'Spinners of his quality a rare breed'

The cricket world reacts to Graeme Swann’s retirement from international cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Dec-20130:00

Graeme Swann retires mid-Ashes

“Of all the England players over the last 20 years he is the one the team who miss the most .. Spinners of his quality are a rare breed…”
Michael Vaughan, former England captain“Sad to see @Swannyg66 retire today. Going to miss you a lot. Congratulations on a fantastic career. Hope the next chapter is as exciting!”
“Huge congratulations to @Swannyg66 on a great career in cricket. I will miss your constant put downs and abuse of my mental capacity.#loveyou”
Derek Pringle: “[Graeme] Swann has been England’s best spinner since Deadly Derek Underwood”•Getty Images”G Swann retires from all cricket as of now!! Not the most graceful exit with a tough #ashes but great career 255 test wickets. #Swannsong”
“Shocked to hear Graeme Swann announcing his retirement mid series, still a top bowler for England during a successful era.”
“It was a bit of a surprise but he’s been a great cricketer for England over many years. So I wish him all the best in retirement. It’s mid-tour, I don’t know what’s going on, but obviously he’s decided he’s had enough, so congratulations on a great career and he’ll go home as one of the England greats. Obviously he feels the time is right and that’s his decision.”
“He’s someone who I’ve looked up to a lot. His career stats stand for themselves, he’s been an unbelievable spinner and someone who I watched pretty closely in my time. I’m sure he will be sorely missed in the England team but I wish him all the best in the future.”
“Swann has been England’s best spinner since Deadly Derek Underwood, though he put many more revs on the ball than him.”
Derek Pringle, former England cricketer

Where's the cauldron?

The MCG on Boxing Day is supposed to be a heaving, roaring giant bowl of Test cricket-loving humanity, no?

Chandrachud Basavaraj27-Dec-2011Choice of game
I have been following the game religiously for at least two decades and got initiated into the whole Boxing Day tradition with India’s Durban debacle of 1996. Earlier this year, my brother had tickets to India’s Lords’ Test but couldn’t make it. That’s when the idea of flying down to Melbourne popped into my head.Team supported
India, but I was also looking forward to particular players in action – Sehwag, Dravid, Zaheer and Ponting. In the lead up to the 26th, my only concern was about how thin and fragile India’s pace line-up looked.Key performer
One great addition to the viewing experience here in Australia is the compact earpiece radios on sale with a choice of ABC and Channel 9 commentary. Harsha Bhogle, on air for ABC, likened Ed Cowan to an F1 safety car – slow but useful. But Umesh Yadav was easily the impact player of the day. Even when not taking wickets, Yadav bowled with pace and vigour, leaked boundaries aplenty and kept the crowd interested at all times.One thing I’d have changed about the match
I came to the MCG with memories, starting with the 1992 World Cup final and the anticipation of a packed ground and a cauldron atmosphere matching that for India’s 2003 Test here. Maybe it was the damp start and the many empty seats, or maybe it was where we were seated – at ground level in the Great Southern Stand, but I just couldn’t feel the imposing gladiatorial air the G is renowned for. Maybe day three will be different, if the sun is out and the local favourite (by far), Sachin Tendulkar, is batting.Contest I enjoyed
Given prior history, I had been looking forward to Ishant Sharma v Ricky Ponting, and the contest didn’t disappoint as Ishant beat Ponting with bounce early in his innings. India were loose after lunch but Ishant’s spell after mid-day drinks was pacy and probing. I would have left him on for another over (like in Perth 2008), but I think that spell set it up for Yadav to come back and prise out Punter with the third ball of a new spell.Wow moment
Zaheer is the leader of India’s attack and was conspicuous by his absence all morning. His late-afternoon spell wasn’t much better but you could tell when he suddenly bent his back that much more in the first ball of a new over, around the wicket to Michael Clarke. Wickets off the next two balls and the Zak we know was back, even if briefly.Filling the gaps
I was watching the game with the family (shout out to bro, who couldn’t fly in!) and spent the extended lunch break taking pictures, picnicking on Christmas day vegetable pulao leftovers and stadium-made chicken sandwiches, and gazing at the symmetry of ladies’ ankles.Shot of the day
Clarke’s upper cuts against a charged-up Yadav were fun to watch but Ponting’s charge after lunch will stay in the mind. His almost over-balanced hooking and pulling were good, and the up-on-the-toes punches off the back foot better, but the most memorable shot of the innings was a flick through midwicket that left Virat Kohli motionless as the ball sped through a still wet outfield.Crowd meter
Towards the end of play, the big screens flashed the day one attendance as 70,086, beating the previous Australia-India record from 2007. To be honest, it didn’t feel like a record crowd, sitting as we were with a view of the barely full Northern stands. But there was visible anticipation on everyone’s faces as we took the tram and walked into the MCG in the morning, and the atmosphere was colorful and festive throughout. The home crowd was not partisan but got behind Ponting right from the moment he walked in, and they delivered a standing ovation for his half-century. The Swami Army added a dash of blue in the stands and got Mexican Waves going every now and then.Fancy-dress index
Debutant and top scorer Ed Cowan is supposed to be best man for a friend’s wedding this Friday, and his friends hope for a four-day Indian win so he can make the wedding! How do I know? The whole row behind ours was taken up by Eddie’s mates, who kept both beer and knowledegable comments flowing through the day. One guy, Pete, wore a blonde wig, fake breasts, and more fake hair (you don’t want to know where) and raised the oomph quotient in our stand by several notches.Entertainment
Unlike my last few times at a cricket match (at IPL games in India), there was thankfully no music blaring on the public address system or cheerleaders on the boundaries. The sponsors had their things going in the breaks, and Mark Nicholas was on the big screen with Merv Hughes at tea time, but more interesting was the Kiss Cam, where the camera would zoom in on couples (or not) and they had to pucker up. Most were obliging, and all in good holiday cheer.Tests v limited-overs
Given that the last time I watched an entire day’s play was the Bangalore Test against Pakistan in 2005 and have since watched a half-dozen IPL matches, it took me well into a session to settle into watching Test cricket again. The first 40 minutes was all nerves (first big game away!) before I could start to make sense of the proceedings. In Twenty20 matches, you watch for moments, but over a day of Test cricket you see ebbs and flows and passages of play, not to forget four seasons in one day, from wet to cloudy to blue skies to gentle breeze. If I had to choose and had the time, I would pick Test cricket any day.Enhanced viewing
We live in the age of Facebook and Twitter, and posting status updates and pictures online seemed as important as experiencing the cricket itself. Midway through the morning session, I could barely get the net going on my mobile. That’s what 50,000 spectators checking into the MCG with their phones can do.Marks out of 10
8. I would have loved a fuller ground and more sustained hostility from the Indian pacers, but after 250-plus runs, lots of boundaries, and six good wickets for the Indians, I am pretty pleased with my first day at the MCG. I hope to be back here on day three.

All emotion, no logic

Why the PCB’s move to press charges against the ICC for the loss of the World Cup is misguided

Osman Samiuddin11-May-2009The emotion behind the PCB’s decision to send a legal notice to the ICC over the 2011 World Cup decision is understandable. The board, the whole country, feels isolated, victimised and targeted. Two major tournaments have been taken away from them, countries have not toured them in better times and are now unlikely to tour for some time. Those the board once thought were friends within the Asian bloc have, in their minds, not helped them. Instead, they have pushed them further to the margins.The process to exclude Pakistan, it also emerges, was not without considerable flaw. Any such decision is usually to be taken by the commercial arm of the ICC, the IDI board. That was not the case here. The subject was not on the agenda at the April meeting, and the PCB was seemingly caught unaware. Not as unaware and unprepared as it should have been, however: the ICC had, in February, asked the 2011 World Cup co-hosts to think of alternative venues should the situation worsen. After the Lahore attack, when everything changed, the PCB should not just have been thinking about such advice, it should’ve been acting on it.The Lahore attack, and its implications, were on the agenda of the meet. One implication was clearly the World Cup and Pakistan’s place in it: would it not have made sense to have a plan at the ready to present? A proposal for Abu Dhabi and Dubai to “host” Pakistan’s matches was said by PCB officials to be on the cards – after the decision was taken. Apparently such a proposal wasn’t tabled at all, perhaps because board officials balked at the possible expense involved in any such move.Still, ostensibly, Pakistan feels humiliated, short-changed. A bullish, emotional response is inevitable, especially if there is a valid sense that legally a decision can be challenged. Some face also needs to be saved domestically. The problem, however, is just that: that the response is an emotional one, not one driven by cold-hearted logic.Had it been, perhaps the board might have realised that even if the decision is referred to the rightful organ, which somehow finds that Pakistan should remain a host, no country can be forced to play here. Amazingly, the board still doesn’t seem to have grasped the gravity of what happened in Lahore and how things have since changed. An international cricket team was targeted by terrorists, who eventually got away. No amount of legalese will convince cricketers to visit after that. They were unwilling before the attacks, as the Champions Trophy decision attests. How can their resolve to not tour Pakistan not have been strengthened now that the government and the board have failed to provide the kind of security that was needed – even if nobody really knows what kind of security measures will suffice against such barbarism? That is the bottomline.Better it might be for the board to just move on; better than a legal notice might be a demand for a review; better it might be to try and repair a faltering relationship with the ICC and its members; better it might be for the PCB to remember the mantra of world politics, that there are no permanent friends or enemies, only permanent interestsAnd if the Middle East as a surrogate host is an option, then the PCB has not yet made it official. Thus, a legal battle appears futile. Potentially, for a cash-strapped board, it will hurt, for lawyers come as cheap as Hollywood stars.There is also an unsavoury sense – emanating from the core of those behind this move – that Pakistan will push for the entire subcontinent to also lose out. If Pakistan is not reinstated for 2011, the board seems to be saying, then the subcontinent should host the 2015 World Cup and not this one. The PCB’s statement, trying to bring in the troubles in India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, confirms it.It comes across as a tasteless, anticipatory schadenfraude, taking pleasure from the potential misfortunes of others in the hope of lessening your own gloom. Whatever the situation in these countries, no team has yet been attacked there and that makes all the difference. And how easy will it be to convince those very countries whose hosting rights you are trying to derail for 2011, to cooperate with you for 2015? Do these lines even have to be written to spell this out?In the longer and broader term, logic says such a stance is disastrous, for confrontation will alienate Pakistan further. As it is, the present PCB administration is not about to write the sequel to . Their reputation within and with the ICC – it is reliably learnt – is as low as it has ever been.Better it might be for the board to just move on; better than a legal notice might be a demand for a review, having tried to garner some support or have some firm alternative in place; better it might be to try and repair a faltering relationship with the ICC and members; better it might be for the PCB to remember the mantra of world politics, that there are no permanent friends or enemies, only permanent interests; finally, better it might be to use – and not squander – some of the genuine sympathy out there for Pakistan’s plight more constructively.

Essex battle back with Sam Cook hat-trick after Joe Clarke ton

Notts lose last six wickets for 34 runs as visitors regain advantage

ECB Reporters Network06-Apr-2024

Joe Clarke’s hundred earned a first-innings lead for Notts•Getty Images

A Joe Clarke century was the highlight as Nottinghamshire secured a 40-run first-innings lead on day two of their Vitality County Championship match against Essex, although they may regret not building a bigger advantage after a late collapse saw them lose their last six wickets for 34, which included a Sam Cook hat-trick.Essex had their noses in front again by the close, although they lost Feroze Khushi to a catch at first slip, finishing on 65 for 1. A further twist to an eventful final session may follow if what appeared to be Khushi’s bat is confirmed to have exceeded the regulation size after an on-field check by the umpires required it to be changed.Clarke made 104, sharing a partnership of 159 with Nottinghamshire debutant Jack Haynes, who hit 77. But Clarke’s dismissal prompted a collapse from 259 for 4 to 293 all out, Cook dismissing Lyndon James, Brett Hutton and Dillon Pennington with consecutive deliveries in his first over with the second new ball to finish with figures of 4 for 59.It was the 26-year-old seamer’s second senior hat-trick – his first came against Kent in the Vitality Blast last summer – and the first by an Essex bowler in first-class cricket since Danish Kaneria achieved the feat against Derbyshire in 2009.Essex had earlier been dismissed for 253 in their first innings as Nottinghamshire needed only 13 deliveries at the start of the morning to pick up the one wicket needed overnight, although Jamie Porter was able to secure a first batting point of the season before he was caught at first slip as Pennington grabbed a second debut wicket.Essex, who had themselves suffered a collapse from 170 for 2, recovered to have the home side three down at lunch in reply. Nottinghamshire openers Haseeb Hameed and Ben Duckett looked comfortable initially, but when Shane Snater relieved Porter at the Radcliffe Road he dismissed Duckett with his first delivery, which did enough to pass the edge of the England left-hander’s defensive bat and clip off stump.Cook followed up with a leg before against Ben Slater before Hameed, dropped at first slip off Porter on 28, perished in Porter’s next over, caught behind for 32.From 93 for 3 at lunch, Nottinghamshire were 100 for 4 soon afterwards, losing Matt Montgomery to a catch by Simon Harmer at second slip as Snater found enough movement away to claim a second wicket. The Netherlands international’s career-best 7 for 98 came on this ground in 2021.Yet Essex could make no further inroads in the afternoon session as Clarke and Haynes took control. Clarke, who enjoyed his best season as a Nottinghamshire batter in 2023, seemed to reach a turning point with his match-saving marathon 229 not out against Warwickshire in June. Since then he has looked like a batter with more clarity in his process without compromising his ability to inflict damage on opponents.For four hours it looked like something similar might be on the cards again, his focus rarely drifting as he passed fifty with a pull for six off Paul Walter and completed his 21st career hundred by sweeping and cutting Harmer for consecutive fours, moments of aggression in the context of well-judged progress. Little wonder that his shoulders slumped after a rare loose shot saw him caught at mid-on.It had been a fine innings, nonetheless, with 16 fours and that one six, as was that of his young partner, another former Worcestershire batter, albeit one whose senior debut came after Clarke had left New Road. Haynes played shots that were pleasing on the eye, any debut nerves seemingly calmed by Clarke’s assuredness at the other end.Their partnership added 159 in a little over 44 overs, putting Nottinghamshire in a seemingly strong position, six runs in front. Yet the breaking of it by offspinner Harmer’s first wicket of the season let Essex back in, with Haynes soon falling to another tame dismissal, a full toss spooned to mid-on, caught by sub fielder Ben Allison, on briefly for Cook.It left the home side with two new batters and the new ball due, one with which Cook promptly took a hat-trick, trapping James and Pennington leg before, with Hutton bowled by a corker in between. Porter wrapped things up by bowling Dane Paterson.

'Permanent' Paine shows stomach for fight

Since an injury in late 2010, Paine has fought his way back into the Tasmanian and Australian teams, before quickly assuming a senior role by dint of his deft glovework, neat, determined batting and the mind and temperament of a leader

Daniel Brettig in Johannesburg01-Apr-20181:53

Voges: We saw some real fight from Australia

When Tim Paine’s right thumb bore the brunt of a Chadd Sayers delivery as he kept up to the stumps on day two, Australia’s 46th Test captain was clearly in enormous discomfort. Such knocks are familiar to wicketkeepers, as any close inspection of the mangled digits of a longtime stumper such as Ian Healy or Brad Haddin will confirm.But there was something deeper at play as he grimaced and shook his right hand, before seeking the attention of the team physio David Beakley at the end of the over. As captain of a team badly shaken by the events of the past week, Paine has needed to show the way, something he did verbally when outlining a fresh direction for the team on day one. Moreover, there was no vice-captain appointed for this match, meaning the team would literally have been rudderless without his continued presence.Overnight in Australia, the former captain and CA Board director Mark Taylor had spoken unequivocally about Paine’s status as captain of the team – he is most definitely not a stopgap until the selectors and board can think things over. “He’s the permanent solution,” Taylor had said on . “Right now, he’s the 46th Australian cricket team captain.”For a moment or two it looked as though a rapid call would have to be made about who would replace him, thanks to what was later diagnosed as a hairline thumb fracture. But Paine gritted his teeth, slotted the inner and glove back onto his throbbing right hand, and persisted. He would go on, as well, to another of the exceptionally calm, organised and constructive innings he has authored at No. 7 this series, helping to fashion with Pat Cummins Australia’s highest partnership of the series. That 99 could take this mark said everything about where Australia have failed to make the runs required to win here, but at the same time Paine and Cummins showed they were not simply going to roll over.”Yeah, you want to play, don’t you? I was hoping,” Paine said of the moments after he was struck. “The initial hit hurt and I was hoping if I gave it five-10 minutes it might settle down. It hurts a little bit but as I said I’ve had my fair share of finger injuries and compared to a couple of them this one isn’t too bad. It’s got a little crack in it. I’ve played through worse. All we know at the moment is some sort of break in it. It’s all in place which is good. Barring another hit in this Test it should be OK.”As a cricketer, much of Paine’s range of life experiences stemmed from somewhere quite close to his right thumb – the very next finger in fact. After suffering a nasty break when batting in a Twenty20 exhibition match at the Gabba in November 2010, Paine needed no fewer than seven surgeries on the digit before it settled down. He then faced a crisis of confidence in his batting that flowed out of all the time out of the game. Paine worked with sports psychologists and notably the Tigers batting coach Jeff Vaughan to rediscover what had him spoken about as a future leader for, by his own recollection, “about two weeks” earlier in the same year his finger broke.Since then, he has fought his way back into the Tasmanian and then Australian teams, before quickly assuming a senior role in the team by dint of his deft glovework, neat, determined batting and the mind and temperament of a leader. In summing up why the selectors had plumped for Paine over the likes of Matthew Wade, Peter Nevill and the younger Alex Carey, Taylor spoke of his character and demeanour as much as his skills.”I think one of the reasons he found his way into the Test team was because he’s a bit of an old fashioned type cricketer,” Taylor said. “There was a lot of chat before last year’s Ashes where we talked about Peter Nevill and we talked about Matthew Wade. The selectors saw Tim Paine, they got him into a match against England, a lead-up match, and they said that’s the sort of guy we want in and around this team, a bit more of an old-world thinker, more of a level head. We’ve seen how things can change very quickly.”Getty ImagesNeeding to remain calm in the face of rapidly changing circumstances was something Paine was once again called upon to do on the second evening, a few hours after the blow to the thumb. Coming to the crease at 96 for 5, he soon saw the last of the specialist batsmen, Shaun Marsh, edging Keshav Maharaj to slip. That made it 16 wickets for 146 since the previous Australian partnership of any note, between the banished David Warner and Cameron Bancroft on the final day at Newlands. What followed was not enough to wrest control of the match, but it at least marked a point at which Australia began to start pushing back against what had become a monotonous pageant of South African domination against spooked opponents.”We were really disappointed with the way things went yesterday and we spoke about that,” Paine said. “Today, to come out and have a response, we’re obviously still a long way behind the game, there’s no doubt about that. But I thought the spirit and the fight with the bat and then to come out, I thought the discipline our bowlers showed, we didn’t get the wickets that we perhaps deserved. But I was really proud at the way they stuck at it and the same with our fielding group. I thought our fielding energy right through the innings was excellent. That’s what we’re about.”Cummins has, alongside Paine, been the major source of hope for Australia on this tour, beneficiary of not only enormous natural talent but also the fact he has begun to play matches consistently. “We all know how good Pat is as an all-round cricketer. I think this tour he’s been superb. He was fantastic in the Ashes as well,” Paine said. “The pleasing thing for Pat is that he’s starting to get some real consistent cricket into him and he’s playing a lot of cricket, bowling a lot of overs and he’s getting through it. So I think the confidence he’s getting out of that is holding him in really good stead going forward.”Likewise, Paine is gaining confidence as a batsman all the time, having needed a second innings half-century for Tasmania against Victoria at the MCG back in November to confirm to the selectors they could choose him for Australia. A pattern of being stranded with the tail has not allowed Paine the luxury of going on to a truly big innings, but his consistency has put the rest of the batting line-up very much in the shade. Asked whether he might move up the order, Paine showed the “old school” attitude to his role that Taylor noted.”No, I don’t think so. I’ll bat at seven where the wicketkeeper bats,” he said. “Sometimes it happens with tails. Sometimes we get knocked over quite quickly and other times, like today, we can dig in and score a few runs. In this team that’s my role, to try and eke out as many runs as I can with the tail. If that means that I’m not out at the end or, like today, you try to put the foot down a bit. It just depends on the wicket as well. I like to show a lot of faith in our tail and let them bat as well at times but I think on that wicket today it might have been a bit more difficult for them.”Difficult was certainly a word to describe the task facing Paine this week, still more so from the moment his thumb was struck. But Paine’s response was heartening for all who watched him both in the team and beyond the boundary. Out of the chaos of this week, a leader of quality has emerged.

Jobe Bellingham backed to play alongside brother Jude at Real Madrid as ex-Man Utd & England star sends 'establish himself' advice

Ex-England star Wes Brown has backed Jobe and Jude Bellingham to star together for Real Madrid, if the younger brother impresses at Borussia Dortmund.

Brown agrees Belligham brothers can feature for MadridEx-defender stresses Jobe has to prove himself firstSays youngster must match older sibling's levelFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Jobe and Jude have had a similar football journey in terms of their moves. Coming from Stourbridge, both brothers spent their early years at Birmingham City. After Jude moved to Borussia Dortmund and on to Real Madrid, Jobe spent two years with Sunderland and helped secure promotion to the Premier League. He then opted to follow in his brother's path by heading to Dortmund this summer, with big things expected of the 19-year-old.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

There have been many instances in football when the careers of two brothers have intersected—Kolo and Yaya Toure at Manchester City, Gary and Phil Neville at Manchester United, and Frank and Ronald de Boer who played alongside each other on several teams. A similar instance might be awaiting Jobe, to cross paths with his brother at Madrid, but former United and England defender Brown claims that for that to happen, the 19-year-old will have to work hard and match his brother Jude's level.

WHAT BROWN SAID

Brown said to : "He could [play alongside Jude at Real Madrid]. It’s happened before, brothers playing in the same team. I don't think it's something you think about (at the moment), but if Jobe can get to that sort of level, I'm sure Real Madrid will look at him in the future at some point. But I think the first thing is to see if he can establish himself at Dortmund.”

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BVBWHAT NEXT FOR JOBE?

Jobe joined Dortmund this summer in a deal reportedly worth €37m (£32m/$43m). The midfielder was included in the first team and played a major role for Dortmund in their Club World Cup campaign, registering a goal and an assist in the competition. He will likely make his Bundesliga debut against St Pauli on August 23.

SLC to launch National Super League for women

The tournament, similar to the Men’s NSL launched in 2022, will be a significant boon to women’s cricket in the country

Madushka Balasuriya05-Feb-2024A Women’s National Super League (NSL) for both white-ball formats will begin this month, Sri Lanka Cricket has confirmed, with the 50-over contest set to begin on February 6, in Colombo, at the completion of which the T20 competition will take place.The tournament, similar to the Men’s NSL launched in 2022, will see the country’s top talent streamlined. In this case, into four teams – Colombo, Kandy, Dambulla and Galle – with 60 players taking part in total.”The 50 over tournament, which will start on February 6, is a major elevation for women’s cricket in the country, as they get to compete in the country’s elite domestic competition,” stated an SLC media release.”Competing and performing well in the Women’s National Super League will enable players to graduate to national recognition.”Both tournaments are set to be held back-to-back in Colombo with each side squaring off against the other once before the final. The 50-over final will take place on February 12 with the T20 tournament starting three days later on February 15. The T20 final is set for February 20.The move is a significant boon to the women’s game in Sri Lanka. Between March 2020 and November 2021, amid the Covid-19 pandemic, Sri Lanka’s women’s side did not compete in a single international fixture.However 2022 and 2023 have since seen an uptick in competitive tours, with series against India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, New Zealand and England in the books, including a historic home ODI series win against New Zealand and a T20I series win against England.In 2023, captain Chamari Athapaththu also recorded the most successful year of her career, being named ICC’s ODI Player of the Year.

مصطفى زيكو: اخترت الانضمام إلى بيراميدز بسبب الطموح.. ولاعب الأهلي مثلي الأعلي

تحدث مصطفي زيكو، لاعب نادي بيراميدز الجديد، عن أسباب اختياره الانضمام إلى السماوي عن الأندية التي قدمت له عروض خلال الفترة الأخيرة، كما كشف أن لاعب النادي الأهلي يعد مثله الأعلي محليًا.

وانتقل مصطفي زيكو من صفوف نادي زد إلي بيراميدز، خلال فترة الانتقالات الصيفية الجارية، ليكون الصفقة الثالثة بعد إيفرتون والحارس محمود جاد.

وقال زيكو خلال فيديو عبر الصفحة الرسمية لنادي بيراميدز على “فيس بوك”: “بدأت من فريق جمهورية شبين من سن 8 سنوات حتى سن 19 وانتقلت إلى صفوف حرس الحدود وظللت في الفريق العسكري 3 سنوات ثم جاء انضمامي إلى نادي زد مؤخرًا ولمدة 3 سنوات أيضًا، ذلك قبل الرحيل إلى بيراميدز في الصيف الحالي”.

وأضاف: “وصلت لي عروض كثيرة في الفترة الأخيرة، لكن أنا كنت أحب المكان في بيراميدز، وجلست مع المسؤولين وفهمت الفكرة والأهداف الموضوعة للنادي وأريد أن أصل معهم لهذه الأهداف والطموحات، واختياري كان في المكان الصحيح وأتمنى التوفيق”.

وتابع: “اخترت نادي بيراميدز، لأني أحتاج إلى الفوز ببطولة، النادي أخذ بطولة إفريقيا الموسم الماضي وحقق كأس مصر في الموسم قبل الماضي، والطموح أصبح عاليًا لديهم”.

طالع | كاف يعلن تصنيف الأندية الإفريقية.. ترتيب الأهلي والزمالك وبيراميدز

وأكمل: “أرغب في الحصول على بطولة خاصة الدوري المصري، وأسعى للمشاركة مع منتخب مصر، هذا طموحي مع بيراميدز وأريد تحقيق كل البطولات المشاركة بها هذا الموسم”.

وأستمر: “احتفلت بفوز نادي بيراميدز ببطولة دوري أبطال إفريقيا في الموسم الماضي، مع كل هدف كانت احتفالات جنونية”.

وأردف: “مركزي المفضل والذي أحب المشاركة فيه “الوينج لفت”، ويوجد مدربيون كثر قاموا بتوظيفي في مركز المهاجم ومركز صانع الألعاب ومركز 8 في وسط الملعب، لا أحب اللعب في الأخير، أشعر بالراحة جدًا في مركز الوينج لفت”.

وكشف: “مثلي الأعلي في مصر، لاعب النادي الأهلي محمود حسن تريزيجيه، أحبه وأري أن لعبي يشبه كثيرًا، وعلى المستوى العالمي البرتغالي كريستيانو رونالدو”.

وأوضح: “أحب أن أشارك مع منتخب مصر في بطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا القادمة في المغرب وأتوج باللقب وعن التواجد في كأس العالم بإمريكا”.

واختتم: “ياسر رضوان لاعب الأهلي السابق وكان مدرب في جمهورية شبين هو من له الفضل عليِ ومنحني الفرصة، كما أتوجه بالشكر إلي نادي جمهورية شبين ونادي زد أيضًا”.

Sam Hain 'made peace' with idea England chance might never come

Hain marked international debut with 89 off 82 after prolific domestic form finally rewarded

Cameron Ponsonby24-Sep-2023

Sam Hain produced a half-century on his England debut•Getty Images

Every generation has a cricketer that is the best of the bunch to never play for England. A decade ago it was James Hildreth, now it’s Sam Northeast, but tomorrow it will never be Sam Hain.Having “made peace” with the idea that his chance for England may never come, Hain, 28, scored a fluent 89 off 82 balls on ODI, making a strong impression as he looks to force his way into the international set-up Dawid Malan style. Safe in the knowledge that he’s not starting as first-choice, but aware that as long as the runs flow, so too will the opportunities.”I know how good English cricket is,” said Hain, who moved to the UK from Australia at 16 to sign for Warwickshire.”The depth is unbelievable. I actually made peace that I might never, ever get the chance but that doesn’t mean I lacked ambition. When I was younger, I probably searched for playing for England too much. And it took me away from the real process of things and the journey that I’ve been on over the last 10 years. I’m just happy to get a chance.Related

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“The last few years I guess I’ve tried to find a reason why I play [and] it’s because I really love it. It’s why I started, so I just find that over the years it’s just helped me ride the highs and lows a little easier.”The much touted statistic that follows Hain around is his record-breaking List A average that sits at 58.56. According to the spreadsheets, this man is the best in the country at this. And yet England never gave him a go until now.Simply put, this was because cricket’s old adage that it’s “not how, but how many” when it comes to run-scoring is obsolete. A statement of received wisdom that, in terms of accuracy, sits somewhere alongside the earth being flat and your mum thinking you’ll drown immediately if you get into a swimming pool less than half-an-hour after eating a biscuit.It’s a falsehood that Hain knows all too well, with the quantity of runs coming from his bat across his career never being the issue, but instead the quality of them. He went undrafted in the first two Hundred drafts despite his reputation as a borderline white-ball phenom, and it was because of a pedestrian T20 strike rate that sat at 126 until the end of 2020. In his own words, the omission was a “kick up the backside” and spurred the change in approach that was the first brick in the wall towards an England debut.”That forced my hand a little bit,” Hain said, reflecting on his change in approach when at the crease. “To actually delve into my game more so than ever.”Hain has always had a 360 game, he just used to be more circumspect in its adoption. Now, and more to the point, for a number of years, those shackles have gone. Nevertheless, it is somewhat of an oddity that Hain, as the Patron Saint of the Forgotten Format, earnt his ODI debut on the back of his change in T20 form. The days of the List A to ODI pipeline existing in England are long gone. Hain, even with – or more accurately, because – of his remarkable run-scoring in List A cricket has seen opportunities in the format dry-up.”We don’t actually play a lot of 50-over cricket if you’re involved in the Hundred,” said Hain, who has played just five List A matches in the last four years. “And you actually forget how much time there is to bat.”Thankfully for Hain, he remembered in time to turn what had been a nervy, stuttering start of just one run from his first 11 deliveries, into a fluent innings that carried England to 300 and beyond.While on 1, Hain slashed a ball that flew through the hands of a diving backward point for two runs, and the next ball he skipped down the wicket and launched the ball for four over mid-on. On such fine margins, international careers are born.”I tried to keep my emotion in check as much as possible,” said Hain, who had the added bonus of his Australia-based dad, Bryan, being in the crowd thanks to him coincidentally being in Europe for the rugby World Cup.”Anyone who says they’re not nervous on a day like this would be lying,” Hain added. “There’s nerves there and that’s because I really care. I really I’ve waited a long time for an opportunity and I am grateful for it.”I wanted to do really well not only for my family, but for all the people that have supported me over the years. I was waking up around 12, two and four [in the morning]…probably the worst I’ve been. I moved over here at 16 and your international debut is something you want to try to make as memorable as possible, but I was at peace whether I scored runs or not. I just really wanted to take in the day for what it was.”

Sri Lanka survive Edwards scare to defend 213

Theekshana starred with a three-for after Dhananjaya’s 93 dragged them past 200

Madushka Balasuriya30-Jun-2023Sri Lanka survived an almighty scare as they scraped past Netherlands by 21 runs to kickstart their Super Six campaign on a nervy but winning note. It was a victory built on the back of a career-best 93 from Dhananjaya de Silva and a backs-against-the-wall bowling effort led by the excellent Maheesh Theekshana, who picked 3 for 31.But every inch of this win was contested by a persistent Netherlands outfit, who first restricted Sri Lanka to a subpar 213 and then nearly pulled off a nail-biting chase. Better sides than them have fallen foul of the twin threats of Theekshana and Wanindu Hasaranga, who picked up five wickets between them on the day. Two run-outs, when the required rate throughout was essentially less than four an over, only adds credence to this notion. Netherlands captain Scott Edwards was left stranded on an unbeaten 68-ball 67, as he ran out of partners on a sticky surface that was taking turn and displaying some uneven bounce.The result means Sri Lanka join Zimbabwe on six points at the top of the table, with the winner of their clash on Sunday guaranteed qualification to the World Cup. As for the Netherlands, they can still get up to a maximum of six points but will now need one of Sri Lanka or Zimbabwe to lose both their remaining games.Theekshana also made an impact with the bat, sticking it out in the middle with Dhananjaya during a vital 77-run eighth wicket stand. With the game won by 21, the importance of Theekshana’s gritty 28 cannot be overstated, especially seeing that it came after Sri Lanka had been reduced to 131 for 7.Netherlands did all the running for much of the game. Starting with the very first delivery of the game, when Pathum Nissanka slashed wildly at one outside off stump to be caught at cover.That would be one of three wickets for the excellent Logan van Beek, who would also send Sadeera Samarawickrama and Charith Asalanka packing – all before the end of the first powerplay.Nissanka’s wouldn’t be the only questionable stroke by a Sri Lankan batter, as several were dismissed trying to hit out. This though was down to Netherlands persisting with nagging lines and lengths, allied with Sri Lanka’s inability to find singles and rotate strike consistently. The build up of pressure had batters falling while attempting to break the shackles. And, if not, the odd one that kept low would do the trick.Logan van Beek proved too hot for the Sri Lanka top-order batters to handle•ICC via Getty ImagesThis was essentially the tale of Sri Lanka’s innings, as Netherlands bowled wicket to wicket and refused to allow for easy runs. It was only Dhananjaya who showed the patience to thrive on this surface.He stitched together successive stands of 33, 29, 35 and 77 with Dimuth Karunaratne, Dasun Shanaka, Wanindu Hasaranga and Theekshana respectively, to drag Sri Lanka to a defendable total.In defence of their target, Sri Lanka knocked over both openers for ducks inside the first two overs. But then the game began to slip away. Wesley Barresi and Bas de Leede – who had grabbed three wickets earlier – put on 77 for the third wicket, in a partnership that was highlighted by its industrious nature. The pair found boundaries frequently, but more than that they scrambled for every run.By the start of the 15th over they were going at a rate beyond six an over. But it would be their exuberance to grab every advantage that would be their downfall, as an ill-advised second would see Barresi run out. Barresi’s wicket would be followed by Teja Nidamanuru five balls later. De Leede and Edwards then put on a 41-ball 36.Theekshana returned to go through a gap between de Leede’s bat and pad to clean him up. He then executed a double-wicket maiden to send Netherlands tumbling to 133 for 7.From that point on it was a lone hand from Edwards, who employed the sweep to great effect and found ones and twos with ease. This would bring the target closer, but Sri Lanka were into the tail and so they chipped away. After an incredible throw to the non-striker’s end by keeper Kusal Mendis saw Shariz Ahmad run out, Hasaranga castled Klein with a googly.Edwards then looked to farm the strike alongside Dutt, but an inswinging yorker from Shanaka dispatched the latter. That Shanaka was even bowling at that stage was only down to the fact that Lahiru Kumara had been able to complete just two overs before being withdrawn with a side strain.