India beat Pakistan, both enter U-15 final

Karachi, July 5: India defeated Pakistan by 33 runs in a match ofacademic interest in the Asia Cup Under-15 cricket tournament at KualaLumpur on Wednesday.Both the teams qualified for July 9 final.Batting first, Indian teenagers slumped to 79 for five before reaching181 for seven from the allotted 40 overs. An unbeaten 52 bywicketkeeper-batsman Abhinav Kumar, who starred in a 83-run sixthwicket partnership with N.Chaudhary (28) was the feature of theinnings.In reply Pakistan could manage only 148 for 9. Brief scores: India181-7 in 40 overs Pakistan: 148-9 in 40 overs on Tuesday, Pakistanbeat Bangladesh team by seven wickets in its fourth pool match.After being put in to bat first, the Bangladesh could score 131 forthe loss of eight wickets in the stipulated 40 overs. Mahmoodullahtop-scored with 39 consuming 48 balls and hitting two fours. AnwarHosain scored 15. Pakistan’s paceman Talal Zia and Muhammad Azhar Alitook three wickets, each.Pakistan won the match by scoring 132 for the loss of three wickets in26.1 overs. Opener Syed Sibtain Raza remained not out at 44, consuming81 balls and hitting four boundaries. The other opener Shahid Yousufalso scored 44 but on 39 deliveries and hit one six and four fours.Mahmood Asim Butt scored 15.Mahmoodullah (Bangladesh) was declared the Man-of-the-Match.

Spurs suffer Japhet Tanganga injury blow

Tottenham manager Antonio Conte has suffered a major injury blow ahead of his team’s Premier League clash against West Ham on Sunday afternoon.

What’s the story?

A statement posted on the club’s official website revealed: “Japhet Tanganga has undergone surgery on his right knee and will be out for the remainder of the season.

“The England Under-21 international will undergo a period of recovery and is expected to return to training during the pre-season period.”

Blow for Tanganga

After making his breakthrough into the Spurs first-team squad under Jose Mourinho, things haven’t quite progressed as Tanganga may have hoped or expected.

The 22-year-old’s versatility has been one of his biggest strengths and arguably one of his biggest weaknesses too, failing to really nail down a place as either a right-sided full-back or a central defender.

Indeed, former Spurs midfielder Michael Brown had previously suggested that Tanganga’s long-term future could remain more infield, tipping him for big things.

He said of the 22-year-old: “He’s gone right-sided, he’s been in a three, he’s gone wing-back, he’s gone left-sided centre-half. It’s a wonderful position. You’re thinking would central defence be that one he’d mature in, to lead, to try and make that his own? I saw it with Phil Jagielka when I started playing with Sheffield United.

“He was a midfield player who then dropped back, like many do, into a right-back situation and we knew he had pace. As that maturity came in he slotted inside and ended up playing 40-odd games for England. It could be as he matures more he becomes that leader at central defence.”

However, this season under Conte and former boss Nuno Espirito Santo has seen Tananga play just 11 times in the Premier League, totalling 739 minutes of football in the top flight.

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His knee injury came at a time just when it seemed like he might have broken into Conte’s plans, having played the full 90 minutes against Leicester and then playing just under an hour against Chelsea.

While Spurs have coped without Tanganga for the past few weeks, the news that his season is now officially over is bound to have left Conte gutted.

AND in other news – Paratici masterclass: Spurs now eyeing 6 ft “phenomenon”, he’s perfect for Conte

UK Government hints at Zimbabwe compromise

The foreign secretary David Miliband has given the strongest hint yet that the British government does not want Zimbabwe’s planned tour of England next year to go ahead, but he left the door open for Zimbabwe to be allowed to participate in the ICC World Twenty20 later in 2009.Speaking to , Miliband said government ministers would be holding talks with the ECB about the proposed tour in mid-2009 which, at the moment, includes two Tests and three one-day internationals, although Zimbabwe have still to regain their Test status.”The situation in Zimbabwe is obviously deeply concerning. I think that bilateral cricket tours at the moment don’t send the right message about our concern,” he said. “This is something that needs to be discussed with the ECB and others.”The key word used by Milliband is bilateral. It means that while the government would ban Zimbabwe from playing a series against England, it would allow them to take part in a multi-team competition such as the ICC World Twenty20.That solution would appease the government’s well-publicised conscience on Zimbabwe and also public opinion – a poll in The Guardian at the weekend showed 93% opposed playing cricket against Zimbabwe – but would avoid the tournament being moved abroad by the ICC with resulting massive financial losses to the ECB.Miliband’s comments follow a newspaper report last week which said Gordon Brown, the prime minister, was prepared to pull the plug on the tour, although his official spokesman said it is too early to make a decision. Any ban would be the latest snub by Britain to Zimbabwe’s president Robert Mugabe.Brown stayed away from a key summit of European and African leaders last month in protest at what he said was Mugabe’s human rights abuses and responsibility for the country’s economic freefall.

England's latest cunning plan

Mal Loye, 34, could be set for his ODI debut © Getty Images

England’s 17th and 18th squad members were paraded this afternoon and in the Australian sections of the room the new figures were so anonymous there were thoughts of asking the ready-to-act security guards to uncover their identity. A deep knowledge of county scorecards will never form part of a Down Under citizenship test, but in the locals’ defence Mal Loye and Ravi Bopara would not be feted on an open-top bus tour through Manchester or Chelmsford.The size of England’s entourage has bulged again following injuries to Kevin Pietersen (cracked rib) and Michael Vaughan (hamstring), so the two men who arrived in ECB gear might well have been the overworked medical staff. But there was no vertical file of explanations or the repetitive use of “scan”, “MRI” or “replacement”.Loye, an opening batsman for Lancashire, landed in Brisbane on Wednesday night from New Zealand, where he scored 51 runs in two State Championship matches for Auckland as their overseas pro. Bopara, the Essex allrounder, joined the squad after being part of England’s back-up brigade in Perth. Both men are uncapped, but the claims of Loye for a debut at the Gabba on Friday are stronger after Vaughan’s problem flared in Hobart.Aged 34 and the owner of 214 first-class appearances, Loye has shown that like Leo Sayer it is possible to reinvent yourself for a fresh generation. He felt he was good enough to play for England five and ten years ago, but only since his move from Northamptonshire to Lancashire has he become a seriously attractive proposition.Starting as a dour, straight-bat accumulator more suited to Tests, Loye has flourished since the introduction of Twenty20 into a free spirited opener whose most eye-catching manoeuvre is dropping down to slog-sweep the new-ball bowlers. Brett Lee returns from a chest complaint at the Gabba and if he receives that sort of treatment he may use his recently cleared lungs to call for a dentist to be added to the visitors’ support staff. Unless they have one already.Loye does not know whether he will need to tone down his inventive approach with the rise in standard. “I can only take it when I’m out there,” he said. “My plan has just been to be as positive as I can through the first 15 overs at home and bat through an innings. Ultimately I’ll look to do that if I get an opportunity. My game plan may differ with certain bowlers but I can only do that when I’m out there.”Text messages during the week prepared Loye for the official announcement of his inclusion and he is on the verge of justifying a decision not to represent Ireland, which would have earned him a World Cup passage. He has Irish parents but remained true to his English roots after growing through the system from under-19 to “A” level. Named in the 30-man preliminary squad for the Caribbean, he is a couple of encouraging performances away from gaining an orthodox journey to the World Cup.The scenario is similar for Bopara, a 21-year-old top-order batsman and medium pacer. He spent six weeks with the Academy squad working on his bowling and picking up tips from Vaughan. “I do like to experiment,” Bopara said. “At my pace you’ve got to have a few things up your sleeve. Just like Paul Collingwood, who is very smart and very clever.” England have been forced into trying new things as well and are faced with more untested hypotheses just two months before the main event.

Board delays Special General Meeting for three weeks

The Special General Meeting of Zimbabwe Cricket scheduled to take place on December 1 has been postponed. It is the latest in a series of meetings delayed by the board, who have yet to hold a committee meeting following a controversial AGM almost three months ago.The SGM was called to discuss the highly-controversial move to affiliate five new provinces – Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, Matabeleland North and Matabeleland South. Opponents of the board have made it clear that they see this as little more than an exercise to give the ruling group, led by chairman Peter Chingoka, enough votes to head off a revolt by the established provinces.The unease with the move has been exacerbated by the revelations that Themba Mliswa, the chairman of Mashonaland West and a man with very limited cricketing credentials, was identified as the person who threatened Tatenda Taibu and his wife. “We have said people like Mliswa are not good for the game of cricket,” Taibu said. “It appears to me that he is so close to Chingoka that there is nothing that will be done to him.”The board statement said that some documentation had not been received in time and so the meeting had been rearranged for December 23.

Mashrafe Mortaza likely to be rested

The reward for bowling well on return from injury? Enforced rest© Getty Images

Mashrafe Mortaza, or the Norail Express as he is known in these parts, is the talk of Dhaka after his rousing comeback to Test cricket against the Indians. However, speculation is rife that he will be rested for the second Test in order to facilitate a smooth comeback to international cricket. Mortaza, who dismissed Rahul Dravid, induced several chances and was easily the pick of the bowlers, missed more than a year of international cricket after suffering a knee injury in the second Test against England at Chittagong in November last year.Dav Whatmore, the Bangladesh coach, confirmed that there was thought of resting Mortaza for the second Test against India that starts at Chittagong on December 17. “The decision to play or not to play Mashrafe will be based on the best interests of Mashrafe’s long-term return to international cricket,” he explained. “You know that we have three one-dayers one day after the next Test match, and within less than three weeks we have another two Test matches and five one-dayers against Zimbabwe. So you have to understand that there is good reason to have lot of discussion about Mashrafe in the best interest of him.”The Dail Star newspaper reported that Mortaza was set to sit out the second Test, and that Nazmul Hossain, the 17-year-old fast bowler, would make the playing XI in his place.The Bangladesh squad for the second Test will be named later on December 13.

Cakes, buses and pigeons galore

All Today’s Yesterdays – September 23 down the yearsSeptember 22 | September 241939
The birth of a dear old thing. Henry Blofeld, “Blowers” to his friends, is so well known for his exploits in the commentary box that it is often forgotten that he was an extremely talented cricketer, whose promising career at Cambridge University was ruined by a serious cycling accident. A devotee of fine wine and even finer cake, Blofeld personifies the eccentricity, charm and passion of the Test Match Special team. He once managed to hold up a series of international flights when he realised that a draft chapter of his book “The Packer Affair” had been mistaken for rubbish by cleaners in Colombo.1979
An unseemly incident took place on the second day of the second Test between India and Australia in Bangalore. Having spent the day studying the maker’s name of Dilip Vengsarkar and Gundappa Viswanath’s blades, being no-balled 11 times in six overs was too much for Rodney Hogg, who bowled a beamer, hoofed down the stumps and stormed off the field. Only the swift action of his captain Kim Hughes, who tendered an immediate apology to the umpire and persuaded Hogg to express his contrition at the end of the day, prevented further recriminations.1952
Sunil Gavaskar’s right-hand man was born. For most of his 40 Tests between 1974 and 1984, Anshuman Gaekwad was the little master’s opening partner. A dasher in his youth, the tall, bespectacled Gaekwad did a Boycott at Test level, cutting out the strokes and reinventing himself as a grinder. He blocked his way to what at the time was the slowest double-century in first-class cricket, against Pakistan at Jullundur in 1983-84, made in 652 minutes off 426 balls, but his bravest knock came on a terror track in Jamaica in 1975-76 – the match in which India’s captain Bishan Bedi refused to bat as a protest against the intimidatory West Indian bowling – where he withstood a barrage of short stuff from Michael Holding to make 81 before he was struck on the head and ended up in hospital. His father Datta Gaekwad captained India on their tour of England in 1959.1971
The birth of one of cricket’s more abrasive characters. Moin Khan may not be on too many Christmas-card lists, but he is a very handy wicketkeeper-batsman with an average just shy of 30. A dangerous lower-order hitter and expert at wresting back lost initiatives, Moin snatched victory for Pakistan in the 1992 World Cup semi-final against New Zealand with an audacious assault on Chris Harris. His three Test hundreds came in an eight-match period between 1994 and 1996, but on becoming captain for the second time his form fell away, and after losing much of his dignity as England triumphed in the Karachi gloom, he lost the captaincy to Waqar Younis and his place to Rashid Latif ahead of the 2001 tour of England.1855
The birth of the longest-serving editor of the Wisden Almanack, Sydney Pardon, who held the post between 1891 and 1925. A man with varied interests – The Times published his musings on racing, music and the theatre – it was in the course of Pardon’s editorship that Wisden established its publication as one of the key dates in the cricket calendar.1972
The Zimbabwean David Gower was born. The quintessence of the frustrating, languid left-hander, Alistair Campbell has never really done justice to his natural ability at Test level, but when on song he remains a wonderfully natural timer of the ball. He captained Zimbabwe between 1996 and 1999, but like so many others found it impossible to maintain his productivity with the bat, and after giving up the captaincy his form slowly returned. After a number of near-misses he finally made his first Test hundred in his 46th match, against India in Nagpur in 2000-01 and added another against West Indies at Bulawayo the following summer.2000
A mammoth 188 not out from Guy Whittall could not stop Zimbabwe going down to an eight-wicket defeat in the second Test against New Zealand at Harare. Whittall batted for 472 minutes and faced 429 balls, but a lower-order collapse left New Zealand chasing 72 in 18 overs, and they swept home to clinch a 2-0 series victory. In his 29th Test as captain, it was Stephen Fleming’s 12th win, surpassing Geoff Howarth’s New Zealand record of 11.1996
In the Sahara Cup decider in Toronto, Pakistan clinched a 3-2 victory over India with a comfortable 52-run win. Mushtaq Ahmed was their main man in a low-scoring game in which nobody reached 50 and only one of 19 wickets to fall went to a seamer. Mushtaq took out four of the top five and ended with 5 for 36 as India – for whom Sachin Tendulkar top-scored with a mere 23 – were brushed aside for 161.Other birthdays
1942 Dave Renneberg (Australia)
1956 Tom Hogan (Australia)
1967 Prashant Vaidya (India)

CricInfo looks back on a roller coaster year for Sri Lankan cricket

Sri Lankan cricket enjoyed a roller coaster ride in 2001. It was joyful,depressing, tense, dramatic, bizarre, frequently controversial, butultimately successful. The team started the year disastrously, but endedtriumphantly, whilst cricket administrations, personalities and televisioncompanies came and went with alacrity.

English supporters
rejoice after Nasser Hussain’s
side complete unlikely
victory

The year started in South Africa, where the team was battered and bruisedinto submission, to leave everyone in no doubt as to the huge task ahead ifSri Lanka were to prosper in the 2003 world cup.But a short one-day sojourn on New Zealand’s lush green-tops boosted thesides flagging morale, as they romped to a series win in a five gamecontest.England had already arrived for the first ever Test series between the twosides. The threat of a television blackout dominated the build-up. Cricketboard President, Thilanga Sumathipala, claimed that WSG Nimbus, who had onlyjust signed a US 27 million dollar broadcasting and marketing rights dealwith the board, were delaying payments without due reason. With typicalbravado he marched them into the Sri Lankan courts. A settlement wasthrashed out, but the relationship between WSG Nimbus and the board had beenfatally soured.England crashed to defeat in the first Test on a Galle dustbowl, in a matchmarred by poor umpiring and an inconsistent match referee, that precipitatedgrowing animousity between the two sides. No one gave England a chance ofcoming back – even Nasser Hussain, who privately contemplated hisresignation – and a series whitewash loomed.But, in Kandy, England completed a remarkable tension strewn win, thanks toanother pitiful umpiring display – this time by B.C. Cooray, who had to beescorted from the field by a police force justifiably scared for hissafety – and some flimsy batting from Sri Lanka. The momentum had turnedtowards England and, cheered on by a noisy 5000 strong army of supporters,Nasser Hussain’s team completed a series win in Colombo after anotherpathetic second innings batting display from the hosts.Sri Lanka strolled to victory in the one-day games that followed, in aseries dominated by the inauguration of an international stadium in theculture-rich dry lands of Dambulla. The state of the art stadium was hastilyconstructed from scrub in only 165 days and was full to capacity for itsvirgin ODI. It appeared a triumph for president Thilanga Sumathipala, whohad championed the ambitious project from its inception, but subsequentdisputes with contractors and problems with the lease meant that the stadiumwas put under lock and key to become an embarrassing white elephant.Next, as England flew home, the cricket board was dramatically dissolved ona constitutional technicality by the sports minister Laksmann Kiriella,amidst allegations – still unproven – of financial mismanagement. An interimcommittee, headed by Vijaya Malalsekera, was appointed to run the affairs ofthe board, along with a probe committee to look into the activities of theoutgoing board. They soon released a damning preliminary report, but thenlost credibility when Sumathipala’s team secured an injunction against themfor a less than evenhanded approach. No more was heard.

Rangiri Dambulla
International Stadium
is built in record time
only to become a
cricketing white
elephant

The team’s good one-day form continued with a second consecutive tri-serieswin in Sharjah, but poor Test match form – no series win since March 2000 -dominated the minds of the selectors, who lost faith with Aravinda de Silvaand recalled 34-year-old Hashan Tillakaratne after a prolific domesticseason with Nondescripts Cricket Club, whom he led to the Premier Leaguechampionship.Meanwhile, minister Kiriella ordered the development of fast practicepitches at Premadasa International Stadium, ironically the internationalvenue with the reputation for producing the slowest wickets in Sri Lanka.Seven months on the practice center remains unfinished.New Zealand and India, sans Sachin Tendulkar, visited Sri Lanka for anine-match tri-series in July that was interrupted by a devastatingterrorist attack on the international airport. Despite safety fears, thetournament proceeded, with Sri Lanka emerging well-deserved winners.A three-match Test series with an injury ravaged Indian side followed, inwhat proved to be a watershed moment for the side and Sanath Jayasuriya’scaptaincy. Once again, a thumping home win in Galle, on an unusually wellgrassed pitch, was proceeded by defeat in Kandy, increasingly considered abogey venue for Sri Lanka. But, in Colombo, Muralitharan put India in a spinwith a devastating eight-wicket haul on the first day before HashanTillakaratne and debutante Thilan Samaraweera went on a run spree. Sri Lankawon heavily to register their first home win for two years.The pressure lifted from the shoulders of skipper Sanath Jayasuriya andcoach Dav Whatmore, as the team started to grow more confidant by the day.Bangladesh were brushed aside with alarming ease, despite a sparkling recordbreaking century from teenage debutante Mohammad Ashraful.As the team started preparations for end of the year series against WestIndies and Zimbabwe, the interim committee enlisted the services of SouthAfrica legend Barry Richards as a specialist batting. The appointment didnot meet with universal approval, critics questioning both the high cost andthe wisdom of allowing a coach so close to a key opponent into the innersanctum of the team. But, with some exceptions, the players claimed to havebenefited from the weeklong training camp.

Muralitharan undoubtedly
the hero of the year
with 80 Test match
wickets

There were other less high profile coaching appointments, though they mayprove more significant. Roshan Mahanama, who had earlier released hisheadline grabbing autobiography ‘Retired Hurt,’ became A team coach, RuwanKalpage became the fielding coach and Pramodya Wickramasinghe an assistantbowling coach, as Champika Ramanayake took over primary responsibility for asuccessful fast bowling academy following the departure overseas of RumeshRatnayake.Meanwhile, further legal battles were brewing with the broadcasters. Theinterim committee reacted decisively to the delayed payment by WSG Nimbus ofthe minimum guarantee due before the West Indies tour. An injunction was wonin the Sri Lankan High Court and successfully defended, as WSG Nimbuspublicly and vehemently refuted allegations that the contract had beenbreached. A new rights process was hastily initiated and a memorandum ofunderstanding with newly formed Dubai-based Taj Televison was signed.Singer Sri Lanka’s six-year team sponsorship deal with the team came to anend amicably and a new lucrative deal – dubbed the marriage of Sri Lanka’sfinest exports: cricket and tea – was signed with Dilmah Tea for threeyears.Sri Lanka’s on-field fortunes dipped, as they were defeated in Sharjah by aresurgent Pakistan side, but they quickly bounced back in the Test seriesthat followed against the West Indies, whose touring plans had beenthreatened by the September 11 attacks in America and fresh elections in SriLanka – sparked, according to ruling party minister Mangala Samaraweera, byThilanga Sumathipala, who was publicly accused by the minister of helping tofund the crossover of politicians into the opposition party.West Indies were whitewashed three nil after match winning bowling effortsfrom Muttiah Muralitharan, who took 21 wickets in the first two Tests, andChaminda Vaas, who showed off a newly found confidence and ability to swervethe old ball dangerously, taking 14 wickets in the final Test in Colombo.The batsmen also prospered, with Kumar Sangakkara impressive and MahelaJayawardene serene. But the prolific performances of Tillakaratne andSamaraweera stole the limelight, as they firmed up the previously shakymiddle order. Brian Lara resisted spectacularly (688 runs in the series) buthis efforts were in vain.Sri Lanka’s confidence was snowballing. The proceeding tri-series was wonwith ease and Zimbabwe were brushed aside dismissively in the twilight ofthe year.A new government brought a new sports minister and further confusion in thecricket board. The interim committee were asked to resign, which they dulydid, and fresh elections were expected to be called. But ten days later, onthe final day of the year, the minister reappointed the committee, withslight modifications, for an unspecified period of time.Individually, it was a spectacularly successful year for the players.Muralitharan was the highest wicket in the world (80 wickets) for the secondsuccessive year, whilst Chaminda Vaas (58 wickets) also bagged a place inthe top five. Mahela Jayawardene scored 1000 runs in Test and one-daycricket, the only player in the world to do so, and Kumar Sangakkara was theseventh highest run scorer in Test cricket. Tillakaratne (136.40) andSamaraweera (140.66) topped the world Test averages.

Hashan Tillakartne
comes back into the side
after two years in the
wilderness

The team won 22 of the 34 one-games contested and eight out of the 13 Testmatches, including an unbroken run of six consecutive wins – a record for aside in the sub-continent – a two series victories.True, the opposition was weak and the majority of matches were played athome. There is no doubt also that the real barometer of the team’s currentworld stature will be their performance in England early next summer and inSouth Africa later in the year.But Sri Lanka have moved on – the players are stronger in mind, body andspirit, whilst the side has been strengthened by exciting new fast bowlingtalent, the emergence of Jayawardene and Sangakkara as truly world-classplayers, the successful recall of Tillakaratne and introduction ofSamaraweera. With a captain more at ease with the rigours of leadership anda shrewd coach working quietly but diligently in the background, the futurelooks bright.

McGrath the difference as Gloucestershire sinks

Another (overcast) day, another spectacular clatter of wickets at New Road.Even allowing for the intervention of further showers, fourteen morefigures perished today as Worcestershire and Gloucestershire’s ‘batsmen’did their best to outdo one another in seeing just how rapidly they couldfritter their innings away. As it was, though, the former lost the battlefor mediocrity and their team now holds an overall lead of 229 runs withone more second innings scalp in tact.Again it seemed that the batting calamities were no fault of the pitchalone: a view certainly shared by ECB pitch liaison officer Phil Sharpe,who will not be initiating action against the club on account of thequality or otherwise of the surface. For however lopsided the contestbetween bat and ball has become in this match, it was indeed more thecombination of some fine bowling and some equally poor strokeplay that wasresponsible. There was a suggestion too that the dull, bleak conditions inwhich the day’s play began also loomed large; a state of affairs aboutwhich Glenn McGrath was hardly complaining. He used the bowler-friendlyweather to rise to his destructive best and captured all but three wicketsin the course of a demolition job that saw Gloucestershire slidehorrendously to 87. Believeable or not after their own ineptitude of theday before, the locals had somehow seized a first innings lead of elevenruns in the process. McGrath’s rival Australian, Ian Harvey, admirablytried to stop the rot with a plucky 27 – the highest score mustered byanyone in the match until then – but even his ability to occasionallypierce a tightly set attacking field became akin to an exercise in tryingto pile up sandbags in the face of a tidal wave.McGrath was methodical, hostile and relentless. It is difficult tocomprehend the notion that he hasn’t taken a five wicket haul on thisground at any stage previously in the Championship season but then that hasprobably had as much to do as anything with the loss of substantialportions of a number of games to poor weather. In any case, his 7/29 here- the third best figures of his brilliant first class career – redressedthe situation eloquently.It did not take long for the Gloucestershire seamers to begin returning thecompliment even if their inability to make the ball lift off the pitch aseasily as McGrath allowed Worcestershire’s top and middle order slightlymore respite. Harvey (5/95) followed up with five wickets of his own onthe back of his trademark variations of pace. But Vikram Solanki found amethod of countering the apparent impossibility of occupying the crease forlong enough to make a productive contribution – by crashing his way to 41off only thirty-two deliveries – and the home team’s lead was soonbillowing beyond the positively gigantic figure of one hundred. Solanki’seffort suddenly made batting look easier, and David Leatherdale (56), SteveRhodes (50*) and Paul Pollard (20) all profited handsomely from being shownthe value of positive thinking.

Aston Villa’s 3 worst players v West Ham

Aston Villa saw their three-match winning streak ended by West Ham United on Sunday.

Andriy Yarmolenko put the Hammers in front with 20 minutes remaining at the London Stadium before Pablo Fornals doubled their lead. Jacob Ramsey’s 90th-minute effort proved to be too little, too late for Steven Gerrard’s men.

Here at The Transfer Tavern, we delve into the three worst-rated starters for the Villans as per statistical specialists SofaScore, with players required to feature for at least 45 minutes for ranking.

Matty Cash – 6.4/10

Cash has started every single Premier League game for Villa so far this season but this may go down as one of his poorer displays.

He lost possession 25 times (second among all players on the pitch, behind only West Ham’s Ben Johnson) and misplaced 13 of his 33 passes (39%). None of his crosses found a team-mate, while five of his six long balls went astray.

Furthermore, the 24-year-old was dribbled past twice during the game and lost four of the eight duels that he contested.

Calum Chambers – 6.5/10

Chambers was making his third consecutive start, but could he lose his place to Ezri Konsa off the back of this performance?

He surrendered the ball 11 times and misplaced six of the 10 long passes that he attempted, while not making any crosses. The ex-Arsenal defender won only one of his three ground duels and also committed two fouls during the match.

Douglas Luiz – 6.5/10

Luiz played 79 minutes before Gerrard brought him off to replace him with Emiliano Buendia.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


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In that time, the 23-year-old failed to complete any of his three long balls or two crosses and, like Cash, he was dribbled past on two occasions.

The Brazilian came off second best in two of his four ground duels and turned over the ball nine times overall.

In other news, Steven Gerrard is eyeing this blockbuster transfer

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