Du Plessis misses record-breaking century

A stats review at the end of the tri-series final between Australia and South Africa

Bishen Jeswant06-Sep-2014464 Number of runs scored by Faf du Plessis in this series, the most runs scored (max 5 matches) in an ODI triangular or quadrangular tournament. There are only three other batsmen who have scored 400-plus runs in such a tournament – Sachin Tendulkar, Sanath Jayasuriya and Aravinda de Silva. No batsman has scored more than three hundreds in any multi-team ODI tournament, including World Cups – in the final, du Plessis fell four short of a record fourth century.27 Number of innings in which Aaron Finch got to 1000 ODI runs. This is the third fastest by an Australian. The joint Australian record is held by Greg Chappell and George Bailey, both of whom needed only 26 innings to reach that mark. Shaun Marsh and Michael Hussey needed 27, as many as Finch. The overall record is 21 innings, jointly held by Vivian Richards, Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott and Quinton de Kock.71 Number of runs posted by James Faulkner and Mitchell Starc for the ninth wicket today. This is the highest ninth wicket partnership for Australia against South Africa. Also, this is Australia’s fourth highest ninth wicket partnership after losing the first eight wickets for less than 150. Across countries, there have been six century partnerships from this situation, four of those by India, and one each by England and Sri Lanka.220 The lowest score that South Africa have failed to chase in an ODI tournament final. This was in the Titan Cup against India, at Mumbai, in 1996. There have been seven instances of South Africa failing to chase down a total in an ODI tournament, three times against Australia, but South Africa cruised to the 218 run target that they were set today.1 Number of times before today that Wayne Parnell had batted above No. 7 in an ODI. The only exception in his 20 previous ODI innings being a game against New Zealand at Auckland in 2012, when he open the batting and scored 27, during an 80-run opening partnership with Hashim Amla. Today’s experiment was not as successful though, with Parnell only managing to score 6 off 24 balls.0 Number of times while batting first that Australia have scored 250 against South Africa after being five down for less than 150. Today was no different. Australia have been in this situation against South Africa on 10 occasions, and have finished up on less than 200 on five of those instances, with 240 being the highest score that they have posted.12 Number of years since South Africa have won an ODI tournament final. The last ODI tournament that they won was the VB series in 2002, also involving Australia and New Zealand. Since then they have lost two finals, the Morocco Cup to Sri Lanka and NatWest series to England, with the TVS Cup final against India being washed out.

Clarke springs a surprise, twice

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the second day of the Hobart Test

Daniel Brettig in Hobart15-Dec-2012Surprise of the day
The way Australia’s newspapermen waxed eloquent about Michael Clarke overnight when he was 70 not out, it seemed a century and more was as inevitable as rain in Hobart. This assumption looked a safe one based on Clarke’s stellar 2012, in which he has so far piled up 1432 runs, including three double-centuries and a triple, against India at the SCG in January. But the Bellerive Oval pitch seemed a little zippier and seamer-friendly on the second morning, and in a swift spell Shaminda Eranga extracted enough life to deceive even Clarke, coaxing an edge that was well held at slip. So the expectation of another captain’s century was confounded, at least for today.Drop of the day
For 170 balls, Michael Hussey made barely the ghost of a mistake on his way to 96, maintaining a fearsome record of runs against Sri Lanka. But to the 171st he swivelled to pull Eranga, did not get on top of the bounce, and Angelo Mathews hovered under the chance in the deep. He intercepted it right on the boundary, but spilled the chance, the ball bobbling onto the turf and then over the rope. Hussey celebrated his fifth century in six Tests against Sri Lanka. In the one Test Hussey did not pass three-figures against Sri Lanka, he had made 95.Decision of the day
As the best captains tend to do, Clarke often makes decisions in advance of observers reaching a consensus on what he might do. Hussey and Matthew Wade were having very little trouble at all against Sri Lanka’s bowlers, rolling along at better than five runs per over following the rain, and might have kept batting all day. Instead Clarke called them in 40 minutes before tea the moment the tally reached 450, catching Sri Lanka’s fielders by surprise. Clarke was not rewarded with a wicket in the period up to the interval, but his closure has left the game open to a result despite the chance of more rain interruptions over the next three days.Spin of the day
Tillakaratne Dilshan does not take kindly to being tied down, and he was helped on his way in the evening by an unfortunate piece of fielding from Ben Hilfenhaus. Posted to fine leg, Hilfenhaus’ eyes briefly lit up when Dilshan hooked at Peter Siddle and sent a top edge in his direction. But the ball died late in its path towards Hilfenhaus, and on pitching short of the crouching bowler it spun past his hands and over the rope. Siddle was aghast, but soon had the consolation of Kumar Sangakkara’s wicket.

Reading the batsman

Video footage is well and good, but there are also plenty of clues for bowlers to pick up from their opponents’ grips, back-lifts and stances

Aakash Chopra12-Aug-2010What if a bowler could read a batsman’s mind – predict how a batsman would play before bowling a ball to him or having watched him play? Wouldn’t it bolster his chances, give him leeway to plan, and buttress his skill?Some may call it wishful thinking, others a secret science, but often just looking at the grip with which a batsman holds his bat tells you something about his preferences in terms of shots, and the way he stands may help you place your fielders.Will a batsman be a good driver of the ball or more comfortable scoring off the back foot? Will he prefer scoring runs through the on side or the off? It’s important to observe the finer nuances of a batsman’s grip, stance and back-lift to size him up and plan accordingly. While it may seem utterly useless in this day and age of exhaustive analysis based on video footage, which is available to almost all professional teams, observation was one of the tools players relied heavily on in the past, and it continues to be useful.The grip
Most batsmen playing professional cricket hold the bat correctly with regard to the Vs made by thumbs and forefingers. The top hand is firmer and the V its thumb and forefinger makes opens out towards the outer edge of the bat, while the bottom hand plays only a supporting role.A correct grip allows a proper downswing, which in turn enables a batsman to play the ball with the full face of the bat. The right grip is also imperative if you want to play the entire range of shots.While the basics remain the same, lots of batsmen do enough with the grip to give some information away. For instance, Sanath Jayasuriya holds the bat close to the bottom of the handle, and Adam Gilchrist higher up. Now the coaching manual recommends that one holds the bat in the middle of the handle, but to say that successful players like these two don’t hold the bat correctly would be grossly incorrect. While there are pros and cons to each approach, it all boils down to what suits your game best.Holding the bat closer to the bottom gives you more control and helps you generate more power at the point of impact. In such cases, since the bottom hand becomes dominant very often, you don’t need a high back-lift to hit the ball long and hard. That’s why Jayasuriya is ever so good with his short-arm jabs. Such players generally are more comfortable on the back foot, and horizontal bat shots are their bread and butter. The flip side of holding the bat close to the base of the handle is that the arc of the downswing gets radically smaller, which in turn reduces the reach and makes driving off the front foot that much difficult. But some players are exceptions to this rule. Sachin Tendulkar holds the bat close to the bottom of the handle but has managed to overcome the shortcomings with ease.On the contrary, Gilchrist’s batting is built on the extension of the arms, and holding the bat high on the handle complements the extension. With this grip, the arc of the downswing becomes bigger, and hence increases the reach of the batsman. Lower-order batsmen tend to prefer this grip to enhance their reach. That’s how the phrase “using the long handle” was coined. The flip side of such a grip is that you may not have enough control and you have to rely on the downswing to generate power. Players with such grips prefer playing on the front foot and can also be a little circumspect against quick short-pitched bowling. Gilchrist, like Tendulkar, is an exception here.Then there were those like Javed Miandad, who had a gap between the top and bottom hands. The textbook recommends keeping the hands close to each other on the handle, to ensure that they move in unison. Yet Miandad’s grip allowed him to manoeuvre the bowling and milk it for singles, though he possibly sacrificed some fluency in the bargain.The stance
If the grip on the bat is the first giveaway, the manner in which a batsman stands is the second. While the coaching manual recommends the feet be about a shoulder span apart, lots of batsmen have toyed with different options to suit their game.People who stand with their feet too close to each other are often good back-foot players and the ones with wider stances are generally stronger on the front foot. Here, too, there are snags: you lose some balance if both feet are too close, and too wide apart results in lack of foot movement.A stance that’s too side-on or too open-chested also tells you a bit about the strengths and weaknesses of a batsman. While you’d be suspect against inswingers if your stance is too side-on, you’d struggle against away-going deliveries if it is too open. Sachin Tendulkar’s is the closest to what would be a perfect stance – though even he tended to lean too much towards the off side when he started.

The textbook recommends keeping the hands close to each other on the handle, to ensure that they move in unison. Yet Miandad’s grip, with hands apart, allowed him to manoeuvre the bowling and milk it for singles

Even the way you take guard can give the bowler a pointer or two. Generally players who ask for a leg-stump guard are good on the off side, for they try to make room by staying beside the line. And the ones who ask for middle stump are good on the leg side, for their endeavour is to whip it through the leg side. It’s not a hard-and-fast rule but any information is better than none at all.If a batsman is falling over, with his head not in line with his toes – which is the case with a lot of batsmen – he will predominantly be an on-side player, but would still be susceptible to sharp, incoming deliveries. Also, the intended ground shots on the leg side will probably travel in the air for a while, and hence positioning a fielder at short midwicket comes in handy. Such a batsman would also be unsure of his off stump and hence might play balls that are meant to be left alone.The back-lift
The last clues before the ball is finally bowled come from the height of the back-lift and its arc. Ideally the bat should come down from somewhere between the off stump and first slip, to ensure that the bat moves straight in the downswing.Players who bring the bat in from wider than second slip, like Rahul Dravid, need to make a loop at the top of the downswing, or else they will find it difficult to negotiate sharp incoming deliveries. Should they fail to make that loop, the bat won’t come down straight, which means meeting the ball at an angle instead of straight on.Batsmen with higher back-lifts find it difficult to deal with changes of pace, because with higher back-lifts it’s tougher to pull out of a shot after committing. Also, there’s always a possibility they will be late in bringing the bat down to keep yorkers out. Ergo, yorkers and slower ones might just do the trick.Since players with short back-lifts, like Paul Collingwood and Andrew Symonds, don’t have a reasonable downswing, they rely on the pace of the ball to generate power for their shots. They tend to struggle if the ball has no pace on it, so taking the pace off isn’t a bad move against them. On the contrary, short back-lifts are almost ideal to keep yorkers out with.If anyone has to think on his feet in cricket, it is the bowler. For it is he who initiates the action and everyone else reacts to what he delivers. Yet, these days he’s the game’s underdog, constantly at risk of being on the receiving end, and bound to follow a plan to render himself effective. Since video data isn’t available to teams before they reach a certain level, most bowlers rely on observing the finer nuances of their opponents in order to strategise.

The heart of the matter

Why Sourav Ganguly is the most fascinating Indian cricketer of our time

Rahul Bhattacharya08-Feb-2006


Love him or hate him, you just can’t ignore Sourav Ganguly
© Getty Images

At some stage, hard to say when, Sourav Ganguly no longer remained a cricketer and turned into a folk hero and a folk villain. Averages and the rest came into it but with Ganguly things became a matter of convictions of the soul. Anything he did or did not do could provoke an outcry. Everything that was done to him or not done to him could provoke an outcry. Ganguly issues took the form of movements. In many ways he is cricketer-phenomenon in India’s modern pop culture.A year of sustained chaos, encompassing several riots, numerous u-turns and countless epitaphs, has now led to a predicament of superb absurdity. In a recent column the satirist Jug Suraiya was badgered by his partner to attend yet another festive-season party. ” meet lots of interesting people,” he protests. “I’ll end up as always like a spare Sourav; present and accounted for, but no one quite knows what’s to be done with him.” Indeed, no one quite knows.The Ganguly situation is impossible. No answer is a solution, not even the one of respectfully putting him out to pasture, because he isn’t going, and if he isn’t going he is almost certain to be back. No, the situation must resolve itself and the rest is commentary. The fashion is to be exasperated, if not disgusted, by the whole affair. Personally I’m not tired of it. Not in the least. I’d be lying if I say I’m not fascinated: as human dramas go, there’s too much in it.And the situation could not be what it is were Ganguly not what he is. On braving my surname and referring to Ganguly as the most fascinating Indian cricketer of his generation in a recent article, I was ticked off by a reader: “I am sure no person, living or dead, on earth outside people of Bengali origin thinks that Ganguly comes anywhere close to being one of the most fascinating cricketers, let alone being `the most’.” Another put it more succinctly: “A f***ing Bong standing up for another f***ing Bong.”Never mind the enlightened. The reactions Ganguly evokes comprise a phenomenon broader than Bengali parochialism. Cricinfo.com’s diarist Siddhartha Vaidyanathan reported from Pakistan that the first thing locals asked him after the was about Ganguly. They were unhappy with the treatment meted out to him. They related to his naked passion. In one way or another Ganguly speaks to watchers. At once he compels you to assume both the best and worst about him; at once he can prove you both right and wrong. In short, he makes you feel. I have not spent quite so much time discussing, debating, any other cricketer. What is it about him?


In … out … in again, the going has been tough for Sourav Ganguly in the recent past
© Getty Images

I suppose Ganguly came to symbolise individualism and rebellion. Individualism in that he was given to flouting norms, yes, but also in the way he could not be bothered about members fitting into or giving energy to the group. To him match-winning talent was match-winning talent and that was that. Type was important: the brasher the better. In his book Aakash Chopra and Mohammad Kaif were meant for walk-on parts and Yuvraj Singh and Harbhajan Singh for glory. This could not be scoffed at because, as much as the attitude may have bred hubris, at the time the team was being built there exuded from it a rawness of belief that was both effective and appealing.A journalist recalls being phoned by Ganguly to watch a youngster in a first-class game that was being televised. (Watch this boy. He is going to be a big player. I want to pick him right away.)” A few months on, Mahendra Singh Dhoni smashed 148 against Pakistan from No. 3. One player put it this way: “If you capture Dadi’s imagination, he will do anything for you.” And vice-versa, for once he’d captured Dadi’s imagination the player too would do for anything for Dadi. Yuvraj on his first comeback to the team was quoted saying: “I’m ready to die for such a captain.” Harbhajan’s unstinting support can in some way be understood in light of the fact that, feeling defeated by disciplinary issues, the chucking saga, an ordinary international track record, and economic pressure at home, he was contemplating moving to the US to drive trucks for a living at the time Ganguly fought for his selection.Generally Ganguly fostered angry or reckless young men. To him “good behaviour”, a broad term espoused by the present team management, belonged in school and probably not even there. He himself had been summoned to the match referee no less than 12 times in the last decade. His approach was bound to precipitate what could possibly be termed a cultural conflict in the world of modern sport. For Ganguly, like for Arjuna Ranatunga, competitiveness involved brinksmanship rather than training. As far as they were concerned Australia were not to be aspired to. They were simply to be toppled. England were not to be appeased. Victory lay precisely in their disapproval. In other words, Ganguly and Ranatunga wanted to do things their way. Both carried a resonance of the anti-colonial rather than that of the savvy global sports professional of the age (in Pakistan, Ganguly blithely sported an oversized beanie bearing a logo of the wrong corporate). If it was limiting it was also inspiring. And it invited, from Western observers especially, a ludicrous mix of suspicion, ridicule and condemnation. Much more easy to be gracious about well-mannered fellows who toe the line.So far so good. Ganguly quenched the thirst for individualism, which is an essential allure of sport; he had an effect on young players and followers similar to that of a rock concert, and all the while kept a successful team together thanks also to a wonderful set of seniors and a fine coach.And yet, after a point every day for him became a day of decay: the uncorrected technical errors, the sinking fitness levels, the sagging fielding, the jaded tactics, the lowering of standards for himself and by extension for the entire side – not least the gifted youngsters over whom he had so much influence. Finally, his almost politician-like desperation to hold on to power manifested itself in an insecurity – or was it the other way round? – that tore away at the very fabric of the team.The deterioration looked all the more stark because of the contrast with that most outstanding of cricketers, and Ganguly’s exact contemporary and heir, Rahul Dravid. Simply, Dravid built himself on stronger foundations. Ganguly batted pretty as a butterfly but, distracted, found himself blown away by the winds of high pace. Dravid opened up once his base was sufficiently secure. When it came down to it, Dravid had the rigour to last. Likewise, where Ganguly the leader powered on bare-chested with the belief that with flair on his side nothing was impossible, Dravid appreciates that any group must have the safety net of work ethic, discipline, punctuality, enthusiasm – the finer things. Dravid’s brand of risk-taking is more cerebral. With Ganguly there was always the element of danger, of losing it all. Ganguly was not about systems and processes. Ganguly was about whims and instincts. This was the thrill, and a great thrill. But I suppose when you’re losing, the thrill is gone.***Personally, commenting on the Ganguly situation has been challenging because it involves a tussle between the heart, which wants the individual, the rebel, to beat the odds and win, and the mind, which cannot help but log the slow, sad decline. Then the watcher and the journalist in you battle and they can be, but are not in every instance, the same.Besides, this was a situation like no other. The more I dwelled on the issue the more I stopped dwelling on the rights and wrongs (there were so many that there weren’t any) and the merits of the case (which became too tiresome). They didn’t matter so much either. Simply, I just wanted to see how it would unfold on a human level.I suppose in effect I was choosing the simple intimacy of the watcher to the powerful insider-ness of the journalist. I couldn’t see why a nebulous “what’s best for the team” should become a pamphleteering cause with me – that was merely a parameter to be considered while trying to pass honest judgement on the actions of the men responsible. Beyond that it was neither my duty nor my inclination and I felt foolish for harbouring any guilt in this respect. At a deeply personal level it did not matter a great deal to me whether India became the next Australia or not. Cricket was at once a massive joke and the most significant human theatre and all the joy ultimately came from the universal stuff and would be fulfilling regardless. And banging on either way missed the most crucial point of sport – that we really don’t know what’s going to come.It was with this sense of freedom that a colleague and I jumped on to a spontaneous train to Rajkot on the eve of a Duleep Trophy fixture in which Ganguly would need to prove his form and fitness. It felt like something special might happen, and it did. On a municipal ground, in an environment so anti-climactic that it was melodramatic, the soon-to-be-deposed Indian Test captain hit a rousing century. It was lovely to watch, not so much because of his strokes, some of which were indeed vintage, but because of all the other layers to it.That evening I met Ganguly at his hotel. I was apprehensive. I had written critical articles about him over the past few months and these things have a way of getting around, often in exaggerated form. I had nothing specific to ask him. I only wanted to try and gauge what he might be thinking, how he might be reacting to the uniqueness of his dilemma.


Sourav Ganguly was largely calm through ups and downs, but his fans certainly were not
© Getty Images

There was an air of complete serenity about him, heightened because he was initially sitting on a swing in an open courtyard. He looked the perfect : crisp white kurta pyjama, hair neatly parted, thin-rimmed spectacles.It was an easy, enjoyable, and in some ways warm, conversation. Broadly, three things were striking. One was that retirement was very far from his mind; how others might like to remember him seemed to be their own business. Another was his sense of hurt about allegations of “divide and rule”. But the most remarkable was his aura of calm. His family members would later tell that he has always been so, that he had never ever lost his cool off the cricket field, that nothing ever fazes him. He himself would say that he believed in destiny and expected to be playing the World Cup of 2007. In that short little meeting I could appreciate more properly than ever before the temperament of a man who at any moment of time has more knives at his back and more garlands at his face than a cabinet of ministers.A week on, Ganguly was dropped from the one-day squad altogether. Then stripped of Test captaincy, then deemed a Test allrounder, then… you know the story.The most revealing moment came in the response to his being dropped after the Delhi Test against Sri Lanka. He could have retired right then a saint, all sins forgotten. The man who a few months ago was among the most reviled in the land now had the undiluted support of the nation. It was extraordinary that he would pass up the opportunity and choose instead to put himself and the team under so much pressure and run the risk even of humiliation – were he to return and flop. As ever he left you grappling with mixed feelings: to admire his self-belief or to dismiss him as delusional? What to make of such a man?And so there he was in Lahore in India’s first Test of the new year. He probably should not have been playing at all. Despite the denials to the contrary, it is learnt that his inclusion in the touring party had more to do with the wishes of authorities other than the selectors and the team management.Late on the second afternoon: Pakistan 668 for 6, India wilting. Ganguly had just made an impressive dive at the boundary. Now a high ball swirled above his head. An initial misjudgement, frantic back-tracking, a final, flailing leap, a one-handed catch both spectacular and comic, a slow-motion backward roll on hitting the ground, and off like a bomb upon regaining poise, injecting humour and spirit into a weary side. It felt like he was one of the boys again. Even Greg Chappell smiled. It was by a distance the most contagious moment of the game. He did not bat a single ball and humbly carried drinks in the next Test.He was back again for the final match. He made 34, 37, and two errors which were each to be – as luck would have it, and since this story has a strain of tragedy running through it – his only error of each innings. Both times the team required a big score and in the final analysis these were a pair of letdowns. Still it was not an illusion: he indeed batted beautifully, more fluently than any other Indian in the match and as fluently as he had ever done in his career. Few could have expected it. Among those few was Ganguly.Two days later he flew back home as Dravid turned his mind to the upcoming one-dayers and, some part of it no doubt, to the batting order for the next Test series. And that’s where the Sourav Ganguly saga rested at the last opportunity to update.

'Resentment & disharmony' – Ryan Reynolds & Rob McElhenney get £50k contract warning as Wrexham prepare to spend big in summer transfer window

Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have been warned that handing out £50,000-a-week contracts could lead to "resentment and disharmony" at Wrexham.

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Red Dragons preparing for life in the ChampionshipLinked with players that have Premier League experienceHollywood co-owners prepared to splash the cashFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Red Dragons, on the back of three successive promotions, are readying themselves for life in the Championship. Hollywood co-owners continue to bankroll a meteoric rise, while leaving the door open for further investors to join the most ambitious of projects.

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Recruitment records have been broken on a regular basis at SToK Racecourse, with Sam Smith becoming a £2 million addition in January 2025 – while ex-England international striker Jay Rodriguez has been acquired on a deal worth £15,000-a-week.

DID YOU KNOW?

Wrexham are reportedly ready to roll the dice again, amid links to Fulham captain Tom Cairney – who is about to become a free agent – while big-money agreements are also being mooted at Birmingham, as Tom Brady and Co seek to make their own push towards the Premier League.

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Getty/GOALWHAT EFL PUNDIT SAID

Former EFL player turned pundit Don Goodman has told of why splashing the cash is no guarantee of positive results and a happy camp: "If those figures that you’ve quoted are true, fifty thousand pounds a week that Wrexham are prepared to pay Tom Cairney and thirty thousand pounds a week Birmingham are prepared to pay Kwame Poku, then they will be two of the highest paid players in the Championship.

“That in itself is staggering really to be fair but those are two players that would undoubtedly help those two clubs in the Championship next season, there’s no question, and if that's the kind of money that it's going to take for them to attract that kind of player, then fair play to them.

“It’s just a case of how many others can you put on those kind of wages, and if it’s not many is there going to be resentment and disharmony in the changing room? I’m not sure about that so, yeah, impressive numbers but they don’t really guarantee you anything.”

Leandro Trossard STAYS! Arsenal attacker set for unexpected new contract to put end to transfer speculation

Arsenal midfielder Leandro Trossard is set to sign a bumper new deal to end talk of his departure from the Emirates this summer.

  • Trossard signs new Arsenal deal
  • Pay increase for Belgium midfielder
  • No extension to length of his contract
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Trossard’s position as one of Arsenal’s main creative forces had come under scrutiny amid the new arrivals this summer. Viktor Gyokeres and Noni Madueke have been added, but boss Mikel Arteta has made clear his desire to keep the Belgium international. And while his monthly pay packet will be larger, there has been no extension to the duration of his contract, according to a report in .

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Trossard was an unused substitute during the Gunners’ 1-0 opening day victory over Manchester United with the left side of midfield being filled by Gabriel Martinelli. But his performances for Arteta’s side, as they fell just short of winning the title last season, have earned him an improved deal. He has bagged 28 goals in 124 games and has consistently shown his all-round ability, playing across multiple frontline positions.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Arsenal have come second in the Premier League nine times. That is a record they hold over Manchester United, who have finished runners-up seven times. 

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    WHAT NEXT FOR TROSSARD?

    Trossard picked up a thigh injury during the pre-season defeat by Tottenham, but is available for selection to face Leeds on Saturday. Arteta has made clear he remains a key part of the club’s plans as they bid to end the run of second-place finishes in the Premier League and leap the final hurdle in the Champions League.

Após rescindir com o Inter, Taison faz críticas pesadas ao presidente do clube

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de terminar seu vínculo com o Internacional onde tem negociação para reforçar o PAOK-GRE, o atacante Taison concedeu entrevista ao streamer Gustavo Paiva, em seu canal na ‘Twitch’, onde disparou uma série de críticas voltadas a Alessandro Barcellos, presidente do Colorado.

Além de falar que não gostaria de ver o dirigente ‘nem pintado de ouro’, o jogador elencou uma série de fatores que colaboraram para o desgaste da relação. Tanto em relação ao trato com ele como também até em relação a funcionários do Inter.

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>Confira a movimentação dos clubes na atual janela de transferências

-Eu não quero ver ele (Alessandro Barcellos) nem pintado de ouro na minha frente. Sabe o que é um cara ficar te ligando todo dia pra eu vir. Eu tinha um bom salário no Shakhtar, um bom contrato. E ele me ligava todo dia pra eu vir. Aí eu rescindo, deixo um caminhão de dinheiro lá, para chegar aqui e eles fazerem isso comigo. Eu vivi o clube, era um torcedor dentro do campo. O que eu mais queria esse ano era ser campeão. Eu falei para os caras, se quiserem baixar meu salário, podem baixar de boa. Eu vou brigar para ser o titular. Só que eles não quiseram e eu também não vou ficar me rebaixando tanto – detalhou Taison.

O atleta hoje com 34 anos de idade e que está perto de retornar à Europa relatou que, no último contato com Alessandro Barcellos, a conversa “subiu o tom” consideravelmente onde mencionou, inclusive, o comportamento do ex-companheiro Yuri Alberto, hoje no Corinthians.

-Eu saí de lá e pedi para eles cuidarem dos roupeiros e dos massagistas. Seu Gentil, que é roupeiro, está lá há 40 anos, e os caras não tiveram nem um centavo de premiação. Quem deu a premiação para eles fomos nós. jogadores. Eu que tirei do meu salário para dar. Se eu falar, as pessoas não vão acreditar no que eles fazem. Eu falei para ele (Barcellos) na cara dele, eu tinha que ter feito igual o Yuri Alberto fez com vocês. Na segunda-feira disse que ia vir jogar aqui e na quarta-feira foi anunciado no Corinthians, largando flauta do DVD. Vocês gostam de jogadores assim – disparou.

No meio de 2022, o Internacional viveu problemas com o pagamento dos direitos de imagem junto ao elenco onde o atraso que chegaria a três meses gerou um boicote a atividade que estava programada no CT Parque Gigante. Na época, Taison foi apontado como o líder do movimento, algo que foi rebatido pelo agora ex-atleta do clube:

-Botaram tudo nas minhas costas. Eram 33 jogadores sentados no vestiário, dizendo que não iam treinar, e sobrou pro Taison. Presidente não teve coragem de dizer na entrevista que não foi o Taison. Os caras me batendo igual criança. Eu apanhando igual criança. Parecia que fui eu que fiz aquilo. Estou com uma mágoa muito grande, mas quarta-feira isso passa. Quando eu tiver treinando com 3 graus, já passa.

AC Milan in talks with Monaco striker as Dusan Vlahovic alternative with Juventus striker demanding double the salary Serie A side have offered

AC Milan have identified Monaco's Breel Embolo as an alternative, with the Rossoneri facing multiple hurdles in their desire to sign Dusan Vlahovic.

Milan eye Monaco striker EmboloClub wants to sign competition for Santiago GimenezRossoneri want Vlahovic, but Juve forward making excessive demandsFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

AC Milan continue to search for suitable profiles to bolster their attack ahead of the 2025-26 season, having failed to qualify for the Champions League. According to a report from , Milan have established contacts with Monaco striker Embolo, after finding out that there are a lot of complexities in an operation for Juventus star Vlahovic.

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Per Fabrizio Romano, Monaco will not stand in the way of Embolo, having already made a pact with the Swiss international last summer. The player rejected advances from Turkish side Besiktas. Milan are keeping tabs on the player and have opened talks to sign him, with the Ligue 1 side setting a €15 million (£13m/$17.5m) price tag.

DID YOU KNOW?

Vlahovic remains Milan's primary candidate to bolster the frontline. Indeed, as per , Juventus are ready to cash in on Vlahovic and get his €12 million net salary off the books. The Bianconeri have already secured the signing of Jonathan David as a free agent and are expected to get in touch with Paris Saint-Germain over extending Randal Kolo Muani's stay in Turin.

The Serbian striker finds a move to Milan appealing, which will give him a chance to not only play for a historically big name in Europe but also allow him to reunite with Massimiliano Allegri. However, the financial aspect of the operation is proving to be a major deterrent in Milan's pursuit of the ex-Fiorentina man. report that Milan will only seriously make moves for Vlahovic if the 25-year-old demands a severance package from Juve, and if the striker would be happy to accept a salary of €6 million plus bonuses tied to winning the league and if he wins the top scorer award in Serie A.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Milan are monitoring Bayer Leverkusen's Victor Boniface and Crystal Palace ace Jean-Philippe Mateta. It is shaping up to be an exciting transfer for the 2022 league winners, who have already signed Luka Modric for free and are pushing to get deals for Ardon Jashari and have also convinced Rafael Leao to continue at San Siro next season.

Palmeiras x Avaí: saiba onde assistir ao jogo pela 33ª rodada do Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

Palmeiras e Avaí se enfrentam neste sábado, às 21h, no Allianz Parque, em São Paulo, em jogo válido pela 33ª rodada do Brasileirão. O Verdão ocupa a primeira posição na tabela, com 68 pontos, enquanto o time catarinense é apenas o 19º lugar, na zona da degola, com 28 pontos. A transmissão será em canais da TV paga.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasScarpa valoriza semana de treinos no Palmeiras e pede cuidado com o Avaí: ‘Entrar focados’Palmeiras20/10/2022PalmeirasPalmeiras de olho no Avaí, e Tabata inicia volta; veja provável timePalmeiras20/10/2022PalmeirasPalmeiras e Abel Ferreira são indicados a prêmio de melhor do mundoPalmeiras20/10/2022

GALERIA
> Confira os públicos do Palmeiras no Allianz Parque em 2022

TABELA
> Veja classificação e simulador do Brasileirão-2022 clicando aqui

O duelo entre as equipes terá transmissão do SporTV e do Canal Premiere, pay-per-view da Rede Globo, para todo o Brasil, em que somente assinantes terão acesso ao jogo.

Além dos meios citados, os torcedores de Palmeiras e Avaí poderão acompanhar o jogo no tempo real do LANCE!/Voz do Esporte.

Veja mais informações sobre o jogo:

PALMEIRAS x AVAÍ

Local: Allianz Parque, em São Paulo (SP)
Data e hora: 22/10/2022, às 21h (de Brasília)
Árbitro: Bruno Arleu de Araujo (Fifa/RJ)
Assistentes: Thiago Henrique Neto Correa Farinha (RJ) e Eduardo Gonçalves da Cruz (MS)
VAR: Adriano Milczvski (PR)
Onde assistir: SporTV, Premiere e em tempo real no LANCE!/Voz do Esporte

Niklas Sule blasts 'such stupid excuses' despite 'pretty terrible' pitch as Borussia Dortmund stumble in underwhelming Club World Cup opener against Fluminense

Niklas Sule admitted the pitch was “pretty terrible” in Borussia Dortmund’s Club World Cup opener, but insisted blaming it would be a “stupid excuse.”

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Sule dismisses “stupid excuses” despite slamming pitchBVB defender claims 'ball didn't even bounce properly'Dortmund played a goalless draw against FluminenseFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Dortmund defender didn’t sugarcoat the team's stalemate opener against Fluminense in the Club World Cup, saying the performance was “far too little” despite the poor pitch at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Notably, Sule was not the only player who criticised the conditions of the pitch. Goalkeeper Gregor Kobel also voiced his concerns, claiming the ball wasn’t bouncing the way it usually does.

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After a year of build-up, FIFA’s revamped Club World Cup has struggled to draw crowds, forcing the organisers to slash ticket prices to boost attendance. Besides the pitch conditions, several teams have voiced frustration over midday kick-offs in the hot U.S. summer. Earlier, PSG manager Luis Enrique blasted FIFA over the scheduling, calling the conditions unfit for elite-level football.

"The time slot is great for European audiences, but the teams are suffering. In terms of play, it's impossible to perform at a very high level for 90 minutes,” Enrique said after PSG's 4-0 win over Atletico Madrid.

Watch every FIFA Club World Cup game free on DAZNStream nowWHAT NIKLAS SULE SAID

Talking to the reporters after the game, Sule said: “We were very, very weak with the ball. We were aiming for much better. No excuses about the conditions, even though the pitch was pretty terrible. The ball didn't even bounce properly. But those are all such stupid excuses. It was simply far too little today. We have to blame ourselves for that to some extent. I still think everyone is up for this challenge. We simply have to bring more to the table for the second game and work on it. We've shown over the last month or two that we're capable of playing better football – but that doesn't count here anymore."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR BORUSSIA DORTMUND?

Dortmund now turn their attention to their next Group F clash against Mamelodi Sundowns in Cincinnati on Saturday, June 21. Notably, this will be a daytime fixture, meaning players will once again have to contend with the hot weather. However, they will be hoping the pitch conditions at least work in their favour this time.

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