'More relaxed than ever' – Mauricio Pochettino shrugs off Chelsea pressure after huge Aston Villa FA Cup win and insists he 'knows' Blues players back him amid Belle Silva controversy

Mauricio Pochettino insisted he was "more relaxed than ever" after Chelsea's convincing win over Aston Villa in the FA Cup fourth round on Wednesday.

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  • Pochettino had come under fire for recent results
  • But Chelsea responded in style against Villa
  • Blues boss says he is "more relaxed than ever"
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Argentinian had seen pressure ramp up on him in recent weeks following two dismal performances against Liverpool and Wolves in the space of a week. But his Blues side responded convincingly on Wednesday night with a dominant display against Aston Villa that sealed their passage to the FA Cup fifth round. Pochettino says that he is not listening to the noise off the field, and again stressed the need for patience in an incredibly young squad.

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  • WHAT POCHETTINO SAID

    Speaking to after the 3-1 win, the Chelsea boss said: "Other things worry me in life, but not football. Today I was more relaxed than ever because I knew the team would perform. You know when the players are with you and care for you. I could fee it after [the loss to] Wolves. We are talking about the youngest team in the Premier League, but with expectations so high. It's normal sometimes the players feel the pressure to be in the top four and challenge for big things. It's not easy to manage these things. Our belief is 200% but maybe around our environment there are some noises, but that's just football."

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    The "noise" Pochettino refers to erupted from all corners of the Chelsea fanbase after Sunday's dire 4-2 defeat at home to Wolves. The Stamford Bridge faithful didn't hesitate to show their disapproval, not only booing but also chanting the names of former manager Jose Mourinho and ex-owner Roman Abramovich. Blues supporters typically took to social media to voice their displeasure but were joined by none other than Thiago Silva's wife Belle. Pochettino has since played down that feud.

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Enzo Fernandez's wonderstrike in the second half means his last three goals for Chelsea have come in cup competitions (against Preston in the FA Cup third round and versus Middlesbrough in the Carabao Cup semi-final second leg).

Revealed: Gio Reyna transfer to be rushed through as timeline drawn up for USMNT star to leave Borussia Dortmund amid Aston Villa & Sevilla links

Gio Reyna is reportedly set to see a transfer away from Borussia Dortmund rushed through, with it possible that a deal could be done this week.

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  • American struggling for regular game time
  • Expected to be on the move in winter window
  • Working with same agent as Cristiano Ronaldo
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The United States international has been generating exit talk at Signal Iduna Park for some time. He stayed put in the summer of 2023, but regular minutes in Germany have remained in short supply for the 21-year-old playmaker.

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    That has led to fresh speculation surfacing in the January window, with Premier League side Aston Villa said to be one of Reyna’s many suitors. Any move to England – where his father Claudio previously turned out for Manchester City and Sunderland – would offer a fresh start to the talented youngster.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Reyna is said to be open to the idea of moving on at an important stage of his career, with it vital for him to get game time under his belt if full potential is to be unlocked. With that in mind, has drawn up a timeline that could see him sever ties with BVB by the time that they return to action against Bochum on Sunday.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR REYNA?

    Winter transfer windows across Europe are due to slam shut at the start of February, meaning that the clock is ticking for Reyna. He has linked up with Cristiano Ronaldo’s agent, Jorge Mendes, amid the questions of his future and has also been linked with leading sides in Spain, France and Portugal.

Fatal obsession

Trescothick’s neuroses are peerless and this book goes into great detail about them. Pity about the cricket

Patrick Kidd14-Sep-2008

Howard Clayton, the long-serving England Under-19 scorer, tells a story about the young Marcus Trescothick that sticks in the mind. Trescothick used to wear his England cap and blazer everywhere while playing for the Under-19 side and was teased for it by his team-mates. “It might be the closest I get to playing for England” was Trescothick’s proud response.Years later, and with 202 senior international matches behind him, an older Trescothick is contemptuous of age-group cricket. “A complete waste of my time,” he writes in his autobiography, annoyed that having to play for the Under-19 team in 1994 meant he was 76 first-class runs shy of becoming the youngest Somerset batsman to score 1000 in a county season.Such things should really not matter – not when you have won the Ashes and people still sigh: “If only Tresco were still playing for England …” That even now this one tiny record rankles hints at Trescothick’s fatal obsession.Cricketers do tend to be obsessives, as do cricket fans, but Trescothick’s neurosis is peerless. It is seen in his refusal to eat any meat except sausages, a trait which lent him the nickname Banger. His fascination with kit, particularly bats, is another obsession. Trescothick says that if he were ever on Desert Island Discs his luxury would be a cricket kit catalogue.Of course, getting Trescothick on a desert island would be tricky given his homesickness. The depression that afflicted him on England’s tours of Pakistan, India and Australia in 2005 and 2006 appears to have been based on obsession. When doubts and homesickness appear, as they can for any sportsman, Trescothick cannot let go. The first show of fear came when travelling on a school outing to Torquay. “I was terrified, irrationally so, and that scared me even more,” he writes.The condition returned heavily in Pakistan in late 2005. Being away from his wife and baby daughter hurt Trescothick and his depression was exacerbated when he visited victims of the Pakistan earthquake. Witnessing children in pain left Trescothick in floods of tears. The first Test, in Multan, could have been a highlight of his career. Made captain after Michael Vaughan’s knee injury, Trescothick scored 193 as England built a healthy first-innings lead, but chasing 198 to win they were dismissed for 175, the captain making 5.Trescothick reveals why his mind was not on the game. On the second evening of the Test his wife rang him in distress after finding her father unconscious outside their house. He had fallen off a ladder and was taken to hospital. Here Trescothick’s obsession is apparent. He had installed CCTV at home and could watch the images on his laptop. That night he sits in his hotel room and watches the footage of his father-in-law falling, hitting his head and passing out. Forward and back goes the tape as he watches the images repeatedly.The next day his wife asks him to come home but Vaughan refuses to release him. The guilt of staying, heightened by a bomb “scare” (just an exploding gas canister), haunts Trescothick, as does his daughter’s lack of recognition of him at the end of the tour. Undeniably the pain and anxiety of the Pakistan tour caused his breakdown in India a couple of months later.Of the 20 chapters in this autobiography, half deal with his illness, his counselling, his attempted comebacks, why he lied in the set-up confessional with Ian Ward on Sky, and the false rumours about his marriage. This, sadly, is what we want to know, more than his experience of the 2005 Ashes or any of his feats with Somerset.It is a shame, because some of the cricketing stories are fascinating, particularly how Trescothick almost manipulated a run-chase of 612 for Somerset 2nd XI against Warwickshire, run out for 322 with victory seven runs away. But in these celebrity-focused days it is the mental frailties of our heroes that we need to read about in minute detail. Obsession is a weakness of us all.Marcus Trescothick: Coming Back To Me with Peter Hayter
(HarperSport) £18.99


WATCH: ‘Harry all the way!’ – Kane serenaded with bizarre song at Bayern Munich fan function that is sung to the tune of Christmas classic ‘Jingle Bells’

Harry Kane is popular among Bayern Munich supporters and has been serenaded with a bizarre song sung to the tune of Christmas classic ‘Jingle Bells’.

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  • England striker starring in Germany
  • Chasing down records on and off the field
  • Already a hero to passionate fan base
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The England international striker has plundered 27 goals for the Bundesliga giants through just 26 appearances. An immediate return has been delivered on the €100 million (£85m/$108m) transfer fee that was required to prise him away from Premier League side Tottenham.

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    Kane is on course to smash all kinds of records in Germany, on and off the field, and has already become a cult hero in the eyes of a passionate fan base at the Allianz Arena. Some fans have a slightly odd way of showing that support, as the 30-year-old found out when attending a recent function in Munich.

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    WHAT BAYERN FANS SUNG TO KANE

    Despite Christmas having come and gone, Bayern followers welcomed Kane to the stage – as they presented him with a special wooden cannon – by tinkering with the lyrics to ‘Jingle Bells’. They sang: “Harry Kane, Harry Kane, Harry all the way. Oh what fun it is to see Harry score again.”

Adams in frame as Davis departs Sussex

Mark Davis has left Sussex by “mutual consent” after the club’s failure to achieve Championship promotion

George Dobell25-Oct-2017Sussex have confirmed the departure of their head coach, Mark Davis. While the club insisted the decision was reached by “mutual consent”, it is clear Davis paid the price for Sussex’s failure to achieve Championship promotion and an over-reliance upon imported players. It is also understood that Davis lost the confidence of some senior figures in the dressing room.Sussex are now expected to hold a thorough recruitment process to appoint a successor. Chris Adams, captain during their three County Championship triumphs in the 2000s, is certain to be a strong candidate for the role with a possibility that he might be able to coax former team-mate Matt Prior back to the game in some sort of part-time, back-room role. Prior retired in 2015 due to injury and has subsequently moved into cycling as the co-owner and chief executive of One Pro Cycling.Confirmation of Davis’ departure comes a day after long-serving batsman Chris Nash was released and Rob Andrew, Sussex’s chief executive, said it was time to try and take the club in a new direction.”After reviewing a disappointing season for the first team, it was concluded that action needed to be taken in order to build for the future,” Andrew said. “The difficult decisions to part company with Mark by mutual consent and to agree to Chris’ request to be released from his contract were part of that action, but at its core were moves to solidify the foundations of a squad that has the potential to achieve great things in the coming years.”As such, a number of players have been offered and have signed new or extended contracts over recent weeks, and more are set to follow. This means we now have a stable and balanced squad made up of a mix of youth and experience that offers real strength across all disciplines.”Whoever is appointed is likely to be expected to show much greater faith in home-grown talent than was the case in 2017. While the club have enjoyed some success at age-group level in recent seasons, there were times last season when four or five of the team was made up of players ineligible for England – including Kolpak signings Stiaan van Zyl and David Wiese – which inevitably limited the opportunities for younger players.”I strongly believe that when a new head coach is appointed, they will have the raw materials with which to build a trophy-winning side,” Andrew said. “We are continuing to work on our four-year strategic plan for the wider organisation and there will be further news on this in due course.”A major part of that strategy will be the on-going development of home-grown Sussex players by our Performance Department. This work will continue the well-established trend of Sussex-bred bowlers and batsmen making their mark in the 1st XI.”Davis’ departure ends a long and generally happy association with Sussex. First as a player (he was part of the squad that won the County Championship for the first time in the club’s history in 2003) and then as a coach – he started as 2nd XI coach before being appointed head coach in 2015 – he has been associated with the club for 17 years.In a statement released by the club, Davis said: “I have established a very strong squad including Jofra Archer, Stiaan van Zyl and Laurie Evans and given opportunity to a number of young players who will no doubt achieve great things in the future.”The professional squad is very well set for the challenges ahead and I am confident these players will bring silverware to the club. I would like to thank all the players, support staff and coaches who supported me, as well as all the faithful Sussex supporters”.

Former Tottenham favourite Mauricio Pochettino admits he is not feeling the love from Chelsea fans after tough start to Stamford Bridge tenure

Mauricio Pochettino admitted that he is yet to feel loved by Chelsea fans after a poor start to his maiden campaign at Stamford Bridge.

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  • Pochettino does not feel loved at Chelsea
  • Blues are currently 11th in the Premier League
  • They have reached the final of the Carabao Cup
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The former Tottenham Hotspur coach did not have the best of starts to his journey as Chelsea boss as the Blues have already lost 10 matches in the Premier League in 23 outings and are currently ranked 11th in the league.

    Unlike most of his predecessors at the club, which include managers like Jose Mourinho, Thomas Tuchel, and Antonio Conte, who have all been adored by the fans, Pochettino claimed that he is yet to feel the love of the fans although they have been respectful to the Argentine.

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  • WHAT MAURICIO POCHETTINO SAID

    When asked if he felt the love of the Blues fans, the former Paris Saint-Germain coach said, "No, no, I need to be honest with you, no because I understand they were winning the Champions League, they won cups, the Premier League. Why are the fans going to love me after six, or seven months?

    "We are in a final but we are not in a good position in the table in the Premier League. I think at the moment I feel the respect from the fans, I see them on the street and they are all nice to me, but I cannot lie."

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    While the club's performance has been below par in the league, they did manage to reach the final of the Carabao Cup where they are set to face Liverpool on February 25. They also recently beat Aston Villa 3-1 to progress to the fifth round of the FA Cup.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

    The Blues will aim to get back to winning ways on Monday as they take on an out-of-form Crystal Palace side in the Premier League.

Chelsea told 'not even Pep Guardiola' could've led club to success this season as ex-Blues defender insists Mauricio Pochettino walked into 'shambles' at Stamford Bridge after chaotic transfer splurges

Chelsea legend Frank Leboeuf has defended Mauricio Pochettino by insisting that even Pep Guardiola couldn't have led the club to success this season.

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  • Leboeuf claims Chelsea were in shambles
  • Even Pep would have failed to guide them to success
  • Chelsea take on Liverpool in Carabao Cup final
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Leboeuf, who spent five years at Stamford Bridge between 1996 and 2001, has expressed his beleif that the club was in a "shambles" when Mauricio Pochettino took charge of the team ahead of the 2023-24 season. The Frenchman went on to claim that not even a manager of Pep Guardiola's calibre could have led the Blues to success this season.

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  • WHAT FRANK LEBOEUF SAID

    Speaking to , the former defender said: "When Mauricio Pochettino signed for Chelsea, there was not a ‘right man’ for the job – the club was a shambles. You could have put anybody in there, even Pep Guardiola, and I don’t think they would have done anything special with this Chelsea team because an instant solution was impossible to find.

    "Now we are starting to see a bit of light at the end of the tunnel after the games against Aston Villa and Manchester City, but it is all about consistency. We can see how Pochettino is working with the players and the confidence that he is building with them, but there is still a long way to go. I think Pochettino is the last person to blame for the situation at Chelsea. I’m not even sure that I would’ve taken the Chelsea job at the time he did, because although the money might be good it is hard to know where to even start with actually managing the team! He had the guts to take it on and he is doing well."

    He added: "Sometimes the criticism of Pochettino is fair but he has not been without problems and injuries and he has done his best. Everybody was saying that Chelsea didn’t know how to defend without Thiago Silva, but then we saw against Manchester City that they are more than capable. Axel Disasi showed last weekend, against a cyborg in Erling Haaland, that he can handle it.

    "When Pochettino puts his confidence in his players, they have shown that they can produce good performances like they have recently against Aston Villa and Manchester City. Hopefully, we are going to see the result of Pochettino’s hard work very soon."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Former Tottenham manager Pochettino did not have the best of starts to his journey with Chelsea as the club managed to register just eight Premier League wins out of 20 games in the first half of the season. They were plagued with multiple injuries, which certainly didn't help Pochettino, but he has still faced criticism for failing to bring the best out of a squad full of big-money signings. Chelsea have been performing more consistently since the start of the new year, though, and are on the verge of winning their first trophy this season as they gear up to take on Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final on Sunday.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

    After facing the Reds on Sunday at Wembley, Pochettino's side will next take on Leeds United in an FA Cup fifth-round clash on February 28.

Holiday over! Lionel Messi heading back to Inter Miami ahead of 2024 MLS season after enjoying rare two-month break from football

Lionel Messi has enjoyed a rare break from competitive football, but the Argentine’s holiday is over as he is now heading back to Inter Miami.

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  • Argentine's last game was on November 21
  • Will not be back in action until January 19
  • Friendly dates lined up ahead of new campaign
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The eight-time Ballon d’Or winner moved to the United States in the summer of 2023 after severing ties with Paris Saint-Germain as a free agent. He inspired his new club to Leagues Cup glory within weeks of his arrival, but an unfortunate injury contributed towards Inter Miami missing out on a place in the MLS play-offs.

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    Messi had international action with Argentina to take in after seeing his domestic campaign come to a close, but his last outing for the 2022 World Cup winners came against Brazil in the Maracana on November 21. He returned to his homeland for the festive and New Year period, but is now flying north to Florida.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    According to, Messi and his family departed Argentina for Fort Lauderdale at around 11pm on Saturday evening. They will now be settling back into life at the lavish waterfront mansion that was purchased shortly after their arrival in America.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MESSI?

    Messi’s next game will not be until January 19 – almost two months after his last – when Inter Miami take in a friendly date with El Salvador. The Herons also have games against a Hong Kong Select XI, Vissel Kobe, FC Dallas and Newell’s Old Boys on their schedule, while Al-Hilal and Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr will be faced at the Riyadh Cup.

The young and the old, and Boucher's shirt

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket

Steven Lynch14-Nov-2005The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:


Shaun Udal: debutant at 36
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I recently read about Hasan Raza’s Test debut at the tender age of 14. Is he the youngest debutant? And who is the youngest to get a century? asked Aswin Chari from Singapore
Hasan Raza, who is playing in the current Test against England at Multan, is indeed the youngest person to appear in a Test match – he was only 14 years 227 days old when he made his debut for Pakistan against Zimbabwe at Faisalabad in 1996-97. There is some doubt about his exact age, but independent tests at the time suggested that he was about 15, so the published date is not far wrong (if indeed it’s wrong at all). For a full list of the youngest Test players, click here. The 12th man on that list, Mohammad Ashraful, is the youngest to score a Test century – he was 16 years 364 days old when he scored 114 against Sri Lanka in Colombo on the third day of his Test debut.Shaun Udal is currently playing his first Test for England, aged 36. Have many people have been older on their Test debut? asked Jeffrey Cobb from Fareham
Shaun Udal was 36 years and 239 days old when the match started, making him the oldest debutant for England since John Childs, who was 81 days older when he made the first of his two Test appearances in 1988. In all 22 players have been older than Udal when winning their first cap for England: for a full list of the oldest Test debutants, click here.Why did Mark Boucher have the number 200 printed on the back of his shirt in the fifth ODI between South Africa and New Zealand? asked Aamir Masood
Mark Boucher wore the special shirt because that match at Centurion was his 200th one-day international. He is the fourth South African to reach this landmark, after Jonty Rhodes (245 ODI appearances), Shaun Pollock (244) and Jacques Kallis (224). For a list of those with most ODI appearances, click here.


Mark Boucher: only the fourth South African with 200 ODI caps
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I read somewhere long ago about a Test played in the West Indies that was abandoned because the pitch was deemed unsafe to play on. Was that the only such occurrence? asked Prateek Goorha from Australia
It wasn’t actually that long ago – the match in question was the first Test of England’s 1997-98 tour, at Sabina Park in Kingston. There was less than an hour’s play – 10.1 overs in all – during which time England limped to 17 for 3, with the busiest man on the ground being their physiotherapist, who kept having to run out to players who had been injured by balls flying unpredictably off the rutted surface. I’ve always felt particularly sorry for Mark Butcher, who hadn’t expected to play, got a late call-up … and was then dismissed by an unplayable lifter. This is the only instance in Test history of a match being abandoned after it had started because of an unfit pitch, although there was one ODI that suffered this fate – India v Sri Lanka at Indore on Christmas Day, 1997.You wrote a couple of weeks ago about there having been only one Test in Multan – but surely there have been several played there? asked Siddiq Khan from Lahore
The question was in this column two weeks ago, and asked about grounds which had only staged one Test. What I meant was that there was a ground at Multan – the Ibn-e-Qasim Bagh Stadium – which had only staged one Test (against West Indies in 1980-81). Subsequent Test matches in Multan have been played at the new Multan Cricket Stadium. The current Test against England is the fourth to be played there.I know that Mohammad Azharuddin scored a hundred in both his first and last Tests – has anyone else done this? asked Neeraj Bhardwaj from Canada
Apart from Mohammad Azharuddin there have been three other batsmen have scored hundreds in their first and last Tests, and they are all Australians: the current Indian coach Greg Chappell, Reggie Duff and Bill Ponsford. This excludes any current players, and the two men – Andy Ganteaume and Rodney Redmond – who scored a century in their only Test match.

Howell's howlers

A closely contested and wonderful Test series has been marred by Ian Howell’s poor umpiring

Sambit Bal12-Aug-2007


Wide of the mark: Ian Howell had a dreadful time at Trent Bridge, and has made plenty of mistakes at The Oval as well
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It is a pity that matters outside bat and ball should continue to spoil what has so far been wonderful advertisement for Test cricket. The first Test was decided by the weather, and the second, which was won by a skilful and determined performance by the Indians, was overshadowed by jelly beans, player behaviour and inconsistent umpiring. And it will be a tragedy if umpiring becomes a decisive factor in this Test.Umpires deserve plenty of sympathy. Theirs is a thankless vocation and they are noticed only for their mistakes. Their actions are judged and damned by experts, journalists, and millions of viewers who now have the benefit of hugely sophisticated cameras and technologies such as Snickometer and Hotspot. But still, it’s not that difficult to tell when an umpire is not up to it.Simon Taufel, who invited the wrath of Indian supporters for denying Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly well-earned hundreds at Trent Bridge, is a good umpire who had an ordinary match. But it is difficult to say the same about his colleague in that Test. Ian Howell had a dreadful match at Trent Bridge, and it has only got worse at The Oval. It can be considered poor taste to pun on someone’s name, but given the number of he has made in the last two Tests, Howell has brought it upon himself.The ICC has a system in place to assess every decision an umpire makes during a match, and it is often trotted out that umpires get over 90 per cent of the decisions right. Of course, considering that they track every appeal and that teams are appeal-happy these days, Howell might still end up with fairly high percentage. But to anybody who has followed his finger, Howell has got more decisions wrong than right when it really mattered.Few things can be worse for cricketers, batsmen and bowlers alike, than to play in the knowledge that their fate hangs in the hand of an adjudicator who is consistently inconsistent. There are not-outers, none more famous than the legendary Dickie Bird, there are those who are trigger-happy – Dave Orchard springs to mind – there are those who are conservative about front-foot lbws and there are ones who are spinner-friendly. In many instances, umpires go by the pitch, and are likely to adjudge lbws on the basis of bounce. At Perth, for instance, batsmen can leave the ball on its length, safe in the knowledge that it will sail over the stumps.But how safe can a batsman feel when faced with Howell? Apart from his obvious tendency to give wrong decisions, it has been impossible to detect a pattern with Howell. May be it lies in his approach to tailenders. This morning he was happy to give Monty Panesar on the forward stretch against Anil Kumble. Panesar had no reason to quibble; he was dead in front. But on what account did he spare Paul Collingwood on the third day? Collingwood’s front foot was perhaps a few inches ahead, but as Ian Chappell remarked on television, if that wasn’t out, they might as well remove lbw as a mode of dismissal. And when he did give Collingwood out, the ball looked, irrespective of what you saw on Hawk-Eye, to be sliding past the leg stump.At Trent Bridge, he denied Panesar two lbws in his first two overs in India’s first innings. They were vital decisions, for they allowed Dinesh Karthik and Wasim Jaffer to swell the first-wicket partnership to 147, but he was happy to send back RP Singh and Sreesanth in quick succession: Singh looked out, but Sreesanth deserved the benefit of doubt.It’s futile labouring the point, but the lbw that he handed out to Ganguly has perhaps been the shocker of the series. Admittedly, the ball has been swinging exaggeratedly, sometimes changing path after passing the batsman. But this was a deviation palpably off the bat. If he didn’t hear the nick, he should have seen it. Was he late in looking up? If he was, it was a schoolboy error from an international umpire.Which raises the next question. Should Howell have been standing in the series in the first place? Of course, the ICC cannot be blamed for not anticipating the errors, but Howell is not part of the elite panel, and since no other international cricket is on at the moment, those appointing umpires had a full list to choose from. Were none of them available?It is sad that umpires rarely get the credit for a job well done. In that, they are like wicketkeepers. Matt Prior has become the object of ridicule after two bad matches; it’s only fair that the heat is now turned on Howell.Should umpire Ian Howell, who is not part of the ICC’s Elite panel, have stood in the Oval Test? Tell us here

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