West Ham interested in Amine Gouiri

West Ham United are reportedly ‘very interested’ in signing OGC Nice forward Amine Gouiri this summer, according to Foot Mercato (via Sport Witness). 

The lowdown: Rise to stardom

Signed by Nice from fellow Ligue 1 outfit Lyon in 2020, Gouiri has directly contributed to 46 goals in 84 outings for his current employers.

The 22-year-old France youth international has previously been linked to Liverpool and Newcastle United but is yet to get close to making a move away from his homeland.

Now, it appears as though the Hammers have joined the admirers for Gouiri and are actively pursuing a transfer in the ongoing window…

The latest: ‘Very interested’

As per Foot Mercato, translated by SW, West Ham are ‘very interested’ in signing the 21-cap France Under 21 starlet.

However, it’s claimed that Nice have ‘other plans’ for their prized asset and a sale is ‘therefore absolutely not on the agenda’ as things stand.

The report also states that Rennes are keen on the youngster, who was labelled a ‘potential world-class talent’ by Ligue 1 expert Adam White.

The verdict: Stellar signing

Although this deal is seemingly some way off becoming a possibility, should the Hammers be able to entice Gouiri to the London Stadium and indeed convince Nice to sell, it would have to be regarded as a sensational coup for the east Londoners.

Capable of playing across the frontline, the exciting youngster would be a welcome attacking option in the Irons’ ranks, potentially to go alongside the heavily linked Napoli supremo Piotr Zielinski.

Last season, the £37.8million valued attacker – who was once praised by Kylian Mbappe no less – scored 12 times and provided ten assists in 43 appearances across all competitions, earning an impressive 7.05 Sofascore rating whilst completing 1.6 dribbles, 1.3 key passes and 40.7 touches on average per top-flight outing.

Sharing similar stylistic traits to such highly regarded forwards as Memphis Depay and Paulo Dybala (Fbref), signing Gouiri would be a superb addition to David Moyes’ squad to accompany the capture of Gianluca Scamacca and if possible, should be regarded as a must-do piece of business for GSB and Rob Newman.

Rangers don’t need to sell Glen Kamara

Former Glasgow Rangers manager Alex McLeish has dismissed the possibility of Glen Kamara leaving Ibrox this summer. 

The lowdown: Kamara in demand

Having played his part in Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s Scottish Cup-winning side last season and in the Premiership title-winning campaign in 2020/21, the 26-year-old has become hot property in Glasgow.

A recent report from the Daily Mail claimed that Turkish giants Galatasaray are the latest club to show an interest in signing the experienced Finland international.

That came after transfer expert Graeme Bailey revealed that Brighton and Hove Albion had also been keen on acquiring Kamara’s services earlier in the summer, leading to one former Ibrox boss having his say on the midfielder’s future with the Light Blues.

The latest: McLeish makes Kamara plea

Speaking to Football Insider, McLeish claimed that the Glasgow giants were no longer in a position where they needed to sell their prized assets such as the 46-cap star and has urged sporting director Ross Wilson not to blindly cash in on Kamara.

The ex-Gers manager said: “There are a lot of people out there who are still very instrumental and are putting money into Rangers.

“I have a few friends who are doing that. They are a very attractive proposition for wealthy fans, Rangers will always make money.

“These bits of business are really good. The Bassey one is a cracker. Chelsea have done that with their academy, bringing boys through and selling them. They have made a fortune doing that.

“Rangers, being in Scotland, they have to think among those lines as well.”

The verdict: Fingers crossed

Having lost one influential star in the shape of Calvin Bassey, who completed his move to Ajax this week, Van Bronckhorst cannot afford to lose many more of his most important players so close to the 2022/23 campaign.

Once dubbed a ‘Rolls Royce of a player’ by former Light Blues manager Steven Gerrard, the ex-Arsenal prospect – who was brought to Ibrox from Dundee – has amassed 158 appearances for Rangers and has become somewhat of a stalwart within the club in his three years.

Last season, Kamara Sofascore rating, he won 3.9 duels, played 1.3 key passes and averaged a 91% passing accuracy per Premiership outing.

With the 26-year-old valued at £6.75m and under contract at Ibrox until 2025 (Transfermarkt), given McLeish’s positivity around the finances and the Gers’ apparent position of strength, it would surely take an extraordinary offer in order for Wilson and co to even contemplate cashing in on Kamara at this juncture.

Leeds "pushing hard" to sign De Ketelaere

Leeds may well see the likes of Kalvin Phillips and Raphinha head through the exit door of Elland Road but they have actually enjoyed a successful summer so far.

Brenden Aaronson, Rasmus Kristensen and Marc Roca have all signed but there is further business potentially on the horizon.

What’s the word?

Leeds are currently working hard to identify replacements for Raphinha but Victor Orta does have a few aces up his sleeve.

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Talks are believed to be in play for Cody Gakpo but according to one journalist in Italy, they are now “pushing hard” to sign Charles De Ketelaere from Club Brugge in a deal that could be worth £34.5m.

The reporter Tweeted: “Leeds are pushing hard for De Ketelaere to replace Raphinha: ongoing talks with the player’s agent.

“Club Brugge ask around €40m to let him go. No progress for the attacking midfielder on AC Milan side.”

Leeds’ new jewel?

If Orta can secure a move for De Ketelaere this summer it could be one of his biggest statements in the transfer window yet.

At the age of 21, the Belgian attacker is a genuine wonderkid and has been tipped as the heir to Kevin De Bruyne in the Red Devils’ number 10 spot.

If he lives up to that tag, he will become quite the player, someone who is capable of dominating Premier League defences with some magical offensive play.

Described as a “jewel” by talent scout Jacek Kulig, he is also renowned for his “superb technique” and “intelligent movement” that makes him a nightmare for the opposition.

That was seen last term as the youngster scored a whopping 18 goals and picked up ten assists in all competitions for Club Brugge, tallies that would have seen him top the charts in each metric at Elland Road.

Raphinha will be a tough player to replace with his 11 goals – the most of any Leeds player – but De Ketelaere seems like he’d be able to do so.

Like the Brazilian, he can play out wide but he’s also an almighty presence in the middle, having played as a centre-forward and as a second striker throughout his career to date.

Jesse Marsch clearly needs more goals in his forward line and by signing the Belgian sensation, his team could explode next season; he is that good.

Sunderland must sign Robbie Brady

Sunderland won promotion back to the Championship last season and are now set to compete in the second tier for the first time since the 2017/18 campaign.

Alex Neil replaced Lee Johnson at the helm earlier this year and hit the ground running on Wearside as he led the team to glory via the play-offs.

Kristjaan Speakman and the Scottish boss will now be looking to shape the Black Cats squad in the coming weeks, with outgoings and incomings potentially taking place ahead of the 2022/23 season.

One player who may be on his way out of the club is versatile American gem Lynden Gooch. The 26-year-old is out of contract at the end of the month and is reportedly attracting interest from fellow Championship side Swansea.

Gooch played in a multitude of roles for Neil and Johnson throughout the 2021/22 campaign, featuring out wide, in central midfield and at wing-back in League One. He was able to fill in wherever he was needed and this made him a reliable option for the head coach to call upon.

However, the consistency in his performances was not always there as he averaged a solid, albeit unimpressive, SofaScore rating of 6.77 in the third tier. The dynamo failed to score a single goal but did provide six assists as he played 41 times in the league.

Whilst losing him may be a concern at this moment in time, Speakman can allay any fears that Gooch’s exit will be a blow by signing free agent Robbie Brady.

He spent the second half of last season at Bournemouth and is now set to be available on a free. Sunderland are one of the teams reportedly keen on the Irishman and he can be a big upgrade on the American heading into the 2022/23 campaign.

The £33k-per-week wizard was recently dubbed “fantastic” by Swansea boss Russell Martin and he showed glimpses of what he is capable of with an average SofaScore rating of 7.03 in six matches for the Cherries.

He has previously shown that he can be a valuable asset at Championship level and has already worked with Neil at Norwich. In the 2016/17 campaign, he averaged a score of 7.11 as he managed four goals and four assists in 22 matches for the Canaries.

The gem is capable of playing at left-back, on either wing – as a winger or wing-back – and has played in central midfield during his career.

This shows that he is as versatile as Gooch whilst also having a history of performing to a higher standard in the league above the one the American gem played in last season. Therefore, Sunderland must sign Brady as he can be a big upgrade on the 26-year-old.

AND in other news, Speakman has held SAFC talks to sign “effortless” £9m magician, he’s McGeady 2.0…

Leeds: Journalist makes Helder Costa claim

Leeds United look set to part ways with winger Helder Costa this summer, according to The Daily Mail’s Jacob Ranson.

The Lowdown: Valencia loan

Costa, who was hailed as ‘immense’ by his former Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo, made the move to Leeds back in 2019. The 28-year-old was a regular in Leeds’ title-winning campaign in the Championship and made 22 appearances during their first season back in the Premier League.

However, Marcelo Bielsa decided to send Costa out on loan to Valencia last summer after he eventually brought Dan James to Elland Road. The winger struggled massively in La Liga, failing to score and registering just two assists in 27 games.

As a result, Valencia have decided against exercising their option to make a loan move permanent, but Costa could still be on the way out of the club, along with star man Raphinha, who has been heavily linked with a move to Barcelona.

The Latest: Costa claim

Ranson shared a story for The Daily Mail late on Friday evening, looking at a forgotten player from each Premier League club.

When it came to Leeds, the journalist chose Costa, stating that ‘the Portuguese winger could be heading for the exit door or may well want to after falling out of favour at Leeds and then enduring a miserable loan spell at Valencia’.

Ranson added that Costa is set to return to Elland Road over the summer, although the club may look to move him on in order to improve their squad further.

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The Verdict: Exit needed

Costa, thought to be on £46,000-a-week, appears to have had his time in Yorkshire, and a new challenge could be best for all involved over the coming months.

He seemed surplus to requirements after James arrived, and with Jesse Marsch now in charge and looking to use inverted wingers such as new signing Brenden Aaronson, Costa may not fit into a narrower system.

Leeds would do extremely well to recoup a large percentage of the £15.93m they paid Wolves for his services, especially as his Transfermarkt valuation has plummeted from £9m to just £4.5m during his time in Spain.

In other news: ‘Quality’, ‘They aren’t waiting around…’ – News of ‘another’ Leeds move has pundit buzzing

Leeds: Aaronson transfer getting closer

Leeds United are closing in on the signing of Reb Bull Salzburg midfielder Brenden Aaronson, according to reliable journalist and MLS insider Tom Bogert. 

The lowdown: Rising star

Born in New Jersey, the 21-year-old made the grade for MLS outfit Philidelphia Union before heading to Europe in 2021.

Since arriving in Austria, the USA international has provided 28 direct goal contributions in 65 outings for Salzburg, lifting two Austrian Bundesliga titles and two Austrian Cups in the process.

Having been on the radar at Elland Road for some time, a move for the player now appears to be closer than ever to completion as Jesse Marsch gets to work in the market…

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The latest: ‘Signed & done’

Taking to Twitter on Wednesday evening, Bogert confirmed that the deal was on the brink of being completed as the 18-cap American heads to Thorp Arch.

He stated: “Sources: Brenden Aaronson has arrived in England to do his medical (tomorrow) and officially complete his $30 million transfer to Leeds United from RB Salzburg. Getting deal signed & done before Aaronson joins USMNT for friendlies against Morocco & Uruguay then Nations League.”

The verdict: Superb start

Whilst there has been much speculation about possible outgoings from the Whites squad, it’s crucial that Marsch and Victor Orta get their own incomings in order swiftly.

Holding a market value of £18m (Transfermarkt), signing Aaronson for the mooted $30m (£23.8m) fee has to be regarded as an excellent piece of business for a fully-fledged 21-year-old international talent.

During the recently completed 2021/22 campaign the attacking midfielder scored six times and provided 10 assists in 41 appearances, including five direct goal contributions as Salzburg went on a Champions League adventure through qualifying and the group stage.

Predominantly operating as a number 10, Aaronson’s imminent arrival at Elland Road may see Marsch implement a formation switch next term as the 48-year-old looks to successfully integrate his compatriot into the Premier League and guide Leeds to a more promising campaign.

In other news, Leeds are eyeing up another signing after Aaronson. Find out who it is here

Newcastle transfer news on Osimhen

Newcastle United are reportedly now readying a record offer for Victor Osimhen in the summer.

The Lowdown: Statement signing

With safety in the Premier League all but guaranteed this season, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s (KSA) Public Investment Fund (PIF) are sure to be looking for a statement signing at St. James’ Park in the summer to really kickstart the new era, much like the arrival of Bruno Guimaraes from Lyon in the January transfer window.

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Osimhen could well be that signing, having scored 17 goals with a further six assists in total over all competitions so far this season (Transfermarkt).

He is sure to be in demand by some of Europe’s top clubs, with Liverpool and Arsenal reportedly both preparing moves already, so swooping in and bringing him to Tyneside would be a big show of ambition.

The Latest: Offer readied

As per Calciomercato, the North East club are ‘especially’ interested in signing Osimhen this summer, having tried to sign him in January.

They are ‘ready’ to guarantee him a salary of between €8-9m (£6.7-£7.6m) per season, which would make him their highest-paid player, but he would cost a whopping €100m (£84.4m), a club-record transfer fee.

The Verdict: Worth the risk

Of course, spending that much money on one player presents a lot of risk, but at 23 years of age, Osimhen has the potential to become one of the world’s best in his position.

Described as ‘unplayable’ by journalist Zach Lowy, and a ‘warrior‘ by his manager Luciano Spalletti, the Nigeria international certainly has a lot of admirers, and so this will by no means be an easy deal to do.

Likened to Mo Salah in terms of his importance to Napoli compared to the Egyptian’s significance at Anfield by Serie A legend Jose Altafini, signing Osimhen would no doubt be a big coup for the Tyneside outfit, should they be able to pull it off.

In other news, find out what ‘serious’ NUFC injury concern has now emerged here!

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.

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