'Anything can happen' – Carlo Ancelotti urges Real Madrid players not to give up on La Liga title after late turnaround against Mallorca puts pressure on Barcelona

Los Blancos beat Mallorca on Wednesday night to delay Barcelona's title celebrations by another day thanks to Jacobo Ramon's late goal.

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  • Madrid scraped win against Mallorca
  • Barcelona can claim title on Thursday
  • Ancelotti says his side can't give up
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    A late goal from 20-year-old defender Ramon helped Madrid claim a dramatic 2-1 victory over Mallorca on Wednesday night to keep the La Liga title race alive for another day. Their Clasico defeat at the weekend saw Los Blancos drop seven points behind Barcelona but they reduced that gap to four in midweek before their rivals play on Thursday night.

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    Barcelona can reassert their seven-point lead and claim the title by beating Espanyol, but Ancelotti insisted his players cannot afford to give up on silverware no matter how unlikely their rivals are to fall off from their position of strength.

  • WHAT ANCELOTTI SAID

    Speaking after the game, Ancelotti said: "La Liga is over? Anything can happen in football. We didn't want to give them La Liga today. They have to play tomorrow. If they win we will congratulate them, if they don't we will see what happens. If we had played like this in all the games we would have had a better season."

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    While Madrid were able to claim the UEFA Super Cup and FIFA Intercontinental Cup, they were knocked out of the Champions League in the quarter-finals by Arsenal and were beaten by Barcelona in the finals of both the Copa del Rey and Supercopa de Espana.

Chelsea 2024-25 season ratings – every player ranked: From revitalised Moises Caicedo to stuttering Jadon Sancho

Despite some ups and downs, it was ultimately a successful season for the Blues, but some will be happier with their individual campaigns than others

It was a rollercoaster, but it all worked out in the end for Chelsea in 2024-25 as they secured a return to the Champions League and a first trophy for more than three years. Objective(s) complete for head coach Enzo Maresca following his appointment last summer.

Despite their best efforts to throw it away in the second half of the season, the Blues finally claimed a top-five place on the Premier League's final day at Nottingham Forest's expense, and three days later Reece James held the Conference League trophy aloft in Wroclaw after a comeback victory over Real Betis.

The end result of Champions League football and a piece of silverware will be highly satisfying to everyone associated with the football club, but on an individual level, which players deserve plaudits and who failed to hit the mark? Some delivered consistently colossal performances across the campaign, others started strongly but fell away and many failed to have any impact at all.

With the 2024-25 campaign wrapped up, GOAL rates and ranks every Chelsea player for their contributions…

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    29Omari Kellyman – N/A

    Chelsea's forgotten man. Omari Kellyman was signed from Aston Villa last summer in what seemed very much like a cynical play from both clubs to circumvent the Premier League's Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR). Injuries meant the attacking midfielder didn't play a single minute for the Blues in 2024-25.

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    28Mathis Amougou – N/A

    Chelsea's sole January signing, there is definitely a sense that Mathis Amougou wasn't a player that Maresca necessarily wanted. Yet another youngster in their ranks, the teenage midfielder was barely afforded any game time and did not feature in a Premier League matchday squad after mid-March.

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    27Marc Guiu – N/A

    Considered an absolute steal when Chelsea signed him from Barcelona for just £6 million last summer, Marc Guiu didn't exactly hit the ground running at Stamford Bridge. The striker's opportunities mainly came in the Conference League, where he bagged six times in as many games, but a serious hamstring injury in February stunted his progress.

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    26Mykhailo Mudryk – 2/10

    Poor Mykhailo Mudryk. Any hope that 2024-25 might be the season the hapless winger finally turned things around was extinguished in December when he was provisionally suspended over a failed drugs test. That curtailed his season, and he is still awaiting an official judgement.

Rohit's message for bowlers taking on England's Bazballers: 'Stay calm'

Despite the absence of Ashwin on the third day in Rajkot, India proceeded to seal their biggest Test win

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Feb-2024The message from Rohit Sharma and India’s team management to the bowling attack was to “stay calm” even as Ben Duckett countered them with a blistering century on the second day in Rajkot. Duckett’s wicket then hastened England’s collapse as they fell from 260 for 4 to 319 all out, in response to India’s first-innings 445. India’s bowlers triggered another England collapse in their second innings to seal a whopping 434-run victory and a 2-1 series lead.”When you’re playing Test cricket, it’s not played over two days or three days. We do understand the importance of extending the game for five days,” Rohit said at the post-match presentation. “They played well, to be honest, and played some really good shots. They put us under pressure a little bit there, but look we’ve got class in our squad, when it comes to bowling. Obviously, the message was to stay calm because when things like that happen, it’s actually easy to drift away from what you want to do as a team. But I’m really proud of how we came back the next day, stuck to what we discussed, and when those things happen, it’s a delight to watch.”Related

  • Ashwin rejoins Indian team in Rajkot

  • Jaiswal and India break six-hitting records

  • Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ravindra Jadeja star in India's biggest Test win by runs

After the second day’s play, India’s most experienced bowler R Ashwin was forced to leave Rajkot after a family emergency. Despite Ashwin’s absence on the third day – he rejoined the squad on the fourth – India proceeded to secure their biggest Test win, in terms of runs.”Lot of turning points. Once we won the toss…that was actually a good toss to win because we know in India, how important it is to win the toss and put runs on the board,” Rohit said. “And the lead that we got was very, very crucial for us. And the way we came out and bowled after that onslaught from the English batters was important for us to stay calm. The bowlers actually showed a lot of character and not to forget we didn’t have our most experienced bowler as well. But for this group to come out and get the job done in that fashion was really, really proud to watch.”Rohit said that promoting Ravindra Jadeja to No.5, ahead of debutant Sarfaraz Khan, was partly down to having a left-right combination in the middle. Rohit and Jadeja added a 204-run fourth-wicket partnership – the highest in the match – to lift India from 33 for 3. Both Rohit and Jadeja hit hundreds while Sarfaraz made a sparkling 62 off 66 balls.”Especially for this game, we thought he’s got so much experience playing this format,” Rohit said of Jadeja’s promotion. “He’s scored a lot of runs as well of late in the last couple of years. We always wanted that left-right batting as well. Sarfaraz being Sarfaraz we know the quality that he brings and we wanted him to just have some time before he gets into bat.”By no means it’s a long-term plan with the batting order; we just go by the flow – what we feel on that particular day or what is right for us in that particular Test match depending on the composition of the opposition as well. We try to calculate everything and then go with the flow.”Jadeja followed up his 112 with a match haul of seven wickets, including a five-for in the final innings, at his home ground. “I know about this wicket,” Jadeja said after collecting his Player-of-the-match award. “If we bat first, it’s always good to bat as the ball comes nicely onto the bat and in the second half it starts spinning. When Rohit won the toss, I was like ‘okay, this is what we wanted’.”On this wicket, you won’t get easy wickets because you have to work hard for it because this surface looks good to bat on and you need to work hard to get wickets. You can’t just bowl and get wickets easily. You have to earn the wicket.”

'Beginning of a new chapter' – Argentina to end 12-year ban on away fans in domestic league, implement controlled roll-out

More than a decade after restricting stadium access to home supporters, the AFA will begin allowing visiting fans starting this weekend

  • Policy change starts with two trial matches in Matchday 2
  • Ban was introduced in 2013 after repeated stadium incidents
  • AFA’s Claudio Tapia calls it "important day” for Argentine football
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    After 12 years of matches played without away fans, Argentine football is taking a major step toward normalcy. The Argentine Football Association (AFA) announced that it will begin allowing visiting supporters back into stadiums, starting this weekend, and gradually lifting the long-standing restriction introduced in 2013.

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    The ban was initially enforced due to repeated crowd disturbances and safety concerns, following several violent episodes – including the deaths of two Boca Juniors fans in a clash with San Lorenzo supporters, and after a fan died during a match between Estudiantes and Lanús in 2013.

    In an effort to reduce risk, officials implemented a blanket policy barring away fans from all domestic league matches. Although controversial, the policy was widely accepted as necessary. The upcoming fixtures mark the first official step toward reintroducing full fan attendance from both sides.

    Now, the AFA will test a controlled return of visiting fans in two games during the second round of the Torneo Clausura: Lanús vs. Rosario Central and Instituto vs. River Plate. The match in Lanús is particularly high-profile, as Ángel Di María is set to play in his long-awaited return to Argentine football.

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    WHAT CLAUDIO TAPIA SAID

    "This is a very important day for Argentine football. It marks the beginning of a new chapter," said AFA president Claudio Tapia. "We’ve been working on this for a long time. Clubs that are prepared will be able to welcome away fans once again, and this weekend we’re conducting our first test."

    Tapia also emphasized the star power drawing fans from across the country.

    "There are supporters who want to see Di María – the player who scored some of our national team’s most iconic goals," he said.

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Argentina has recently welcomed back two key players from its 2022 World Cup-winning squad: the legendary Di María, who returned to his beloved Rosario Central, and midfielder Leandro Paredes, who signed with Boca Juniors.

    In total, several members of the Qatar 2022 champions now play in the Argentine league. Goalkeeper Franco Armani, defenders Gonzalo Montiel, Germán Pezzella, and Marcos Acuña are all currently with River Plate.

The hero who almost didn't play

Bob Willis, one of the heroes of Headingley 1981, wasn’t even in the original squad picked for the Test

Martin Williamson02-Sep-2005The exploits of Ian Botham at Headingley in 1981 are the stuff of legend, but Bob Willis’s last-day performance, grabbing 8 for 43 as Australia were bowled out for 111 would, in almost any other match, have made him the hero. What is less well known, however, is that Willis was not even in the original squad picked for the Test.At the end of the second Test at Lord’s, Ian Botham had been sacked as captain and replaced with his predecessor, Mike Brearley. Three days later the selectors – Alec Bedser, Brian Close, Charles Elliott, John Edrich and Brearley – met at Lord’s. Once it had been agreed that Botham would be retained, Willis’s fitness was the next subject up for discussion.By 1981 Willis was increasingly fragile. He had broken down before the first Test in the Caribbean the previous winter, and although he had returned for the first two Tests of the summer, taking 8 for 183, he had contracted a chest infection and was expected to sit out Warwickshire’s county match at The Oval that weekend and, according to Bernard Thomas, the England physiotherapist, would not be fit to resume training until the following Tuesday, 48 hours before the start of the Leeds Test.Brearley was concerned. In Australia in 1978-79 Willis had come down with a similar ailment and had been out of sorts for the remainder of the tour. There were also doubts about his general fitness and stamina anyway in what was a six-match series.An attempt to speak to Willis proved fruitless, although Thomas was contacted who suggested that training could be brought forward 24 hours to Monday. With doubts remaining, the decision was made to leave him out of the 12-man squad in the hope he would be fit for the fourth Test at Edgbaston. Bedser was given the unenviable task of breaking the news.The next day, Willis, who was watching Warwickshire at The Oval, was contacted by Bedser and was shocked to be told that he had been dropped. Even though Brearley had been adamant he did not want a half-fit bowler in the side, Willis was not going to take the news lying down. “Although it took me some while to convince Alec that I had little doubt about my fitness for the game,” he recalled, “I effectively talked my way back into the team.”Willis and England physio Bernard Thomas•Getty ImagesBedser eventually spoke to Brearley at tea-time and the captain agreed that Willis could be reinstated as long as he played in the next day’s 40-over match and also turned out for the second XI on the Tuesday. He also said that Willis had to bowl 12 overs flat out in the nets in between.”Mike Hendrick’s invitation to play was intercepted before it could reach him,” Willis explained. “My name was among those read out to the waiting world on the midday news the following day.”Even then, Willis almost missed out. Although he came through the three tasks set by Brearley without a hitch and joined the other 11 at Headingley on the day before the Test, Brearley was still leaning towards playing a spinner, John Emburey, at the expense of one of the seamers. “Bob, who probably imagined that Chris Old would be left out if Emburey played, opted – uncertainly – for four seamers,” Brearley reflected. “Finally, I too came down, with equal tentativeness, on the same side. The selectors inclined the other way, but let me have the side I preferred.”In Australia’s first innings Willis bowled well but without luck, finishing with 0 for 72 from 30 overs. In the second innings, with Australia needing 130, Ian Botham and Graham Dilley were given the new ball, although the wayward Dilley was replaced by Willis after two overs. Willis huffed up the hill into the wind for five wicketless overs before suggesting to Brearley that he switch ends. Brearley consulted with Bob Taylor and Botham and agreed. The rest is history.Original England squad Graham Gooch, Geoff Boycott, Mike Brearley, David Gower, Mike Gatting, Peter Willey, Ian Botham, John Emburey, Bob Taylor, Graham Dilley, Chris Old, Mike Hendrick.Is there an incident from the past you would like to know more about? E-mail us with your comments and suggestions.

Bibliography

Phoenix From The Ashes – Mike Brearley (Hodder & Stoughton, 1982)

Lasting The Pace – Bob Willis (Willow, 1985)

Wisden Cricket Monthly – Various

The Cricketer – Various

The agony, the ecstasy, the comedy

Being cricket’s leading prima donna turned workaday-superstar is no teddy bear’s picnic

Osman Samiuddin24-Jun-2006


Shoaib Akhtar: a disruptive prima donna to some, a sheer genius to others
© AFP

Last October, I wrote about Shoaib Akhtar. He had turned 30 in August and the previous 18 months had been rocky. In April 2004, after the India series, he appeared before a medical commission, accused (by his captain and others) of lying about an injury. A new coach came, and issues soon did too. He went to Australia, lit up half the Test series, ignored the other half, and came back hamstrung, at odds with the establishment, and in a huff. He hadn’t played for Pakistan since the turn of the year, missing two tours, one with an injury and one because he wasn’t fit – wasn’t committed, if you were Inzamam-ul-Haq. There was no kissing but Shoaib and Inzamam did make up during the Afro-Asian Cup (it served some purpose).But Shoaib was about to be dissed as a disruptive prima donna mercenary by John Elliot, the Worcestershire chairman. He was about to be informed by Imran Khan that it was make-or-break time, he was about to be two days late for a training camp for the England series, Bob Woolmer was about to say of him, “If he wants to do it his way… he has to understand he might not get selected.” So yes, a piece was needed, a contemplative one, asking where Shoaib stood and where he went from where he was. Nothing clear emerged.Subsequently, he produced his most influential performance, against England, prompting Michael Vaughan to cite him as the difference between the two sides. I interviewed him soon after, at the start of the India series, a broader feature expanding on the original: Shoaib Akhtar at 30 – has he matured? He didn’t do much against India – the pitches didn’t help – but by series end he was stuck in another maelstrom of chucking. And he was injured again.Play this 21-month period on endless loop, varying only the duration of highs and lows, over the 111 months since his debut. Injuries, suspensions, ball-tampering, lawsuits, dalliances in the woods of Lolly and Bolly, chucking, brash statements, saving Australian kids, extraordinary sporting feats: on repeat, in no order. Forget Kevin Pietersen, Shoaib is cricket’s true rock star; how the f***, I asked myself, do you begin to comprehend him and his place?You’d think meeting him might help, but I left with more questions than I arrived with – never a promising sign for a journalist. After his England triumph, critics answered, he might justifiably have felt vindicated, enough to gloat even. Instead, he was prickly, brooding though not rude, and on the back foot. I asked him about his injuries at one point and before I finished, he interrupted, Punjabi twang via Bradford and Australia, “Who didn’t have injuries? Why am I always picked? I ask you – my answer is a question – who didn’t have? Imran sat out injured, Wasim had groin troubles, Waqar, Mohammad Zahid, Mohammad Akram, Lee, Gillespie, McGrath, everyone. Why people are picking me?”Injuries became commitment. “Eighty wickets in 14 Tests [77 in 17, actually] so I don’t know what people are talking about. What type of commitment do they want? You want me to get 100 wickets in 10 Tests, is that what you want me to do? Those who question should go through their records. How many Tests have they won? Ab mein kya karoon agar log bolte hain? (What do I do if people talk?)”I asked him about the obsession he had with speed in his early years and after he chided me for being loud (I was nervous), he interrupted again. “What do you mean? It’s what I do.””But there’s more…””Like what?””Slower balls, bouncers, new-ball outswing. You are more than just pace,” I defended him.”It’s not an obsession I have,” he half-laughed, half-sighed. “It’s a talent what I have. I don’t know why people want me to slow down. Cut your run-up, do this, do that – that’s the problem. I respect that people have an opinion and I don’t disagree, but this is my life and I like to do what I like to do and sort it out. What I think, that is just for me.” Chucking didn’t even get a look in; “as if,” he said with his eyebrows.Okay. But he was probably born on the defensive, I figure. He was born with flat feet, so he couldn’t walk till he was four. And since he began playing cricket, at 16, he has defended constantly; his action, his commitment, his attitude, his run-up (in June 1997, Peter Deeley wrote that Shoaib would learn the futility of a long run-up; eight years later, people still suggest as much), his fitness, his social life (in court for appearing at a fashion show), his statements (in court for saying Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis were past it in 2003 – which they were), perceived slurs against his honour (An ESPN-Star presenter had compared him to a dog’s tail – impossible to straighten), inquiries, commissions.I brought up what I thought would be, in this mood, a touchy issue – his 30th. He had only 36 Tests by that age, having missed almost half the Tests – 71 – Pakistan had played since his debut. Of the 21 series he played in, he completed only seven. At 30, he had an undercooked career, I suggested. Yet instead of defending his record, he introspected about his role. “It’s a heavy age, man. You wonder about yourself, life, what should be done, what shouldn’t, what should’ve been done, what shouldn’t have. It’s heavy. It’s not a life – people have better lives than this. They go through less pain than this.”He moved, unprompted, to responsibility, wistfully explaining his emergence as the Jason Gillespie of Pakistan’s lower order (85 crucial runs against England over 298 even more crucial minutes; 92 runs against India, including an innings-saving 106-minute 45 at Karachi). “I never took batting seriously before. The last Test against England was really difficult. I got hit, took bruises, and obviously it’s not my kind of job, but I wanted to set examples for youngsters – if I can do it then others can.”That transformation, albeit guarded, from maverick to role model of sorts, was the most significant aspect of his comeback; he was now one of the seniors, he was on the inner. His celebratory, winged run was into a team huddle rather than away from it. He cheered from long leg, he patted backs and offered tips. Rumour had it that he was praying with the team; he spoke publicly of how forgiving and united the side were; he refused to speak to the media. He described it like Morgan Freeman might, benevolent and wizened: “I can suggest; I can offer opinions; I can advise. If someone needs help, I am there – even without asking, I will help. I back up people going through bad phases. Ultimately you are the one who has to improve and prove yourself at the end of the day.”It may have been a rehearsed, clichéd introspection or it may have been spontaneous but in either case it caught me off guard and only illustrated how little we understand of Shoaib. This is not entirely our doing. Before I met him, I reasoned that either he hadn’t been able to articulate himself or that he had never felt compelled to. I’m still not sure which.We spoke of the turbulence before the England series, and of whether he needed to prove anything when he returned. Al Capone-style, he blurted, “I have nothing to prove to no one, apart from myself.” A few minutes later, still on the topic, he u-turned, “I just had to sort my fitness – I had nothing to prove to anyone, not even myself.”


I’ll huff and I’ll puff, and I blow you away…
© AFP

Perhaps he doesn’t care if people get him. When I asked him, straight up, whether he was misunderstood and why, he regretted: “I am, I always have been. I don’t care what people say or think. It’s their life and this is mine. I’m not bothered and have never been. I don’t take advice or listen to people – I only listen to Imran or other senior players.” Is the reader getting a clear picture? No? Neither did I.At a stretch, Bollywood actor Salman Khan’s troubled hunk, heart-on-sleeve, good-and-bad-all-bared-for-public rogue evokes a compelling parallel to Shoaib’s popular persona. Besides the body-building, both claim they are misunderstood. Both are abhorrent to certain, haughtily discerning tastes (“Oh, he’s so cheap, just look at him”). The great unwashed, though, as Shoaib proves at stadiums and Salman at cinema halls, love them, warts and all. Their tragedies are lately synchronised (Salman’s jail sentence came soon after the latest Shoaib chucking-injury imbroglio).And following Shoaib’s career-life, I find, often arouses emotions similar to those that Mike Tyson did. In hindsight, Tyson’s melodramatic tale was destined for a sombre, tragic conclusion. People were hooked to the barbaric brilliance, the rapes, the assaults, the women, the championships. Watching Shoaib is similarly compelling, if only to see what drama he lurches into next, whether or not he emerges from it, whether or not he ever will.Certainly, few personalities in cricket fragment opinion as sharply – maybe only Sourav Ganguly recently. Like with Ganguly, Shoaib’s on-field career doesn’t yet provide the protection afforded to yet another “difficult” man, Shane Warne. As a cricketer, any assessment, passing or final, will be coloured by doubts about his action – with Warne there is no such doubt. Shoaib has been publicly reported thrice – and cleared – but questioned privately many times more. Greg Chappell sparked the most recent inquisition, calling his action “seriously different”, a coy comment for a supposedly straight-talking man. Michael Holding was less shy, suggesting that hyperextension was little more than babble that allowed the ICC to let big names like Shoaib get away with chucking.Innuendo clouds the situation. Umpires are unwilling to call Shoaib (though one expressed his concern privately during the Faisalabad Test against India recently – incidentally, just before Chappell’s comments). Batsmen are allegedly concerned about the danger of his faster – read chucked – deliveries, Indian reporters revealed, though only after Shoaib had bullied Sachin Tendulkar at Faisalabad. Also allegedly, the ICC sent a videotape to the Pakistan board after the India series, highlighting one passage in which they felt his action raised worries. “Get it fixed,” was their message supposedly, “before we call him.” Shoaib missed the ODIs against India, and the tour of Sri Lanka, ostensibly so that he could tend to his injuries. Many Pakistani journalists winked that he was getting his action fixed.The only problem is, of course, that all this is officially denied and nothing can be confirmed, which leaves Shoaib dangling between villain and hero, cheat and champ. A worse situation you cannot imagine and frustratingly – or admirably – he refuses to say anything. He does have a freakish elbow that bends both ways and he is officially, if ambiguously, cleared. Whether or not he is a chucker is, as ever with Shoaib (and the issue itself), not so simple to answer. Some combination of biomechanics, doctors and the ICC might do one day, but it will tar him forever.
For those who can – or care to – look beyond it, he is a special bowler, one who only conforms to Gideon Haigh’s description of “pantomime fast bowler” in the drama he can impart to any match situation. His career is startlingly thin – only 42 Tests over near nine years. He doesn’t have 200 Test wickets, which makes assessments a little rushed and incomplete. But his own analysis – that he has become more rounded and dangerous over the last three or four years – is key. “I look through more videos of my bowling, to see how I bowl best and how to bowl to certain batsmen. I make mistakes and not every ball is going to be right but I know my plans to batsmen, I know the pitch, how batsmen play. I’ve developed more in the last three years.”Matthew Hayden, whose happiness he messed with on Pakistan’s 2004-05 tour, before Flintoff and gang did likewise, will testify to this. Ditto Marcus Trescothick and the rest of his team, all outwitted. The slower ball? More misunderstanding, mate: “People don’t know me. They’re saying it’s new but I’ve bowled it for years; it’s just loopier now.” Alec Stewart, duped leg-before by a 30mph change in pace at Lord’s in 2001, says aye.Wickets weren’t forthcoming against India, but Shoaib lurked in their heads throughout, bouncing the great and good, intelligently picking up wickets at Karachi. By then, he had played two full consecutive Test series – a first. Despite “not playing for records”, he isn’t slow to point out an impressive one since 2001. It’s only 27 Tests, but he has taken 120 wickets, at under 22, with fabulous strike-rates (under 39). He’s done it against everyone – save India – and everywhere. Over his career, he has taken wickets every 45.3 balls, the 12th best ever – among those who have bowled 2000 balls or more. Of the 11 above and six below him, only Waqar Younis maintained it over more Tests.Ultimately he upholds what is the most challenging standard to bear in Pakistan – fast bowling. It can’t be, and hasn’t been, a stroll. We demand more from our fast men, for as a tradition it has been as much the preserve of Pakistan as of Australia and West Indies. To be the latest face of that brings its own pressures. Whatever he is or has done, his uniqueness warrants appreciation. He’s not Imran, Wasim or Waqar. He doesn’t do reverse swing quite so readily, and with his slingy action you wonder whether he chooses not to use such historically trademarked weapons. Maybe he can’t do it on demand; it’s hardly the most controlled science. Different methods have produced different results but, operating in his own time and space, Shoaib has scripted magnificence, turned matches; the 1999 World Cup, Colombo against Australia 2002-03, Kolkata and the big two in 1998-99, Wellington 2003-04, England 2005-06. There’s more and it’s not a poor tale to tell from 42 Tests.


Shoaib, in any capacity, always attracts the shutterbugs
© AFP

Hero, misunderstood, freak, villain, loudmouth, , chucker, crowd-puller, match-winner; Shoaib is, and will be, many different things to many different people (and sometimes all of them to one person). All of it and none of it is true. For what it’s worth, above all the bullshit that it is my duty to record, I will remember him at Iqbal Stadium against England last winter. I tried hard to remain a journalist, an observer, but he sucked me – and others – in over a five-over spell, after lunch on the third day. The match, and 18,000 spectators with it, was dozing when he started. Instantly, the ambience switched. Suddenly, it became raw; people stirred as he bowled a spell where every ball demanded the utmost attention. He began with an old ball, 90-plus mph, and as he took the new ball, his run-up became a naked, burly sprint. He upped the pace, and the crowd their noise, with every step of his run.Two wickets were felled, and what wickets they were: last year’s most exciting player, Kevin Pietersen, hooked a six to reach his century but was beaten by a quicker bouncer next. Freddie “the world’s best player” Flintoff, had his bat cracked and then his stumps by one at 91mph. I thought then, and still do now, that that was Shoaib as originally conceived, scalping players big enough to matter to him, joking with the captain and players, rousing and jostling the crowd, chirping at batsmen, sending them off, all eyes only on him, at the centre of the celebrations, the stadium, and all attention. A brief glimpse, I think, of him in his element.

Win tickets to The Oval and a Harbhajan signed mini-bat

It’s time for another competition

Cricinfo staff30-Aug-2007********************************************************************************************


Which England player’s name is an anagram of ?
© Cricinfo

Something a bit different this time: an anagram for you to decipher.Up for grabs are the following juicy treats for some lucky winners:One UK reader will win a pair of tickets to the sixth ODI at The Oval on September 5, as well as a pair of tickets for the floodlit Surrey Pro40 against Somerset on September 11.Two other readers will win a mini-bat, signed by Harbhajan Singh among other Surrey players, and a Surrey cap.To get your hands on the freebies, which England player’s name is an anagram of ?The winners of the last competition are:Vikas Madaan, India
Alexis Smith, Scotland
Dave Deverick, England
They win a signed print of Alastair Cook, Ravi Bopara and Danish Kaneria (one player per winner), tickets to Essex’s Pro40 match against Gloucestershire on September 3 (floodlit)
and a copy of Harry Thompson’s . Well done everyone.We asked which England bowler took a hat-trick when England played India at Trent Bridge in the NatWest Challenge in 2004 and who were the victims? The answer was: Steve Harmison, who scalped Mohammad Kaif, L Balaji and Ashish Nehra.

Dhoni draws confidence from Gambhir

For the second time in the Kitply Cup, India’s openers laid the platform for victory with an aggressive partnership

George Binoy in Mirpur12-Jun-2008

Gautam Gambhir’s fifth ODI century was an extension of his recent Twenty form, and set the platform for a massive win
© AFP

For the second time in the Kitply Cup, India’s openers laid the platform for victory with an aggressive partnership. Gautam Gambhir took centre stage today and, after an opening stand of 85 in ten overs, went on to score an unbeaten match-winning century.”I always had confidence in him,” Mahendra Singh Dhoni, India’s one-day captain, said of Gambhir. “We were on an India A tour to Zimbabwe and Kenya. We played together and I’ve always regarded him as a batsman. He’s quite aggressive at times and he gives it his all. Even if he’s got a big score in the last game, he wants to score in the next game. He always gives more than 100%.”Gambhir’s fifth ODI century was an extension of his recent Twenty20 form, especially in the IPL where he was, predictably, one of the leading run-scorers with 534 runs at 41.07 from 14 games. Gambhir is also no stranger to opening the innings in ODI cricket; he has taken guard at the top 29 times out of 49, scoring three hundreds at 35.88.His form has been complemented by his opening partner, Virender Sehwag. His 89 dominated their partnership of 155 against Pakistan on Tuesday and his 59 off 32 balls against Bangladesh got India off to a furious start. Dhoni praised the efforts of his openers and said that their contribution was doubly important because of the conditions in Mirpur.”It [the start] is extremely vital especially in these conditions,” he said. “When the ball gets old it is difficult to score fluently. So it is always great if you have two openers who give you good starts. Today’s wicket was better for batting compared to the last game. So far in the two games, we’ve got the starts we wanted. Hopefully we’ll get it in the final too.”The colour of the pitch, unusually dark because of the black soil used, also makes it difficult for new batsmen in the middle order to sight the ball because it gets discoloured around the 25th over. The pitch also tends to get slower as the ball gets older, hence it is imperative for the openers to score significantly while the ball is new.India made just the one change for this game, bringing in RP Singh for Ishant Sharma, when it was thought they’d use this opportunity to give the bench strength a shot. Dhoni simply felt it was an “appropriate” change.”You look at the team composition and you want to win whether you are playing either Pakistan or Bangladesh,” Dhoni said. “We could have changed a batsman but several batsmen didn’t get a proper opportunity to bat in the first game. So it was a tough call but we are playing many games in the near future so most probably everyone will get a chance.”India’s victory over Bangladesh today has ensured Pakistan’s qualification for the final of the Kitply Cup on June 14.

Old guardian still close to new talent

Australia’s former World Cup-winning captain will keep an eye on the next generation during the tournament

Peter English07-Mar-2009

Belinda Clark enjoys her prize from 2005
© Getty Images

In her playing days Belinda Clark spent years as the world’s best batsman and the captain of the strongest side, but she had the misfortune of never appearing in a home World Cup. Clark led her side to victory in the 2005 tournament in South Africa, the second time she was in charge of a global triumph, and by the end of that year had retired as one of the most celebrated figures in women’s cricket.The tournament began today in her home state of New South Wales, and though Clark won’t have an on-field role she will be busy. “I remember watching the 1988 World Cup final on the TV, but it’s been a while since then,” she says. “I managed to squeeze my career in between the two home World Cups. On the one hand I will miss not being on the field, but on the other hand I’ll be involved in other ways. This tournament is going to be fantastic.”Clark, who played 15 Tests and 118 ODIs, is the manager of Australia’s Centre of Excellence (formerly the Academy) and runs a close eye over the men’s and women’s squads as part of her administrative duties at the complex in Brisbane. So even though the outfit is no longer her side, she has tracked it since planning began for March 2009 shortly after Australia beat India by 98 runs in Centurion four years ago. She was involved in the early re-setting of goals for the team, then part of the exit of senior players, before watching the regeneration of the side.Over the past 12 months the team has increased its matchplay, including series against New Zealand and India in the Australian summer, and during the off-season five representatives spent extended periods at the Centre of Excellence to fine-tune for the World Cup. Clark was there when Karen Rolton, the captain and experienced batsman, spent 11 weeks at the facility. The stints of Ellyse Perry, Kate Blackwell, Emma Sampson and Shelley Nitschke varied between a fortnight and a month.”Karen’s 11 weeks were to get her physically ready to embark on the season and we did that for a specific reason,” Clark says. “We were really pleased to have had them here.” All of it was geared towards the World Cup, which kicks off an A-list winter that includes the World Twenty20 and the Ashes in England.The entire squad also goes to Brisbane a few times a year under the direction of the head coach, Richard McInnes. While the men’s Centre of Excellence intake gets months to focus on positioning front elbows and back legs, the women don’t have the luxury of a major overhaul in the few days they spend at Allan Border Field.

Clark, who played 15 Tests and 118 ODIs, is the manager of Australia’s Centre of Excellence and runs a close eye over the men’s and women’s squads as part of her administrative duties at the complex in Brisbane. Even though the outfit is no longer her side, she has tracked it since planning began for March 2009, four years ago

“The work they do here has to be quite specific and it has to be tangible because there’s no point trying to change the world in five minutes when you have them for three or four days,” Clark says. “Then they go back to their states for three or four months, then you have them back for three or four days again. Because of the difference in attendance time, you have to hit the mark pretty quickly, so the girls have been doing a lot of that type of work for the past 12 months.”McInnes, who was the Australian men’s team’s performance analyst until the 2008 tour of the West Indies, has relied heavily on being games-focussed when the squad is together, developing the players’ ability to perform their skills under the highest pressure. That way they know that if they are needed in the final on March 22 to strike a last-ball four over point, or deliver an off-stump yorker, they are ready.During a Centre of Excellence camp the attendees will also undergo series of tests to measure their bodies and performances. There will be medical and physiotherapy examinations along with fitness and skill analysis. Batsmen will learn how many places they can hit the same sort of delivery, while fast bowlers will discover their speed and accuracy. Spinners will see to the centimetre how much they turn the ball.”We get in all the experts from the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra,” Clark says. “All the high-speed cameras come up here and we go from there. It’s part of the picture, not the full picture. We also do psychological profiling. We gather information and find ways to determine whether they are moving forward, as well as identifying strengths and weaknesses.” Those attributes will be tested over the next three weeks.Clark, who will be doing television commentary and radio stints during the World Cup, will remain involved throughout the tournament. “I’ll be working closely with the coach,” she says, “and overseeing the strategies we have in place for high-performance cricket.”

Speedy Harry

Was Bodyline’s chief protagonist the quickest ever? Duncan Hamilton does a good job of convincing us

Steven Lynch18-Jul-2009

To suggest that an athlete from the 1930s might have been faster or stronger than today’s trained-to-the-toenails professionals is a tough argument to win. Modern sprinters are quicker, jumpers soar higher and longer, and swimmers (even without their techno trunks) just keep going faster and faster: Johnny “Tarzan” Weissmuller’s 100-metre freestyle world record was around six seconds slower than the current women’s mark. So was Harold Larwood, the scourge of Australia during the Bodyline series, really the world’s fastest bowler, ever? He was shorter than average, especially for a quick bowler, at around 5ft 7in. His training regime apparently involved lots of walking and lots and lots of beer. Nonetheless Duncan Hamilton, whose previous books include an award-winning salute to another Nottingham hero, football manager Brian Clough, makes a convincing case for Larwood.He possessed a superb action, astonishing stamina, given all that beer, and the priceless asset of dead-eye accuracy, without which the Bodyline tactic would have been stillborn. Starting by beating his hero Jack Hobbs for pace with a nipbacker – not once but twice – Larwood gradually became the most feared bowler in county cricket, and for a while in Tests too. He was fiercely loyal – he remained a steadfast supporter of Douglas Jardine, his captain on that infamous 1932-33 tour, throughout his long life – and straightforward and trusting: too trusting, actually, as he would allow journalists to write columns for him and sign them off without reading them. Even his book , rushed out soon after the tour that defined his whole life, seems to have been completed with a minimum of involvement from the “author”.His criticism of the MCC, and Australia and Australians, eventually put him beyond the pale. The MCC, a more autocratic institution then than now, ordered him to apologise for his part in Bodyline: Larwood predictably refused, considering he had done nothing wrong, as he was a professional carrying out his amateur captain’s instructions. He never played for England again: actually, he might never have done so anyway, as his pace was never as searing after he badly injured his foot in the final Bodyline Test.Ironically, Larwood later moved to Australia, where he lived quietly out of the limelight (apart from a brief renewal of the Bodyline hate campaign after a dramatised TV series was aired in the 1980s).”Lol” emerges from this well-produced book, which received assistance from his surviving daughters (and so includes many rare family photographs), as a determined, upright character. Others are less lucky. Don Bradman always seemed uncomfortable in Larwood’s company; Fred Trueman recalled The Don snubbing his old adversary in the England dressing room in the 1950s. And Plum Warner is unmercifully denounced as a self-serving hypocrite by Hamilton, whose turn of phrase is occasionally delicious (especially when talking of John Arlott’s “ravishing voice marinated in vats of fine wine”).But was Harold Larwood really the fastest ever? Hamilton does a good job of convincing us. He was obviously appreciably faster than other pacemen of the time, and yes, he must have been up there with the fastest of all.Harold Larwood: The Authorised Biography of the World’s Fastest Bowler
by Duncan Hamilton

Quercus, hb, 400pp, £20


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