In Focus: Ander Herrera still has an important part to play at Man United

As reported by The Daily Telegraph, Manchester United are set to extend the contracts of four first-team stars, including Ander Herrera, invoking clauses to keep them at the club until the summer of 2019.

What’s the story?

A number of players’ contracts are up at the end of the season, leading to uncertain futures for a number of valuable assets at the Red Devils, but Jose Mourinho is said to be keen to protect their value and see them extend their stay at the club.

The Telegraph report that Ander Herrera, Daley Blind, Ashley Young and Juan Mata will all have their contracts extended to the end of next season, to fend off potential January interest.

It now gives Mourinho breathing room to decide what to do with the first-teamers at the end of the season, rather than have their situations disrupt their ambitions in January.

Long-term future

While the futures of Ashley Young, Daley Blind and to a certain extent Juan Mata are less clear at United, Ander Herrera is a player that undoubtedly can play an important role at the club in the years to come.

The Spaniard has made close to 150 appearances for the Red Devils since joining in 2014 and adds something unique to Jose Mourinho’s midfield, even if he is slightly behind in the pecking order this term.

Midfielders with his technical ability don’t come along very often and although not the most creative of players, he can provide a defensive stability that allows the likes of Paul Pogba to get forward.

Protecting his value, he is rated at £27m by Transfermarkt, is clearly the right step and even if none of these players have a long-term future at the club, United are at least in a strong position in the transfer market.

Revealed: 52% of West Ham fans wouldn’t back Sturridge bid

Currently sidelined with injury, Daniel Sturridge may have kicked his last ball for Liverpool.

There’s no doubting the England international’s pedigree and he can border upon unplayable for opposition defenders when in top form, boasting a strike-rate better than one-in-two in the Premier League since signing for Liverpool in January 2013.

But Sturridge’s injury problems are notorious and he hasn’t enjoyed a solid run of form since Jurgen Klopp replaced Brendan Rodgers as Anfield gaffer last season – so a departure this summer seems inevitable.

Earlier this week, West Ham manager Slaven Bilic revealed his admiration for the Liverpool striker. The Irons boss is certainly in need of extra firepower for next season, with his side struggling for results during Andy Carroll’s recurring injury absences.

But according to the results of our recent poll, the majority of West Ham fans wouldn’t back a bid for Sturridge this summer, with 52% voting against a potential transfer deal with Liverpool. The east Londoners clearly need to sign another striker this summer, but Bilic might be better off looking elsewhere.

Can Sunderland escape relegation once again?

Sunderland’s annual flirtation with relegation is edging increasingly close to becoming a fully fledged affair with the Championship. For the majority of the seasons since Martin O’Neill left the club, the Black Cats have had to pull off last ditch relegation escapes. Teeth gritting performances have wrestled them away from danger on numerous occasions and this has often been accompanied by the appointment of a new, short-term manager.

The brief hope under O’Neill that Sunderland could become something more than a bottom-half side was short lived. A 13th placed finish in 2011/12 was followed by the nearest of relegation misses in 2012/13 and that has, on the whole, been the norm ever since.

Under David Moyes, Sunderland have notched a grand total of two points from their first eight Premier League games. Scoring only six goals along the way and conceding 15, Moyes’ side have failed offensively and been fortunate not to concede more. The failings of the current side are tricky to address with the squad available and, despite what Moyes may say publicly, there are few signs of improvement. To give a real indication of their woes offensively, only two players have found the net in the Premier League this season – one of those is left back Patrick van Aanholt, who has scored two of their six.

With a trip to an improving West Ham side next up in the league, things won’t be getting much easier. Following the trip to the London Stadium, there is a distracting EFL Cup game against Southampton and the daunting prospect of the visit of Arsenal. Although November’s first two fixtures are notably easier for the Black Cats, Moyes is unlikely to make it to next month if he doesn’t at least avoid defeat in two of the three remaining October matches.

Eventually, the panicked managerial appointment formula will fail to save Sunderland. It may not be this season, it may not be for quite some time yet, but their current state is clearly not sustainable. David Moyes seems like a man short on confidence that they can survive and he has given indications that he was not fully aware of the squad’s weaknesses when he took the role. Sunderland’s only saving grace this season might be that there may be three worse teams who eill disappear into the abyss of the bottom three instead.

Sunderland’s innate lack of quality sets them back significantly. Relegation, if it is not already, has to be deemed a serious threat for the Black Cats. We might not have made it to our advent calendars just yet, but the early signs are present to suggest Sunderland could be without a hope by the time we are tucking into our turkey.

Xavi under fire: Barcelona boss facing more questions ahead of season-defining run

A run of underwhelming performances has led to some fans to call for the coach's head, with crucial fixtures to come after the international break

After Barcelona's 2-1 win over Alaves on Sunday, Xavi immediately had to defend himself. His team, not for this first time in recent weeks, leaned on individual excellence to redeem a dour performance. This time around, it was Robert Lewandowski who saved face for the Blaugrana, but the striker's second-half double did little to hide the fact that Barca, once again, had been poor.

This has now become an annual tradition for Xavi. Just over a year into his Barca tenure, the boss faced similar questions. At that time, the Blaugrana were slumping in the Champions League and had suffered a demoralising Clasico loss, leading to some tough questions. Could this club legend, without top-class managerial experience, really handle the job?

Of course, Xavi survived — but only after publicly admitting that he would understand if Barca sacked him. A Liga trophy followed eight months later, one that restored winning ways but papered over some clear cracks in his side. Yes, Barca were good enough defensively to win the league, but their attacking quality was lacking. This was not the La Masia-bred, Cruyffian, Pep Guardiola football that Xavi had promised. This was a Jose Mourinho-esque side that grinded out results.

One year on, and while the situations are somewhat similar, things have also changed. On the field, the same defensive unit that carried the Blaugrana to the league title is markedly worse. At the other end, the litany of big-name signings that were supposed to make Barca an attacking force haven't really had the desired effect. They are third in La Liga, but if a surging Atletico Madrid can win their game in hand, the Blaugrana will slip down to fourth.

The press has, inevitably, snatched onto the narrative, and the usually calm manager took the bait after Sunday's victory, proclaiming that his players are feeling the pressure of an overeager local media — a remark that only fuelled the flames of scepticism.

And so just past his two-year anniversary in the job, Xavi finds himself under the spotlight again. But with a crucial run of games to come almost immediately after the international break, he must find the answers quickly to ensure Barca's season – and his future – isn't defined before the turn of the year.

Getty ImagesUnfair criticism

The term Xavi used to describe the recent coverage of his team was "not fair" following the Alaves win. He said that his side was "more tense than normal", and admitted that they weren't "at their best." It was his job, Xavi conceded, to turn things around, revive the mood, and inspire a comeback win, but the manager also claimed that he wouldn't have to if those covering the team wer more positive.

"Without doubt what the media say affects how the team plays," he said. "The [media] create situations and scenarios that, for me, are not real. And it affects, without any doubt, the team."

Stories and opinions around Barcelona are nothing new. Xavi himself admitted that media scrutiny affected him as a player, and set expectations for the of great teams he played in. It has, however, only grown in intensity in recent years.

Barca have borne the brunt of criticism from Spanish media, in particular, for their enumerate controversies off the pitch. Club president Joan Laporta's obsession with so-called "levers" to revive their fledgling finances, the ongoing investigation into their payments of a high-ranking refereeing official, and their inability to register academy products to first-team contracts have all added to what is already a frenzy for press both local and afar. His youngsters, Xavi admitted, were struggling with all of the scrutiny.

And in a sense, Xavi has a point here. Sixteen-year-old Lamine Yamal still goes to school, while 19-year-old Gavi only just learned how to drive. Fermin Lopez, practically ancient at 20, has only made five La Liga starts. But this is also Barcelona, and this is a manager who should know not only what the media pressures are, but also how to control them.

Xavi cannot snatch his players' phones away, or censor what they hear on the street. But he can control what comes out of his own mouth. Calling out members of the press who don't need any excuses to heighten their criticism has only increased the scrutiny on him and his team.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesInjury impact

Xavi is correct, though, in his summation that there are real reasons for the Blaugrana's struggles. In the same interview, he referred to "injuries and players coming back." Certainly, the manager cannot be blamed for how crowded his medical room has become in 2023-24.

At various points this season, Barca have been without the following players: Frenkie de Jong, Jules Kounde, Pedri, Lewandowski, Raphinha and Ronald Araujo. Gavi was also suspended for Sunday night's fixture. No team, regardless of quality, competition or level of self-inflicted media scrutiny, can survive without six players who would undoubtedly make the first XI every week when fit.

And the manager himself, despite having depth at his disposal, hasn't found it easy to work those injured legs back into the team. Lewandowski was thrust back into action too early, and failed to find the net for six straight games after coming back from an ankle ailment. Pedri has been chucked into three consecutive midfield battles, and admitted himself that he isn't fully fit — even agreeing to sit out Spain's final Euro 2024 qualifiers.

The same goes for Kounde — a slight centre-back on the best of days — who was pushed around so badly in his return that he was forced to switch positions with right-back Araujo. Raphinha, meanwhile, has produced all of his signature moves — pretty dribbles, sharp cuts and angled passes — but is yet to score or assist since returning from injury in late October.

Getty ImagesMistakes creeping in

One thing the injuries of those players cannot account for, though, is the form of the rest of Xavi's squad, and particularly those new faces who arrived during the summer.

A lot of Barcelona's transfer business was centred on experience. Oriol Romeu and Ilkay Gundogan, both brought in on cut-rate deals, are north of 30. Joao Cancelo, signed on loan, has won the Premier League three times. Joao Felix, although just 24, has played over 210 top-flight football matches, and certainly learned about dysfunction after spending four months at Chelsea at the start of 2023.

Those big names haven't lived up to the billing yet. Romeu enjoyed a few solid weeks when Barca played weaker teams, but has since been budged out of the line-up. Felix, after starting his Catalan career with three goals in three games, hasn't scored since mid-September. Cancelo has also failed to build on the praise heaped on him in the early goings of the campaign.

Last year's star performers have seen a drop, too. Alejandro Balde, once good enough to send Jordi Alba off to the Miami sun, hasn't been named to the most recent Spain squad. Marc-Andre ter Stegen is conceding at double the rate of last season. Lewandowski has experienced two goal droughts of at least five games. Perhaps only Gavi, who has plugged holes all over the midfield, can claim to have improved – even if he remains a walking yellow card.

And then there have been the mistakes. There were three that allowed Granada to take a 1-0 lead within 17 seconds last month. First, Andreas Christensen played the ball to a surrounded Gavi. Four seconds later, he stepped too early to make a tackle, and allowed Bryan Zaragoza to take up possession. The winger then fired a shot at goal that Ter Stegen of last year would have comfortably saved, but instead it found the back of the net. Gundogan got involved in the trend last weekend, first losing the ball in the centre circle, then failing to track runners as Alaves swept down the pitch to establish a 1-0 advantage after 18 seconds.

Other errors could have proved costly, too. Kounde made a litany of mistakes against Real Sociedad two weeks ago, and was fortunate to avoid a red card. Had it not been for some loose La Real finishing — and a late Araujo header — the France international would have been largely culpable in a damning loss.

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Getty Time for changes?

Media angst aside, Xavi painted a positive picture following Sunday's win. While he admitted that Barca's disastrous start — going 1-0 down before the majority of their players had touched the ball — could certainly have been avoided, the manager praised his side for their "improvement at times".

Three points are, of course, little cause for complaint. This is a tight league, where every goal could could matter. It really doesn't matter how the wins come — something last year's title-winning side proved — but could the manager be doing anything more to make life easier?

Xavi has proven to be painfully married to his tactical principles. The manager first employed his lop-sided, morphing, Guardiola-lite 4-4-2 in January 2023, and hasn't strayed too far from it since. He still relies too heavily on his advanced midfielder to create, still asks Balde to run through two-on-ones and still can't quite find the right position for Kounde — who perhaps just doesn't fit into this team.

Asking for tactical flexibility, or a change of system, then, seems unrealistic. Instead, Barca will need to 'principle' their way out of this thing. Perhaps Cancelo moves to right-back, instead of being used on the wing? Maybe Yamal will come in for Raphinha full-time? There are personnel tweaks to be made here, but this is not a manager who will overhaul something outright.

Real Madrid player ratings vs Almeria: Sensational Jude Bellingham is already paying back his €103m transfer fee

The England international continued his dream start in a Real Madrid shirt, proving crucial in a valuable away win

Real Madrid turned in a messy showing in a hostile environment at Almeria, but were bailed out by a spellbinding 80 minutes from their big-money signing to secure a 3-1 win on the road.

Los Blancos' struggles showed early on. Almeria only needed three minutes to open the scoring, with Sergio Arribas sneaking in at the back post to head past Andriy Lunin after a sweeping counter.

Bellingham pulled Madrid level shortly after, though, slotting one into the far corner after a frantic sequence inside the Almeria box. Los Blancos thought they had another on the stroke of half-time, but saw Toni Kroos' curled strike chalked off due to a foul in the build-up.

Madrid were much improved in the second period, and their marquee newcomer led the charge. He bagged his second with a fine header, sneaking into the box and meeting Kroos' pinpoint cross. Bellingham went on to set up the third, finding Vinicius Jr just inside the box, whose deflected shot looped over the goalkeeper to seal the three points.

GOAL rates Real Madrid's players from Power Horse Stadium…

Goalkeeper & Defence

Andriy Lunin (6/10):

Could have done better for Almeria's opener — he didn't have to move very far to save it. Solid otherwise.

Dani Carvajal (7/10):

Turned in an excellent piece of defending to prevent an Almeria second. Probably should have scored late on.

Antonio Rudiger (6/10):

Stepped up well in the absence of Eder Militao. Could do little about the goal. Doesn't look like much of a downgrade.

David Alaba (6/10):

Sloppy at times, and was given a rough go of things by Luis Suarez. Always looked to pass forward, though.

Fran Garcia (6/10):

Left Arribas wide open on the Almeria goal, but was reliable after that. Still improving, but doesn't seem a bad option in a position of need.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMidfield

Aurelien Tchouameni (8/10):

A much better performance. Tackled well, comfortable on the ball. Expansive in his passing after the break. Looks to have the spot nailed down.

Federico Valverde (7/10):

Kept it moving, and was as hard working as usual. Crucial in the build up to all three goals. Perhaps needs to add a few himself, though.

Toni Kroos (7/10):

Had a defensive nightmare for the home side's opener, failing to mark Arribas as he ran into the box. Saw a signature curled strike cruelly ruled out by VAR, but provided a gorgeous assist for Bellingham's second. Still makes the game look very easy.

Jude Bellingham (9/10):

Inspirational, when Madrid seemed to be out of ideas. Grabbed the equaliser in the first half, added a second just after the break. Assisted Vinicius' goal, and Madrid's third. What a signing. Kylian who?

Attack

Rodrygo (6/10):

Had a couple of half chances in the opening period. Lively for most of proceedings, but still looks like he needs to play off a bigger striker.

Vinicius Jr (7/10):

Sloppy, by his lofty standards. Held onto the ball for too long, and wasn't exactly crisp when trying to move it. Grabbed a lovely goal to redeem himself, though.

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Subs & Manager

Luka Modric (6/10):

Off the bench for the second time this season. Not a bad player to bring on to close things out.

Eduardo Camavinga (6/10):

Not fit enough to start, but was solid across 20 minutes.

Joselu (N/A):

No real time to make an impact.

Brahim Diaz (N/A):

Could have had an assist late on.

Lucas Vazquez (N/A):

Fresh legs for a tired Valverde.

Carlo Ancelotti (6/10):

No place for Modric, but otherwise he went for his strongest starting XI. Madrid, in truth, weren't particularly good. Still, they had enough individual quality to win it. He will take the three points.

São Paulo sofre com 'surto' de indisposição e câimbras em Ribeirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O São Paulo teve problemas físicos na derrota por 1 a 0 para o Botafogo-SP, neste domingo, em Ribeirão Preto. Antes do jogo, alguns jogadores relataram indisposição ao médico José Sanches, sendo que Hernanes acabou cortado da partida e nem foi ao estádio. Durante a partida, seis deles reclamaram de câimbras: Fabinho, Everton, Diego, Shaylon, Brenner e Liziero.

– Nós tivemos seis jogadores com câimbra, três que saíram e três que ficaram dentro do campo. Além dos jogadores que a gente poupou, outros que poderiam estar aqui hoje estão se recuperando, caso do Helinho, caso do Sara, do próprio Hernanes, que teve um problema de virose. Não sei se virose, mas uns cinco jogadores tiveram indisposição e eu também estava indisposto. A gente não sabe o que causou. De acordo com aquilo que a gente tinha, o time aguentou bem enquanto teve condição de jogar. No segundo tempo a gente foi sofrendo com as câimbras. De fato o problema das câimbras foi o que mais me incomodou – disse Fernando Diniz.

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– A virose e o longo tempo que a maioria dos jogadores têm sem jogar 90 minutos são os dois fatores principais para as câimbras – emendou.

O São Paulo não sabe se a indisposição foi causada por algum fator durante a viagem para Juliaca, no Peru, ou depois da volta ao Brasil. Sobre a dificuldade física da equipe, Fernando Diniz disse que era esperada, mas não em grau tão alto.

– Os que jogaram estão na mesma pegada dos outros, mas tem um porém: o maior treino para qualquer jogador é o jogo, e eles estão há muito tempo sem jogar. A gente esperava que alguns tivessem câimbra, caso do Fabinho. Um que a gente esperava que pudesse sentir era o Rodrigo Nestor, que não joga na base há bastante tempo, e aguentou a partida inteira. A gente estava preparado para um ou outro sentir, mas o número foi maior que o imaginado.

Mohammedan thump Gazi Group to go second

Mohammedan Sporting Club leapfrogged Gazi Group Cricketers on the points table by beating them in Mirpur by seven wickets, thereby putting themselves in second place behind Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club.The win was set up through four-wicket hauls from left-arm spinners Enamul Haque jnr and Naeem Islam jnr. After being inserted, Gazi Group made a decent start but from 63 for two, they collapsed to 110 for 8. Only captain Alok Kapali hung around to make a 67-ball 48; he was the last man out in the 38th over, as Gazi Group were bowled out for 141. The two other wickets went to Habibur Rahman.Mohammedan lost Ezaz Ahmed early but Upul Tharanga and Shykat Ali added 76 for the second wicket to keep the chase on track, before Naeem Islam and Ariful Haque took them home in 31.5 overs.Kalabagan Krira Chakra secured their first win of the tournament by beating Cricket Coaching School by 49 runs in Fatullah. The win was set up by Hamilton Masakadza’s 104-ball 115, which included ten fours and two sixes. Opener Shadman Islam chipped in with 47 off 63 balls as Kalabagan made 270 for 9. The bowlers then, led by Abdur Razzak kept CCS to 221 for 8.Having been sent in, Kalabagan lost Jashimuddin early, but Islam and Masakadza laid a strong base with a 74-run partnership for the second wicket. After Islam offered a return catch to Rajin Saleh in the 18th over, Masakadza combined well with Tasamul Haque for a 77-run stand. Masakadza pressed on to score his seventh List-A century, also his second in the Dhaka Premier League, having made one in 2013. Nasum Ahmed took three wickets while Salman Hossain and Uttam Sarkar claimed two each.CCS began positively in the chase, with opener Pinak Ghosh and Saif Hasan taking their side to 89 for 1 by the 22nd over. Razzak then had Ghosh caught by captain Mashrafe Mortaza and a ball later, the left-arm spinner pinned Salman Hossain lbw for a duck. When Nasum Ahmed holed out for 5 in the 27th over, CSS were reduced to 106 for 5. Uttam Sarkar mounted late resistance, with 63 off 74 balls, but his team eventually came up short. Mashrafe complemented Razzak by picking up two wickets.Legends of Rupganj picked up their second victory in the competition by thumping Kalabagan Cricket Academy by 29 runs (D/L method) in a rain-affected match at the BKSP-3 ground.Batting first, Rupganj posted 239 for 9 in 50 overs with Asif Ahmed top-scoring with 82 and Sajjadul Haque making 70. Asif and Sajjadul revived their side’s innings with a131-run sixth-wicket after Rupganj had slipped to 81 for 5 in the 24th over. Seamer Abu Jayed took four wickets while Mehedi Hasan Miraz and Rifat Pradhan took two each.Rain reduced KCA’s chase to a 25-over innings, and their revised target was 171. KCA slipped to 85 for 7 inside 15 overs before Taposh Ghosh and Bishawnath Halder added 56 runs for the unbroken eighth-wicket stand. The Taposh-Halder stand, however, was not enough as KCA restricted to 141. Mosharraf Hossain and Nahidul Islam led Rupganj’s charge by picking two wickets each.

Prolific Wright keeps Sussex on course

Luke Wright took his run-total in this season’s NatWest T20 Blast to 522 with an unbeaten 92 as Sussex Sharks strengthened their bid for a quarter-final place with an eight-wicket win over Glamorgan at Hove

ECB/PA10-Jul-2015
ScorecardTymal Mills was again in the wickets with 3 for 34•Getty Images

Luke Wright took his run-total in this season’s NatWest T20 Blast to 522 with an unbeaten 92 as Sussex Sharks strengthened their bid for a quarter-final place with an eight-wicket win over Glamorgan at Hove.Sussex made short work of a target of 165, reaching it when George Bailey hit the third six of the 15th over from Dean Cosker to seal only their second home win in the South Group but one which should guarantee a top-four finish with two games still to go.Glamorgan’s total of 164 for 7 looked competitive at halfway as they chased a third successive away victory but Wright and Chris Nash produced another punishing stand against them to set up victory.Three weeks ago in Cardiff they put on 116 but went one better this time, scoring 117 in 69 balls with Nash contributing 50 off 32 balls to the third-highest first-wicket stand in Sussex’s T20 history.Insights

Sussex are in a strong position to qualify for the quarter-finals. By contrast, Glamorgan are likely to be scrapping hard for their place after this defeat. It could be argued that Sussex and Glamorgan – two well-rounded, well-drilled teams are similar in style and substance. The difference, it could also be argued, is Luke Wright. With experience playing in the BBL and IPL Wright is perhaps the best and most experienced player in England not in the T20 international team. His past five scores this season are 57*, 111*, 47, 12, 92* and such rare international quality hiding within the domestic circuit is invaluable.

Nash hit seven boundaries and initially took the initiative but once Wright had reached his half-century he went into overdrive, savagely attacking the Glamorgan spinners as he hit Andrew Salter’s off-breaks for successive sixes before taking three maximums of slow left-armer Cosker. It was left to Bailey to hit the winning runs with the eighth six of the Sussex innings.It was the fifth successive game where the side batting second at Hove had won and Glamorgan will feel that their total was at least 20 runs short.They lost opener Jacques Rudolph in the fifth over when left-armer Chris Liddle trimmed his off stump and thereafter Glamorgan needed a solid unbeaten knock of 63 from 46 balls from Ben Wright to hold their innings together.Liddle and leg-spinner Will Beer bowled with commendable control but the fireworks were provided by left-armer Tymal Mills, who finished with 3 for 34 and unsettled all the Glamorgan batsmen with his searing pace.Mills picked up a wicket in his first over when Colin Ingram gloved down the leg side and he returned to the attack to knock back Graham Wagg’s middle stump and have David Lloyd caught off a leading edge.Glamorgan only got some momentum when Craig Meschede clubbed 20 off an over from Matt Machan, including two sixes, and well though Wright batted in difficult circumstances he never found the tempo that Luke Wright and Nash produced later in the contest.

Batting fixes in order at Wankhede

Match facts

Sunday, April 12, 2015
Start time 2000 local (1430 GMT)2:18

Agarkar: Match-winners aplenty on both sides

Big picture

After losses in their respective first games, Mumbai Indians and Kings XI Punjab have a few issues to fix when they face each other. Mumbai Indians’ innings stuttered at the start in Kolkata against the pace of Morne Morkel and Umesh Yadav, and Kings XI did not fare any better in Pune against James Faulkner and Tim Southee. Wankhede Stadium could provide respite from those lively pitches and allow the strokemakers to flourish.But it’s the bowling that could prove to be the difference between the teams. While Kings XI looked well-rounded with pace, swing, and spin, Mumbai Indians hardly made an impression against Knight Riders. Lasith Malinga’s bulging waistline maybe hampering his bowling, or maybe the batsmen are used to him, but he did not look menacing at all. Pragyan Ojha, with his remodelled action, appeared to have lost his bite and Harbhajan Singh has long been on the wane. That Josh Hazlewood decided to opt out is going to put more pressure on the current lot.Kings XI would be satisfied with the way they bowled and are not likely to change a thing at Wankhede, except, perhaps the batting order, with promotions for David Miller and George Bailey. It is likely to be a run-fest. Mumbai Indians score their runs at comfortably more than eight an over on this ground, but Kings XI, in their seven matches here, score at a rate even faster than the home side.

Watch out for…

Kieron Pollard is one of the icon players for Mumbai Indians but was almost invisible in the first game in Kolkata. He did not bowl, he did not get a chance to bat and when he took a catch, it was one of the easiest chances, not a madcap one-handed leap. In Mumbai, while in the outfield, he usually gets the crowd going. That was not going to happen in Kolkata. Now back in Mumbai, expect Pollard to be more vocal, more present.Playing his first IPL match in six years, Anureet Singh impressed not only with his movement – his known strength – but also his pace. One of his deliveries on Friday was clocked at 148 kph. He was as incisive from over the stumps as around, which added another dimension to his bowling. Kings XI let go an experienced bowler in L Balaji, but if Anureet keeps bowling like he did against Rajasthan Royals, Kings XI will continue posing problems for top-order batsmen.

Stats and trivia

  • Kings XI boast of the highest score by any team at Wankhede in the IPL – 226 v Chennai Super Kings, in 2014
  • Mumbai Indians broke their five-match losing streak last season with a win against Kings XI at Wankhede. They chased down the 169-run target in the 20th over
  • Sixteen, the number of maiden overs bowled at Wankhede, which is the joint-second along with Eden Gardens for most maidens at a ground. Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur is at the top of the list with 19 maidens

Renato Gaúcho valoriza o poder de reação do Grêmio

MatériaMais Notícias

Após a decepção na Copa do Brasil, o Grêmio mostrou poder de reação e, diante do Cruzeiro, o Tricolor aproveitou a má fase do rival e conseguiu um ótimo resultado fora de casa ao vencer por 4 a 1.

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Na coletiva de imprensa, Renato Gaúcho voltou a bater na tecla que o Grêmio está vivo no Campeonato Brasileiro e, apesar da distância, o Tricolor vai buscar as primeiras colocações.

‘Resultado muito importante. O grupo ainda está sentindo um pouco, mas tivemos um poder de recuperação muito bom. Não é fácil vir aqui e conseguir uma apresentação dessas com o resultado que tivemos na quarta. O Grêmio está vivíssimo no Brasileirão, pode sim lutar por muita coisa’, analisou.

De olho na situação da Raposa, Portaluppi afirma que conversou com os jogadores na preleção e pediu que o Grêmio aproveitasse o momento para sair com o triunfo.

‘Conversei bastante com meu grupo, tínhamos que aproveitar a situação. O Rogério Ceni é um grande treinador, tem um grande grupo e uma grande torcida, mas ele tá chegando agora. Está colocando em prática a posse de bola, coisa que o Cruzeiro não tinha. Mesmo tendo ótimos jogadores, não é da noite pro dia que se absorve’, afirmou o treinador.

Após 18 jogos disputados, o Tricolor está na 10ª colocação, com 25 pontos.

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