Putting mind over matter, the Amla way

The Test series in India will be the sternest examination of Hashim Amla’s short captaincy career as it comes a time when his own form is under scrutiny

Firdose Moonda02-Nov-2015Among the few things Hashim Amla has allowed outsiders to know about him is that he does not like talking too much. At least not in public. Answers most often begin with, “Let’s see,” which then leads the questioner down a corridor of uncertainty, unsure whether Amla enjoys the ambiguity or prefers to answer with action. It is likely a bit of both.Amla is a complex character who does not come across the way a typical sportsperson does. Fire and fury do not form part of his on-field persona, the fervour is kept as hidden as the frustration, but they are both there. On this tour, that has perhaps been the case more than ever before.This is the most important Test series of Amla’s career. Simple as that. It will be the sternest examination of his short captaincy career and comes at a time when his own form is under scrutiny, which doubles the challenge that lies ahead. Which one should demand more of his attention – the lack of runs or leadership? He answered with his actions.Minutes after the warm-up match between the Indian Board President’s XI and the South Africans finished at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai, Amla was back at the nets. He had only spent 18 minutes at the crease in the game, faced 12 balls and scored one run; he spent at least double that amount of time receiving throw-downs in a bid to return to his run-scoring ways.In seven innings on this India tour so far, Amla averages 17.85, but his lean run has extended well beyond that. Since his century against Ireland at the World Cup in March, Amla has played 15 ODI innings with only one score over 50 – a century against New Zealand in August. He averages 26.13 and has been out eight times under 20. In the same period, he has played four T20Is and had one Test innings, with a top score of 48.Exactly what he is struggling with is unclear, but footwork could be a small part of it. Amla has been stumped twice on this tour. It may not sound like much, but only until it is seen in context – he has only been stumped three times in his 123-innings ODI career. Among other things, his attention to detail in practising the sweep shot in the post-game net seemed to suggest he was working hard on his batting.

Unlike Graeme Smith, whose determination dripped out of every pore, Hashim Amla’s ambition is kept in the same place as the answers to the questions people ask of him – somewhere we don’t know – but is there.

The crease is not the only place Amla will be watching his step, though. From now on, every move he makes will be in the spotlight. He is the Test captain and the media and fan attention will reach fever pitch. The Indian obsession with the game has now gone beyond pure partisanship. The IPL allowed them to warm up to players from elsewhere and in some cases, take ownership of them, like they have done with AB de Villiers. The “A-B-D” chants are the new “Sachiiiiiin, Sachiiiiiiiin.” They have not composed a song for Amla, but they do not have to because their bond with him runs even deeper.Supporters around the world anyway recognise Amla as the good guy of world cricket, one who is loved for his humility. But it is exactly that demeanor which will define how Amla emerges from this tour. It remains to be seen whether his quiet nature is overpowered by the noise or if he can silence the sounds. At the moment, we only know how different he is from his opposite numbers.The Indian leader is created by his ability to be the authority. MS Dhoni was a military-man; Virat Kohli is movie-star material. Amla is neither. The only thing we have been able to gauge about Amla as captain thus far is that he leads with a quiet but cut-throat competitiveness.Graeme Smith, the former South Africa captain, who was in India to commentate on the limited-overs series, elaborated on it when he explained Amla’s deep desire to do well. Unlike Smith, whose determination dripped out of every pore, Amla’s ambition is kept in the same place as the answers to the questions people ask of him: somewhere we do not know about, but it is there. Amla’s approach to winning shows in the creativity he employs with his captaincy. He is not scared to try things – like declaring with a carrot to dangle in front of Sri Lanka in his first match in charge in Galle – and reads the game as though it was a textbook.Amla has made just one international century since the 2015 World Cup•Associated PressAmla has been particularly astute in managing his bowlers, bringing them back for key spells at key times, and ensuring they work in pairs. On this tour, his management of spinners will be crucial, especially if one of those spinners is Imran Tahir.The legspinner is primed for a comeback, but there are skeptics and their reasoning is sound. Although Tahir has excelled in limited-overs cricket, he has been disappointing at Test level. He needs to translate the control he keeps in ODIs and T20Is to Tests, and may only be able to do that if there is a captain to remind him. Tahir’s variations need to be reined in, his consistency maintained and he needs to be used cleverly. If Amla can get those right on spinner-friendly tracks, he could be halfway to making history in India.The other half will come from how he manages his youngsters. Although South Africa’s core is experienced thanks to the presence of de Villiers, du Plessis, Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel, they have a youthful outer layer which could leave them vulnerable.Dean Elgar and Stiaan van Zyl are new to the opening role and have to understand and act on the importance of the solid start. Simon Harmer and Dane Piedt only have a few Tests to their names and cannot be left as targets for the Indian line-up if they play. If JP Duminy is ruled out, Temba Bavuma may have to play and if Morne Morkel is unavailable, Kagiso Rabada could be handed a Test debut. That would mean almost half the team could have less than 30 Tests between them. They will all need Amla’s experience to rub off.In India, experience is the one thing Amla does not lack for. He has been on three Test tours to India over the last 11 years and his record in the country is eye-popping. In six Tests, he has scored 823 runs including three centuries and one double-hundred, and averages 102.87. Can he draw on that to turn things around for himself and to inspire his team in this series? As the man himself would say, “Let’s see.”

Switch Hit: Travball 1-0 Bazball

After England’s dramatic two-day capitulation to start the 2025-26 Ashes, Alan Gardner hears from Vish Ehantharajah and Alex Malcolm about what went down in Perth

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Nov-2025After all the talk, time for a speed walk. The 2025-26 Ashes got underway in rip-roaring style, as Australia overturned a first-innings deficit to win by eight wickets in Perth, thanks to Travis Head’s century for the ages. Can England fight back from 1-0 down? On Switch, Alan Gardner was joined by Vithushan Ehantharajah and Alex Malcolm to consider that question and more. Will Head continue to open? How did England squander their advantage? And should we start worrying about Joe Root? Also under consideration was Mitchell Starc’s greatness and what’s in store for Brisbane.

Breakthrough: West Ham now reach agreement to sign £30m "complete package"

West Ham United reportedly have an agreement in place with a club as they look to secure their fourth senior signing of the summer.

West Ham want more defenders after Kilman

The Irons haven’t wasted time in the transfer market, bringing in Brazilian winger Luis Guilherme from Palmeiras, experienced goalkeeper Wes Foderingham on a free transfer after his contract expired at Sheffield United and Max Kilman from Wolves in a £40m deal.

Max Kilman West Ham graphic

Kilman has reunited with Julen Lopetegui after their time together at Molineux and expressed his delight at signing for West Ham, saying via the club’s official website: “It’s an amazing feeling to be a West Ham United player.

“As soon as I was aware of the interest from the Club, it was an opportunity I was keen to pursue, so I couldn’t be more delighted to be here. I really enjoyed working with Julen during his time at Wolves – he’s a top-class coach and someone I learned a lot from, and I am confident I will continue to improve as a player under his management here.

“West Ham is a massive Club and I feel this is the natural next step forward in my career. Playing in front of a passionate fan-base, with 62,500 supporters packing out London Stadium every other week, is something I am incredibly excited about.”

However, the centre-back may not be the only addition at the back this summer, with a new left-back linked to rival Emerson Palmieri. Contact was made for Ryan Sessegnon, who is available on a free transfer after leaving Tottenham, whereas Jayden Oosterwolde of Fenerbahce and Lazio’s Luca Pellegrini have also been linked.

Deal close: West Ham in advanced talks to sign 27 y/o in permanent transfer

He could be the next to arrive at the London Stadium.

ByCharlie Smith Jul 17, 2024

Another centre-back to partner Kilman also appears to be on the club’s wishlist, and it looks as if the Hammers have made a breakthrough in regards to one target.

West Ham reach agreement for Jean-Clair Todibo

According to journalist Santi Aouna, West Ham and Nice have reached an agreement for the signing of Jean-Clair Todibo. The Ligue 1 side have accepted a proposal which could see the Frenchman sign on loan with the option to make a deal permanent for €36m (£30m), however, the player seemingly has his eye on a move to Juventus.

“Agreement found between Nice and West Ham for Jean-Clair Todibo. Loan with purchase option of 36M € + bonuses. The Aiglons push the player to ACCEPT the offer but the defender wants to join Juventus. JC gives priority to the sports project. Juve wants to make it their priority. Upcoming contacts between Juve and Nice.”

Nice defenderJean-Clair Todibo.

This is good news and bad news for the Irons, and although the clubs have reached an agreement, West Ham could find it tough to persuade Todibo to move to the Premier League.

We’ve seen that things can change, though, such as with Lille’s Leny Yoro who wanted to move to Real Madrid before deciding to join Man Utd, so who knows, there could still be hope for the Irons and a move for Todibo, dubbed a “complete package” by Football Talent Scout Jacek Kulig.

Revealed: Gianluigi Buffon rejected chance to play with Lionel Messi at Barcelona after receiving radio 'sign'

Gianluigi Buffon revealed that he turned down the opportunity to play with Lionel Messi at Barcelona after receiving a "sign" while driving.

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Barcelona approached Buffon in 2021Legendary goalkeeper turned them downInstead returned to boyhood club ParmaFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

After announcing his decision to leave Juventus in 2021, Buffon was courted by several clubs across Europe seeking his vast experience. Among the offers on the table was one from Barcelona, who were in search of a seasoned goalkeeper to back up their first-choice, Marc-Andre ter Stegen.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The thought of joining the Catalan giants and sharing the pitch with Messi was undeniably appealing to Buffon, who had already spent years playing alongside another football legend, Cristiano Ronaldo. However, he decided to reject La Blaugrana on an impulse during a routine drive.

Getty Images SportWHAT BUFFON SAID

While on the motorway, Buffon heard , a song by Italian artist Jovanotti, playing on the radio. The track, which Buffon hadn’t heard in over a decade, stirred a sense of nostalgia.

"I had an offer from Barcelona to be second goalkeeper: I liked the idea of playing with Messi, after CR7. One day, however, I was driving and on the radio, they played a song by Jovanotti that I liked and that I hadn’t heard for ten years: ‘Bella’," he began saying during an interview with 

While listening to the track, he came across a sign for Parma on the road and the sign felt like a clear message from fate, reminding him of his roots and the club where his legendary career began: "I looked up and saw the Parma sign on the motorway. It was a sign. And that’s how I ended my career, where it all began."

DID YOU KNOW?

Buffon returned to Parma 20 years after he had first left them to join Juventus in 2001. During his second stint with the club, Buffon became the first goalkeeper ever in men's association football to reach the milestone of 500 clean sheets. Although he signed an extension with the club until 2024, he hung up his boots on August 2, 2023, at the age of 45.

England's stagnant batsmen

I woke this morning with an increasingly unusual feeling in my cricketing belly – one of genuine anticipation

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013I woke this morning with an increasingly unusual feeling in my cricketing belly – one of genuine anticipation. This emotion, of course, has almost been successfully and completely excised from the cricketing calendar by the powers that be, as they pile wodge upon wodge of increasingly indistinguishable contests on top of each other, crammed into the few remaining crannies of time available.

‘Pietersen appears to be in vengeful mood, like Anne Boleyn after her husband had had her head chopped off, only with his head still attached to his central nervous system, and therefore more able to act on his anger than the young church-schisming temptress of Kent and England’© Getty Images
Furthermore, as a die-hard lover of the five-day game, Test matches increasingly seem to me to be tagged on as a regrettable but contractually essential precursor to an interminably tedious one-day series, which would be forgettable were anyone able to take enough notice of it in the first place for its existence to register in their brain before being lost into the swamp of time and the ICC rankings.However, hearing the words “Sabina Park” on the radio instantly conjured up childhood memories of listening to terrified English commentators describing even more terrified English players in the terrifying heyday of the Caribbean pace attack, and of trying to work out if the resounding clonk I had just heard was leather on bat (unlikely), leather on stump (likely), or leather on nose (probable).This is a series that possesses that rarest of cricketing commodities – rarity. It is only the second time in the last 11 years that West Indies have hosted England in a Test series. (Admittedly, when the two sides reconvene for a hastily-arranged two-match series in England in May, minutes after concluding business in the Caribbean, and seconds after some of the players have returned from briefly adorning the non-business end of the IPL, it will be the third time in five years that the two have met in England, it will begin almost before the and looks set to smash all records for Least Eagerly Awaited Test Series Of All Time.)There are other factors adding to the excitement. Under their new captain Strauss, England are entering a new dawn, albeit with the same players who have boldly woken up on its last few new dawns, stretched, pulled back the new curtains, calculated the minimum allowable performance to avoid being dropped, hit the snooze button and settled down for a well-deserved lie-in, whilst Owais Shah sits alone in the breakfast room, picking at his corn flakes with an increasingly irritable spoon.England should win, although, hopefully, not quite as easily as in recent series between the two, if only because of the height of their bowlers – the most successful bowlers in the Caribbean recently include Harmison, Nel, Clark and Shabbir Ahmed – and because deposed skipper Pietersen appears to be in vengeful mood, like Anne Boleyn after her husband had had her head chopped off, only with his head still attached to his central nervous system, and therefore more able to act on his anger than the young church-schisming temptress of Kent and England. This is all dependent on someone concocting a method of dismissing Chanderpaul, who is arguably now the single most important player in world cricket, as well as the oddest.A few statistical pointers:The Lara Effect
Chanderpaul averaged 44 before Lara retired at the end of 2006, but a Bradman-embarrassing 104 since then. The team’s next best two batsmen have also posted more impressive numbers since the great Trindadian swished his spectacular bat for the final time. Both Sarwan and Gayle averaged 38 before his retirement; they average 45 and 44 respectively since.Fast Bowlers
In their last 16 Tests, Steve Harmison averages 47, Fidel Edwards 32, and Jerome Taylor 31. Harmison does however average 24 in 12 Tests against West Indies.Spin Bowlers
Since 1980, England’s specialist spinners in the West Indies have taken 53 wickets in 6 series at an average of 49.70.England’s stagnant batsmen
Excluding Pietersen (50) and Flintoff (32), five of England’s current top 7 have career averages in the low 40s. However, their recent form is less impressive.Cook: career average 42. Last 19 Tests: 36. First 17 Tests: 48.Strauss: career average 42. Last 24 Tests 37. First 31 Tests: 46.Bell: career average 41. Last 21 Tests: 36. First 24 Tests: 45.Pietersen: career average 50. Last 20 Tests: 45. First 25 Tests: 54.Collingwood: career average 42. Last 24 Tests: 37. First 17 Tests: 48.Flintoff: career average 32. Last 12 Tests: 24. First 60 Tests: 33.Prior: career average 40, but excluding century-spanking debut, has averaged 33 over 11 Tests.The statistics speak for themselves. Exactly what they are trying to say is not clear, and the selectors almost certainly are sticking their fingers in their ears and humming the theme tune to themselves, but they are certainly speaking.Possible interpretations of their utterances include:“These boys have been operating in the comfort zone of undroppability for too long.”“Moores was really, really adequate.”“They still haven’t got over the 5th day at Adelaide in 2006.”“If at least two or three of you don’t swing your career curves upwards again, you could lose this series.”Finally, an apology. To Jack Russell. I have lain awake over the last few nights tormented by feelings of guilt and anguish that I have perpetrated a grave injustice by including the Gloucestershire genius in my World’s Dullest XI. His sublime glovework alone should have rendered him beyond consideration, let alone selection, and his batting provided far too fascinating an insight into the curious psyche of a tatty-hat-wearing painter-cricketer. Selectors often make mistakes – I am prepared to be the first in history to admit my error in public.

"Oh my god" – McAvennie buzzing as West Ham eye "great" free transfer

Former West Ham United forward Frank McAvennie has been left excited about a transfer rumour he's heard involving the Hammers.

West Ham looking at signing new striker

The Irons and technical director Tim Steidten have already made three summer signings ahead of Julen Lopetegui’s first season in charge at the London Stadium, with Max Kilman becoming the latest addition from Wolves. Kilman’s joined winger Luis Guilherme, who arrived from Palmeiras and experienced goalkeeper Wes Foderingham who joined on a free transfer after his contract expired at Sheffield United.

New West Ham head coach Julen Lopetegui

It is shaping up to be a busy summer in the market, just as Steidten predicted during Lopetegui’s first press conference as Hammers boss:

“I can’t tell you specifics, but it will be a busy summer for us for sure. The owner and the board have done a really good job over recent years, so we’re in good shape financially. We’re trying to build up the squad. We’re not limiting ourselves to one position – we’re looking at all areas.”

Next on the agenda for Steidten and Lopetegui appears to be a new striker, with Danny Ings and Michail Antonio the only two o8t and out centre-forward options at the club currently.

Latest West Ham transfer news: £35m ace and La Liga superstar on radar

It’s a new era at the London Stadium – here’s what Julen Lopetegui could be up to in the transfer market…

ByMark Marston Jul 11, 2024

Aston Villa’s Jhon Duran appears to be a firm target, with personal terms already agreed with the Colombian. Meanwhile, a bid worth more than £12m has reportedly been submitted for Chelsea forward David Datro Fofana.

Another attacking link has been former Leicester City striker Kelechi Iheanacho, with both West Ham and Wolves eyeing up a free transfer for the Nigerian.

McAvennie reacts to West Ham links for Iheanacho

Talking to West Ham Zone, McAvennie gave his reaction to the idea of the Irons signing Iheanacho. The pundit seemed excited at the prospect, calling it a “no-brainer” and Iheanacho a “great player”.

“I like Iheanacho. I think he’s a great player. Oh my god, on a free transfer, I’d take him. It’s a no-brainer for me, though I’m not sure who this new manager will want.”

Kelechi Iheanacho warming up for Leicester City.

The 27-year-old has scored 42 goals in 196 games in the Premier League for both Leicester and Manchester City and is currently valued at €12m by Transfermarkt.

Former Leicester City manager Brendan Rodgers is also a fan of the striker, previously saying: “Since he has come into the team he has just been fantastic. I am delighted for him because he is such a conscientious guy, such an honest guy, and as you can see now, a very talented player.

"I know when I came here that there were probably times when there were grumbles if he was playing but he has very quickly won over people. That is just through hard work, resilience and talent. What you are seeing is a young player at the top of his game."

A move could be one to keep an eye on, and with a big transfer fee not required, it may make sense to bolster Lopetegui attacking options with the acquisition of Iheanacho.

Joy, Rahim and fast bowlers shine after first six rounds of the Dhaka Premier League

A summary of the first six rounds of games at the Dhaka Premier League T20s

Mohammad Isam10-Jun-2021How the table stands
Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club lost their top place in the Dhaka Premier League T20 following their three-run loss to Prime Bank Cricket Club on Thursday. Prime Bank and Abahani Limited are now on ten points each, followed by Doleshwar who are on nine points in third place.Partex Sporting Club are the only team without a win after six rounds, while Shinepukur Cricket Club are just above them with two points. Click here for the full points table.Top performers
It is of no surprise that Mushfiqur Rahim is among the top performers in the DPL, after his player-of-the-series winning exploits against Sri Lanka last month. Rahim has batted Abahani Limited into winning positions in nearly every one of their five wins.But it is young Mahmudul Hasan Joy who leads the batters’ leaderboard with 241 runs. He has been dismissed twice in five innings and hit the most sixes. Joy’s strike rate of 136.15 is the highest among batters who have faced 100 balls till now.Rahatul Ferdous of Brothers Union put together the best all-round showing in the tournament when he made 54 after his side was reduced to 57 for 6 against Partex. He followed it up with a four-wicket haul with his left-arm spin that decimated the opposition.Left-arm quicks Mustafizur Rahman and Salauddin Sakil took the only five-wicket hauls in the tournament so far, while Alauddin Babu took the only hat-trick. Fast bowlers have generally done well in this competition, with five of them among the top ten wicket-takers so far.Mustafizur Rahman is one of two bowlers to take a five-for after six rounds of the DPL•BCBPlayers with poor returns
Najmul Hossain Shanto, Anamul Haque and Nasir Hossain haven’t been among the runs despite playing in important positions for big clubs. Abahani’s Shanto, who was dropped from Bangladesh’s ODI side recently, has so far made 85 runs in five innings. Haque, who plays for Prime Bank, averages 15.50 with a top score of 35 runs in six outings. Hossain, playing for Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club, averages 15 with the bat and 80 with the ball, having struck just one six in his six innings.Pace bowler Shohidul Islam, who was picked as Mohammad Saifuddin’s replacement in Bangladesh’s ODI squad against Sri Lanka last month, has been surprisingly expensive in his five games, conceding runs at 9.21 while having taken just four wickets. Islam’s Abahani team-mate Taijul Islam also hasn’t done too well, having taken just two wickets and conceded runs at seven per over in his four outings.On the national radar
T20 skills are at a premium in Bangladesh, which is why Nurul Hasan’s unbeaten 66 against Mohammedan Sporting Club won’t go unnoticed by the selectors. He struck five sixes and four boundaries in a 34-ball knock that help Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club to a 16-run win. Hasan isn’t usually regarded as a big-hitter but his wicketkeeping skills and middle-order ability could be tested in the build-up to Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup campaign.Another who has staked a claim is Kamrul Islam Rabbi, an underrated death bowler. He is among the wickets in this competition, as he had been in the Bangabandhu T20s last year, and during the BPL the past couple of years. Rabbi also hit a 12-ball 38, including four sixes off Rubel Hossain in a last over in which they needed 31 to win. He couldn’t help Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club to the win, but very few lower-order batters in Bangladesh have shown this proclivity towards hitting sixes in the death overs.Talking points
BCB’s monetary and logistical effort to ensure a bio-bubble environment for 12 DPL clubs and match officials is commendable. Never before have the Dhaka league players seen such opulence in their accommodation, but the cricket on the field hasn’t quite matched the budget. There have been no more than two or three tight finishes. Pitches have been predictably slow at the Shere Bangla National Stadium while the drainage in the two BKSP venues hasn’t helped in the monsoon.Rain has had a lot to do with the 130-ish average scoring rate in all three venues as matches have been interrupted, reduced and abandoned in the first ten days. Batting line-ups have found themselves out of rhythm. When Dhaka has to host three matches per day from 9am to 10pm, it is clear that the BCB and the clubs are desperate to finish the tournament, rather than worry too much about the quality of cricket.The other disappointment has been the performance of teams like Gazi Group Cricketers, Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club and Legends of Rupganj. Rupganj lost their first four matches before recovering with two wins, while Gazi Group and Dhanmondi Club have been lacklustre. This, despite all three spending big on player salaries.Paying for a bio-bubble that costs more than 7 crore takas (USD $825,000 approx.) isn’t sustainable, but Bangladesh is in the middle of a prolonged lockdown so there weren’t too many alternatives to finish what is essentially the 2019-20 DPL. There are still 30 matches left in the first round apart from the Super League and the relegation playoffs.

Ian Wright calls out Man Utd & INEOS for ‘not caring enough’ about women’s team and criticises head coach Marc Skinner’s ‘David Brent-ish’ interview

Ian Wright claims Manchester United "don't care enough" about their women's team as he criticised manager Marc Skinner's comments.

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Manchester United and INEOS criticisedAccused of not caring about women's teamManager Skinner likened to David BrentFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Over the past year, United's women's team have been moved out of their training facilities to accommodate the men's side, and minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe said the project was a "work in progress". Now, former Arsenal forward Wright has laid into the Red Devils and also women's coach Skinner for his post-match interview following their goalless draw with Aston Villa. The coach had complained that he is working with a "new team" as he responded to criticism from fans, but Wright added the way Skinner carried himself was reminiscent of David Brent – a character played by Ricky Gervais in The Office.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT IAN WRIGHT SAID

He said on women’s football podcast : "When you hear murmurings of Man United saying 'once we sort out the men’s, we’re gonna focus on the women’s' – when is that going to be? You look at the men’s and how far they are off it at the minute. When are they actually going to take notice of the women’s? I genuinely believe, especially with how Man United Women are playing, they do not care. They genuinely do not care enough."

Wright added on Skinner: "Unfortunately for him, the interview he did the other day didn’t stand him in good stead. What he’s saying, in respect of new players, the team gelling – he’s had this team for long enough now where they should be doing a lot better. You talk about the four new players, [Celin] Bizet – she’s played in the WSL before, [Dominque] Janssen has been there before, [Elisabeth] Terland and then Grace Clinton who had to go to Tottenham to get herself better and in the England squad. You listen to that interview, no plan B, no real structure of what they’re doing. They were playing against a Villa side that were bottom of the league and he’s talking about they got a good result – at home. This is why I was quite pleased to see Man United fans pull him up about that interview and how David Brent-ish it was for me."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

After a strong start to the season, where they won three games in a row, United have drawn their last three fixtures and are seven points behind Women's Super League leaders Manchester City – although they do have a game in hand. Skinner was under pressure to keep his job for much of last season but their FA Cup triumph kept him in the job. If results turn, however, he may be given the boot.

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

Skinner's United side, who sit fifth in the WSL, will hope to return to winning ways away at eighth-placed Leicester City on Sunday afternoon.

Ethan Nwaneri compared to Phil Foden and Cole Palmer by Arsenal team-mate as teenage star's breakout season rolls on

Gabriel Jesus has tipped Ethan Nwaneri to reach the level of Phil Foden or Cole Palmer following his impressive performance for Arsenal.

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Jesus praises NwaneriCompares him to Foden and PalmerYoungster impressed for GunnersFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Opening up about his experiences playing with the likes of Palmer and Foden at Manchester City, the Gunners forward predicted big things for Arsenal's youngest star, saying he looked forward to watching him "grow". Jesus placed Nwaneri in the same category as some of the most "special youngsters" he's observed in training over the years.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT JESUS SAID

Nwaneri said: "I have been with some very special youngsters, like Phil and Cole — and also James McAtee at City, he is also very good. So to see Ethan in training and in the game is good, because I am a fan of football… when I see someone young with this quality, I am happy and then obviously I want him to grow, grow, grow. Then if he needs something from me personally, I am here to help him because I am 27.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Nwaneri was Arsenal's star man against Preston in the Carabao Cup in midweek, grabbing the Gunners' second goal in an easy 3-0 victory. More broadly, the teenage midfielder has taken big strides this season, stunning Mikel Arteta with his performance in the middle of the park. In total, he's made four Premier League appearances and notched up several impressive cup displays.

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR NWANERI?

The Premier League's youngest-ever player — who made his league debut aged just 15 years and 181 days old — smashed another record recently as he became the youngest player to score in his first two starts for Arsenal. The 17-year-old will be hoping that over the course of the 2024-25 campaign, his influence on the Gunners' first team can continue to grow.

Chris Silverwood happy that buck stops with him as long road to Ashes begins

First squad of new selection era will test depth of England’s reserves

Andrew Miller18-May-2021Chris Silverwood, England’s head coach, says he is comfortable that the buck now stops with him, after unveiling a 15-man squad for the two-Test series against New Zealand next month – his first since being named as the new supremo of the ECB’s selection process, following the end of Ed Smith’s three-year tenure as national selector last month.Silverwood’s squad includes two uncapped players in James Bracey and Ollie Robinson, and a recall for Somerset’s Craig Overton, but it will be missing both Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer due to injury, as well as the contingent of multi-format players – Chris Woakes and Jonny Bairstow among them – who flew home from India earlier this month following the postponement of the IPL.However, with England’s busy schedule in 2021 including a five-Test series against India and culminating in an Ashes campaign in Australia, Silverwood has called on the players at his disposal to seize their opportunities in the absence of their more established colleagues, and ensure that England travel Down Under in November with a squad that is brimming with both confidence and experience.Related

Do you get England's rest and rotation policy? I don't

James Bracey, Ollie Robinson in line for Test debuts as England name 15-man squad

Ollie Robinson senses Test cap is close

Smith's tenure ends as national selector as role is made redundant

Parkinson: 'I don't just want to be in England squads on potential'

“It’s one thing we’ve talked about, to try and get to the point where we’re not debuting anybody in Australia,” Silverwood said. “It’s been a plan now for a while and we have given different people different experiences, debuted people, got more experience into people, so we’re banking that all the way to the Ashes, really.”To the youngsters who are coming in: ‘Take your opportunity’,” he added. “It’s very simple. For the rest of the guys, it is to find that form and keep working on the game-plan we have, which is very simple – big first-innings runs and then finding a way of taking 20 wickets.”I think we have a great mixture of experience and youth and it’s a great opportunity to keep pushing that game-plan and keep getting better. Not only do we play New Zealand, one of the top nations in the world, but we also have India. It is another opportunity to keep galvanising this team moving forward to the Ashes.”Due to the expanded touring parties required for international cricket in the Covid era, Silverwood is better acquainted with the newer members of his England squad than many coaches before him would have been – which is part of the reason why the ECB deemed Smith’s bespoke role to be surplus to current requirements. And though it means an extra workload for Silverwood, he said he welcomed the clarity that comes with the new arrangement.”Busy is one way of putting it,” he said. “But to be honest, ultimately the buck stops with me anyway, whether the selector was there or just me. If the team underperforms, it is me for the high jump. You have to accept that and I’m at peace with that as well.”What I would not want to do is worry about it because that will stop me making decisions and pushing the team forward, so I’m comfortable with it. It has been busier contacting players and getting the relevant information together that would previously have been done by the chairman of selectors, but I’m happy with where things are at.”ESPNcricinfo LtdBracey’s selection could come to be seen as a test case for Silverwood’s new role. For all that his county form this summer merits a call-up – he has made 478 runs at 53.11 to date in Gloucestershire’s rise to the top of the Group 2 standings – most of his progress towards a Test debut has been made from within the England set-up, be it with the Lions in Australia two winters ago, or during his diligent hours of training in the bio-secure Test environment for the past year.”There is a lot of downside [to bio-secure squads], but one of the upsides is I have spent so much time with players I would not usually see much of, and Bracey is one of those,” Silverwood said. “He applied himself through last summer and this winter, when he was on the fringes and further away from playing than he would have liked, and his attitude in helping the squad and improving has been exceptional.”When Bracey was called into England’s 55-man training squad last summer, he was a relative unknown who had averaged in the mid-30s in each of his previous two seasons for Gloucestershire. Since returning to his county, however, he has shown the value of being hot-housed in an elite environment, a point that Silverwood was keen to recognise.”We have seen him come back from those experiences a better player, and I have no doubt if he were to play in the first Test, he will give himself the best chance of success,” Silverwood said. “He is a quick learner, whatever situation we put him in, and he will move forward and take the opportunity with both hands.”It can only help, having the best players in the world around you, and arguably some of the best coaches, and exposed to different conditions as well,” Silverwood added. “They learn a lot from each other. You listen to guys talking at nets, and the experiences they share when it comes to playing different deliveries. If you are being exposed to that you can only be better if you go with your eyes open.””Bracey is just one example. Look at the spinners who have come back this summer,” Silverwood added, referencing the likes of Matt Parkinson, who has taken 19 wickets at 19.21 so far for Lancashire, and Dom Bess, who bounced back from a tough tour with a matchwinning five-for for Yorkshire at Hove. “They have all been involved somewhere and been successful in their own right. The investment in players this winter has been very rewarding.”In the absence of Stokes, as well as Woakes, Moeen Ali and Sam Curran, the other recognised allrounders in England’s Test set-up, the issue of team balance will be a pressing one for Silverwood. But with Overton and Robinson both very capable batters in their own rights, he’s confident that England will have the depth to withstand one of the world’s leading seam attacks, as well as the firepower to make inroads of their own.”I’ve selected a squad that gives me every option, to be honest,” Silverwood said. “You lose a Woakes, a Curran or a Stokes, it does make it very difficult to balance a side. But the two of them [Overton and Robinson] are very capable with the bat and will give us those options around seven or eight, which is what we need really.”I think the two of them are competing with each other realistically,” he added. “They have done exceptionally well this summer, hence they are both in the squad. It is difficult to split the two of them on their performances and I can’t fault their attitude on the field in the games and what I’ve seen of them. They are fantastic cricketers with opportunities in front of them.”Amid all the rhetoric about peaking for the Ashes, there is an obvious danger for England in facing India and New Zealand this summer. They are, after all, the two best Test teams in the world, to judge by their places in next month’s World Test Championship final. Silverwood, however, insisted that the processes put in place since he and Joe Root took control of the team’s Test fortunes two years ago were robust enough to cope with such a relentless set of challenges.”We want to travel to Australia, fitter, faster, leaner, more ready than ever before, and they get off the plane and it is ‘right we’re here, we mean business and we’re full of confidence’,” he said. “But the here-and-now is part and parcel of the gradual process of getting to the Ashes.”We talk a lot about what it’ll look like when we get to the Ashes, but that game-plan has to be practised and instilled in the India series, the New Zealand series. It’s a continuation of working on the game-plan and getting people in a good space, making sure they have banked plenty of Test experience before they arrive there.”We have the greatest respect for our opposition. We have two great Test teams here. To get to where we want to be against Australia, we have to perform well and carry that respect into these Tests as well.”

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