Newcastle must land Richarlison

The summer transfer window is now well underway and Newcastle have bolstered their squad with the signings of Matt Targett and Nick Pope.

Journalist Ben Jacobs recently told The Football Terrace that the Magpies are one of the clubs who are keen on a deal to sign Richarlison from Everton, as PIF plot a swoop for the Premier League striker.

Jacobs said: “[He is] a player that is available in the market. And there’s a few clubs currently looking at him. Newcastle United are considering a swoop as well if they don’t get Ekitike.”

However, it remains to be seen whether or not the Magpies will now firm up their interest with an offer for the £50m star, after the news that they are set to back out of a deal for the Reims attacker.

Big Saint-Maximin upgrade

It has been reported that Newcastle may look to cash in on Allan Saint-Maximin in order to bolster their squad this summer.

A number of Premier League clubs are said to be keen on the French winger, who is valued at £40m, and his head has reportedly been turned by the prospect of raking in a hefty wage increase by moving to another club.

PIF can now seal a masterstroke by selling Saint-Maximin and replacing him with Richarlison, as the Toffees talisman would be a big upgrade on the dynamic Magpies winger.

Both players are capable of playing out wide on the left or through the middle, but the former Watford man has had far more joy in the final third.

Current Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti, who worked with the Brazilian at Everton, previously lauded the player’s ability, saying: “Richarlison is a modern striker, a complete striker, because he works really hard. His physical statistics are really high, like a midfielder – but he has speed and he is really clinical in the box.

“He is fantastic with the head and clinical in front of the goalkeeper and his movement without the ball is really good.”

The 25-year-old scored 17 goals and provided eight assists, along with creating 11 ‘big chances’, in the last two Premier League campaigns combined, showing that he has the quality to make a big impact at the top of the pitch.

Meanwhile, Saint-Maximin produced just eight goals and nine assists and created 13 ‘big chances for the Magpies in that time.

This shows that they are similar in terms of how much they create chances for their team-mates, but Richarlison offers a far greater goal threat.

Therefore, Newcastle can land a big upgrade on their current number 10 by bringing in a player who can make a bigger impact in front goal in the top flight next season, with the duo’s respective statistics showing that the Toffees star is the superior player.

AND in other news, Newcastle can seal big Targett upgrade with “eye-watering” move for “class” £30m star…

Insider drops Man Utd claim over Eriksen

Manchester United fans have had their hopes boosted regarding the possible signing of Christian Eriksen.

What’s the word?

That is according to a report from Dean Jones (via GIVEMESPORT), who has claimed that the Red Devils are keen to sign “at least one player aged 30 or over”.

In his column for the website, the transfer insider stated that Erik ten Hag will issue changes in “pretty much every element of the squad”, and one of the 52-year-old’s main priorities for the new season is ensuring that there is enough experience on the pitch to help “manage difficult moments”.

As per the same report, it is said that Eriksen’s “mindset and professionalism could be key” in the early stages of the Ten Hag era.

Supporters surely buzzing

According to Transfermarkt, Manchester United’s average squad age for the 2021/22 season was 27, but with the departures of Nemanja Matic, Paul Pogba, Jesse Lingard, Edinson Cavani, Juan Mata and Lee Grant, this average is set lower somewhat signifcantly.

As such, it will mean that just Cristiano Ronaldo and Phil Jones will be the only two outfield players in the squad over the age of 29.

With the latter expected to play a bit-part role at the very most, having barely featured in recent years, it means that Ronaldo is the only senior outfield regular.

Considering the amount of talent that United have in their youth ranks, such as Alejandro Garnacho and Hannibal Mejbri, among others, an experienced asset who fits the system of a Ten Hag possession style is just the kind of signing that United need this summer.

Eriksen has been schooled at Ajax earlier in his career, and when you also consider that he can be snagged on a free transfer, the move makes even more sense from a Red Devils perspective.

Supporters will surely be buzzing over what looks a very astute prospective signing from the Old Trafford club, although this does not mean that the priority level for Frenkie de Jong should be dropped.

In other news: MUFC now plot bid for “brilliant” £22.5m-rated “freight train”, Ten Hag would love him

Crystal Palace linked with Chris Richards

Crystal Palace are eyeing an ambitious move for Bayern Munich defender Chris Richards, according to The Telegraph.

The Lowdown: Richards profiled

The 22-year-old, who has been hailed as an ‘athletic freak’ by former USA national team scout Thomas Rongen, can play anywhere across the back four.

Primarily a centre-back, Richards is valued by Transfermarkt at a career-high £6.75m. He has spent time out on loan with Hoffenheim after joining Bayern Munich from FC Dallas in 2018.

Richards has only made 10 senior appearances for Bayern and is under contract until 2025, but it looks as if Patrick Vieira has his eyes on a move for the pacey USA international.

The Latest: Palace interest in Richards

The Telegraph’s Mike McGrath shared a Palace transfer update on Monday afternoon, revealing that Lens midfielder Cheick Doucoure is the club’s priority this summer.

McGrath added that Richards has also been looked at and is an ambitious target, with a move a possibility.

The Verdict: One to watch…

It looks as if Doucoure and Sam Johnstone are primary targets for Palace early in the transfer window, although Richards is also one to keep an eye on following the update from the reliable reporter.

You can see why Vieira would want to bolster his centre-back ranks after relying heavily on Marc Guehi and Joachim Andersen during his first season at Selhurst Park.

James Tomkins and Jaroslaw Jack are out of contract at the end of June, while Nathan Ferguson has struggled to stay fit, so signing Richards could be a shrewd move.

In other news: ‘Interested…’ – Transfer insider drops big Palace claim involving ‘brilliant’ EPL supremo. 

Man City first summer exit confirmed

Fabrizio Romano has now confirmed details surrounding Pedro Porro’s transfer to Sporting CP from Manchester City.

The Lowdown: Porro’s City career

The 22-year-old joined Man City from sister-club Girona in the summer of 2019 for a reported fee of £10.8m.

However, rather than training with the Sky Blues’ first-team, the right-back was immediately loaned out to La Liga side Real Valladolid.

After spending a season in the Spanish top-flight, Porro was sent out on loan again. This time, he joined Sporting CP in Portugal, where he has remained for nearly two years.

When Sporting drew City in this year’s Champions League, the player annoyed Pep Guardiola by joking that the Spaniard didn’t even know who he is, something which drew a prickly reaction out of the boss.

He is still yet to play a single game for Manchester City.

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The Latest: Romano’s update

After a quiet announcement, Romano has confirmed that Sporting have now signed Porro on a permanent transfer from City, after triggering the £7.2m clause in the loan deal.

Taking to Twitter, Romano leaked more details, including an option for Txiki Begiristain to bring the player back for just £16.9m.

“Official, confirmed. Sporting have now signed Pedro Porro, permanent deal from Man City for €8.5m clause triggered. Contract signed until June 2025.

“Manchester City will have a buy back clause for €20m. Release clause for all the other clubs will be €45m. MCFC”

The Verdict: Good deal for both sides

The highly rated 22-year-old will be a great permanent addition to the Portuguese side.

According to FB Ref, Porro ranks in the 97th percentile for non-penalty goals as a full-back and in the 94th percentile for shots totalled, drawing praise as

Thus, this attacking threat would have fit well into Guardiola’s style of play, and perhaps with the implementation of a cheap buy-back clause, City will be able to bring Porro back to Manchester if he continues to perform well

Sporting meanwhile will have a talented player on their hands for the next few years, so this feels like a good move for both sides.

In other news: Manchester City: Kieran Maguire reveals latest twist in FFP saga

Celtic had a disaster on Vakoun Bayo

There will no doubt be some at Celtic left somewhat frustrated to see former Hoops striker Vakoun Bayo beginning to shine in his post-Parkhead career, with the Ivory Coast international having been largely on the periphery during his brief stint in Glasgow.

In truth, there is an argument to make that the explosive forward was simply not handed a chance to impress while with the Premiership club, with the Hoops no doubt potentially regretting their decision not to hand him a more prominent role.

The twice-capped Ivorian appears to have sparkled at every club other than the Old Firm outfit in his career so far, having made the switch to Scotland in January 2019 after bagging 22 goals and recording nine assists in just 32 games for Slovakian side Dunajska Streda.

Perhaps not aided by the departure of Brendan Rodgers, the 6 foot marksman went on to make just 16 outings under the management of Neil Lennon, with his only goals coming in domestic cup competitions.

In total, the “powerful” asset – as dubbed by ex-Hoops striker Chris Sutton – scored just twice in 17 appearances in all competitions during that disappointing 18-month stint, before subsequently joining Toulouse on loan in the summer of 2020.

His impressive haul of 13 goals for the French outfit ultimately sparked a £1.4m move to Belgian side Gent last summer, with Celtic losing out financially on their initial £2m investment.

A subsequent loan move to Charleroi in the winter proved particularly profitable for the centre-forward as he scored 11 goals in just 16 league appearances, showcasing what he can do when handed a consistent run of games.

That form unsurprisingly prompted attention from elsewhere and he was snapped up by English Championship side Watford in the summer transfer window, with the Hornets forking out £5m for his services as a marker of his talent.

Although it is early days in his time at the Hornets, the £2.88m-rated marksman has already caught the eye in England’s second tier with two goals in just seven games so far, scoring a stunning volley in the recent draw against Rotherham.

The 25-year-old looks set to enjoy a fine season at Vicarage Road if that early evidence is anything to go by, with those back in Glasgow perhaps scratching their heads as to why they failed to hand a proper chance to a player who now has 50 club career goals in just 126 appearances.

Rabada: Four ten-fors at 22

The fast bowler has burst into elite company less than three years after making a debut

Bharath Seervi12-Mar-2018Kagiso Rabada has been quite consistent ever since he wore the South Africa jersey. In a period of about three years, he has shown that he could end up as a great. In just 28 Tests, he has already managed four ten-wicket hauls, which is joint second-most among South Africa bowlers. He is behind only Dale Steyn who has five ten-fors in nearly three times as many Tests.ESPNcricinfo LtdRabada already has more ten-wicket hauls than many greats. The likes of Glenn McGrath, James Anderson, Courtney Walsh, Curtley Ambrose, Allan Donald and Fred Trueman took just three ten-wicket hauls each in their careers. Kapil Dev managed only two, Shaun Pollock just one and Brett Lee none. Morne Morkel hasn’t manage a ten-wicket haul in his entire career of 84 Tests.ESPNcricinfo LtdRabada is yet to turn 23 but has already achieved great heights. No bowler has picked more ten-wicket hauls than Rabada’s four before their 23rd birthday. Waqar Younis was the other to take four ten-fors before turning 23, but he had played seven Tests more than Rabada.No fast bowler has picked more wickets than Rabada since his debut, nor has anyone has managed more five-fors or ten-fors. In fact, all other fast bowlers combined have managed only three ten-wicket hauls – one each by James Anderson, Mitchell Starc and Chris Woakes.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn 28 Tests, Rabada now has 135 wickets at 21.45 and a strike rate of under 39. Among 183 bowlers to pick 100 or more wickets in Test history, only one bowler has a better bowling strike rate than Rabada. George Lohmann who picked 112 wickets at strike rate of 34.1 in 18 Tests is only one better than Rabada. Rabada will spearhead South Africa as Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel near their ends. How far is he destined to go?

Faiz Fazal – fluid strokeplay, fluid future

Faiz Fazal displayed an impressive catalogue of strokeplay on ODI debut, but the 30-year-old’s international future is by no means certain

Karthik Krishnaswamy15-Jun-20162:29

‘This is just the first step, hopefully’ – Fazal

On January 10, 2000, India played Pakistan in Brisbane, and lost a low-scoring thriller by two wickets. In their XI that day was a new wicketkeeper, Sameer Dighe. He was lbw to Shoaib Akhtar for 6, and caught Yousuf Youhana off Javagal Srinath’s bowling. Dighe was 31 years and 94 days old. He was only the ninth thirty-something to make his ODI debut for India.It took until June 15, 2016 for India to field their tenth thirty-something ODI debutant, Faiz Fazal.

‘The game itself is a great motivation’

Faiz Fazal, the opener who made his ODI debut at 30, has said he kept himself motivated by his passion for cricket even when an India cap did not seem possible. “I love the game – it’s my hobby. So, the passion, the motivation, it’s just the game. I always wanted to play for the country, that was my aim,” he told ANI. “So if this aim is lost, there would be nothing to play for.
“I was numb [laughs], and I was really happy that I got the cap. But that’s the life of a sportsman; you just need to keep working hard and then when you get the rewards you have to accept it and go there and perform.”
Fazal said it was a “dream come true” to score 55 on debut and lead India to a 3-0 sweep of the series in Harare. “Yeah, me and Rahul were communicating really well. I mean, it was not a big total, but, to be honest, the wickets are not that great over here, a little bowling friendly. So it was important to just stay there and keep batting. That’s what we did, and it’s good that we won by 10 wickets.
“I was lucky to have got my cap from him [Dhoni], and it’s a dream come true, getting a half-century for India in my first game. But this is just the first step; hopefully there will be more.”

Some teams have no hang-ups about picking late bloomers. In this millennium, nine players over 30 have made ODI debuts for Australia, five for England, nine for New Zealand, seven for Pakistan, five for South Africa, and four for West Indies. India tend not to give new caps to older players. At 30 years and 282 days, Fazal was a definite outlier when MS Dhoni handed him a blue one, numbered 214, on Wednesday morning.It was an unlikely cap in more than one respect. Unlike the rest of India’s squad, Fazal did not have an IPL contract. He hadn’t played an IPL game in more than five years. He didn’t have an un-ignorable domestic record either: a first-class average of 40.15, a List A average of 34.52 at a strike rate in the 60s – this in a land of tall batting feats.Fazal’s case for selection came from a run of consistent form in the 2015-16 season, with two memorable spikes that occurred in matches that mattered. In late January, a 100 off 112 balls for India A in the final of the 50-over Deodhar Trophy, against an India B attack containing Dhawal Kulkarni, Stuart Binny, Karn Sharma and Pawan Negi, all of whom have been in and around the national team. In early March, a fourth-innings 127, spread over seven hours, to anchor Rest of India’s successful chase of 482 against Mumbai, the Ranji Trophy champions.On May 23, the selectors named Fazal in the squad for the tour of Zimbabwe. It may have helped his case that he had made, on May 7 and 14, in the chilly climes of England’s North-East, scores of 104 and 108 in successive games for Hetton Lyons.India versus Zimbabwe at the Harare Sports Club was presumably a stiffer challenge – though perhaps not, given the home side’s performances through the series. In the third ODI, they were a somnolent 80 for 2 in 27.2 overs when a powerful hit from Vusi Sibanda, off Barinder Sran, came hurtling to the left of Fazal at mid-on. His dive couldn’t stop the boundary, but he got a finger to the ball, and a bruise to show for it. For a moment, spectators may have wondered if this blow would deny him a chance to bat on international debut.But Fazal stayed on the field, and, after Zimbabwe slipped to 123 all out, walked out, padded up and helmeted, alongside KL Rahul.India had seven overs to negotiate before the lunch break, and Fazal took a couple of overs to settle. He missed the first ball he faced, angled across him by Neville Madziva, his front leg just a touch slow getting forward. Then he looked to work the ball into the leg side, and closed his bat face a little early. The ball ran into the off side off his leading edge. The same thing happened in the fifth over, off Donald Tiripano.In and around those nervy moments, he also tucked a single off his hips and clipped three off his stumps, both times off Tiripano. Like a lot of left-hand batsmen – with Graeme Smith at one end of the aesthetic spectrum, perhaps, and Usman Khawaja at the other – Fazal seemed to favour the leg side.With eight balls remaining in that mini-session, Fazal got an off-stump half-volley from Madziva. He didn’t really stride forward – he simply leaned over the ball and met it with the full face, and it thudded away to the left of mid-off. An excellent way to pick up your first international boundary.The drives continued to flow when play resumed after the break; through cover point off Madziva, through extra cover off Tawanda Mupariwa, and then – after an interlude when Rahul overtook him with a series of boundaries – another down the ground, on the up, off Mupariwa. There was definitely more to Fazal’s game than leg-side nudges and flicks.The target was small, but there was just enough time for Fazal to demonstrate his footwork against spin – down the track to Graeme Cremer for a single to long-on, down the track once again for a straight, effortless, six, arms at full extension. There was enough time, too, to show he could put the short ball away – a hooked four, a controlled pull behind square to go from 49 to 50, and a fierce pull in front of square to bring up India’s win.Fazal had waited a long time, but he had made a definite impression when the chance finally came. Those who watched him will remember his upright, bat-up stance and his easy, fluid strokeplay. But for those who didn’t, he might go down as the answer to a quiz question: Who made his ODI debut for India at 30, scored an unbeaten half-century, and never played again?Cruel, a little premature, but a definite possibility. India next play ODIs some time in September or October, against New Zealand. When that series rolls around, they will most likely field a full-strength squad, very different to the group that is currently in Zimbabwe. Will it have room for Fazal?

The spidercam rebate

Plays of the Day from the match between Royal Challengers Bangalore and Kings XI Punjab

Arun Venugopal06-May-2015The drop-IWhen Chris Gayle is dismantling your bowling, you want to hold on to the first opportunity he offers. In the third over, bowled by Sandeep Sharma, Gayle mistimed an aerial strike, and George Bailey turned around and hared towards the ball from mid-off. But just as he neared the ball, it swerved away and Bailey’s dive wasn’t good enough. As if to rub it in, the ball trickled over the rope. A frustrated Bailey could only slam his palm into the ground.The drop- IIAxar Patel nearly had Gayle off his first delivery after he swung it towards Manan Vohra at deep square leg. But Vohra, moving to his left, clanged what was a sitter. The cameras didn’t zoom in on Bailey, but if they had they might have recorded a grimace in place of his usually pleasant smile. Surely you can’t drop Gayle twice when he is going like this?The spidercam rebateAnureet Singh’s bowling figures received an unexpected boost in the fifth over. After Gayle dispatched a short delivery over midwicket for six, Kings XI Punjab’s fielders gathered around the umpires and appeared to discuss something. The umpires then checked if the ball had struck the spidercam cables on its flight, and as it had, they signalled dead ball. Anureet made use of the second chance to bowl a yorker which Gayle could only squirt for one. Small mercy.The nod to RonaldoA Gayle century is invariably followed by a flashy celebration and it was no different this time around. He dropped his bat, leapt up and extended his arms with a roar to boot. Gayle later said he was a fan of Cristiano Ronaldo and hence wanted to celebrate like him.

Learning on the job

On his way to a central place in Australia’s batting line-up and their leadership plans for the future, Steven Smith talks about his journey so far

Daniel Brettig18-Nov-2013Eight years ago, Steven Smith sat in the principal’s office of Menai High School in Sutherland Shire, a pensive look passing across his chubby face. The source of the tension was not of the kind usually associated with high-school students finding themselves in this position. Smith had been a good and popular student, but at 17 he envisioned a future well away from the Higher School Certificate. Accompanied by his junior coach, Trent Woodhill, Smith wanted to state his intention to leave early.It was not a decision everyone approved of, including the Cricket New South Wales welfare officer present at the meeting. He made a sturdy case for not rushing Smith, allowing him to complete his schooling, and putting full-time cricket on hold to make sure he had something else to fall back on. After listening for a time, Woodhill interrupted. “No disrespect to the school,” he declared, “but Steve’s going to make $1 million a year for a good ten years of his life. He’s that good a cricketer.”Steve nodded his head and said thanks, the principal said, ‘I couldn’t agree more, he’s a good student but his mind is with his cricket, so I reckon he should give it a go, he can always chase his schooling later if need be’,” Woodhill recalls. “The welfare officer was absolutely gobsmacked and we walked out of there. We still laugh about it.”For a few of the years since then, the cricket world has laughed at Smith rather than with him, as he found himself thrust into the front rank of Australian cricketers a few summers before his time. But an education on cricket grounds rather than in classrooms seems now to be bearing fruit. His progress has not always been smooth, pockmarked by the advice of as many as 15 batting and bowling coaches, but it has now stabilised into a strong upward curve. With each match, each innings, Smith appears to be benefiting from lessons on the job.”It did help having a lot of exposure to international cricket at such a young age. That showed me what I need to do to be successful at that level,” Smith said. “I probably didn’t have what it took at that time to be successful, and being able to have that taste of it and then go back to state cricket and Australia A and try to find a way to get through those situations and tighten up my technique, it’s definitely been a benefit.”The self-reliance evident in these words has always been there, but for some time after Smith’s emergence he had to contend with the fact that his own methods were not thought correct enough to be sure of success. In the years between his departure from Menai and his first brush with Test matches in 2010-11, Smith found his batting and bowling techniques picked apart. As his junior coach, Woodhill had stressed to Smith the importance of working things out for himself. This simple maxim became more difficult to follow with each new coach Smith encountered.”I can remember certain members of the NSW youth programme saying, ‘This kid won’t progress, he’s too flashy, his technique’s not right.’ Steve’s had to battle a lot harder than people from the outside would probably realise,” Woodhill said. “He’s unorthodox, and Australians hate unorthodox cricketers. If he was an Indian cricketer right now, he’d be untouched, he’d be smoother, he’d be fluent, but in Australian cricket, from a young age people want to talk technique.”As much as he’s only 24 now and from the outside he got picked early for Australia and made his way through NSW, he’s had to fight for his technique along the way. We want to clone batsmen in Australia. Everyone wanted to bat like Greg Chappell in the 1970s and the 1980s, then everyone wanted to bat like Steve Waugh in the 1990s, then we had the power phase with Matthew Hayden, we’ve had people wanting to bat like Michael Clarke and Shane Watson.”It’s very hard in Australia if you’ve got an unorthodox technique, to find someone who can help you bring it on. They want to go to the manual, they want to get it to match up. A lot of things the Indian and Pakistani players don’t do – all they have is the game and they learn the technique from playing. That’s where we let a lot of players down, by over-coaching them.”For a time, Smith was also a victim of mistaken identity. When he first emerged as a contender for an Australian Test berth across the summer of 2009-10, it was not his batting that attracted the most attention. Four centuries were apparently of less note than his hard-spun legbreaks and blond hair. A seven-wicket cloudburst against South Australia at the SCG excited a national selection panel grasping with increasing desperation for another Shane Warne. In England, Smith debuted as the No. 1 spinner, but the most notable contribution of his first two Tests were not the legbreaks but an uproarious 77 in a losing cause against Pakistan at Headingley.

“We want to clone batsmen in Australia. Everyone wanted to bat like Greg Chappell in the 1970s and the 1980s, then everyone wanted to bat like Steve Waugh in the 1990s”Smith’s junior coach Trent Woodhill

Though Smith’s dancing feet to spinners were unveiled as he tucked into Danish Kaneria, he toured India later that year as the spin bowling back-up to Nathan Hauritz. He only made it onto the field as a substitute fielder in Mohali, when a severely underdone Doug Bollinger suffered the side strain that probably cost Australia the match. Even so, it was Smith who went closest to conjuring victory when a stiff VVS Laxman and nervy Pragyan Ojha had crept to within a few runs of their eventual one-wicket win.Six runs were still required when Mitchell Johnson and the Australian slips cordon went up vehemently for an lbw appeal against Ojha. While Billy Bowden shook his head, Smith picked up the ball on the off side and threw for the non-striker’s end, where Laxman’s runner was well out of his ground. Had the ball hit, Smith would have been a match-winning wunderkind. Instead, it missed by centimetres, and the four overthrows took India to the cusp of victory.Australia’s next sight of Smith was in mid-Ashes series, when he and Phillip Hughes were dropped into a team that was 1-0 down and considerably further behind in terms of energy and purpose. Speaking at a joint press conference with Hughes, a wide-eyed Smith said part of his commission was “to come into the side and be fun”. The guffaws of the English press in attendance would be replicated by the touring players on the field over the next three Tests, as Smith found his technique examined with forensic precision by James Anderson, Chris Tremlett and Tim Bresnan.”I probably wasn’t quite ready for it at that time,” Smith said of 2010-11, when his only half-century of the series arrived as the last rites were administered at an SCG deserted of anyone not swearing loyalty to the Barmy Army. “I’d come off some good cricket and scored some big runs on the trot in a couple of games for NSW, but looking back, I don’t think I was technically correct enough to be successful at this level.”Smith went to the subcontinent for the 2011 World Cup but could not hold down a regular place. He made inadvertent headlines when vying with Ponting for a skied catch against Canada, their gentle collision and the captain’s angry reaction beamed around the world. The moment said much about Ponting’s dissatisfaction with a team that seemed to be losing direction, but the lesson about not drifting in the field has not been lost on Smith, now that his own captaincy credentials are being spoken of by many, including Ponting.”I watch the game pretty closely and think of a few things that I’d do perhaps differently to what’s going on and throw up ideas here and there as well,” Smith said. “That’s how you learn and if you eventually get that opportunity to captain any team, you’ve already done all the work on the field to know what you need to be doing, so it keeps you alert on the field as well. I think people can start drifting. You’re out there for a long time and I think it keeps you focused on the game and ready for every ball.”Leadership was to be the area in which Smith next impressed. Named captain of the Sydney Sixers in the first edition of the Big Bash League, he guided the magenta-clad team adroitly, helped along by the wise words of the Test wicketkeeper and vice-captain Brad Haddin. Either side of the Sixers’ tournament victory, Smith showed evidence his batting had begun to mature, a greater tightness in defence allied to the earlier flair. When they faced Smith, Victoria’s Chris Rogers and Andrew McDonald were two among many older players to sense that a precocious game was starting to grow.Few have trouble picturing Smith as a captain in years to come•AFPAt length, a new selection panel began to agree. Opportunities were limited – an ODI here, a T20 there – but Smith’s place in the future again began to appear more assured. Those who had not seen him bat since the SCG Ashes Test in 2011 were gratified by the sight of a still head and a straighter defensive blade during his fleeting appearances for the national team. A call-up for India following the retirements of Ponting and Michael Hussey followed, and Smith’s runs in the final two Tests amid the chaos of “Homeworkgate” suggested a major leap had been made.The national selector John Inverarity’s intentions for Smith would appear a little muddled in subsequent months, as he was first omitted from the Ashes squad but named vice-captain of the Australia A tour that preceded the Tests. A staunch hundred against Ireland on a difficult pitch in Belfast stood out, and Smith was then included at the behest of Clarke and the coach Mickey Arthur. By the time Smith joined the rest of the squad, Arthur was gone, and Darren Lehmann installed to mentor the team.This upheaval did not detract from Smith’s progress, and runs accrued in a variety of situations and conditions, at Trent Bridge, Old Trafford and The Oval. Team-mates enjoyed Smith’s lack of ego and eagerness to learn; few have trouble picturing him as a captain in years to come. His early forays in the role with NSW in the domestic limited-overs competition were notable for their energy and insight, his collusion with offspinner Nathan Lyon particularly promising as the Blues reached the tournament final.As for his batting, the poking and prodding of 2010-11 has been replaced by something far more stable and aware. Smith’s importance to Australia’s top six for the return series was underlined by the selectors’ decision not to send him to India on ODI duty, despite his obvious affinity for the conditions. Instead they preferred that he spent time grooving his game on Australian pitches, the better to counter England’s pacemen on swifter pitches. A sequence of intelligent domestic innings was capped by a century against Victoria at the MCG. Anderson and company await.”It does help your confidence to know that you can do it against one of the best bowling attacks in the world,” Smith said of England. “I’ve taken a lot out of that tour. It was tough with the result, but I’ve certainly gained a lot of confidence out of it. I think I understand a bit more now how bowlers are trying to get me out, and where my scoring options are, and just playing the percentages a lot more.”A lot of that’s been able to come from tightening up my technique. I got rid of one bat tap I used to have as I was about to face up, and getting rid of that’s made me more stable and able to get in better positions and play, particularly fast bowling, a lot easier. I feel like I’m good to go now.”For Woodhill, Smith’s tale is vindication of the idea that cricketers should be given room to evolve for themselves. Just as he outgrew Menai High School, Smith has prospered without too many scholarly batting voices in his ear.”Steve’s got an unorthodox and very Indian technique, the way he holds the bat, his movements, and thankfully over the last two years he’s taken greater ownership of his own game,” he said. “He’s followed the lead of Michael Clarke, who has great ownership of his own batting technique and game, and he’s catching up on some lost years where others had tried to change his grip, his stance, his backswing. He’s now fluent as he’s been for a long time and that’s only going to get better.”

Australia make sacrifices to focus on Test rebuilding

A 4-0 beating by England will not go down well at home but Australia’s ODI fortunes pale in significance when set alongside the Ashes

Daniel Brettig at Old Trafford10-Jul-2012During an era in which the Test team slipped to No. 5 and the Ashes were humiliatingly lost at home, Tim Nielsen spoke with pride of retaining Australia’s No. 1 ODI ranking. Whenever he did so, Nielsen sounded rather like a sea captain happy to reach home port in a lifeboat after his ship had sunk.The final time Nielsen said it, in Sri Lanka last year, he had already paid for the Test team’s decline with his job. Apart from the former Cricket Australia chairman Jack Clarke, few in Australian cricket appeared to derive any satisfaction whatsoever from remaining No. 1 in the one-day format. Of itself, the ranking meant little, particularly when it was no longer validated by retention of the World Cup. Its value, relative to the equivalent perch in Test matches, is minor.Ten months later and the team’s heaviest ever defeat in a bilateral ODI series will cause plenty of ugly headlines and a spell of navel-gazing about how much ground has actually been gained on England since the last Ashes. Yet it is possible to conclude that this tour is less a sign of Australian cricket’s malaise than a side-effect of the national team’s more streamlined priorities. While Nielsen’s successor, Mickey Arthur, has raged against how his “submissive” team have been “bullied” by England and not shown enough “mongrel”, their 4-0 drubbing has taken place at least partly because much of the team’s focus and resources have now been funnelled more directly into the development of the Test XI.The Argus Review made patently clear that greater prominence had to be given to Test cricket, from a “premium” of payments given to Test players to the prioritising of continuity in selections and coaching appointments for Tests over ODI or Twenty20 assignments. In fact, some passages of the review suggested that ODI and T20 matches be used as a proving ground for players of the future, and the squad chosen for these five matches against England had a decidedly developmental slant.The selection panel, led by John Inverarity and including the captain, Michael Clarke, resolved last summer to use the ODI team as a way of testing the abilities of players who may then graduate to the Test team. They were chosen ahead of others who might be better suited to Australia’s ODI XI but with flaws more likely to be exposed at Test level. Earlier in the series, Inverarity stated his intention.”We made a decision six months ago that if through lack of form or retirement or injury there was a place in the team, we don’t want these blokes making their international debuts at Lord’s in a Test match, so we’ve got them going,” he said. “They’ve tasted, they’ve toured, they know the guys, and they’re familiar.”This is why a plodding batsman like Peter Forrest has been given an extended run in limited-overs games, for his deliberate approach may one day prove useful in Tests. George Bailey and the recently recalled Steve Smith are another two to find themselves in the ODI team with an eye on future contests in other formats. Perhaps the most obvious casualty of this new priority is Callum Ferguson, who is likely to be waiting quite some time to add to his 663 ODI runs at 41.43 due to a technique deemed unsuitable for five-day examinations. Cameron White’s card seems similarly marked.

“Returning the Test team to No. 1 in the world and regaining the Ashes sit well in front of the ODI rankings in the national team’s priorities”

Of the more speculative choices on tour, Bailey has fared best by a distance, rounding off his efforts with a sparky 46 from 41 balls to ensure the visitors had something to bowl at in the gloom at Old Trafford. He will follow it up by staying on for Australia A’s matches against the England Lions, and further decent scores there will go a long way to pressing his case for an Ashes tour berth. So too will his continued exhibition of leadership skills befitting the man chosen as Twenty20 captain.In the bowling attack there has been a similar sense of asset management. Three of Australia’s best-performing Test bowlers over the past year have been Peter Siddle, Ryan Harris and Nathan Lyon. Yet none have been considered for too much ODI duty in recent times, preferred as five-day weapons. It is a point of considerable contrast with England. Inverarity said earlier this year that he wanted to let Siddle loose in Tests. “He was lionhearted and wonderful [against India] and we look forward to him returning,” he said. “But he’s not in our short-term ODI plans.”Instead of showcasing Australia’s first-choice attack, limited-overs games are now also being used to re-introduce players to the national squad after injury, as has happened with Mitchell Johnson. While his role in the three formats will become clearer with time, Johnson has reacquainted himself with the team and their support staff on this trip, which will help him to be more settled next time he is chosen, even if his bowling has looked some way short of the level required.The overall standards of Australia’s cricket are now assiduously monitored by the team performance manager, Pat Howard, in concert with the selectors and coaches, and he will not be happy with the displays put on against England over the past two weeks. At times the batting, bowling and fielding has reached similar depths to those explored during the 2010-11 Ashes series, much to the mirth of English spectators in London, Durham and Manchester.Yet the difficulties encountered in England have been faced with future goals in mind, and a wider plan afoot. Returning the Test team to No. 1 in the world and regaining the Ashes sit well in front of the ODI rankings in the national team’s priorities. The next World Cup lies three years away; the next Ashes series begins a year today. Australia’s ODI team has been poor so far in 2012, but if the urn is regained in 2013 it will be considered a worthwhile sacrifice.

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