Babar's century drought grows longer; SA end a long wait

Stats highlights from the second Test between Pakistan and South Africa in Rawalpindi

Shubh Agarwal23-Oct-20253 – Number of Test wins for South Africa in Pakistan. Their previous two wins came in Faisalabad in 1997 and in Karachi in 2007. Since then, South Africa had lost three Tests in Pakistan.1 – Instance of two South Africa spinners taking five-wicket hauls in the same Test. Keshav Maharaj dismantled Pakistan in the first innings with 7 for 102. Simon Harmer then took 6 for 50 in the second innings, his best figures in Test cricket.7 for 102 – Maharaj’s first-innings figures are the best by a South Africa bowler in Pakistan. Left-arm wristspinner Paul Adams had the record with 7 for 128 in the Lahore Test in 2003. It is also the second-best figures by a South African spinner in Asia. Maharaj also holds the top spot with his 9 for 129 against Sri Lanka in Colombo in 2018.Related

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  • Harmer's six-for helps South Africa ease to series-levelling win

4 – Number of South African bowlers to complete 1000 wickets in first-class cricket. Harmer reached the milestone in the second innings in Rawalpindi when he dismissed Noman Ali. Only Mike Procter (1417), Allan Donald (1216) and Charlie Llewellyn (1003) have more first-class wickets among South African bowlers.38 years and 299 days – Asif Afridi’s age at the start of the second Test, making him the oldest debutant to take a five-wicket haul. England’s Charles Marriott was 37 years and 332 days old when he picked up 5 for 37 on debut against West Indies in 1933.3 – Maharaj, Asif and Harmer picked up five-wicket hauls in Rawalpindi; it was the first time that three bowlers over the age of 35 took five-wicket hauls in a Test.35 – Number of wickets picked up by South Africa’s spinners in the two Tests, the most in a series for them in the 21st century. South Africa’s spinners took 17 wickets in Rawalpindi, the second most for them in a Test.ESPNcricinfo Ltd71 – Kagiso Rabada’s score is the highest by a South African No. 11. It was also his maiden first-class fifty.15.2 – The difference in batting average for Pakistan between their first and second innings in Test cricket since 2023. They average 34.49 in the first innings and only 19.29 in the second. The difference is the highest among all Test nations in this period.786 – Number of days without an international hundred for Babar Azam. His last century came against Nepal in the 2023 Asia Cup.Babar has now gone 75 innings without an international ton. Among Pakistan batters to bat in top four, only Kamran Akmal (76 innings) and Mohammad Rizwan (82) have had a longer streak without a hundred in international cricket.

In numbers – Finch signs off as one of the greats of the T20 game

He ranks right up there in the lists for top run-scorers, top century-makers, and much else

Sampath Bandarupalli13-Jan-2024A legend of the T20 formatFinch retires as one of only ten players to aggregate 10,000-plus runs in the T20 format. His tally of 11,458 runs is the seventh-highest overall, and the second-highest among Australians, behind only David Warner’s 11,732 (and counting). Finch’s tally of eight T20 hundreds is bettered only by two men – Chris Gayle (22) and Babar Azam (10).ESPNcricinfo LtdHis 1095 fours are the fourth-highest for any batter in T20s, while only ten players have hit more sixes than his 452.Finch is also one of only three batters with multiple 150-plus individual scores in the format, alongside Gayle and Brendon McCullum. Most of his career runs came as an opener – 9697 in 304 matches. Only three batters have had more T20 runs while opening the batting – Gayle (13,469), Alex Hales (11,136) and Warner (10,531).Six years of T20 greatnessFinch had his best years in the T20 format between 2012 and 2018, where he matched Gayle’s consistency. Between October 2012 and September 2018, Finch aggregated 6229 runs across 189 matches. Only Gayle’s 7513 runs were higher than Finch’s in this period.He had an average of 37.75 in those six years, marginally behind Gayle’s 38.33, but was striking at 147.11, three runs quicker than Gayle. Finch hit six hundreds and 43 fifties in this period, a 50-plus score every 3.8 innings, once again behind only Gayle’s 54 50-plus scores (13 100s and 41 50s).Finch has two hundreds and 26 fifties across the 105 innings he played in the league and ranks second in the 50-plus scores tally, behind Lynn’s 31. He is also one of nine batters with more than one hundred in the BBL, with only Ben McDermott (3) ahead. Finch is near the top at hitting boundaries in the BBL too – his 292 fours are the second-highest and he is one of five players to hit 100-plus sixes (118).A unique trebleFinch’s success in T20 leagues was not limited to the BBL. He excelled in the T20 Blast, where he finished with 2067 runs across 57 matches with four hundreds and 11 fifties. Finch’s strike rate over there was 158.75, the highest of the 81 batters with 2000-plus runs. His average of 42.18 is the second-highest among the 81 and is only marginally behind Sam Hain’s 42.23.

Finch had it comparatively tough in the IPL, where he represented nine franchises in 11 seasons, which is a record. But he finished with 2091 runs, scoring 15 half-centuries in 90 innings. Finch, with over 2000 runs in the BBL, T20 Blast and IPL, remains the only one to pass the milestone in three major T20 leagues. He is also the only one with 2000-plus runs in two leagues as a foreign player.Aaron Finch was in supreme touch as he broke his own record for the highest individual T20I score, back in 2018•Associated PressBreaking his own recordFinch became the first with a 150-plus score in T20Is when he made 156 against England in 2013. Nearly five years later, Finch broke his record for the highest individual score in T20Is when he scored 172 against Zimbabwe, which is still a record. Finch thus holds the unique distinction of breaking his own record for the highest score in a format in international cricket.Myrtle Maclagan is the only other player with this feat at the international level, having bettered the highest score in women’s Tests twice in the space of two matches. The England opener scored 72 in the first-ever women’s Test and surpassed it in the next game, scoring the first-ever hundred (119).Other than Finch, only Hazratullah Zazai (162 not out vs Ireland in 2019) has made 150-plus in a men’s T20I innings, while four have done it in women’s T20Is, but none as high as Finch’s 172.

Botham, Willis, Brearley, magic: let's cast our minds back to 1981

To be an up-and-coming English cricketer that summer was to get a glimpse of the stuff myths are made of

Mark Nicholas16-Jul-2021Wednesday, July 29, 1981: Prince Charles marries Princess Diana. Thursday, July 30: play begins in the fourth Test of the 1981 Ashes – a series of matches as daft and dramatic as any played – the series known to this day as Botham’s Ashes because of the gargantuan part Sir Ian played in further lifting the mood of the nation. Botham’s nicknames were the stuff of legend: Beefy, Beefcake, Monster, and Guy the Gorilla foremost among them. The stakes are a little higher now. Late last year he was appointed by the prime minister to the House of Lord’s for his support of Brexit among other things, so we know him as Lord Botham of Ravensworth. Or, as the lads like to say, the Baron of Beef.Come those heady days of late July 1981, the score in the five-match series was 1-1 after England had drawn level in extraordinary circumstances at Headingley about ten days earlier.On the first Sunday of that August, Hampshire were playing a Sunday League game against Kent at the St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury. The dressing rooms were alongside each other back then but only the home dressing room had a television. I poked my head into the open door and changing right there, under the telly, was Alan Knott, the great wicketkeeper.Related

When cricket improved England's national mood: in 1981, 2005, and now 2022

Why Headingley 1981 is a work of art

The great escape (2006)

'I don't think odds of 500-1 have appeared since' (2016)

The hero who almost didn't play

“What’s the score?” I asked. “Not good, still three down.” I groaned. “Don’t worry,” Knott added with typical enthusiasm and a bright smile, “the Gorilla will come on in a minute and take five for none.”Which was pretty much exactly what he did.In a match that echoed some of the random cricket played at Headingley by both teams, the Australians had done enough at Edgbaston to leave themselves just 151 to win in the fourth innings. But 151 was 21 more than they had needed in Leeds, and though Mike Brearley, the England captain, doubted lightning would strike twice, he was encouraged by a nervous start from the Australian top order on Saturday evening.Ahead of the second Test of the series, at Lord’s, Botham, the captain, introduces his team to the Queen•PA Photos/Getty ImagesAt lunch in Birmingham on Sunday, the score had crept to 67 for 3. In Canterbury, Kent chose to bat first and as we left our dressing room for the field of play, the fourth Australian wicket fell – Graham Yallop a victim of the wily John Emburey. Then Emburey had Allan Border caught at silly point from a brute of a delivery.Upon which Brearley threw the ball to Botham, who had been strangely reluctant to bowl. He took 5 for 1.The match was over before the beer queues had woken up to the fact it was even alive again. In the field in Canterbury, we heard six reactions from the spectators whose radios were tuned in to Edgbaston.The first, Border’s wicket, was the sort of titter that comes from an embarrassed giggle and says, “Phew, at least we won’t be humiliated.” The second, the uprooting of Rodney Marsh’s middle stump, was louder and almost feral, partly because it was Marsh, the archetypal Australian, whose bet against his own team during the Headingley Test – more of that in a moment – had caused something of a stir.The next reaction was different: it had the men and women of Kent out of their chairs and sharing the detail of Ray Bright’s first-baller, lbw to the Gorilla – whisper, whisper, murmur, murmur; surely not. This had nothing on the roar that followed 20 minutes later: arch-villain Dennis Lillee well caught at the wicket by Bob Taylor after a defiant 19-ball innings of 3 in a partnership of 6 with Martin Kent, which, from afar, seemed to be turning back the tide. That Lillee wicket provoked a guttural roar, a bloodthirst, and was the moment when Kentish folk came together with Hampshire fielders to agree that the possibility of a miracle had become the probability of a victory.Ahead of the Headingley Test, new captain Mike Brearley bats in the nets while Botham, his predecessor, watches from the stairs•PA Photos/Getty ImagesBriefly, none of us gave a stuff about Kent versus Hampshire, only Botham versus the Aussies.Sensing the country alongside him, the Gorilla then ripped one through the game defences of Kent and triumphantly knocked over Terry Alderman with another very fast, full and straight ball. It was over. He ran, right fist in the air, to claim a stump and a famous victory. Indeed, he might have been Caesar returning to the Colosseum for his triumph, so ecstatic were the people.If Charles and Diana had stoked the fires of national fervour, ignited by victory in the third Test, Botham had lit them in the first place in that game and was now fanning the flames at Edgbaston.This brought the most unlikely and visceral reaction from the bleachers in Canterbury. Our match came to a brief halt as the news sank in, whereupon an extraordinary communal feeling of euphoria spread around the ground. Yes, the garden of England had become momentarily triumphalist itself before getting a grip and returning to the polite applause given to boundaries struck in the more sedate environment of the Sunday League. The facts still being digested by all of us were that Brearley’s team had won back-to-back Test matches from nowhere.And by nowhere, I mean nowhere.That a Cowdrey was making a few against Hampshire was irrelevant. England were 2-1 up in a series that only a few weeks previously had offered no hope. Of course, Edgbaston was not story; that was at Headingley a fortnight earlier, and what a story. But Edgbaston underlined the movement on the dial.Little did they know: spectators at Headingley on day one as Australia went about compiling their first-innings 401 for 9 declared•Adrian Murrell/Getty ImagesThe 40th anniversary of Headingley ’81 – a Test that began on 16th July – is, of course, today. In the Times of London last week, Michael Atherton wrote a superb piece about the match and its surrounding events and players. It was accompanied by contemporary black-and-white photographs of them all, except Knott, who lives in Cyprus. They are dressed in black T-shirts and have been asked by Phil Brown, the photographer, to reflect rather than rejoice. These pictures are both a stark and evocative reminder of the passage of time and its effects on a man. We remember these cricketers as heroes and see them now as a part of our history.Bob Willis is missing, and of course, missed, in a way his own self-deprecation could barely believe. It was rather special that the “Blue for Bob” day at Edgbaston last Tuesday went so well and that a huge amount of money was made for research into prostate cancer.Bob Woolmer and Graham Dilley are missing too, men lost to the unpredictable cycle of life and death.It is worth spending a moment on the transformative powers of Botham in his playing pomp. He was more than just a cricketer; more, indeed, than a man of the people, as he has been called so often. By throwing caution to the wind at every turn he single-handedly created hope for a whole nation in a way that few sportsmen have done.Seve Ballesteros – at his best – and Viv Richards are two others but it is a short list.Botham tore at the opposition, not always coming out on top, of course, but always telling them he was around. He laughed in the face of doubt and paid little attention to the weight of public expectation. He saw every game as an opportunity – nothing less, nothing more. He might not be the greatest of the allrounders to stand for that title but he might well be the greatest out and out match-winner. (Eighteen months earlier he had made a hundred and taken 13 wickets in the one-off Golden Jubilee Test against India in Mumbai.)Defending in a 148-ball 149 – who woulda thunk it: Botham during his legendary second innings at Headingley•Adrian Murrell/PA Photos/Getty ImagesIn the Times portrait, Botham looks good, less lined than one might think and still strong. In fact, after a second glance just now, he is surprisingly undiminished and it is easy to imagine that on impassioned issues such as the countryside, woke culture and sovereignty, he is a force in the second chamber.Back in 1981, briefly, he was sour at the game, having lost the England captaincy after a thumping in the West Indies and a bad start to the Ashes in the first two Tests at Trent Bridge and Lord’s. With England one down, the selectors turned to Brearley, who knew Botham better than most, having been his first Test captain. They got on well and Botham tended to perform for Brearley in a way that he might not have done for others.In its way, the Headingley win was a fluke but the notion that the best captains and players make their own luck has some truth to it. Botham batted in the second innings as if he were on the village green and in a hurry for his first pint (he had made a lively 50 in the first innings but with a little more culture). There was no sign of any magic from Brearley when England followed on 227 behind and found themselves 135 for 7 – and all but gone – when Dilley joined Botham at the crease. Dilley made 56, playing a relatively straight bat to Botham’s uninhibited form of expressionism. They were lucky. Any edged boundary – and there were plenty – might have gone to hand on another day. From the dressing-room balcony, an animated Brearley encouraged them to keep going as they were.I remember watching this partnership from the café underneath the Hampshire dressing room in Portsmouth, where I was nursing a broken finger courtesy Sylvester Clarke the day before. The longer the pair of them went on, and especially after England got in front, the more I shouted at the screen for them to rein in and take stock. My entirely misguided view was that they now had the Aussies by the proverbials and should grind out a bigger lead. Seeing Brearley egg them on taught me more about leadership in a single moment than in any other during my career as a cricketer.Dream run: Mike Gatting, Bob Willis, Graham Gooch and Peter Willey scarper off the field at Headingley after the scarcely believable win•PA Photos(I also remember Richie Benaud’s terrific commentary that day, and specifically, his sense of theatre when Botham hit a six into a little hut selling sweets and stuff – “Don’t even bother looking for that, it’s gone straight into the confectionery stall and out again.” I also learnt from this, realising that capturing the moment was more important than making perfect sense. As Richie would later say over a beer, “The ball rebounded onto the concourse, everyone knew where it was!”)Botham finished unbeaten on 149 from 148 balls, dynamic by Test match standards of the time. Australia needed 130 in the last innings to win the match. Easy. So much so that Lillee and Marsh were unable to resist what Lillee called “the ridiculous odds offered for a two-horse race”. With Dilley walking out to bat, the odds hit 500-1 against an England win. Lillee asked the Australian team’s coach driver to put on a tenner and Marsh called him back to add a fiver of his own. A few days later, £7500 was delivered in cash to Worcester and landed on the tourists’ dressing-room table. “It looked like a million dollars!” Border recalled.There was never a suggestion of impropriety, only the daftness of the odds exciting a couple of young blokes who could see the main chance. Of course, it turned embarrassing for those two wonderful cricketers but nothing more. As Lillee points out, “The odds quickly disappeared after Beefy’s amazing innings, and with our score at 56 for 1 in the run chase, we had the champagne ready for celebration with the bet already forgotten. I’d have swapped every penny for a win. Simple as that.”For all Botham’s fireworks with the bat, it was Willis who cleaned up the game and there is a story there too. Concerned about his form and fitness, the selectors left Willis out of the side. Then they heard he had suffered from the flu at Lord’s but was well again, so he was added to the extended party of players for the match. Such science! On the way to the ground, Brearley asked him about the balance of the team. “Four seamers” was the reply, which included Bob himself. He insisted on bowling up the slope to counter his frustrating no-ball problem. Only when Brearley switched him to bowl down the hill on that amazing final afternoon did the tide turn in his favour.Rodney Hogg gets despatched for four at Edgbaston by Botham•PA Photos”Give him his head, switch him round,” said Taylor. “Tell him to bowl straight at Lillee, any length, and forget about no-balls,” said Mike Gatting. Bingo! After Willis’ breathtaking six-wicket burst, Lillee and Bright made 30-odd for the ninth wicket in four overs and seemed to be racing home. Gatt’s advice did the trick, Lillee immediately chipping a full, straight ball to the tumbling Gatting, who held on at mid-on.Finally, Robert George Dylan Willis, with his demonic eye and trance-like demeanour, blew Bright’s middle stump out of the ground with a perfect yorker and ran from the field as if lost on another planet, with 8 for 43. These were simple twists of fate and because of them, the times they were a-changing. (I know, but why not. This was the music that Bobby lived for and the music that made him forever young.)I remember most of this as if it were yesterday, when I was starting out on a career in the game and watched and listened with something close to an addiction. At one time or another I played against all of those who took part in the series and on every occasion, I would think back to these two matches – and the fifth Test at Old Trafford too, in which Botham played his finest innings – when our hearts and minds were captured and held all summer long by a group of cricketers and their incomparable talisman. Sure, England had two captains, three wicketkeepers (??) and 20 players, so it was not a perfect world. But to a young wannabe, it was close.I will leave the last word to Brearley. “I was the luckiest man that summer. If I haven’t dined out on it, I’ve become, for better or worse, along with Botham, Willis and others, part of the mythology. It’s not easy to sort myth from reality.” Amen to that. Which is why our dreams live on.

ترتيب هدافي كأس العرب 2025

تمكن عادل بولبية لاعب منتخب الجزائر من تسجيل هدف في مباراة الإمارات، اليوم، بربع نهائي بطولة كأس العرب قطر2025.

وواجه منتخب الإمارات نظيره الجزائر، في ربع نهائي بطولة كأس العرب في السابعة والنصف من مساء اليوم، ضمن مباريات ربع نهائي كأس العرب

وحجز منتخب الإمارات بطاقة التأهل إلى نصف نهائي بطولة كأس العرب عقب الفوز على الجزائر بركلات الترجيح بنتيجة 7/6. 

طالع.. فيديو | الأردن يطيح بالعراق ويتأهل إلى نصف نهائي كأس العرب.. وإصابة يزن النعيمات

وأحرز عادل بولبينة هدف الجزائر الأول في مرمى منتخب الإمارات، في الدقيقة 46 مع بداية الشوط الثاني.

وبهذا الهدف يصعد عادل بولبينة إلى المركز الثالث في جدول ترتيب هدافي بطولة كأس العرب برصيد 3 أهداف.  ترتيب هدافي كأس العرب 

علي علوان – الأردن – 4 أهداف. 

محمد كنو – السعودية – 3 أهداف. 

 عادل بولبينة – الجزائر – 3 اهداف

 رضوان البركان – الجزائر – هدفين. 

 مهند علي – العراق – هدفين. 

عصام الصبحي- عمان- هدفين 

فهد الهاجري- الكويت- هدفين 

كريم البركاوي- المغرب- هدفين 

عمر خربين- سوريا- هدفين 

مهدي عبد الجبار- البحرين- هدفين 

أفشة- منتخب مصر- هدف وحيد 

حامد حمدان- منتخب فلسطين- هدف وحيد 

محمد علي بن رمضان- هدف وحيد 

مروان حمدي- منتخب مصر- هدف وحيد.

Vasco trabalha de maneira unificada em diversas frentes em prol de dias melhores

MatériaMais Notícias

Apesar do imbróglio judicial envolvendo o associativo e a 777 Partners, o Vasco tem trabalhado de maneira unificada em busca de dias melhores e para dar alegrias ao torcedor. Prova disso é a tentativa de repatriar Philippe Coutinho, cria de São Januário que está próximo de um acerto com o clube.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasVascoReforma de São Januário: Pedrinho encontra com vereadores e discute pontos da modernização do estádio do VascoVasco28/05/2024Fora de CampoNarrador prevê narração memorável em futuro título do Vasco: ‘A chance de entrar pra história é muito grande’Fora de Campo28/05/2024Fora de CampoMuralhas da Colina: Fernando Prass relembra momentos no Vasco ao lado de Carlos GermanoFora de Campo28/05/2024

➡️ Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Com a 777 Partners em cena, a relação era mais fria e a sensação de quem olhava de fora era de distanciamento entre as partes. A decisão judicial fez com que o Vasco associativo assumisse o controle da SAF.

Com isso, Pedrinho pôde se aproximar, participar e ajudar mais da SAF. O presidente do Vasco mantém contato frequente com o CEO Lúcio Barbosa e o diretor de futebol Pedro Martins.

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O Pedrinho tem feito contatos comigo e com a SAF, olhando para o bem do Vasco, independente de batalhas jurídicas. Tem questionado sobre o planejamento, temos passado todas as informações para ele. O Vasco já tinha um planejamento que vem sendo executado. Qualquer mudança de rota será feita em conjunto com o CRVG e todos os envolvidos nessas decisões


afirmou Pedro Martins após o Conselho Técnico Extraordinário na sede da CBF

Quando se trata de Philippe Coutinho, Pedrinho foi diretamente em pessoas próximas ao meia-atacante. Já Pedro Martins conversou com os representantes. No momento, o que impede o retorno do jogador é a rescisão com o Aston Villa, da Inglaterra.

Philippe Coutinho não foi o único grande nome a ser trabalhado por Pedrinho. Segundo informações apuradas pelo Lance!, o meia Thiago Alcântara, filho de Mazinho, que foi ex-jogador do Vasco e da Seleção Brasileira, chegou a receber uma sondagem do Vasco. No entanto, é um negócio improvável de acontecer em razão da vontade do jogador de ainda permanecer na Europa, do alto salário do astro e da condição física do atleta.

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Thiago Alcântara jogou apenas cinco minutos na temporada 2023/2024.

– Nunca foi minha intenção retomar o futebol. Sempre usei as palavras colaborar e contribuir. Tudo que eu possa vir a indicar futuramente, eu indiquei para a 777 lá atrás. Indiquei membros para a comissão técnica, jogadores com números financeiros bons e capacidade técnica acima da média, acreditando que eles tinham dinheiro, por que eu faria isso se quero o mal da 777? Indiquei profissional que hoje serve à seleção brasileira (Rodrigo Caetano) para ser diretor. Sempre quis o bem do Vasco – afirmou Pedrinho em coletiva.

Na última semana, a Justiça do Rio teve um movimento favorável ao Vasco associativo ao manter a liminar obtida em primeira instância. Dentro das quatro linhas, o Cruz-Maltino volta a campo neste domingo (2), às 16h, para fazer um clássico. O rival será o Flamengo pela 7ª rodada do Brasileirão.

Tudo sobre

Futebol NacionalLúcio BarbosaPedrinhoPedro MartinsVasco

جرافنبيرخ بعد خسارة ليفربول أمام آيندهوفن: الوضع صعب للغاية.. ونستقبل الأهداف بمنتهى السهولة

أعرب الهولندي ريان جرافنبيرخ، لاعب الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ليفربول عن استيائه بعد خسارة الريدز أمام بي إس في آيندهوفن ضمن منافسات دوري أبطال أوروبا.

واستضاف ليفربول نظيره آيندهوفن، مساء الأربعاء، في المباراة التي جمعتهما ضمن منافسات دوري أبطال أوروبا، على ملعب آنفيلد”.

وخسر ليفربول بقيادة مدربه آرني سلوت برباعية مقابل هدف أمام آيندهوفن في مفاجأة كبيرة للغاية حدثت بين لاعبي الريدز ووسط جماهيرهم، والتي تعتبر أول هزيمة أوروبية على آنفيلد هذا الموسم.

وقال جرافنبيرخ، في تصريحات عبر الموقع الرسمي لناديه: “نحن غاضبون جدًا من خسارتنا، أعتقد أننا لم نلعب بشكل سيء في الشوط الأول بل خلقنا العديد من الفرص أما في الشوط الثاني، فقد سارت الأمور بشكل سيء للغاية”.

اقرأ أيضًا | كاراجر: أريد من محمد صلاح شيئا مهما من أجل جماهير ليفربول

وأكمل: “تأخرنا بهدف مبكر، ثم رأيتم رد فعلنا في الشوط الأول أعتقد أننا قدمنا ​​أداءً جيدًا بعد ذلك، لعبنا كرة قدم رائعة وخلقنا العديد من الفرص، من الصعب وصف الوضع، نحن ببساطة في وضع سيء الآن”.

وأردف: “أعتقد أننا نستقبل أهدافًا بسهولة، هذه مشكلتنا الآن وأعتقد أن فريقا مثلنا عليه أن يقوم بتحسين أدائه الدفاعي وأن يدافع بشكل أفضل، نعلم أننا فريقٌ قوي ونمتلك إمكانيات جيدة لكن كل شيء يُعيقنا، الوضع صعب للغاية حاليًا لكن علينا أن نتكاتف وننطلق من هنا”.

وأتم: “أعتقد أننا لا نملك الزخم الكافي حاليًا، كما قلت كل شيء لا يسير في طريقنا الآن حتى المواجهات الثنائية، وفرص الفوز المتساوية، الأمر صعب حقًا لكن كما قلت، علينا أن نتكاتف وننطلق من هناك، وأنا متأكد من أننا سنجد مخرجًا”.

As bad as Chermiti: Rangers flop is becoming one of Thelwell's worst signings

The work done by Glasgow Rangers during the summer transfer window has come under plenty of scrutiny after a fairly dismal start to the season for the Scottish giants.

One win in the first seven games of the Scottish Premiership campaign led to head coach Russell Martin losing his job, having only been appointed in the summer as the long-term successor to Philippe Clement.

Danny Rohl arrived at Ibrox last month and has already delivered four wins from four matches in the Premiership, but he has also lost both of his Europa League games in the dugout.

The former Sheffield Wednesday tactician has won 100% of his league games in charge, most recently beating Livingston 2-1 at Ibrox thanks to goals from Emmanuel Fernandez and Mohamed Diomande.

Despite this upturn in results in the league, there will still be question marks over the summer recruitment due to poor form on the European stage from the Light Blues under both Martin and Rohl.

Who were the worst signings of the summer window by sporting director Kevin Thelwell before he was dismissed from his role on Monday? Here are our worst three…

3 Youssef Chermiti

It is almost impossible not to mention Youssef Chermiti as being among the worst signings made by Thelwell when you consider the context of the signing and the fee that was paid for him.

Firstly, Rangers had already signed proven Premiership goalscorer Bojan Miovski from Girona for a fee of up to £4.2m, which suggested that Martin already had his first-choice striker in the building.

Secondly, Chermiti cost a staggering £8m to sign him from Everton. That made him the most expensive Rangers signing in 25 years, since the £12m that was spent to land Tore Andre Flo in 2000.

Paying £8m to sign a 21-year-old striker who failed to score a single competitive goal in two years at Goodison Park is bad enough on paper, but even worse when you consider that Thelwell was the man behind the £15m deal to take him from Sporting to Everton in 2023.

The Toffees had to take a £7m hit on the striker without getting a single goal out of him because of Thelwell’s investment, and now Rangers look set to suffer a similar fate if his fortunes do not improve.

Chermiti has scored one goal and provided one assist in 13 outings in all competitions for the Light Blues this season, per Sofascore, which shows that he has already offered more than he did for Everton, but it is still not enough to justify the huge outlay.

25/26 Europa League

Youssef Chermiti

Starts

4

xG

1.29

Goals

0

Big chances missed

4

Big chances created

0

Assists

0

Pass accuracy

59%

Duel success rate

35%

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, he has particularly struggled in the Europa League this season, failing to offer quality in front of goal, in his general play, or physically, which is a big concern.

For the amount of money paid, the signing of Miovski made before his arrival, and how he failed when Thelwell signed him for Everton, he has to be among the ex-Gers man’s worst deals.

2 Joe Rothwell

Joe Rothwell also currently looks like one of the worst signings of the summer transfer window, in a move that was very different to the one that brought Chermiti to Ibrox.

Whilst the Portugal U21 international was signed for big money as a 21-year-old talent with room for improvement and potential to eventually hit, the English midfielder came in as an experienced 30-year-old operator who should have made an immediate impact.

Instead, the summer signing from Bournemouth has failed to hit the ground running at Ibrox and now looks to be out of favour under new head coach Rohl, after being brought in by Martin, whom he played for at Southampton in the 2023/24 campaign.

Joe Rothwell’s last 10 matchday squad appearances

Opposition

Minutes played

Livingston

0

Celtic

18

Hibernian

0

Kilmarnock

0

Brann

64

Dundee United

83

Falkirk

70

Sturm Graz

21

Livingston

17

Genk

10

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, the Englishman has become a bit-part player for the Gers, failing to get on the pitch in the three league games that he has been available for under Rohl.

Given he was brought in as an experienced player for the here and now, it is hard to look past him as another one of Thelwell’s worst summer signings.

1 Thelo Aasgaard

Thelo Aasgaard looks to be another one of Thelwell’s worst pieces of business from the summer transfer window, as he has been as ineffective as Chermiti and Rothwell.

Rangers swooped to sign the Norway international from Luton Town for a fee of £3.5m to bolster their ranks in the attacking midfield positions, but he has been unable to provide a regular threat at the top end of the park.

Per Transfermarkt, Aasgaard has only produced one goal and one assist in 19 appearances in all competitions for the Light Blues, whilst Chermiti has one goal and one assist to his name in 13 outings for the club.

What makes that return even less impressive is that his assist was the pass to Djeidi Gassama in the clip above, where the winger does the majority of the heavy lifting for the goal.

The English-born number ten has not shown enough quality in his performances to suggest that he can be a difference-maker, aside from his stunning solo goal against Dundee United, which currently looks like it was a flash in the pan.

Heart & Hand content creator David Edgar described Aasgaard as “rotten” at the start of this month, and it is hard to disagree with that when he has many red cards as goals this season.

Aasgaard’s red card against Celtic in the semi-final of the League Cup is far from the only poor moment he has had in a Gers shirt, though, as the £3.5m signing was also hauled off at half-time against Livingston last weekend.

Rohl was clearly unhappy with his contributions in the opening 45 minutes, and it is hard to be happy with his contributions over the entire season so far, which is why he has been just as bad as Chermiti and Rothwell.

Antman upgrade: Rohl must unleash Rangers flop who Thelwell tried to replace

Danny Rohl should finally unleash this Rangers flop who Kevin Thelwell attempted to replace.

ByDan Emery Nov 25, 2025

Phillies Manager Interview Gets Awkward As Team Gave Up Back-to-Back-to-Back HRs

Spring training is a time for baseball teams to work out their kinks as they gear up for the regular season.

On Wednesday, the Philadelphia Phillies found some kinks that will certainly need working out in the days to come.

After a rain delay, the day’s exhibition game against the Detroit Tigers finally commenced, and was broadcast on ESPN. The network took advantage of the extra access that spring training allows for, nabbing mid-game interviews with players and coaches that we sometimes see during regular-season broadcasts, but with a bit more freedom.

One of those interviews was with Phillies manager Rob Thomson, who answered questions in the second inning while newly acquired starting pitcher Jesus Luzardo was on the mound. At least, Thomson tried to answer questions—he didn’t have much of a chance to speak during one portion of the interview, as Luzardo gave up back-to-back-to-back home runs on three consecutive pitches.

Tigers outfielder Jahmai Jones got the dinger fest started with a grand slam off of a change-up Luzardo left right down the pipe, and was followed by home runs from Andy Ibanez and Gleyber Torres to jump the Tigers out to a 6–0 lead.

All Thomson could do was watch.

The Tigers tacked on six more runs in the third inning to take a 12–0 lead. This time it wasn’t Thomson, but Phillies first baseman Kody Clemens who was on the mic with ESPN, along with his father Roger Clemens.

Hey, at least these games don’t technically count.

A Closer Look at Elly De La Cruz's Historic Numbers in 2024 Season

Elly De La Cruz has been historic this season and the Cincinnati Reds shortstop has put up some huge numbers. Both good and bad.

De La Cruz enters the final week of the 2024 season with some tremendous numbers. He's currently hitting .261, has an on-base percentage of .343, while slugging .476. He has 25 home runs, 74 RBIs and leads all of baseball with 65 stolen bases. His OPS is .819, he boasts an fWAR of 6.5 and a wRC+ of 121.

His campaign has been historic as the 22-year-old is the first shortstop in MLB history with 25 or more home runs and 65 or more stolen bases in a season. Additionally, he's only the fourth player since 2000 to register 90 or more home runs and stolen bases combined in a season. He's tied at 90 with Jose Reyes's mark from 2007, but trails only Ronald Acuna's 114 from 2023 and Shohei Ohtani's 108 this season. That's some pretty great company to be in.

De La Cruz is electric and has become a budding star, but the Reds have had to take the bad with the good as he's developed. He does lead MLB in stolen bases, but he's also tops in strikeouts (210) and errors (28).

The closest competition for the lead in strikeouts is Colorado Rockies shortstop Ezequiel Tovar at 193, so there's very little chance he loses the strikeout crown. The MLB single-season record for strikeouts is 223, set by Mark Reynolds in 2009. The Cincinnati Reds record is Adam Dunn's 222 from 2012. De La Cruz is also on pace to become the first player to lead MLB in strikeouts and steals in the same season.

Despite the negatives, it's easy to see why De La Cruz is so exciting. His StatCast page is a really fun read. He's in the 90th percentile in average exit velocity, 89th in bat speed, 77th in hard-hit percentage, 98th in defensive range, 90th in arm strength and 100th in sprint speed. Then there are some weird takeaways. He's in the 34th percentile in xBA (.244), 25th in percentage of balls squared up, eighth percentile in whiff percentage, and fifth in strikeout percentage.

De La Cruz is a ball of contradictions, but he has a long career ahead of him to iron out his issues. His 2024 season has seen him post ridiculous numbers, both positive and negative. But he's been incredibly fun to watch the entire time.

McCann, Haynes half-centuries give Notts the edge

Kyle Abbott takes two wickets for Hampshire on overcast day on south coast

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay22-Jul-2025

Freddie McCann on his way to a half-century•Getty Images

Nottinghamshire 241 for 5 (McCann 79, Haynes 70*) vs Hampshire Nottinghamshire batters Jack Haynes and Freddie McCann continued to score runs against Hampshire in the 2025 Rothesay County Championship on an even first day at Utilita Bowl.Haynes and McCann both collected centuries in the reverse fixture at Trent Bridge in May, before each picking up half-centuries on the south coast.Haynes ended the day unbeaten on 70, after McCann was dismissed for 79 – one of two scalps for Kyle Abbott, with Eddie Jack also picking up a couple of wickets.Nottinghamshire ended the day on 241 for five, with neither side able to complain too much about their position in the match.Haseeb Hameed called incorrectly at the toss and was inserted on a very green looking pitch, with plenty of threatening clouds overhead.The Nottinghamshire captain was the only victim in a truncated nine overs before rain came down – which lumped 30 overs off the day. The highly-talented Jack got Hameed chasing a wide delivery which seamed even further away to edge behind.Hampshire’s slip fielding which had blighted them at Trent Bridge returned for another two dollies put down in the cordon.Tilak Varma unsuccessfully juggled to spill Ben Slater, while Joe Weatherley gave McCann a life from first slip.While Slater didn’t make the most of the drop – he scored just two more runs before he was bowled by a Abbott beauty that kissed the top of off – McCann did.The 20-year-old’s season has been plagued by unfulfilled starts save for his 79 against Durham and the 138 against Hampshire.He weathered the early Kookaburra ball movement, which Kyle Abbott had on a string, and was backed up by Jack and Sonny Baker.McCann rebuilt from 31 for two with Joe Clarke and Haynes – putting on 74 and 43 – in a non-flashy, but effective manner.He dominated square of the wicket in a 65-ball half-century, his sixth in first-class cricket.Clarke and Haynes were happier to take risks with their shot-making in the partnerships as runs became easier as the day progressed and the ball softened.Hampshire bypassed that with a plan, which worked to see off Clarke and McCann.It revolved around slightly shorter pitch bowling and a fly gully – aiming to capitalise on the amount of balls being hit square on the offside.Clarke couldn’t keep down a cut shot to pick up the odd field placing, while McCann stuck his bat up like a periscope to unusually guide to the man.Kyle Verreynne returned for the first time since becoming a world champion, having helped South Africa to the ICC World Test Championship.He was punchy in his quick-fire 42 before Jack drew a false pull, which was wonderfully caught by the sprawling James Fuller at deep square. Jack picked up a deserved second to end his first home Championship day two for 57.Haynes passed his fifty in a blink and you’d miss it 54 balls before slowing towards the close, with Lyndon James now for company.Bad light prematurely knocked off another 23 balls from the day’s play.

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