Wolves ‘in talks’ with Joao Palhinha

Wolves are seemingly on the brink of finally signing Joao Palhinha, and transfer guru Fabrizio Romano has now shared what he knows about the deal.

The Lowdown: Palhinha constantly linked

Few, if any, players have been linked with a move to Wanderers in recent months than Palhinha, with the Sporting CP man surely the club’s No.1 summer target and recent reports even claiming the deal is as good as done.

The Portuguese colossus looks likely be arrive as Ruben Neves’ natural replacement in midfield, as the Wolves hero looks for his own fresh challenge ahead of next season.

Now, Romano has weighed with on what he’s heard from Molineux, suggesting the deal is not quite done but the parties are down to just the finer details.

The Latest: Romano drops key update

Taking to Twitter on Friday, Romano claimed that talks are ongoing over the structure of the payments:

“Wolves are in talks with Sporting to sign João Palhinha as new midfielder. Negotiations ongoing as reported by @Record_Portugal, price tag €20m. Discussions ongoing about payment terms, Bruno Lage wants Joao. Work in progress.”

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The Verdict: Matter of time?

With each passing day, the more it feels as though Wolves have got their man, in what could be a significant piece of transfer business to kick-start their summer.

It was vital that a player of Neves’ brilliance was replaced both immediately and sufficiently, and Palhinha could be the perfect man to come in.

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He has 14 caps to his name for Portugal, scoring twice, and according to FBRef ranks extremely highly in the defensive numbers, registering in the 99th percentile for pressures, 92nd for blocks and 86th for tackles among midfielders in Europe’s top leagues.

In other news, a fresh Wolves transfer rumour has emerged. Read more here.

Tottenham: Journalist shares major Bergwijn update

Dutch transfer journalist Mike Verweij of De Telegraaf has shared a big Tottenham Hotspur exit update involving want-away winger Steven Bergwijn.

The Lowdown: Bergwijn eyes exit…

The Netherlands international openly admitted that he intends to leave Spurs this summer as manager Antonio Conte cannot give him a sufficient amount of game time.

Despite weighing in with crucial contributions at big points over 2021/2022, including his last minute brace to clinch a 3-2 victory away to Leicester City, Bergwijn has found it hard to fight his way past the in-form Dejan Kulusevski in Tottenham’s pecking order.

As such, Eredivisie giants Ajax have been plotting to bring him back across the English channel with Verweij now sharing an update on the situation.

The Latest: Personal terms a ‘formality’…

The reporter, taking to Twitter, claims a five-year contract for Bergwijn at Ajax is a ‘formality’ – going on to state in his piece that the 24-year-old has an ‘outline agreement’ on personal terms to leave Tottenham.

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However, it is also believed that the Amsterdam outfit have been indecisive in terms of an offer to Spurs and will have to shake off emerging competition from the Premier League (De Telegraaf).

The Verdict: Time to go?

Lauded as a ‘big-game monster’ in recent seasons by members of the media (John Cross, Daily Mirror), as evident by his heroics at the King Power Stadium, his quality at times is perhaps deserving of more regular chances.

Depending on the fee Spurs can obtain from Ajax or any other interested party, we believe it is best to amicably part company before the start of 2022/2023.

Allowing the player more regular minutes at a high level team while Spurs bank a decent fee to reinvest into other positions feels like a win-win.

In other news: ‘Better and better’ – Tottenham could make announcement ‘in the coming days’, says insider…find out more here.

Newcastle told to forget Calvert-Lewin after recent development

Sky Sports pundit Paul Robinson has suggested that Newcastle United should forget about trying to sign Dominic Calvert-Lewin this summer after a Magpies source revealed Eddie Howe’s interest.

The Lowdown: Magpies given Calvert-Lewin encouragement

The 25-year-old first joined the Toffees in a £1.5m deal from Sheffield United six years ago, where he has since gone on to make 191 senior appearances in the Premier League during that time.

Despite still having three years remaining on his current contract at Goodison Park, the striker has recently been linked with a move away from Merseyside due to the club’s financial problems, with Everton believed to have recorded losses of approximately £250m over the past two seasons.

The Magpies are thought to be heading into the upcoming transfer window looking for a new centre-forward, and a Newcastle source told Football Insider just last week that Howe’s side have been encouraged to pursue the 11-cap international.

The Latest: Robinson’s transfer ‘risk’ claim

Robinson however, after hearing that news, thinks the St. James’ outfit should be targeting Manchester City’s Gabriel Jesus instead, who only has 12 months left on his deal at the Etihad. He told Football Insider:

“Callum Wilson is a top player.

“We saw at the end of the season just how important he is for them.

“He is injury prone though. He has had an unfortunate time with injuries.

“They play with one up top right now with two players out wide. Is Calvert-Lewin versatile enough to play as one of the wide players, probably not. I also question whether he is better than Wilson.

“He has had a hit and miss season. He scored an important goal late on but other than that he struggled.

“I think signing him would be a risk when you take into account how much Everton would want for him.

“I think they should go for someone like Jesus instead. He is the type of player Newcastle should be going after.”

The Verdict: If the price is right…

Even though Calvert-Lewin has only clocked up 17 top-flight appearances this season after being ruled out of action for the first four months of the campaign with injury, he has still managed to make an impact in the final third, scoring five goals and registering two assists, as per Transfermarkt.

As a result of Frank Lampard’s blues narrowly surviving relegation, if the 6 foot 1 talisman was to depart, Everton would probably be expected to ask for a significant sum of money which they could put towards some much-needed transfer funds to buy a better profile of player if they want to stay clear of the drop zone.

So, we feel this deal all depends on the price demands from Merseyside, as Calvert-Lewin could provide some serious competition upfront and help Newcastle aim for a top ten finish next term, but perhaps not for his £37.8m valuation given by Transfermarkt.

In other news… a journalist has dropped a huge ‘£40m’ Newcastle transfer claim involving one of their summer targets.

Robinson reacts to Ward-Prowse to Tottenham transfer update

Sky Sports pundit Paul Robinson has urged Tottenham Hotspur to completely forget about the possibility of signing Southampton star James Ward-Prowse this summer, despite calling the player ‘incredible’.

The Lowdown: Spurs monitoring Ward-Prowse

The 27-year-old still has four years remaining on his current contract with the Saints after signing an extension last year, which is set to keep him at the St. Mary’s Stadium until at least 2026.

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However, due to his recent impressive run of form, the midfielder has been attracting plenty of interest, and according to a transfer update published by the Daily Star, it’s claimed that the north London outfit are monitoring Ward-Prowse.

The Lilywhites are allegedly considering a move for him during the upcoming window, but are set to face competition from fellow Premier League rivals Arsenal and Newcastle United.

The Latest: Robinson’s doubts

When asked after that transfer update whether he thinks the ten-cap international could fit into the Spurs starting XI, Robinson told Football Insider: “I’m not so sure about Ward-Prowse.

“Make no mistake about it, his set-pieces are incredible. But I am yet to be convinced about his all-round game.

“Yes, he stands out in a Southampton team but could he stand out in a Spurs team? Could he take Spurs to the next level? Which is competing regularly in the Champions League. I’m not sure he could, if I’m honest. I’d be looking elsewhere.”

The Verdict: Perfect creative outlet

The £100k-per-week ace, who was once hailed an “unbelievable” player by his Saints teammate Oriol Romeu, definitely has the ability to shine in Antonio Conte’s side, and could be the missing piece of the puzzle to give them that creativity in the middle of the park that they have been so desperately lacking.

Ward-Prowse has had a huge influence on the pitch under Ralph Hasenhuttl this season, having scored ten goals and provided eight assists in all competitions for Southampton, as per Transfermarkt, not to mention the fact that David Beckham is the only player to have netted more direct free-kicks than him in Premier League history.

As the Italian boss looks to reassemble his squad ahead of the start of the 2022/23 campaign, two new midfielders are believed to be on his wishlist this summer, and so he could be tempted to bolster his ranks with the maestro in a bid to push for a place in the Champions League and beyond next season.

In other news… Spurs are said to be eyeing up a move for a ‘fantastic’ new transfer target.

Rohit's surgical precision enthralls Lucknow

His fourth T20I century wasn’t just about a slow start followed by an onslaught. There was a clear method to his madness

Sreshth Shah in Lucknow07-Nov-2018A steady accelerationRohit began watchfully after India were asked to bat on a brand-new batting surface. With Oshane Thomas steaming in, Rohit left the first two deliveries and blocked out the rest in the first over. His first boundary came in the fourth over – much to the 50,000 strong crowd’s delight. Rohit finished the Powerplay with a strike-rate of 119.05.As the ball got older and the pitch stayed true, Rohit justified the decision to begin cautiously. He smacked three sixes and four fours through the middle ten, gaining momentum to reach 78 off 49 by the time the 16th over ended. In the middle overs, Rohit went at a strike-rate of 189.29 as India’s run rate was above eight.At the death, Rohit had the license to blast, with India still having eight wickets in hand, and he mesmerised the Lucknow crowd. He began the 17th with two exquisite boundaries that lit up the stadium – first, a cover drive right over the infield followed by a cut over point. With eight needed off the innings’ final five balls to reach his century, Rohit hammered two consecutive boundaries and then followed it up with a six over long on to cap off India’s innings in style. His strike-rate for the final four overs was a whopping 275.A leg-stump guard that opened both sidesWest Indies’ plan was clear at the outset: bowl so wide that Rohit is forced to reach at it, thereby preventing him from generating maximum power. But Rohit’s experience of nearly 300 T20s showed, as he picked the opposition’s plan very early. He planted himself in a way that two stumps remained exposed.The plan gave Rohit the chance to free his arms whenever the ball was pitched on off, or slightly beyond. The game’s first boundary off Kharry Pierre was testament to that, when Rohit muscled an inside-out drive right over mid-off after staying on the leg side of the delivery. When Thomas came to bowl this third over, Rohit backed away towards the leg side even before the bowler had delivered the ball, and shellacked the youngster’s 149kph delivery right over his head and into the sightscreen.The template continued as the evening progressed. Anything that was outside his off stump was clobbered with his toes pointing towards cover while a delivery bowled near his toes was deposited towards the leg side as he cleared his front leg towards the midwicket region. It wasn’t the first time Rohit used this strategy. On an excellent batting surface in Indore during an ODI win against Australia in 2017, Rohit found success doing much of the same.Associated PressUsing the dimensions of the ground to one’s advantageWith one square measuring 82 metres and the other at 79 metres rotation of strike was key. Shikhar Dhawan never got going despite a 41-ball 43, and it was down to Rohit to dictate proceedings in the middle. Rohit played out only 16 dot balls in his knock, of which six came in the very first over itself.Off his 61 deliveries in all, Rohit collected 29 singles and two doubles, playing the balls into the gap and rotating the strike even if he couldn’t get the boundary. It was in stark contrast to the Rohit we know, who plants himself to clear the infield – and the ground – once set. Under cool Lucknow conditions where there wasn’t much humidity, Rohit pinched singles at will, caressing the ball into the gaps between fielders patrolling the boundaries and ensured India’s scoring rate continued to tick along.Using the V – both in front and behindCoaches keep telling youngsters that the safest shots are those that are played between mid-on and mid-off. It allows the batsman to offer the bat’s full face, and therefore gain the most out of a bat swing. On Tuesday, Rohit followed that mantra to the T, scoring over half his runs in the V in front of him and behind.Forty-four percent of his deliveries (27 of the 61 balls) were hit between mid-on and mid-off while fetching 52 runs. And behind the keeper, he paddled and dabbed his way to add another 12 off six deliveries between third-man and fine leg. In all, Rohit scored 64 runs in 33 deliveries in those two scoring regions. The only other area where Rohit caused more destruction was the area just over midwicket, where he struck 17 runs in just four deliveries, smacking two sixes and a boundary in the process.

How not to use the DRS

England have a lot of experience using the DRS, but you might not have guessed as much from their early referrals on the review system’s Test debut in India

Sidharth Monga09-Nov-2016Betting houses will give you odds on anything, but you cannot be sure if they would have accepted bets on the first talking point of the DRS on the first day of its use in a Test in India being its non-use. It has been a long wait for the review system’s Test debut in India, and it has come with all the bells and whistles in place, including letting the viewers at home have a listen-in. You would have expected it to arrive with a bang, and it did – through its conspicuousness.Alastair Cook had enjoyed all the luck until then: won the first toss in a Test where Virat Kohli has flicked the coin in India, then enjoyed two dropped catches in the first two overs after deciding to bat. Having survived the first hour, having just begun to look comfortable, Cook missed one from Ravindra Jadeja. It was a shortish delivery, it spun past his inside edge and hit him in front of leg. At first look it seemed it was headed down leg, but Cook followed the protocol teams have in place: ask the non-striker, unless you have hit the ball.Cook did ask Haseeb Hameed, the 19-year-old debutant, the youngest player to open the innings for England on debut. You have to admire a team space where such a rookie can tell the captain, the most-capped England player, to walk off, but Cook would have realised his error soon after, watching replays inside the dressing room.Hameed was not done dealing with the DRS. Soon he was trapped in front off the bowling of R Ashwin. This was a length ball from around the wicket that turned back just enough to be hitting the stumps but not enough to hit the defensive bat. This time, though, the vice-captain Joe Root encouraged Haseeb to ask for the review. Challenges remaining: 1.India made their first use of DRS minutes before tea, at the end of a wicketless session. The ball was reversing, Root had planted his front foot across, and Umesh Yadav had swung it past his inside edge. This one looked a really good candidate for lbw, but Kumar Dharmasena ruled it to be not out. India understandably reviewed it. Ball tracking said the ball was hitting the leg stump as much as it could without getting the decision overturned. Root was on 92 then, and successfully went on to become the first batsman visiting India to score a century since Michael Clarke in February 2013.Dharmasena, whom DRS had given a lot of grief in Bangladesh, could relax. It was DRS 0 – Dharmasena 2.

Dane Vilas ready for a starring role

The India tour gives the South African wicketkeeper another chance at sealing his spot in the national team

Firdose Moonda25-Sep-2015The closest Dane Vilas thought he would get to international cricket was when he was Allan Donald.Seven years ago Vilas was a dedicated provincial player, adequate but not exceptional, captaining the Lions franchise’s academy side in Potchefstroom, a student town 120 kilometres south-west of Johannesburg, which was also home to the Lions bowling coach Gordon Parsons and his wife, Hester, the sister of Hansie Cronje.When Hester’s brother Frans, who was making a movie on Hansie’s life, told his family that he was struggling to find extras who were both athletic and articulate to play the role of some of Cronje’s team-mates, she suggested Vilas’ name.Vilas’ height (six feet), his hair colour (a blond that’s not quite bleached) and his angular face reminded Frans of Donald, so though Donald was four inches taller, with a little less hair and a harder expression, Vilas was cast as him. That Vilas was an English-speaking wicketkeeper-batsman and Donald an Afrikaans-speaking bowler whose English was almost exclusively learnt in Birmingham made no difference. Welcome to the movies.

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These days wicketkeepers tend to be batsmen who can’t bowl. Standing behind the stumps is a “second skill”, according to coach Ray Jennings, because most teams cannot afford to have a place reserved for a gloveman whose main strength is safe hands.

“Dane may actually be the South African Gunn & Moore have sponsored the longest”Anne Vilas

“If we are honest about it, wicketkeeping around the world has become worse in skills terms, because keepers are relying on their ability as batsmen to make it into teams,” Jennings said. “There isn’t an understanding that if you keep badly you will be dropped on that alone – as long as you can bat as well.”That means sometimes the best wicketkeeper may not make it into a team but the best wicketkeeper-batsman will.In October 1997, Nic Pothas was widely regarded as the best keeper in the country. He was Transvaal’s first choice, had played 41 first-class matches and scored 1849 runs at 33.01. Mark Boucher, three years younger, was a rising star who had been with South Africa’s Under-19 team but had played only 14 first-class matches, in which he had scored 689 runs at 38.27.Boucher was much less experienced but his potential loomed large, and his bullish batting was partly the reason why he was picked ahead of Pothas to replace an injured Dave Richardson in a Test in Pakistan.For the next decade and a half, apart from three Tests in 2004, Boucher was South Africa’s Test keeper and there was no obvious competition. Despite scoring a century against West Indies A a month after Boucher’s debut, Pothas played for the national side only as his injury replacement, and his career eventually took him to the county circuit.Keeper Nic Pothas was denied a place in the South African side because Mark Boucher’s batting was believed to be better•Getty ImagesMorne van Wyk should have been Boucher’s challenger – he had a batting average over 40 for four seasons and over 50 for two – but never got a look in. Instead, Thami Tsolekile replaced Boucher briefly but then fell off the radar and emerged again only as Boucher’s career reached its twilight. There were no other candidates to keep wicket, perhaps because no one wanted to be a wicketkeeper in a system where they did not stand a chance.”The same thing happened with bowling, when South Africa would insist on an attack with four seamers and no spinner, and then found we had not developed spinners,” Jennings said. “We have to stimulate every side of the game so that players in every discipline can feel they have a chance and there will be opportunity.”

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Vilas started playing cricket in 1994, when he was nine years old. What set him apart then was that he had better equipment than any of his peers.His mother, Anne, is the managing director of Opal Sports, the South African agency for Gunn & Moore. “Dane may actually be the South African Gunn & Moore have sponsored the longest,” Anne joked.

Vilas was on the fringes of the franchise team and captained the academy, but by the time he featured in the Cronje movie, he seemed to have reached a glass ceiling

Anne, whose brother was a wicketkeeper for SA Schools, was “always keen” that her three sons play sport, so she sent them to King Edward VII school (KES), the alma mater of Ali Bacher and Jimmy Cook. “I thought that even if they only make the B team, they would be pretty good.”Of the three boys, Dane was the most successful. He was a regular in the school teams, where he performed well, but it was not immediately clear that sport could be a career option for him. He was picked for a provincial side only once while in school, when he played for the Gauteng U-13 B team, and Anne accepted that while Vilas would be a decent school sportsman, it would possibly be difficult for him to progress beyond that. “It’s not often that if you are not in the provincial system through the age groups that you will go further.”After school, Vilas played at Old Eds, the KES old boys’ club, while working as a sales assistant for his mother. He was also occasionally involved with the provincial side. He was on the fringes of the franchise team and captained the academy, but by the time he featured in the Cronje movie, Vilas seemed to have reached a glass ceiling, although he appeared to want to break through.Jennings, who was on the domestic coaching scene at the time, remembered Vilas as a committed cricketer, “a fanatic, a very hard worker, who would be in the nets until the sweat ran off him”.At the start of the 2010-11 season, Cobras were looking for a keeper and thought Vilas would fit their requirements. It would mean moving to Cape Town, which Anne said was “difficult for the family but good for Dane”. Nobody really thought the move could open doors to the national side.Quinton de Kock impressed with the bat in limited-overs games before his dip in form gave Vilas another chance•AFPVilas was solid behind the stumps and with the bat he averaged 48 in 2011-12 and above 30 every season since then, but more importantly he was building a career as a professional cricketer. “He really loves the game, which is important when you are one of those players who may not make it,” Anne said.

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By the time Boucher announced his intention to retire in mid-2012, a replacement had been lined up. Tsolekile was nationally contracted, had travelled as the reserve keeper, and he claimed he was promised he would get to take over from Boucher in the home series against New Zealand and Pakistan in 2012-13. But when an eye injury forced Boucher to quit earlier than planned, AB de Villiers was given the gloves as the emergency replacement.At that point, wicketkeepers on the domestic scene would have been forgiven for giving up. The national selectors made it clear that they were not casting the net wide, primarily because with de Villiers keeping they could play an extra batsman.Then de Villiers’ back started to give way. His value as batsman, fielder and captain was being compromised by the burden of keeping wicket, but by then Quinton de Kock had emerged to take his place behind the stumps. Carefree but calculating, aggressive but artful, at 19, de Kock had already played for South Africa, been dropped and re-selected by the time he was needed to take the load off de Villiers.

“What I do know is that Dane’s work ethic and skill and desire is there. Now it’s about how he performs”Ray Jennings

And as he broke batting records – de Kock was only the fifth batsman in history to score three ODI centuries in succession – other keepers in the country lost hope.

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Vilas had been picked for a solitary T20,against India in March 2012. “He’d been playing for a couple of years for the Cobras and we thought it was not impossible that he might get picked for South Africa,” Anne said. “But after that T20, I thought that was it.”Vilas did not bat in the match and he was only required in the field for 7.5 overs before rain stopped play. Rain was to play a major role in his next South African debut as well.

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After the 2015 World Cup, South African cricket structures shifted dramatically, underlined by a stronger commitment to transformation. In the aftermath of the World Cup exit, Cricket South Africa announced increased quotas at franchise level, and eventually, following a protracted controversy surrounding Vernon Philander’s selection for the semi-final against New Zealand, explained how the system applied to the national teams as well.Vilas’ international debuts were marred by rain, but the selectors want to give him a fair shot•AFPThe commitment to change was obvious from the squads selected to tour Bangladesh, particularly in terms of the number of black African players. Against that backdrop, Vilas was a surprise inclusion. He was travelling as a reserve, much like Aaron Phangiso, and with the focus on providing more opportunities to players of colour, Vilas was probably lucky to be included at the expense of Tsolekile or even Rudi Second.Vilas was “shocked” by the call-up, and even more shocked when, two days before the game, he realised he would be making his Test debut. De Kock was struggling with his form since his comeback from an ankle injury, and with de Villiers out of the tour due to paternity leave, there was no one else but Vilas, who had also become a father four months before the series.”He just loved the experience being with the team,” Anne said. “Dane likes structure and he liked the kind of structure that set-up had. And then to make his Test debut – that was just the cherry on top. He was so excited to make his Test debut and we were so proud of him. We had thought of going over when he told us he was going to play, but on short notice and with the possibility of rain, we decided not to go.”Play was possible only on the first day. The remaining four were washed out. An experience that started off as “amazing” for Vilas turned “bittersweet”, especially since he didn’t know whether his Test career would go the same way as his T20 one.

De Villiers’ value as batsman, fielder and captain was being compromised by the burden of keeping wicket, but by then Quinton de Kock had emerged to take his place behind the stumps

Immediately at the end of the Bangladesh tour, de Kock redeemed himself with a hat-trick of hundreds on South Africa A’s tour of India. Vilas, also part of that squad, scored a fifty in a List A match and 75 in an unofficial Test, but he did not know if that was enough. There was uncertainty over everything, including Vilas’ batting ability, but the selectors decided the only way to obtain some clarity would be to give Vilas a fair chance. He is the first-choice keeper for the upcoming tour of India.”We don’t know how good Vilas is because he hasn’t had the chance to show us yet,” Jennings said. “From a wicketkeeping point of view, I don’t think there is much between Vilas and de Kock, but from a batting point of view, I don’t know,” Jennings said. “What I do know is that Dane’s work ethic and skill and desire is there. Now it’s about how he performs. India will be about standing up to the wicket and making sure the skills are good enough. There will also be uneven bounce and spin. After India we will have a better idea of who is in front for now.”At 30, Vilas will have fewer years to give than de Kock, who is now 22, but Jennings does not believe age will be a factor. “The best player must play, and if he is a bit older, then there needs to be a succession plan in place. It’s much more important to have a strong system. Competition means there is a person pushing from the bottom and the person already there cannot get into a comfort zone and stop growing.”Vilas has never had the luxury of complacency in cricket, except when he was pretending to be Donald. Now he is a real international cricketer. Welcome to the movies.

The evolution of Corey Anderson

Grant Bradburn, former coach of Northern Districts, recounts the rise of Corey Anderson, who took some brave decisions, overcame the hurdles of debilitating injuries and countered weight issues

Abhishek Purohit in Hamilton23-Jan-20140:00

Crowe: Anderson the difference between the teams

Grant Bradburn: “He is more determined and confident now that he has the ability to bat for longer periods of time”•Getty Images”The biggest compliment I could give Corey Anderson is I wish I could hit the ball like him,” Chris Cairns had said after Anderson smashed the fastest ODI hundred recently. How would you feel if the man you consider your idol said this about you? To get this far, however, Anderson has had to overcome a potentially debilitating cocktail of injuries, surgeries and weight issues.He also shifted domestic teams for better prospects when he was only 20, an age when most players would be happy to be part of the squad and get the odd look-in. Anderson might still be quite young in terms of years, but for someone who made his first-class debut aged 16, and was the youngest domestic contracted player in New Zealand, maturity has come early.The talent has been there from Anderson’s junior days. Virat Kohli remembers him hitting big sixes in Under-19 games. “He smashed us at Kuala Lumpur as well in the Under-19 World Cup, he hit some massive sixes,” Kohli said. “Even then he had a lot of power. Even when we came to New Zealand with the Under-19s, in Dunedin he scored a hundred on a drop-in wicket which was very difficult and he hit some massive sixes there as well.”It is good to see someone from the same batch coming in, maybe from another country but doing well. He has a lot of talent, bowls decently as well, good fielder, pretty strong lad. He is a huge bonus for the New Zealand team. Especially, I don’t think they had any pinch-hitters in the middle order before him, so they were struggling after Ross Taylor would get out. Now they have a dangerous player like him who can change the course of the game anytime.”Before he started changing the course of games for New Zealand, Anderson took a route that led up north from his hometown Christchurch, and one that was to turn around his career. Grant Bradburn, who was the coach at Northern Districts when Anderson shifted there from Canterbury in 2011, said the move revealed a lot about Anderson.”He made the decision himself that he needed to move away from his home association and wanted to push himself to take his game to a new level,” said Bradburn, also a former New Zealand player. “He decided to move here without even being contracted. That makes it even more special that a guy with such talent was prepared to come up here knowing that he was going to be under pressure to perform, and he did it. He challenged himself by coming out of his comfort zone. That was a big decision to leave his family, leave his association where he first started the game. He’ll always hold huge respect from me and all the staff and players for that.”That is a sign of his integrity, of his desire to prove himself, to make himself accountable. He knew he needed to play his way into a very strong squad here. He made some big physical changes, lost 20 kgs very quickly and became a lot more resilient because of that.”Anderson had missed most of the 2010 season for Canterbury with a severe groin injury and wanted a “fresh start.” But he had been known to have troubles with his weight and Bradburn said it was “non-negotiable” that he work on that when he joined Northern Districts. To Anderson’s credit, he drew motivation from his new colleagues and worked hard to shed the excess weight.”He knew that strength and conditioning was very important up here in this environment in terms of how it related to performance. It was almost non-negotiable when he came into this environment. There were a number of dedicated cricketers around him training very hard. He is very close to Kane Williamson and [Trent] Boult, for example, who are exemplary with their physical conditioning. Corey realised even before he made the move that it was not going to be easy up here. Physically it was going to be tough. He was up for that challenge. He wanted to make those changes. Without him wanting to make those changes, they would not have happened.”We have just provided the environment for him to do that. We recognised his immense ability. We welcomed him into our environment. He recognised, too, that Northern Districts was a place where he would be valued and supported.”A leaner, fitter frame has also helped Corey Anderson become more effective with the ball•Getty ImagesAnderson has been marked out for his talent for a long time, but, for all his potential, he did not have any first-class hundreds until 2012, and often used to fall after getting starts. Then he cracked a second-innings 167 against Otago in Hamilton. Bradburn calls that knock the “turning point” in Anderson’s career, and says the allrounder has learned to control himself. A fitter body has also meant a stronger mind, and Bradburn says Anderson is able to concentrate hard and long now.”He’s always had the ability to hit the ball hard but also had the tendency to get out too early. During that innings he showed, most of all to himself, that he has the ability to think tactically through a situation and apply his skills for a longer period of time. He learned so much during that first breakthrough innings.”He is more determined and confident now that he has the ability to bat for longer periods of time, and therefore, much more significant innings than short, explosive ones. Technically we haven’t had to make many changes. It is more applying those skills to the situation that we have worked hard with him.”Within a year of moving to Northern Districts, Anderson had earned himself a new contract. With a leaner frame, he became much more effective with the ball as well. And crucially, the injuries are less frequent now.”With the better physical condition, he was able to be a lot more effective for longer periods of time, was able to stay on the park a lot more,” Bradburn said. “It really helped his whole game and his confidence.”He’s always been a very strong, powerful man. Because of that immense power, his body has taken a little bit of time to build the resilience it needs to control the power. He’s always got some niggles here and there, but because he is in great shape now and his body has matured, we are finding that he is getting a lot less injuries.”He’s always been quick because of his power. With the coaching up here, he has learned to control that power and also use if more effectively. He has learned so much about his bowling rather than just coming in and charging. He has learned the finer points of release and good strong body position. We always had the feeling it was a matter of when and not if Corey would make the necessary physical changes to go to the next level.”The next level is well and truly his now. But there is plenty more to come. Anderson is widely expected to earn a huge IPL contract at the February auction. Can all the success, and money, get to his head? He is still only 23, after all. Bradburn thinks there is no chance.”Corey is fortunate that he is from a well-balanced and a very supportive family, and he is a very well-balanced man himself. He has the right people around him to keep him under control. Knowing Corey so well, he will be enjoying the fact that he is playing good cricket and improving all the time, that he is proving to himself that he can do it at the highest level. There will be no problem now.”

Australia Under-19s get ready for final

After two days of relaxation, Australia’s young cricketers got back to full-intensity training in a quiet setting ahead of the big final on Sunday against India

George Binoy in Townsville24-Aug-2012The venue for Australia’s last full net session ahead of the final of the Under-19 World Cup was only a five-minute drive from Tony Ireland Stadium, but its setting was far removed from the goldfish bowl they’ll be in on Sunday. The Brothers Cricket Club, nestled in the quiet suburb of Thuringowa, has a huge, lush field bordered by a white picket fence. Stand in its middle and, apart from the birds, the only sounds are from groups of excited Under-19 cricketers, having a net on the centre wickets and practicing their fielding in preparation for the biggest match of their lives.Australia played their semi-final against South Africa on August 21, which means they had four days until the title clash. They didn’t even know who their opponent was until last evening. India, it turned out.Their players had a couple of days off after the semifinal to take their minds off the high-pressure match coming up. William Bosisto, the captain, played some golf, as did Travis Head, the allrounder who bowls offspin.”After the game we did our normal recovery, came to the pool,” Bosisto said. “I had a hit of golf yesterday, so that was quite relaxing, I love my golf. That’s a great way to take your mind off cricket, relax and enjoy life kind of thing. Today we had a net session – that was our big, main session before Sunday. Tomorrow we’ll have an optional session at Tony Ireland, just a short little hit.”Head, who said he was a “pretty relaxed person,” went down to Tony Ireland on Thursday to see bits of the India-New Zealand semi-final too. “I just couldn’t watch, got back to the hotel and the air conditioning, it was a bit hot,” he said. “Just got a bit itchy watching … just wanted to get out there. I think we’re pretty relaxed and the team’s not too nervous. It’s good to know we’re playing India now, we can plan for that and look forward to Sunday.”Gurinder Sandhu, the fast bowler, said there hadn’t been much talk about the final over the last two days, with most of the team unwinding about Townsville.Their coach Stuart Law said the down time was important in such a high-profile tournament. “You can only do so much practice,” he said. “Players in this day and age are probably getting it wrong. They think you can improve at practice, you don’t. You improve in a game; you maintain a practice. You shouldn’t be batting for four hours each day in the nets. It’s not going to do you much good at all.”We had a similar sort of break between our quarter and our semi, so we did basically the same thing as we had done then – two days off, the boys have got family up here, so spent a bit of time with them. They go fishing, they play golf, just keep them relaxed, keep them occupied, among doing gym sessions and whatever. They knew they had to come back today to start the hard work again.”The practice was extensive and the spirits high. Among other things, the national talent manager Greg Chappell had a long chat with Bosisto after a net, watched the offspinner Ashton Turner bowl closely and gave Kurtis Patterson some catching practice. Sandhu was among the most vocal and enthusiastic while catching skiers from Craig McDermott.Greg Chappell oversaw the cricketers during practice•George Binoy”Don’t really have any words to explain it to be honest, the boys are pretty pumped, especially with India,” Sandhu said, when asked about the excitement ahead of the final. “Everyone’s positive, 5-0 at the moment, haven’t lost a game, the momentum is on our side I guess. Just get out there.”The tournament could not have had a more high-profile final. Australia against India is a promoter’s dream, drawing in the local support for both teams, and the television audiences from cricket’s biggest market. The competitors have pedigree too. Australia are undefeated in this World Cup; while India have had the most success among Under-19 sides over the last 12 months, winning two quadrangular tournaments and sharing the Asia Cup. Both those quadrangulars involved Australia and they recognise that having to face India in the finale is a fitting test of which is the best side.”Coming into the World Cup we were expecting India to be a really tough opponent and we thought that there was a fair chance they’d probably end up in the final, so look it’s no surprise to see that they’ve done a great job,” Bosisto said. “They have been successful over the last 12 months. Hopefully we can produce the right game of cricket on Sunday.”Head said: “We’ve got to play the best to win this sort of championship and to play against the best is what we want to do in a final. We’re always expecting to play a really good, strong team in the final if we made it. Obviously we’ve won all our games and we’re coming in confident.”These Australian Under-19 players have not been together as long as India’s have, nor have they played in as many finals, but Law said the role their “grit and determination” will play on Sunday should not be underestimated.Australia’s practice on Saturday will also be in the suburb of Thuringowa, but it won’t be at an obscure little cricket club. They’ll be at Tony Ireland Stadium, on the eve of the biggest match of their cricket careers.

Mumbai lose bearings when it matters most

An inexplicable strategic error cost Mumbai Indians the IPL final, and it will haunt them for some time

Cricinfo staff26-Apr-2010A couple of moves cost Mumbai Indians the IPL. Both were loaded with nothing but risk. The first was to send Abhishek Nayar at No. 3. If that was not a gamble, whatever Robin Singh and the rest of the think tank thought before asking Harbhajan Singh to walk in to bat next was hard to comprehend especially when Ambati Rayudu, Saurabh Tiwary, JP Duminy and Kieron Pollard, batsmen who had played a crucial role in Mumbai reaching the final, should’ve been given the preference.Even before Mumbai had won the semi-finals against Royal Challengers Bangalore, they were aware that Sachin Tendulkar, their captain and star batsman, was fighting to get fit for the ultimate game. It was only appropriate then that the management put faith in the team’s most trusted lieutenants – a responsibility carried out successfully and admirably by the pair of Rayudu and Tiwary all season. Such has been the importance of that pair that they have easily been the Indian success story of IPL 2010.On numerous occasions, both Rayudu and Tiwary had allied grit with instincts and smart strategy to put Mumbai in a winning position. They couldn’t have asked for a better teacher than Tendulkar, who deserved to win the orange cap, a belated birthday gift. Perhaps, the biggest lesson they seemed to have learnt from the master was pacing the innings.As a fresh example, refer to the semi-final against Bangalore. Mumbai had lost Tendulkar in the second over and though Nayar hung around staunchly to guard any collapse, it was Rayudu and Tiwary who pushed the opposition back and regained control before Pollard slashed ruthlessly. His 13-ball 31 allowed Mumbai ransack 77 runs in the last five overs, easily the biggest turning point in the semis. In the final, Mumbai needed the same vigour.This does not mean that Nayar, a proven allrounder, was not up for the job. But he had his limitations. He was only playing his third match of the season, having spent most of the time recuperating from a wrist injury. Though he hung around tenaciously, Nayar failed to answer to Tendulkar’s call to up the ante in the first ten overs. As a result there were a few airy swings and cheeky singles, but that did not force the issue. Ideally Nayar was suited in the lower order, a role he had managed successfully last year in South Africa.”They tried to push their big hitters down the order so that may be my left-arm spinner can’t bowl with the left-armer at the crease,” was how MS Dhoni read Mumbai’s strategy, but it was not just about big hitting. It was more about playing percentages and then picking the bad ball to get easy runs. Importantly, with Tendulkar in pain, the other guy needed to dominate.That is what Rayudu did as soon as Harbhajan went back swinging his bat wildly. Immediately, he picked the loose balls to hit over the inner circle into the wide gaps and found the ropes easily. His positive approach allowed Tendulkar, who till then appeared cagey, to free his arms. The partnership prospered fast and 27 were scored off 14 balls before Tendulkar’s punch landed in the hands of M Vijay at long-off.Though hopes still lingered with Tiwary and Pollard still to bat, Mumbai’s fightback had started late. The asking rate hovered in the ten-an-over mark which meant the following batsmen were under pressure and the margin for error was minimal. They had to accelerate from the first ball and take chances. Duminy and Tiwary failed, but Pollard nearly answered the rousing calls of the full house and threatened to pay back the (undisclosed) big purse the Ambanis had bought him for in one night. It was also an evening heavy with the uncertainty of IPL chairman Lalit Modi’s future. Pollard’s cameo seemed to lift the gloom pervading the IPL as it enlivened the atmosphere and brought cricket back to the centrestage. Except the miracle never happened, and Mumbai had to pay for their fallacy.Explaining his batting line-up for the day, Robin said Mumbai wanted to play Pollard kin the final overs when he could take on the fast bowlers. Obviously, he did not mention Pollard’s discomfort against spin and hence it was no point exposing him against Chennai’s trio of spinners. But it would have been more viable to put faith in Rayudu and Tiwary in the top order and leave the finishing role to Pollard and Nayar. It was inexplicable strategic error that will haunt the league’s richest franchise for long.

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