I’m thankful that my mother prevented me from choosing science in school. I wouldn’t have been able to manage, no way!”A central contract, she says, guarantees financial security, but she does not want to look too far ahead. “Any form of cricket, the moment you switch off and take things lightly, we all know what will happen,” she says pragmatically. “While money reduces your external worries, I hope to finish my commerce degree too,” Mandhana, who is a first-year Bachelor of Commerce student at Chintaman Rao College of Commerce in Sangli, says.”I haven’t attended lectures though, but attendance is not an issue. Studying sometimes helps me from over-thinking. But for now, I’m happy playing cricket. Winning a World Cup is a dream. There’s the T20 World Cup now and a 50-over World Cup next year. Who knows, our time isn’t too far away.”When she started playing, she wanted to bat like Matthew Hayden, but remodeled herself around Kumar Sangakkara’s style once her coaches told her timing, and not brute force was her forte. For now, she is happy to revel in Hayden’s praise after her exploits in Australia, where India won a T20I series for the first time. “That was something,” she chuckles. It indeed was.

Tough batting conditions, good World T20 prep

The Mirpur pitch, topped with a layer of grass, has tested batsmen but India have displayed impressive temperament and skill to build for the World T20

Alagappan Muthu in Mirpur02-Mar-2016Stupid Asia Cup. Stupid green pitches. Stupid low-scoring matches. Didn’t you get the memo? The World T20 is coming, and its in the subcontinent. Your job was to prime the batsmen to rack up or run down big totals and smother the bowlers with the toughest of love. So what’s the big idea?Only three out of 14 totals in the tournament have tiptoed over the 140-mark. A chase of 84 ended up not being one-sided. That’s not normal, is it? Only, why did Virat Kohli say that batsmen to play games like those? To weather spells like Mohammad Amir’s where the ball was hooping around and zipping about like it was remote-controlled? To endure a nerve-wracking examination of one’s technique and temperament first before coming out the victor? Must’ve been a misunderstanding.After all, Kohli’s idea of a good contest also meant a limited-overs legend like Yuvraj Singh ended up like a sitting duck at a carnival shooting gallery. It’s one thing that seven-foot tall Mohammad Irfan made the ball trampoline past Yuvraj’s nose at 145 kph, but Thisara Perera, another comeback man, who would sooner bowl 145 kph than run at 145 kph, was making things difficult for Yuvraj on Tuesday.He made only 14 not out off 32 against Pakistan and 35 off 18 against Sri Lanka. He set up two victories, but how much more fun would it have been to see him on a featherbed treating fast bowlers like slow bowlers and slow bowlers like net bowlers?Instead, the Asia Cup offered conditions that were prickly for the batsmen. As if Yuvraj didn’t have enough working against him.”When you return to international cricket, there is a lot of pressure from yourself. There are people’s expectations as well,” MS Dhoni said “So the first few matches go out in just figuring out what to do. Whether you want to go out and play the big shot. The minus being that, if you don’t do well in the first couple of innings, then there is more pressure on yourself.”Now consider the sordid past Yuvraj has with Mirpur. It was here, against Sri Lanka, under the overwhelming glare of a World T20 final, that he withered away.”I felt that his approach has always been very good,” Dhoni has said for three straight matches. “He gives himself two or three balls before playing the big shot. And you saw today, he’s someone who can hit sixes at will. So if the same thing continues gradually, he will be in a very good position before the World Cup.”Why did India’s captain – a limited-overs legend himself – offer such glowing testimony to a man who has only 64 runs in three matches at a strike-rate of 96?Because the conditions were so difficult. Because Yuvraj has withstood them for 125 minutes. Because he is nowhere near his best, and yet only Kohli and Sabbir Rahman have bested him at spending time at the crease.The Asia Cup has offered bowlers a chance, and as a result the cricket has been intriguing. There has been a thrust and there has been a parry. Even an Associate nation like UAE has been able to cause a few scares. So much that none of the results so far have been foregone conclusions and all of the matches have demanded the batsmen to be clever.Take India’s innings today, for example. They were 16 for 2 by the fourth over with the ball nipping just about enough to make Sri Lanka believe 138 could be defended. Virat Kohli was at the crease, Suresh Raina joined him and they stuck together for 47 balls. Only 14 of them were dots. There wasn’t any release in pressure but dew had set in and the seam movement had diminished.Kohli and Raina had faced enough deliveries to ascertain the line of attack practiced by Nuwan Kulasekara and company – off stump and just outside – and the field was appropriately set. Point, cover, mid-off and the sweeper. Which meant there were gaps on the leg side; gaps that could be capitalised now that the ball wasn’t jagging about anymore.Out came the flicks. Gentle ones, played late and with a roll of the wrist to keep them down. Kohli diminished his chances of getting out even further by batting outside the crease. This meant he could reach the ball before it had the chance to deviate laterally and even force Sri Lanka to hit a shorter length lest they gave away half-volleys.Such finesse becomes surplus on flat pitches, as was amply clear during India’s tour to Australia in January. Perth was a puppy dog. The Gabba left onlookers gobsmacked. The fastest pitches in the world had been put to sleep. No total seemed safe and the cricket almost numbed the senses. Matches like those can help youngsters like Hardik Pandya get used to the pressure of chasing mammoth targets or Jasprit Bumrah get used to the pressures keeping big-hitting batsmen quiet when nothing is in his favour. But luck may play as prominent a part as skill in such circumstances. In the Asia Cup, with these sporting tracks, skill has been the deciding factor.Even if the conditions have not exactly mirrored those likely for the World T20, there is plenty that all the teams can take away from Bangladesh.”It [this experience] will help us assess the conditions [better],” Dhoni said “You won’t go in with the mindset that ‘generally this what happens here and we will bat like this’. It will push the openers especially to play a few deliveries. Especially, if you are batting first. If you’re batting second you get some sort of an idea as to what is happening. But if you’re batting first, they will give time to the bowler. Then after the second or the third over, depending how much it’s deviating off the wicket or if there is some swing, then they will play their shots. I think that’s very important.”Even on the flattest of wickets, it is the first couple of overs that are really important. We will be able to give that respect to the opposition and the condition, which I think is crucial. Because one or two overs for this side won’t make a lot of difference. Even if we don’t get too many runs in the first two overs, we still have the firepower to get those runs in the next 18 overs. That has been our strength.”What is important is to keep it in the back of your mind as to ‘this is what were thinking like when we were in Bangladesh when it was doing a bit but now’s it’s not so what’s a good score?’ All these things, being a cricketer is a part of your subconsciousness. I feel it will only help us.”This Asia Cup has provided some fantastic cricket, compelling stories, a refreshing balance between bat and ball. If the price for that is a little grass on the pitch, then so be it.

Wolves must regret selling a "superstar" who’s now even better than Cunha

da cassino online: It’s fair to say Wolverhampton Wanderers games this season in the Premier League haven’t exactly been short of talking points, with a hefty 54 strikes tallied up in terms of goals scored and goals conceded across their 13-game stretch.

da marjack bet: To add more context, the likes of Everton and Crystal Palace only have 31 and 29 in contrast, but both those sides certainly have meaner defences, as Gary O’Neil’s men have leaked a worrying 32 strikes when examining their bumper total.

O’Neil will know that the likes of Matheus Cunha will need to continue to put in top-drawer displays in attack for his side to stand a fighting chance at survival, away from obviously shoring up at the back more effectively.

Matheus Cunha's performances this season

Alongside Jorgen Strand Larsen, who has a healthy goal return of six in Premier League action, Cunha has also been a reliable source of entertainment for supporters at Molineux with the Brazilian managing seven of his own goals alongside three assists.

Cunha was a man-possessed away at Craven Cottage before a sobering 4-2 defeat to AFC Bournemouth jolted his team back to reality, with two goals and one assist coming his way from an exceptional 89 minutes versus Marco Silva’s Fulham in a comprehensive 4-1 win.

The South American ace did have a quiet game by his standards in that aforementioned defeat to the Cherries, with possession squandered a costly 21 times not helping his side’s cause, but there’s no doubt in his mind that he can bounce back when O’Neil’s team travel to Everton on Wednesday evening.

The Premier League strugglers will just hope they don’t over-rely on the 25-year-old’s magic, especially if he falls foul of a prolonged drop in form down the line, with one former Wolves ace arguably more tricky and influential for his current employers than Cunha is right now back in England.

Wolves flop who is now even better than Cunha

Of course, the electric Old Gold number ten is currently basking in his superb form, and rightly so, but it’s not always been plain sailing for the 6-foot ace at Molineux.

Cunha only managed to fire home two strikes from 17 Premier League games during his debut season at the club, before developing into the stunning performer he is today for the West Midlands outfit.

Sadly, the same patience wasn’t shown to Pedro Goncalves when he was on the books at Molineux.

Pedro Goncalves of Sporting CP

Now, the Portuguese attacker has become a “superstar” at Sporting CP according to journalist Jack Collins, despite making just one meagre senior appearance for his ex-employers.

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The Old Gold were somewhat powerless to Goncalves returning back to his native country in 2019, with a move away credited to the winger wanting more senior game time, but Wolves will wish they had put up more of a lasting fight when you consider his numbers for Sporting this campaign alone.

Goncalves’ numbers at Sporting by season

Season

Games played

Goals scored

Assists

24/25

12

5

6

23/24

49

18

17

22/23

51

20

15

21/22

41

15

14

20/21

37

23

5

Sourced by Transfermarkt

This campaign, the scintillating winger has managed to better Cunha’s numbers by one, with Goncalves picking up one of those assists in the Champions League when Sporting toppled Manchester City 4-1 under the expertise of former manager Ruben Amorim.

In total, the 5 foot 8 star has a ridiculous 81 goals and 57 assists next to his name since joining the Lisbon-based giants, with Wolves left to ponder what could have been if Goncalves had decided to stay put.

He could have filled the void perfectly when Pedro Neto departed this summer, but O’Neil will be content that he has Cunha to call upon as a similar style maverick in attack, even if Goncalves has surpassed the Brazilian this campaign when fit.

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The Wolves academy player has impressed on loan

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USMNT's Chris Richards helps lead Crystal Palace to clean sheet, three points in win over Ipswich

The American defender played all 90 minutes, denying Ipswich a goal as Palace earned a crucial three points in Premier League action

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Crystal Palace defeat Ipswich 1-0USMNT defender Chris Richards plays 90 minutesCenter back helps record clean sheetFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

U.S. international Chris Richards helped lead Crystal Palace to an important three points in a 1-0 victory over Ipswich Town in Premier League action on Saturday.

The 24-year-old completed the most passes of the match, connecting on 37, six tackles, and won nine duels in an important defensive performance that led to a clean sheet and a huge win.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The lone goal on the day came off the boot of winger Ismaila Sarr, who chipped Ipswich goalkeeper Alex Palmer from close range after playing a lovely one-two pass with Daichi Kamada on the edge of the box.

Palace move up to 11th in the standings with the win, one point ahead of 12th place Brentford and seven points shy of European soccer next season.

Fellow U.S. international Matt Turner went unused as the backup goalkeeper on the bench.

DID YOU KNOW?

Since the start of the new year, Palace have lost just two matches and drawn just once across 12 matches in all competitions, recording nine wins during the span. Saturday marked their fourth-straight win.

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR RICHARDS?

Palace next return to the pitch after the international break when they take on Fulham in the FA Cup on March 29. Richards, meanwhile, is expected to be a part of the USMNT roster for the CONCACAF Nations League semifinals during the break.

Amorim’s new Gyokeres: Man Utd targeting "monster" £84m Zirkzee upgrade

It would be an understatement to say that this season has already been a roller coaster for Manchester United fans.

The team started the campaign with a respectable win over Fulham, but cratering form in the Premier League and Europa League eventually saw Erik ten Hag relieved of his duties in the dugout.

Former Red Devil Ruud van Nistelrooy is in temporary charge, but it’s the highly-rated Ruben Amorim who will have the task of delivering glory to the Old Trafford faithful once more.

Ruben Amorim for Sporting

However, to do that, he’ll likely want and need to make several changes and additions to the first-team squad, and recent reports have linked the club to a striker who could be his new Viktor Gyokeres, and big trouble for summer signing Joshua Zirkzee.

Manchester United transfer news

According to a recent report out of Spain, Manchester United are one of several ‘European giants’ interested in FC Porto star Samu Omorodion.

The story claims that following his sensational form for the Portuguese giants this season and the sky-high potential many believe him to have, the former Chelsea target has become a player of particular interest to the Red Devils.

However, there are two significant obstacles to completing this signing: Paris Saint-Germain’s interest and the striker’s lofty release clause, which stands at around €100m, which is about £84m.

It could be a complicated transfer to get over the line, but if Sir Jim Ratcliffe and Co can find a way to lower the asking price, then Omorodion would be an excellent signing and could develop into Amorim’s new Gyokeres.

The Zirkzee upgrade who could be Amorim's new Gyokeres

So, before we get to how Omorodion compares to one of his potential rivals at United, Zirkzee, let’s examine his similarities to Gyokeres, starting with the biggest: where he plays.

Yes, like the Swedish powerhouse, the former Atlético Madrid prospect is currently plying his trade in Portugal’s top flight, and he’s doing so with almost as much success as the former Coventry City star, currently sitting two behind him in the league’s goalscoring charts.

Their two other similarities are that they’re both right-footed marksmen and come in at over 6 foot, with the Sporting star measuring 6 foot 2 and the Porto poacher a mammoth 6 foot 4, which should help him adapt to the physical nature of the Premier League.

With all that said, how does he stack up to the Red Devils Dutch summer signing? If he moves to Old Trafford in 2025, he’ll have to compete with the former Bologna star to establish himself as Rasmus Hojlund’s main rival for a place in the starting lineup.

Well, when it comes to output, the most important metric for a number nine, the Spanish “monster”, as dubbed by talent scout Jacek Kulig, is the clear winner, racking up 11 goals in 11 games this year, compared to one goal and two assists in 15 matches for the Schiedam-born forward.

What about their underlying numbers? Is it just as one-sided when we take a look under the hood? Unfortunately for the former Bayern Munich prospect, it is.

For example, aside from shot-creating actions and progressive passes, Porto’s goalscoring “beast”, as dubbed by U23 scout Antonio Mango, comes out ahead in every relevant metric, including non-penalty expected goals plus assists, actual non-penalty goals plus assists, progressive passes received, shots and shots on target, goal-creating actions and aerial duels, all per 90.

Non-Penalty Expected Goals + Assists

0.85

0.62

Actual Non-Penalty Goals + Assists

1.54

0.53

Progressive Passes

1.25

2.70

Progressive Passes Received

4.86

3.97

Shots

3.91

2.46

Shots on Target

1.96

1.07

Shot-Creating Actions

2.66

3.02

Goal-Creating Actions

0.42

0.32

Aerial Duels Won

2.64

1.90

Ultimately, Omorodion looks like he could develop into an elite centre-forward, and if United can convince Porto to accept a lower fee, then they should do what they can to bring him to Old Trafford, even if it could spell the end for Zirkzee.

Amorim setting sights on signing "cheeky" £90m Antony upgrade for Man Utd

The new manager isn’t wasting any time…

ByTom Cunningham Nov 3, 2024

Matt Milnes stars as defending champions Warwickshire slide to heavy defeat

Kent took a huge step away from the lower reaches of the LV=Insurance County Championship Division One with a thumping 177-run victory over struggling champions Warwickshire at Edgbaston.After resuming on 28 for 2, in pursuit of a target of 325, the home side folded to 147 all out before lunch. Matt Milnes led the demolition with a destructive burst of 6.5-1-11-4 but Kent’s quartet of seamers all played their part in building the pressure under which the Bears buckled.The result leaves Warwickshire, who visit leaders Surrey next week, in real jeopardy of following their title triumph in 2021 with relegation in 2022. Kent, meanwhile, spring into mid-table after an excellent performance by a team galvanised by the arrival of overseas pacemen Navdeep Saini and Matt Henry.Related

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Their seam attack possessed the cutting edge that the depleted Bears, without the injured Liam Norwell, Olly Stone and Chris Woakes, sorely lacked. Kent’s bowlers also were supported by fine work in the field, led by captain and wicketkeeper Sam Billings who took 12 catches in the match, surpassing the previous Kent record of ten (Fred Huish, 1911, and Jack Hubble, 1923).The final day had a helter-skelter start as Sam Hain hit his first three balls for four but then edged a fine delivery from Saini to Billings.Dom Sibley and Will Rhodes dug in to add 35 but then came a moment which summed up the old cricket truism that it’s when things are going against you that Lady Luck will give you another good kicking. Rhodes, having looked in decent nick and started to sow the seeds of a partnership with Sibley, was strangled down the leg side off Quinn.That’s always an infuriating way to get out – all the more so when it triggers a collapse of 61 for 7 in 91 balls.Kent seam depth in this game showed itself as, with spearheads Saini and Henry grazing, Matt Quinn and Milnes took up the attack and took five wickets in 30 balls.Quinn followed the wicket of Rhodes with that of Dan Mousley who edged behind. Milnes produced an unplayable lifter to take Michael Burgess’ edge and then forced Sibley to play on. Milnes had 3 for 7 after taking a return catch from Danny Briggs.With Warwickshire’s last two wickets needing to find 196, Kent turned to the spinners to improve their over-rate. Jack Leaning disposed of Craig Miles, caught and bowled, before Milnes returned to round off the rout when Olly Hannon-Dalby edged to first slip. Kent’s visit to Birmingham simply could not have gone any better.”The win is a product of all the things we talk about in the dressing room, how we are going to try to turn this around, and I think we saw all of it in this game,” Matt Walker, Kent’s coach, said. “You can’t just want to win and that’s enough, you have got to put the things in place and I was really impressed with the way the boys went about their work.”Our first day’s batting didn’t quite go to plan but our response after that over the next three days was outstanding. That felt like a Kent side of old. The quality through those two-and-a-half days was brilliant and it felt like a real team performance with some real key moments that we had to win and we did.””The league table doesn’t lie, what’s happening doesn’t lie,” Mark Robinson, Warwickshire’s coach, said. “What people can’t see behind the scenes is all the thought and the effort that goes in and the hurt that the players are feeling. In both the last two games they have committed a lot to the games and it’s just not been enough.”

Games that Kyle Bartley will now miss for West Brom after new injury update

After making it six games without victory in the Championship, West Bromwich Albion were handed more bad news courtesy of Carlos Corberan’s update on Kyle Bartley’s injury.

West Brom injury news

The Baggies started the season in fine form but have lost their winning touch in recent weeks, losing twice and drawing three times in their last five games with their latest disappointing afternoon coming in a 0-0 draw against in-form Cardiff City, Dropping down to fifth and eight points adrift of surprise leaders Sunderland as a result, West Brom must get back to winning ways at their next chance.

With Luton Town up next, West Brom should see the trip to face the struggling Hatters as the perfect chance to flip the narrative and turn a winless run of five games into an unbeaten run of five with four draws and one victory. However, if they are going to do that then they’ll be forced to do so without Bartley once again after he missed the draw against Cardiff.

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As confirmed by Coberan, Bartley will now be sidelined for the next four to six weeks in a major blow for West Brom. The Baggies boss updated reporters on the defender’s injury, saying via the Express and Star: “The only one I can offer is that Bartley will be four to six weeks out of the team, that is all I can confirm so far.”

West Brom games that Bartey will miss

Possibly missing up to six weeks, Bartley could return just as the festive fixtures begin to come thick and fast. Given that he’s featured in 10 of West Brom’s 12 Championship games before he was sidelined for both Blackburn Rovers and Cardiff, Bartley’s importance cannot be denied at a time when the Baggies must rediscover their best form under Corberan.

Luton Town vs West Brom

01/11/2024

Championship

West Brom vs Burnley

07/11/2024

Championship

Hull City vs West Brom

10/11/2024

Championship

West Brom vs Norwich City

23/11/2024

Championship

Sunderland vs West Brom

26/11/2024

Championship

Preston North End vs West Brom

30/11/2024

Championship

West Brom vs Sheffield United

08/12/2024

Championship

Potentially missing as many as seven Championship games, including those against promotion rivals Burnley, Sunderland and Sheffield United, Bartley’s injury may well prove to be a defining moment for West Brom’s campaign.

If he is to miss the next six weeks of action, then the defender should make his return against Coventry City on December 11 to begin a run of five games in 18 days for the Baggies. Without the £15,000-a-week star for now, however, Corberan must come up with a solution and get his side back on track, so it will be interesting to see what the Baggies boss decides to do.

Leeds wanted to sign £46m star in the making but got Sinisterra instead

Leeds United maintained their place in the top six in the Championship with a hard-fought 1-1 draw away against Norwich City on Tuesday night.

The Whites went 1-0 down in the first half, thanks to a penalty from Josh Sargent, and lost central midfielder Ilia Gruev to an injury, just days after captain Ethan Ampadu suffered a knee injury.

Daniel Farke’s side reacted well to that setback, though, and clawed it back to 1-1 in the 60th minute. Largie Ramazani raced onto a through ball from Wilfried Gnonto to find the bottom corner and his second goal for the club since joining from Almeria.

The West Yorkshire outfit are aiming to secure promotion to the Premier League at the second time of asking, after they lost 1-0 in the play-off final against Southampton at Wembley last term.

Leeds finished third in the Championship during the regular season and that meant they missed out on automatic promotion to the top-flight, with Ipswich Town and Leicester City going straight up.

The Whites were relegated from the Premier League in 2023 after a string of poor signings, including Luis Sinisterra, left them struggling under Jesse Marsch.

Luis Sinisterra's time at Leeds

In the summer of 2022, former Leeds head coach Marsch wanted to bolster his attacking options and opted to swoop for Feyenoord winger Sinisterra.

It was reported that the West Yorkshire outfit splashed out a fee of £22.3m to sign the Colombia international, after he had produced 12 goals and seven assists in the Eredivisie and six goals and four assists in the Europa Conference League during the 2021/22 campaign.

Unfortunately, Sinisterra’s debut season with the Whites was full of injury issues and underwhelming performances on the pitch in the Premier League, as the team were relegated down to the Championship and had Marsch, Javi Gracia, and Sam Allardyce in charge at various points.

Appearances

19

Goals

5

Big chances created

0

Assists

0

Key passes per game

0.5

Duel success rate

47%

As you can see in the table above, the Colombian forward did score five goals in 19 matches, which was not a dismal return, but his lack of creativity is clear to see.

The winger did not do much to create for his teammates, with less than one key pass per game and zero ‘big chances’ created overall, to go alongside his goal threat.

Sinisterra also missed a whopping 16 matches through injury, with ankle, muscle, and foot issues, and that limited his involvement during the season.

Luis Sinisterra

The former Feyenoord star did not hang around for the Championship campaign, though, as he moved to Bournemouth on loan for the 2023/24 term, before joining them on a permanent deal for £20m.

This meant that Leeds made a loss, albeit of only £2m, on the 25-year-old whiz, who did not do enough to help them avoid relegation in the 2022/23 season.

Things could have been different, though, if Victor Orta had been able to sign one of his alternative targets for the left wing position that summer – Cody Gakpo.

Leeds' interest in Cody Gakpo

Marsch confirmed that Leeds wanted to sign the Netherlands international during the summer of 2022 and claimed that Orta had been to meet the family after agreeing personal terms.

Liverpool forward Cody Gakpo

The saga dragged on throughout the window, however, and the Whites moved to sign Sinisterra out wide in July, before continuing to pursue Gakpo, who was once described as a “towering” presence by U23 scout Antonio Mango.

Unfortunately, though, the West Yorkshire outfit were never able to get a deal over the line for the PSV star, and it was later revealed that it was because of a hat-trick from the Eredivisie sensation.

In his documentary, Gakpo revealed that he had three options on the table; stay at PSV, move to Southampton, or move to Leeds, on the eve of a clash with Volendam.

The impressive forward told himself that he would have signed for the Saints if he scored once or Leeds if he landed a brace. Instead, he scored a hat-trick to stay with the Dutch side.

One that got away

The transfers that nearly happened but never did. This article is part of Football FanCast's One That Got Away series.

This means that, if the attacker was true to his word, the Whites were within one goal of him deciding to make the move to Elland Road in 2022. Instead, Sinisterra was the only left-sided forward added in the window and Gakpo went on to shine for PSV before joining Liverpool.

Cody Gakpo's current market value

At the time of writing (03/10/2024), the Reds winger now has a current market value of a whopping €55m (£46m) by Transfermarkt, having been in England since the start of last year.

Six months after Leeds were unable to secure a deal to sign the attacker from PSV at the end of the summer transfer window in 2022, Liverpool snapped him up for a fee of at least £35m in January 2023 to bolster Jurgen Klopp’s forward options.

Liverpool player Cody Gakpo

Gakpo produced a staggering nine goals and 12 assists in 14 Eredivisie matches during the first half of that season and hit the ground running in England, with seven goals and three assists in 21 Premier League appearances.

This meant that the Dutchman racked up five more goal contributions than Sinisterra did for Leeds during the 2022/23 Premier League season, despite not moving to the country until the January transfer window.

He followed that up with 16 goals and six assists in all competitions last term for Liverpool, which included eight goals and five assists in the top-flight, which shows that the talented gem can be a reliable scorer in English football.

The 25-year-old, who has been capped 32 times by the Netherlands, was valued at €30m (£22m) by Transfermarkt in 2022 when Leeds were interested in him.

This shows that he has soared in value since the Whites missed out on him, as the forward is now worth over twice as much, and that is why he is one that got away for Orta and Marsch.

Sinisterra was the only left winger they landed instead and the club ultimately made a loss on the Colombian, who was outperformed by Gakpo in the Premier League that season.

80% duels lost: Farke must drop Leeds star to unleash teen titan instead

The Whites central defender endured a difficult night against Norwich City.

1 ByDan Emery Oct 2, 2024

فيديو | الأهلي ينجو من فخ بتروجيت بثلاثية مثيرة في الظهور الأول لـ عماد النحاس

حقق الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالنادي الأهلي فوزًا مثيرًا على حساب نظيره بتروجيت بنتيجة 3-2، في المباراة التي جمعت الفريقين مساء اليوم على استاد الكلية الحربية، ضمن منافسات الجولة الثالثة من المرحلة الثانية لمسابقة الدوري المصري الممتاز “دوري النيل” موسم 2024-2025.

المباراة شهدت أول ظهور للجهاز الفني المؤقت بقيادة عماد النحاس، الذي تولى المهمة عقب رحيل المدرب السويسري مارسيل كولر، حيث نجح النحاس في قيادة الأحمر لتحقيق انتصار مهم في توقيت حساس.

جاءت بداية اللقاء سريعة من جانب الأهلي، الذي ترجم تفوقه المبكر بتسجيل هدف أول في الدقيقة 10 عن طريق وسام أبو علي، بعدما قابل عرضية إمام عاشور الأرضية بتسديدة مباشرة في المرمى.

ولم تمر سوى خمس دقائق حتى ضاعف عمرو السولية النتيجة بهدف ثانٍ من تسديدة قوية من داخل منطقة الجزاء.

ورغم التقدم المريح، فإن بتروجيت انتفض في الدقائق الأخيرة من الشوط الأول، حيث قلص الفارق في الدقيقة 45 من ركلة جزاء، قبل أن يدرك التعادل عبر إيمانويل لاكي في الدقيقة الخامسة من الوقت المحتسب بدلًا من الضائع، لينتهي الشوط الأول بالتعادل 2-2 في سيناريو مثير.

في الشوط الثاني، أجرى عماد النحاس عدة تغييرات أبرزها الدفع باللاعب جيراديشار، الذي احتاج لثوانٍ فقط ليمنح فريقه التقدم مجددًا، بتسجيل الهدف الثالث للأهلي في الدقيقة 63 بطريقة رائعة بعد كرة هوائية متقنة.

وشهد اللقاء إصابة المدافع المغربي أشرف داري الذي غادر الملعب بعد تعرضه لشد عضلي، ودخل ياسر إبراهيم مكانه في الدقيقة 62.

“بطولات” يكشف تفاصيل إصابة أشرف داري في مباراة الأهلي وبتروجيت

كما ألغى الحكم محمد معروف هدفًا رابعًا للأهلي في الدقيقة 72 أحرزه إمام عاشور، بعد العودة لتقنية الفيديو التي أثبتت وجود مخالفة.

بهذا الفوز، رفع الأهلي رصيده إلى 43 نقطة من 12 فوزًا و7 تعادلات وخسارة واحدة، ليحتل المركز الثاني في جدول مجموعة حسم اللقب، مواصلًا مطاردة بيراميدز المتصدر برصيد 47 نقطة.

ويتجمد رصيد فريق بتروجيت عند 25 نقطة، ليواصل تراجعه في جدول الترتيب، حيث يحتل المركز قبل الأخير في مجموعة حسم لقب الدوري، والثامن في الترتيب العام لمنافسات الدوري المصري.

ويمثل هذا الانتصار دفعة قوية للجهاز الفني المؤقت بقيادة عماد النحاس، الذي بدأ مشواره مع الأهلي بانتصار ثمين يعكس شخصية الفريق، ويمنحه الثقة قبل المواجهات القادمة الحاسمة في مشوار الدوري، وتعيين مدير فني جديد. أهداف مباراة الأهلي وبتروجيت اليوم في الدوري

'We're rock bottom again' – Lewis Dunk slams 'embarrassing' Brighton performance in thumping 7-0 defeat to Nottingham Forest and admits 'we let ourselves down'

Lewis Dunk has slammed "embarrassing" Brighton and admitted that they "let themselves down" after Nottingham Forest put seven past them.

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Ruthless Forest put Brighton to the swordChris Wood led the charge with a hat-trickDunk scored an own-goal in the matchFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Seagulls endured a humiliating evening at the City Ground, with Dunk inadvertently turning the ball into his own net to hand Forest the opening goal. From there, the afternoon went from bad to worse for the Seagulls as the hosts, recorded their biggest-ever Premier League victory. Chris Wood led the charge with a clinical hat-trick, while Morgan Gibbs-White, Neco Williams, and Jota Silva also found the net in a rampant display by Nuno Espírito Santo’s side.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT DUNK SAID

Speaking to after the game, Dunk delivered a scathing analysis of Brighton’s performance, admitting that the team had completely fallen apart.

"Everything [went wrong]. It was embarrassing," he stated. "We let ourselves down. We let the travelling fans down. We let the fans at home down. We have to take it on ourselves. It was us out there that performed like that. We have to look ourselves in the mirror and bounce back next week."
Dunk criticized the team's lack of effort and added: "I don't think we played with enough intensity or wanted it enough. It's not nice to say as a football player but we weren't good enough today. As a whole team, we didn't deserve [anything]. It could have been even more.

"We knew that we were coming here for a tough game. They are flying in the league and it is always a tough place to come. That tough? Probably not. And that is on ourselves. We have to work hard now and make sure we don't let ourselves or the fans down like that again.

"It is doing it on the training field. Working hard every day, wanting it every day. It starts on the training pitch. Three games ago we were on top of the world again weren't we after two wins in a row? Now we're rock bottom again."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

For Dunk, the night was even more painful on a personal level. His own goal was the seventh of his Premier League career, putting him behind only Richard Dunne (10) for the most own goals in the competition’s history.

"This season has been a rollercoaster," he said. "The manager speaks about consistency all the time and that is a prime example of not showing any. We have to work at it. There's a lot of work to do to get to where we want to get to. There wasn't much to say [for Fabian Hurzeler]. We let ourselves down, let the fans down, let him down. There was nothing to say."

DID YOU KNOW?

Forest’s emphatic win was their biggest league victory since a 7-0 demolition of Chelsea in April 1991. Meanwhile, Brighton suffered their heaviest league defeat in more than six decades—their worst since a crushing 9-0 loss to Middlesbrough on the opening day of the 1958-59 season. Additionally, Brighton have now scored more own goals (19) than any other club since the 2017-18 Premier League season.

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