Sweat, sweeps and salvation for Australia

In the year of ball-tampering and bans, a weakened team found a way to survive more overs than any Australian side before them to snatch a dramatic draw

Daniel Brettig in Dubai11-Oct-2018For the first time in 2018, new territory for Australian cricket represents a point of pride rather than a moment of madness. In the year of ball-tampering, bans and backlash, a severely weakened Test team found a way to survive more overs than any Australian side before them to snatch a draw from Pakistan out of the dust of Dubai. History made, leaving a series still to be won.When Australia began their occupation on day four, they faced the prospect of 140 overs to block out; more than a day and a half of batting on a pockmarked and spinning pitch. In the team’s rearview mirror was the loss of all 10 wickets for 60 runs on day two; looming in the headlights were Yasir Shah, Bilal Asif and Mohammad Abbas.Never had Australia lasted more than 90 overs in the fourth innings for a draw in Asia. A team shorn of Steven Smith and David Warner? Forgeddaboutit! To paraphrase Ray Warren’s call of an end-to-end Queensland try in a famous State of Origin encounter, that’s not a draw, that’s a miracle.And whose miracle was this, forged amid enervating heat and all sorts of mental blocks. It belonged, chiefly, to Usman Khawaja, conjuring the greatest of his Test innings and one of the greatest save-a-game efforts in all of Test history. Only Michael Atherton, for 643 minutes at Johannesburg in 1995, had batted longer in a fourth innings than Khawaja’s 524 minutes for 141. Much as the Wanderers has remained Atherton’s signature moment, so too Dubai will always be associated with Khawaja.From the very start of his first-innings 85, Khawaja showed evidence of strong planning, deep concentration and vastly improved fitness. While he joined his team-mates in the hole they fell into after an initial opening stand of 142 with Aaron Finch, Khawaja had provided an example for others, as underlined by a post-play discussion in the middle with the rest of the side’s left-handers. As Travis Head attested, Khawaja’s strength of mind and sureness of method was something to be followed.In the second innings, Khawaja added a fusillade of reverse sweeps, 21 in all, to confound Yasir in particular. In the consistency of the shot’s use and its proficiency, Khawaja recalled a famous World Cup innings by Graham Gooch at Mumbai in 1987, when he swept Maninder Singh and India out of the tournament. But the use of attack as the best form of defence over such a prolonged period provided a reminder of how much quality may be found in Khawaja’s cultured hands, now without peer as the most skilled in this Australian batting line-up. He played the innings of a senior player, and a leader. As so many in the team had said before this match, it should not require the bestowal of a formal title to make one.Accompanying Khawaja for the best part of 50 overs across close to two full sessions was Head, the South Australian captain and debutant. Here was another example of deep concentration but also rapid learning. Having looked lost in the first innings, Head found his way through the testing early passages on the fourth evening and slowly gathered confidence, punching the ball with clear intent off both front and back feet. He did not always get it right: the sweep did not work for him and he may easily have been lbw playing it against Yasir when he was on 44. But overall Head showed he was a willing pupil in these conditions, and with Khawaja turned the draw from a theoretical possibility to a tangible one.Usman Khawaja gets down the track to hit straight•Getty ImagesAfter Head and Marnus Labuschagne both fell to skidding deliveries made possible by the second new ball, Tim Paine walked to the middle with a keen desire to salvage more from this day. He had, as a far younger man, made quality runs in Asian conditions on the 2010 tour of India – at the time describing conditions as the toughest he had ever encountered. But now as Australian captain, having also delivered 222.1 spotless overs behind the stumps, Paine was highly invested in this team and this scenario.His early overs in the middle were fraught just about every ball. One Yasir legbreak, left alone with a clear sight of the stumps, failed to disturb the off peg by approximately one millimetre, and there were numerous other strangled appeals. But little by little, Paine gained a foothold, aided by Khawaja’s serene presence at the other end. Slowly the minutes ticked past, and tea arrived without a further wicket. Five left to survive the match’s final session, in which an average of 4.75 wickets had fallen across each of the previous four days, meant that Paine’s Australians now had a glimmer, however slight.When eventually fatigue and sweeping got the better of Khawaja, lbw to a perfectly pitched googly by Yasir from around the wicket, the final hour had already begun. Time was running short, but there was plenty for Pakistan to conjure a win – just ask the West Indies and their inattentive No. 11 Shannon Gabriel. Mitchell Starc and Peter Siddle were unable to endure, as 15 overs with five wickets left became 12 with a measly two. Nathan Lyon, so often the last man out in Australian defeats, marched to the middle at No. 10.The closing overs were incredibly tense, with the benefit of a Paine inside edge onto pad meaning that Pakistan were out of reviews. Yasir, Abbas and Bilal all tried their wares, with Sarfraz Ahmed unwilling to try a wayward Wahab Riaz, despite his greater pace. Paine’s bat, for the most part broad, also found fortuitous edges, one fractionally over the stumps from Yasir, another marginally past them from Abbas. Strained smiles from Pakistan’s fielders and an increasingly grimacing face from their coach Mickey Arthur told a tale that climaxed with something as simple as a Paine forward defence, and then a fist pump. Australia did not, in the end, bat out 140 overs, but only because Sarfraz offered his hand to Paine after 139.5.For the coach Justin Langer, this was a result to epitomise the type of Australian team he and Paine are trying to build – hard to beat at first, and then ever more frequently victorious. Langer, of course, had been involved in one other result commonly viewed as miraculous, the fabled Hobart chase against Pakistan in 1999. Where that victory, complete with centuries to Langer and Adam Gilchrist, had jumpstarted Australia’s reign of dominance, this one picked a previously forlorn team off the Newlands killing floor.Langer has reflected on that result, where his outward positivity when Gilchrist arrived had masked a sense of impending doom, and thoughts mainly of keeping his tenuous spot. “Gilly walks out, and I’m being positive, saying, ‘If you just hang in there, you never know what could happen. Let’s see if we can stick it out till stumps, it might rain tomorrow’. He goes, ‘Yeah, yeah, no worries’,” Langer said last year. “I was just trying to say the right things but thinking to myself, we’re going to lose this Test but if I get 50 not out I might get another Test match…”Similar exchanges were had between Khawaja and Head, then Khawaja and Paine. In the closing overs, Paine and Lyon tried to relax by talking about watching episodes of . But at the end of all that talk, the nerves, the sweat and the sweeps, was salvation of a kind Australian cricket had not previously seen. In it came a significance that recalled Hobart, as Langer has often said: “It was significant personally, but for the Australian cricket team, it was actually the [third] of our 16-match winning streak. I think we thought if we could win from there, we could win from anywhere.”This wasn’t a win, but very close to it for the psyche of this team. At the end of another famous draw, in 1984 against the West Indies, the then recently retired Rod Marsh rang the Caribbean to inform the batting hero Allan Border and the captain Kim Hughes that a rare non-winning rendition of the team song had his blessing. In the heat, dust and glare of Dubai, another Australian team forged a similar piece of history, at a time when it was so sorely needed.

Man Utd told they will need to make 'crazy' offer to sign 'dream' transfer target Carlos Baleba from notoriously tough negotiators Brighton

Manchester United have been told it will take a "crazy" offer to prise "dream" transfer target Carlos Baleba away from Brighton.

Red Devils have made attacking additionsAttention turning to midfield engine roomSeagulls to demand nine-figure transfer feeFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Red Devils have been able to bolster their attacking ranks this summer with the signings of Benjamin Sesko, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo. Midfield reinforcements are said to be next on their list of priorities.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Ruben Amorim is reported to be a big fan of Brighton star Baleba, who is considered to be a “perfect” fit for any engine room. The 21-year-old is being billed as a “dream” addition for those at Old Trafford.

DID YOU KNOW?

Initial contact has been made with Baleba’s representatives, and United “didn’t find closed doors”. Brighton, though, are understandably reluctant to part with a Cameroon international who they snapped up from Lille in 2023.

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GettyWHAT ROMANO SAID

Fabrizio Romano has told : “It means an important, very important, maybe crazy proposal is needed or Baleba is not available for sale this summer. It’s never easy to negotiate with Brighton, especially with 23 days to go. But Manchester United wanted to try. Let’s see what happens next.”

الزمالك يُعلن تجديد عقد لاعبه لمدة 5 سنوات رسميًا

أعلن نادي الزمالك برئاسة حسين لبيب، عن التجديد مع أحد لاعبي الفرق الرياضية بالقلعة البيضاء لمدة 5 سنوات.

كشف بدر حامد، رئيس قطاعات كرة القدم بنادي الزمالك، بالتنسيق مع مجلس إدارة النادي، عن تمديد تعاقد حسام عاشور التقي، جناح فريق 2007.

طالع.. خاص | أول رد فعل من الزمالك بعد اعتذار أحمد فتوح

وأكد حامد، أن اللاعب وقع على عقود مع نادي الزمالك لمدة 5 سنوات، حتى موسم 2029 -2030.

وأشاد رئيس قطاعات كرة القدم بالزمالك، بقدرات حسام عاشور مؤكدًا أنه يمتلك إمكانيات كبيرة ويعد واحدًا من أهم لاعبي قطاع الناشئين.

وأوضح أن تجديد التعاقد معه جاء وفقًا للإستراتيجية الموضوعة للحفاظ على العناصر المميزة بجميع المراحل العمرية، حيث تم التنسيق منذ فترة في هذا الأمر مع حسين السيد، عضو مجلس إدارة النادي.

وفي سياق مختلف سقط الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالزمالك، في فخ التعادل السلبي أمام المقاولون العرب في الجولة الثانية من الدوري المصري الممتاز.

يانيك فيريرا يمنح لاعبي الزمالك 24 ساعة راحة قبل مواجهة المقاولون

اتخذ الجهاز الفني لنادي الزمالك بقيادة البلجيكي يانيك فيريرا، قرارًا قبل مواجهة المقاولون العرب القادمة في بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

ويستعد فريق الزمالك لمواجهة المقاولون العرب، مساء يوم السبت 16 أغسطس، في الجولة الثانية لمسابقة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

وكان الزمالك قد حقق الفوز على سيراميكا كليوباترا، في الظهور الأول بالموسم الجديد من الدوري المصري، أمس الجمعة.

طالع.. مران الزمالك | طلب من فيريرا للاعبين.. وتدريبات فنية استعدادًا لـ المقاولون

وقرر يانيك فيريرا، منح اللاعبين راحة من التدريبات الجماعية غداً الأحد، على أن يستأنف الفريق تدريباته مساء يوم الإثنين المقبل بصورة طبيعية، استعدادًا لمواجهة المقاولون العرب.

وكان الزمالك خاض مرانه مساء اليوم على الملعب الفرعي باستاد الدفاع الجوي تحت قيادة يانيك فيريرا وجهازه المعاون.

Charith Asalanka, Kusal Mendis shine in chaotic finish as Sri Lanka make Asia Cup final

In a game of multiple compelling storylines, it was Charith Asalanka who stood tall in the end as Sri Lanka edged Pakistan out by two wickets in a final-ball thriller in Colombo. With it, Sri Lanka made it to their 11th Asia Cup final (for ODIs), where they will face India on Sunday.Asalanka remained unbeaten on 49 off 47 balls to see home a nervy chase, but it was a win built on Kusal Mendis’ 91 from 87 deliveries and Sadeera Samarawickrama’s 48 off 51. Pakistan will look back at what might’ve been, as their injury-hit attack fought tooth and nail, and almost secured an unlikely come-from-behind win.Set a DLS-adjusted target of 252 in a rain-shortened 42-over game, Sri Lanka needed six an over from the get-go, but in Mendis and Samarawickrama, they had two in-form batters of the tournament at their disposal. During their 100-run third-wicket stand, the game seemed Sri Lanka’s to lose, as they knocked over the singles while also finding boundaries when required.Indeed, one of the features of the chase was that Sri Lanka never ran away with it, while at the same time keeping the required rate always at six or below. While this exuded a sense of control, it also allowed Pakistan the opening late in the game.Both Samarawickrama and Mendis fell against the run of play, each dismissed by Iftikhar Ahmed, who finished with 3 for 50 in eight overs. Samarawickrama came down the track and missed an arm ball to be stumped, while Mendis chipped a leading edge for Mohammad Haris to take a blinder at short extra cover, diving full length in front and grasping it centimetres off the ground.Sri Lanka needed 42 off 41 balls at this point with six wickets in hand, and while Dasun Shanaka fell shortly after, Dhananjaya de Silva kept Asalanka company as the requirement was whittled down to 12 from 12 deliveries with five wickets in hand.Enter Shaheen Shah Afridi, who had had an absolutely mediocre game up until then by his standards – eight overs bowled, 48 runs conceded, and no wickets taken. Six balls later, Sri Lanka were seven down, and another eight away with six balls remaining as Afridi first had Dhananjaya caught at long-on off a low full toss, and then Dunith Wellalage nick behind looking to heave one across the line.Sadeera Samarawickrama and Kusal Mendis added 100 for the third wicket•AFP/Getty Images

Then enter Zaman Khan, the slinger who had had a forgettable debut until then. His five overs had gone for 32, and Babar Azam had resisted the urge to bring him on earlier, instead opting to save him for just such a moment. Zaman had given eight runs in his last over, and needed to save eight in the final over of the chase.He allowed tailender Pramod Madushan off strike first ball, but then Asalanka incredibly took a single off the third after a dot, leaving Madushan on strike with six needed from three. Pakistan had found a way into the game, and then an attempt to run a bye as the ball rolled away to the wicketkeeper saw a chaotic mix-up between Madushan and Asalanka. Thus, Madushan was run-out at the non-striker’s end. Sri Lanka, who were also a batter short after Maheesh Theekshana had suffered a hamstring injury in the field, then needed six from the two deliveries, and Pakistan were suddenly ahead.But then Asalanka edged a swipe between the wicketkeeper and short third for four. Two from one left – with a Super Over on the cards – but Asalanka turned an attempted yorker behind square leg, as Sri Lanka and a packed Premadasa Stadium breathed a heaving sigh of relief.It was hardly the expected finish when the day had started with whether there would be any play at all. Heavy rain had seen the start delayed by nearly two hours, with Pakistan particularly dreading further interventions as only a win would suffice for them to qualify for the final. And when the rain inevitably arrived again, midway through their innings, it proved to be the catalyst for a nearly match-winning resurgence.The match had begun with 45 overs a side, and Babar electing to bat, a decision that wouldn’t seem to be the wisest for a chunk of their innings, as the Sri Lankan bowlers throttled the middle overs as well as the opening exchanges. The first five overs brought a wicket and only 13 runs, while by the end of the tenth, Pakistan had just about crept up to 40. It was at this point that a brief period of acceleration took place, with Abdullah Shafique and Babar running well and finding regular boundaries.Mohammad Rizwan helped Pakistan amass 102 runs in the last ten overs•AFP/Getty Images

But when Babar lost balance to one that beat the bat off Wellalage, he found himself stumped for the fourth time in ODIs this year. This once more slowed down proceedings as Sri Lanka chipped away at Pakistan’s soft underbelly. However, Shafique reached a maiden ODI fifty, but threw his wicket away by top-edging a pull off Matheesha Pathirana to deep square leg.Mohammad Rizwan was the only batter who looked to show any sort of intent in this period, but he too survived a couple of close calls, either of which, had they been taken, would have sharply changed the trajectory of the innings, and possibly the match.The first was a stumping opportunity, as he fell over trying to flick an arm ball from Dhananjaya; fortunately for Rizwan, Mendis behind the stumps couldn’t gather cleanly. The second was a missed sweep that popped up off the glove towards a vacant short leg, with Mendis diving full length to his left but fell agonisingly short of getting his gloves under it.At the other end though the wickets kept tumbling, as Pakistan found themselves at 130 for 5 in 27.4 overs when the rains intervened for a second time. While the ground staff had been ready with the covers several overs prior, the umpires let play continue through a light drizzle in the hope that it would be a passing shower. This, though, soon turned out to a brief but heavy downpour which saw significant parts of the ground – and crucially the pitch – get soaked.While play got underway with only a 30-minute stoppage, the impact of that brief downpour would be felt for the rest of the game. Not only had the match been reduced to 42 overs a side, but also the grip and turn which the spinners had been exploiting had all but vanished. In its place was a ball that was skidding through on to the bat.Rizwan, who had been treading water prior to the rain break in reaching 22 off his first 30 balls, got to his half-century off only another 18 deliveries. He took a particular liking to Madushan, who was playing his first game of the tournament in place of Kasun Rajitha. Madushan had been miserly in his opening four-over spell of 1 for 16, but on his return in the 33rd over, Rizwan greeted him with a nonchalant slap over deep midwicket.Madushan then compounded matters later in the over by overstepping – followed by two wides – only to be swatted down the ground by Iftikhar off the free hit. All in all, the over would go for 18, and it signalled the start of Pakistan’s death-overs onslaught.The final ten overs of Pakistan’s innings eventually ended up yielding 102 runs, with Rizwan ending unbeaten on 86 from 73 balls. Iftikhar provided the ideal supporting act at the other end with a solid 47 off 40. The pair put on 108 off 78 deliveries for the sixth wicket.Sri Lanka’s bowlers, meanwhile, struggled, especially with their star spinner Theekshana hobbling through his final set of overs with a hamstring strain – he would later be sent for scans and be unavailable to bat – while Wellalage too was unable to provide the same wicket-taking heroics he had showcased against India. But for once, it was their batters who would bail them out.

Northern mayors petition ECB to rethink 2027 Ashes allocation

The mayors of Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire have urged the ECB to reconsider its allocation of men’s Ashes Tests for 2027, which will see the north of England overlooked.Ben Stokes, England’s captain, said before the ongoing fourth Test at Emirates Old Trafford that he was “devastated” that none of the five Tests would be staged north of the River Trent, with Lord’s, the Kia Oval, the Ageas Bowl, Edgbaston and Trent Bridge chosen as the host venues.Andy Burnham (Greater Manchester) and Tracy Brabin (West Yorkshire) have now written an open letter to the ECB, describing the allocation of venues as “remarkable” and criticising the fact that London “consistently hosts three Tests every summer”.Related

  • Ageas Bowl to host its maiden Men's Ashes Test in 2027

  • England players 'disappointed' at lack of northern venues for 2027 Ashes

“We are writing to you to express our disappointment at the English Cricket Board’s announcement of match venues for the men’s Ashes in 2027,” the mayors wrote. “As you know, there will be no men’s Ashes Test in the north of England in 2027 – meaning that this week at Old Trafford will be the last men’s Ashes Test played in the North of England until 2031.”Headingley and Old Trafford are two of England’s most iconic cricket grounds, and home to historic Ashes moments from Ian Botham’s heroics in 1981 to Ben Stokes’ own ‘Miracle of Headingley’ in 2019. Very few grounds attract support as passionate or indeed as diverse as Headingley and Old Trafford – as a number of England players themselves have acknowledged in recent days.”We understand that the ECB’s criteria for awarding Test matches includes maximising attendances and ensuring a geographic spread of matches. It feels even more remarkable therefore that an area so passionate about cricket, with a population of over 15 million people, misses out on a men’s Ashes Test in 2027 whilst the south hosts three.”It does not feel right that at a time when cricket needs to do more to spread interest in the game around the country that London consistently hosts three Tests every summer. Next year, for example, Lord’s hosts one third of England men’s Tests whilst Headingley doesn’t get any.”The rivalry between Lancashire and Yorkshire within cricket is legendary, but this is an issue that unites both sides of the Pennines. We urge you to think again and ensure people in the north of England get the opportunity to witness more iconic Ashes moments in 2027.”Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, rings the bell at Emirates Old Trafford on the third morning•Stu Forster/Getty Images

Stokes said on the eve of the Old Trafford Test that England tend to perform well in the north due to the level of support they receive from crowds. “I’m a bit devastated that there won’t be any Ashes cricket here in 2027 in the north. It’s a shame,” he said. “I don’t make those calls, but if I was involved, I would have said, ‘please keep at least one game in the north’. I think it’s always a loud atmosphere here. You know the crowds we get in the north – and I say the north quite bluntly there – is very good. We get a lot of support.”Mark Wood and Jack Leach had previously expressed their own “surprise” and “disappointment” around the choice of venues, with Leach suggesting that by playing primarily in the south, England were not making the most of their home advantage.Headingley is due to host a women’s Ashes Test in 2027, and both Headingley and Old Trafford are due to stage men’s Ashes Tests in 2031.Andy Anson, Lancashire’s chair, said that the club were “entirely comfortable” with the ECB’s process of awarding matches, as well as the opportunity host more women’s internationals in coming years.”We are entirely comfortable with the process that the club went through with the ECB regarding the major match allocation package for future men’s and women’s internationals between 2025-31,” Anson said. “The announced package provides the club with seven years of certainty for international match scheduling which will see 40 days of international cricket played at the venue. The package is the result of in-depth discussions between the counties and the ECB and has been a thorough and fair process.”As well as the men’s Ashes Test in 2031, we will also be welcoming India for four matches in five years, in addition to hosting international women’s cricket at Emirates Old Trafford for the first time in many years – which we all look forward to. We are grateful to the ECB and our fellow counties for the level of cooperation and communication in arriving at this schedule.”

Liverpool starlet was once ahead of Trent, then Klopp sold him for just £3m

While Jordan Henderson’s cameo last night provided Liverpool with a burst of nostalgia, more eyes would have been on Curtis Jones as he started in the centre of Thomas Tuchel’s Three Lions squad.

It was a routine victory, England seeing off Albania 2-0 through goals from debutant Myles Lewis-Skelly and record-extending goalscorer Harry Kane, who marked cap number 104 with goal number 70.

Jones has been a steady presence in the England camp since making his debut in the Autumn. He scored in that one, against Greece.

Curtis Jones’ Performance vs Albania

Match Stats

#

Minutes played

74′

Touches

105

Shots (on target)

1 (0)

Accurate passes

94/99 (95%)

Key passes

1

Possession lost

7x

Dribbles

1/2

Tackles

1

Duels won

3/7

Stats via Sofascore

What a rise for Liverpool’s academy graduate. Like Trent Alexander-Arnold, Jones has become a star for club and country, but not all among the Reds youth succeed in reaching such heights.

There’s no question that Trent is the finest talent Liverpool have produced since Steven Gerrard inspired a city, and Liverpool would do well to find an even brighter star in the coming years.

Trent Alexander-Arnold

Saying that, the current crop is looking rather healthy.

Liverpool's academy development

Liverpool’s talent factory has made significant progress over the past several years, but it wasn’t always the case. Before Jurgen Klopp, Kirkby prospects of genuine quality were few and far between.

Liverpool youngsters Conor Bradley and Jarell Quansah.

But the German’s final years at the helm saw a stunning influx, Conor Bradley and Jarell Quansah becoming regular features last term to join the existing stars in Alexander-Arnold and Jones.

The success, of course, culminated in ‘Klopp’s Kids’ playing an instrumental role in lifting the 2023/24 Carabao Cup. Now, the Anfield side boasts rich youth ranks with the likes of Trey Nyoni and Rio Ngumoha leading the next generation’s charge.

This new crop are great and all, but Trent led the way for this academy revival on Merseyside. Pickings had been slim beforehand, but there was another who was expected to be part of that trend-setting group as a homegrown superstar.

However, it hasn’t happened for this Redman, who is now clubless aged 27.

The Liverpool prospect who was ahead of Trent

The man in question here actually burst onto the scene before Alexander-Arnold, but he’s since plummeted into the depths of the game, barely playing any football over the past three years.

First Impressions

What did pundits and fans alike think about their new star signing when they arrived? Football FanCast’s ‘First Impressions’ series has everything you need.

Who remembers Ovie Ejaria? Once among the cream of Liverpool’s academy crop, the midfielder has endured a tough career that threatens a bleakly premature conclusion.

He made eight competitive appearances for Liverpool during the 2016/17 season, earning praise from then-academy coach Michael Beale.

Ovie Ejaria

“Ovie has developed so much since he joined the academy,” Beale said. “He has always been a lovely technical player but now he is much more mature in his decision-making and in his application to his defensive duties.”

Alexander-Arnold might be one of the world’s best right-backs, but he was principally found in midfield before breaking onto the scene in 2017.

Sharing the role with Ejaria, jostling for space and prominence, it’s safe to say the 26-year-old won, but given Ejaria actually got a chance before his one-time teammate, things could have been so different.

Once a titan of Liverpool’s youth scene, Ejaria ebbed away across a loan and then permanent stay with Reading, making a total of 127 displays in blue and white, notching 22 goal involvements.

Since leaving the League One club, he’s done very little, going on trial with Egyptian Premier League club Zamalek in October 2024. Sadly, nothing appears to have come of the audition.

Considering the former England U21 international’s fortunes since leaving Liverpool, it’s rather good business that Klopp and FSG managed to claim £3m when he left for Reading.

Ovie Ejaria

For a player who was once held in such high regard, emerging at the start of Klopp’s dynasty before the superstars of today took their first steps, it’s a shame things haven’t worked out.

But it also serves as a reminder that Liverpool have come on leaps and bounds over the past decade.

Better than Gakpo: Liverpool plot surprise move for "outrageous" £20m star

Liverpool are reportedly eyeing up a swoop to sign the Ligue 1 sensation this summer.

ByDan Emery Mar 21, 2025

Keaton Jennings' untimely tear hands Somerset a lifeline after run-spree

Rain frustrates Lancashire as hosts hope to escape with draw after chastening day two

Paul Edwards22-Apr-2023

Keaton Jennings made 189 before retiring hurt with a torn hamstring•Getty Images

Wickets, which retains its status as the best breakfast shop on the circuit, seemed to be thronged with Lancastrians this morning. “Hope you enjoyed yesterday,” was the general tenor of their conversation and you can imagine the sort of response that might have received from Somerset supporters with the scoreboard informing us that the visitors were 302 for 1. Even more to the point, Keaton Jennings was unbeaten on 124 having taken his aggregate in two innings against one of his favourite opponents to 442.There was, therefore, every good reason for the locals to be gloomy before play began and even the omens were hardly propitious. For example, it was Emergency Services Day at the County Ground, which seemed something of an overreaction to the home team’s unimpressive draw and its loss at Trent Bridge. But maybe seeing Jack Leach hit for five sixes and going for 103 runs in 17 overs had decided things.And so cricket, like the lovely old witch she is, served up two sessions to pickle expectations. After a day on which the fall of a single Lancashire wicket seemed a rude aberration, the visitors lost nine batsmen, eight of them to the bowlers and the other to a torn hamstring which Jennings suffered when completing a single at around 12.30pm and which the ministrations of physio, Sam Byrne, could not calm. Luke Wells came out to serve as runner but it turned out that Jennings could not complete the most gentle of defensive shots without pain. After facing two balls from Leach, he hobbled off for the day with 189 high-quality runs against his name.This mattered partly because it occurred in the 80th over. Four deliveries after Jennings had left the field, Tom Abell took the new ball and Lewis Gregory bowled an excellent over with it. His first delivery shaded away from Dane Vilas, who nicked a catch to James Rew; his fourth had Colin de Grandhomme driving loosely but only edging another catch to the keeper. At this point, Somerset supporters could see Lancashire batters leaving the field with pleasingly unexpected regularity and with the score reading 413 for very few, the locals didn’t give a monkey’s what had prompted their departures. There are times when you pick apples from the tree and times when they drop of their own accord but they all go into the pie.The day got better for Somerset’s seamers and better for Rew, who had taken six catches and dropped none by the time Lancashire were bowled out for 554. Yes, a deficit of 113 left them on the sharp end of affairs but it was rather better than had seemed probable when Jennings, Wells and Josh Bohannon were scampering along at six an over on Friday afternoon. The cloudy conditions helped, of course, but so did the simple common sense of Gregory and Peter Siddle, who shared six wickets by keeping the ball up to the bat. For the plain truth was that the bowlers who stuck to the disciplines of line and length on or around off stump enjoyed success. That probably sounds like something one might have found in when E W Swanton was in the pulpit but it happens to be the bald truth. Having made 85, Bohannon had been beaten when fencing at Siddle and George Balderson was to depart when cutting at Gregory half an hour after lunch. George Bell made a pleasing 36 before falling to Siddle but Lancashire’s innings was now composed of such modest contributions and the change in tempo after Friday’s carnage was obvious, even to those spectators getting stuck into the cider on Thatchers TerraceThe weather was closing in as well. Russell Warren and Richard Illingworth took the players off in mid-afternoon and we needed folklore to help us weigh up the likelihood of a resumption. One local made use of St James’ weather vane, a Taunton pavilion and a range of local hills: “If the cock’s arse is facing the Colin Atkinson and you can’t see the Blackdowns, you can put your feet up for a couple of hours,” he said.. The first of these conditions was met in mid-afternoon in Taunton but not quite the second, so we came back for the one ball that Leach needed to bowl James Anderson, who was trying to reverse sweep.It would be eleven overs before the rain returned and that brief session brought further comfort to Somerset. Rather than lose their top order to Anderson and Tom Bailey, as they had done on Thursday morning, they reached what became close of play without mishap, Tom Lammonby batted competently, as the locals know he can, and Sean Dickson made an unbeaten 15 which might seem like manna to him after scores of 5, 0, 0 and 14. At the very least, home supporters can arrive at the County Ground on the final morning with reason to hope their team can avoid a second defeat in three games. The rest of us will have to be mummy’s little soldiers and cope with the fact that Wickets doesn’t open on Sundays.

Tom Curran suffers back injury, expected to miss start of T20 Blast

Tom Curran is expected to miss the start of the T20 Blast after being diagnosed with a stress fracture of the lower back for the second year in a row.Curran announced in February that he would take an indefinite break from red-ball cricket, saying that prioritising white-ball cricket was “the right decision for my body and for my mental health”.But earlier this month, while playing in the Pakistan Super League, he reported pain in his lower back and scans upon his return to the UK revealed another stress fracture.”Tom Curran returned early from the Pakistan Super League and scans have shown he has suffered a stress fracture of the lumbar spine,” Surrey, his county, said in a statement.The club did not put a timeframe on Curran’s return, saying: “Tom will be out for a period of time whilst he recovers and undergoes rehabilitation at Surrey.”ESPNcricinfo understands that he is considered a doubt for the start of the Blast on May 20, and may miss the competition altogether depending on his timeframe.He was also recently retained by Oval Invincibles on a £100,000 contract in the Hundred, which starts on August 1.Curran, who recently turned 28, has played 60 times for England across all formats but has slipped down the pecking order at international level. His most recent appearances in ODI and T20I cricket came in July 2021.He has spent the first two months of the year playing overseas, first for Desert Vipers in the inaugural edition of the ILT20 and then for Islamabad United in the PSL.

موعد مباراة إسبانيا والبرتغال في نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية 2025

حُسمت هوية طرفي مباراة نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية 2025، بعد انطلاق منافسات نصف نهائي البطولة مساء يوم الأربعاء والخميس.

والتقى البرتغال مع نظيره ألمانيا في نصف نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية، مساءً الأربعاء، في اللقاء الذي أقيم على ملعب “أليانز أرينا”.

طالع | موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة إسبانيا والبرتغال اليوم في نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية.. والمعلق

ونجح منتخب البرتغال في التأهل إلى نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية عقب فوزه على ألمانيا بهدفين مقابل هدف.

من جهة أخرى، واجه منتخب إسبانيا خصمه منتخب فرنسا، في نصف نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية، مساءً الخميس، في اللقاء الذي أقيم على ملعب “مرسيدس بنز أرينا”.

وتأهل منتخب إسبانيا إلى الدور ذاته وذلك بعدما تخطى منتخب فرنسا في مباراة مثيرة انتهت بنتيجة 5/4 لصالح المنتخب الإسباني. موعد مباراة إسبانيا والبرتغال في نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية 2025

ستُقام مباراة نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية، بين إسبانيا والبرتغال، يوم الأحد 8 يونيو الجاري على ملعب “أليانز آرينا” في مدينة ميونيخ الألمانية، في تمام الساعة العاشرة مساءً بتوقيت القاهرة ومكة المكرمة.

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