Cristiano Ronaldo, Alexis Sanchez and the eight transfer bullets Man City dodged that ended up flopping at Man Utd

City considered signing a number of players who ended up moving to Old Trafford instead – and the blue half of Manchester must be glad they did

In a parallel universe, Erling Haaland and Jack Grealish are getting fired up ahead of the upcoming derby Manchester City. Haaland followed his former coach Ole Gunnar Solskjaer from Molde to Manchester United, while Grealish moved from Aston Villa to the Red Devils in 2020.

Meanwhile, City defensive duo Harry Maguire and Victor Lindelof, wearing light blue tracksuits, are discussing how they will stop Haaland and Grealish and are preparing themselves for the volley of abuse they will receive from the Stretford End.

Maguire joined City in 2019 along with Brazilian winger Antony, while Lindelof moved to the Etihad Stadium two years earlier. Raphael Varane is on the substitutes' bench for City after recovering from a niggling injury along with veteran Alexis Sanchez.

Paul Pogba, who controversially switched from the red half of Manchester to the blue half in 2022 as a free agent, will be lining up in midfield alongside Bruno Fernandes, who chose City over United in 2019…

Ok, let's head back to reality, even if it is fun to ponder what might have been been. Because, but for a few differences of opinion between sporting directors, chairmen and agents, a number of players involved in Sunday's Manchester Derby at Old Trafford could have been lining up on the opposite side of the divide.

With City still in the hunt to repeat last year's incredible treble success while United are looking increasingly likely to miss out on the top four, many of those players may have wished they chose a different destination. And City fans will be thanking their lucky stars they avoided some of the players who ended up flopping at Old Trafford.

Ahead of Sunday's Manchester derby, GOAL runs through all the players who were on the verge of moving to City but ended up joining United instead and had a far less happy time as a consequence…

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    Alexis Sanchez

    In January 2018, with just months left on his contract at Arsenal, Sanchez faced a choice between joining two of the best coaches in the world. One option was reuniting with Pep Guardiola, who had signed him for Barcelona and who he has said "was like my dad".

    Then there was Jose Mourinho, who looked to be taking United back to the top. The Portuguese, who was already seeing his arch-rival run away with the title, could not bear the thought of another top player further strengthening City and made an appeal to Sanchez.

    "I was about to go to City," the Chilean told earlier this year. "We talked every day, he sent me messages. Suddenly the phone rings. Mourinho tells me: 'Alexis, here is the number seven shirt available for you'. I wanted to leave at that moment, but I had Guardiola's word.

    "That's when I said to myself, a Chilean footballer playing for Manchester United, something that has never happened. With the seven of Cantona, Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo and now a Chilean had it, it was a dream."

    That dream, though, quickly turned into a nightmare for everyone concerned. Sanchez later confessed that after his first training session with United, he asked his agent if he could rip up his contract and go back to Arsenal.

    The Chilean, who earned a reported £400,000 ($485,000)-per-week, never came close to replicating his form for the Gunners at United, and when the Red Devils made a miserable start to the following season, he bore the brunt of criticism.

    Sanchez left United for Inter after a miserable 18 months, scoring just five goals in 45 appearances and looking utterly devoid of confidence and verve, a shadow of the player he once was.

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    Harry Maguire

    Maguire was regarded as one of the best centre-backs in Europe after a stunning 2018 World Cup, and both City and United vied for his signature the following summer. Guardiola was an admirer and the club were ready to match the Red Devils' £70m ($85m) bid for him, but turned away when Leicester, seeing the competition breweing between the two rival clubs, raised their asking price to £80m ($97m).

    "We were interested but we could not afford him. United could," Guardiola later admitted. While Maguire had a perfect debut at Old Trafford, a 4-0 win over Chelsea, things quickly unravelled for him. He recovered his form to steer United to consecutive top-four finishes, but when the team began to fall apart under Solskjaer, he was blamed for their spiral of horrendous results, among them the 5-0 home humiliation by Liverpool.

    Erik ten Hag gave Maguire just eight league starts last season and wanted to sell him in the summer to West Ham for just £30m ($36m), but the defender refused to leave.

    Maguire has staged an impressive recovery after facing merciless ribbing from all quarters and silenced his critics. However, he has continued to be rocked by injury problems and is set to miss the derby. And City, who signed Ruben Dias in 2020 for £64m ($77m), will have few regrets about not getting the deal for Maguire over the line.

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    Paul Pogba

    Pogba's second spell at Manchester United was a long-running and painful saga that finally came to an end when his lucrative, six-year contract ran out in June 2022.

    Despite his many injury issues and the fact he had not managed to truly shine under Mourinho, Solskjaer or Ralf Rangnick, City were interested in signing him as a free agent. It was not the first time that Pogba had been linked with City, as Guardiola revealed that he had been offered the chance to sign the Frenchman in 2018 after he fell out with Mourinho, despite agent Mino Raiola calling the City boss "a coward, a dog".

    Pogba, wary of the potential backlash from United fans, opted to move back to Juventus instead. But his second coming in Turin has been a nightmare in every sense, suffering two serious injuries, being subject to blackmail, and then failing a drugs test for elevated levels of testosterone. Another bullet dodged from City's point of view.

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    Cristiano Ronaldo

    With his time at Juventus coming to a bitter end in the summer of 2021, Ronaldo was considering his next move, and City were one of the few clubs who could afford him. When word spread that the five-time Ballon d'Or winner was speaking to City, key figures from United, especially Sir Alex Ferguson, began to panic.

    "Honestly, it [moving to City] was close. They spoke a lot and Guardiola said two weeks ago that they tried hard to have me," Ronaldo told Piers Morgan during his infamous interview in December 2022. "Sir Alex Ferguson was the key. I spoke with him… He said to me that, 'It's impossible for you to come to Manchester City'. And I said 'OK, Boss'."

    Ronaldo made an immense start to his second coming, scoring twice on his debut against Newcastle and rescuing victories over Villarreal and Atalanta. But it was clear that United were a worse team as a result, as he slowed down their play and forced them to adapt their style of the past three years to suit him. Ronaldo ended the season as the team's top scorer but United registered their worst points total in 30 years in the Premier League, and his capacity to pull off escape acts slowly diminished.

    His me-first attitude had also had a negative effect on the team, and in his second campaign he stunk out the place, leaving a friendly against Rayo Vallecano at half-time and refusing to come on as a substitute before full-time against Tottenham, incurring a brief suspension. His unauthorised sit-down with Morgan embarrassed United further and there was only going to be one ending – ripping up his contract.

    City, meanwhile, won another title without a striker and then welcomed in Erling Haaland, who fired them to the treble. Yet another bullet dodged.

'I have to get cricket right'

Arjuna Ranatunga, recently appointed the chairman of Sri Lanka Cricket, talks about his plans – both for the long run and short – and the changes Sri Lankan cricket needs

Interview by Charlie Austin18-Jan-2008


Agent of change: Arjuna Ranatunga
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If you were to prioritise one aspect of Sri Lanka’s cricket that needs urgent attention and needs to be a key focus of your tenure in charge of Sri Lanka Cricket, what would that be?
Junior cricket. Our school cricket has been neglected for too long. I am not pointing fingers, I just think that that has been too much focus on the top, the national team, which has had a detrimental impact on junior cricket. There was a time, in the 1980s and even early 1990s, when a handful of cricketers, perhaps five or six, could be accommodated into the national squad straight from the school system – a school system that was the envy of the world. Sadly, this is no longer the case.What has gone wrong with school’s cricket?
I think the change to limited-overs cricket at the younger age groups – Under-13 and Under-15 – was a mistake. Even when we were 12, 13 and 14 we used to play full-day matches from 9.30am to 6pm. We’d play aggressive and positive cricket. But these days the kids play just overs cricket and learn less. In addition, coaching has become a business and winning has become too important. When I was growing up Sri Lanka had some fantastic coaches – the likes of Lionel Mendis, Bertie Wijesinghe and Nelson Mendis to name just a few – who were committed to cricket and had a huge passion. Nowadays, with a combination of pressure from school principals, Old Boy Associations and parents, all that matters is winning. Spinners are finding it tougher and players are not learning how to be creative and think on their feet. Go to a school match these days and the coach will probably be standing on the boundary edge setting the field. That approach is not conducive to developing quality cricketers.So what are you going to do about this?
Well, DS de Silva has been appointed by president Mahinda Rajapakse as a cricket advisor and we have asked him to spend four to six weeks researching the current situation. We hope he’ll be able to come up with a good solid proposal that will be discussed with a strong Cricket Committee, which is to be headed by Aravinda de Silva. We hope to have a plan for the future very soon.You have just completed the inaugural one-day Provincial Tournament, soon to be followed by the Provincial T20 and later this year a four-day competition – is this now going to become the bedrock of the domestic professional game?

Yes. We have to raise the standard of first-class cricket to bridge a growing divide between our first-class cricket and the international arena. We have the talent, no doubt about that, but our players are not developing as fast as they should be. For example, under the club system, a top batsman may be exposed to one high-class bowler in each game, but at the other end he’ll be able to pick off runs more easily. The obvious and only solution is concentrating the talent so the best players play against each other. The provincial system will achieve this. We’ve already seen this in the one-day series that finished recently. Batsmen were made to work really hard. The matches were competitive and the cricket of a much higher standard than normal club cricket. So we are looking at provincial cricket being the main competition, and the main arena for national selection. Below that we are considering the option of a district-level tier that feeds into the provinces – there are about 22 districts which could be feeding into their respective provinces. And then below this will sit the club system which will also remain a very important component of the national system.How do you anticipate the clubs taking this? It will be a radical departure from the current system and could be unpopular.
I am here to go the right job. When the president asked me to be chairman he gave me one instruction: “Get cricket right.” That is what I have to do. I will have to make tough decisions and I am ready to do that. That might make me unpopular in some quarters. But being popular is not as important as giving our cricket the right structure so that we can be a consistent global force. We need to be challenging Australia for the No. 1 position in the world.Interim and Executive Committees come and go promising to change the system and make Sri Lanka the best team in the world. Invariably, though, the status quo remains. How can you force through proper change and also safeguard those developments under future administrations?
It is too early to go into specifics, but the plan is for us to spend the next few weeks reviewing the current system. There will be lots of consultation and discussion. Crucially, our leading cricketers, from the past and present, will be at the forefront of this. Our job will be to come up with a proper plan which we will take to the sports minister. This can then become the basis of a national policy of cricket and a new constitution for Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) that will protect us from the problems that have plagued us in the past. Now is the time to get things right.

It is the cricketers that have generated the television and sponsorship revenues that are now financing SLC and it is the duty of the administration to make sure this money is spent responsibly. Cricketers need to be in charge of the cricket board with support from high caliber administrators, including financial and marketing expertise

So a feature of your administration is going to be the greater participation of the cricketers?
Absolutely. This is the key. It is the cricketers that have generated the television and sponsorship revenues that are now financing SLC and it is the duty of the administration to make sure this money is spent responsibly. Cricketers need to be in charge of the cricket board with support from high caliber administrators, including financial and marketing expertise. The cricketers are in the best position to get our cricket structures right. They have been through the system and they understand the needs of professional sportsmen. The Cricket Committee, headed by Aravinda, will have increased power to implement their policies and plans. I have ideas of my own, but it is this Cricket Committee that will shape the future of our game.Does this also mean a closer relationship being forged between the cricket board and the SL Players’ Association?
Yes, absolutely, we want the input of cricketers and we want to have a closer relationship with the SLCA. We are even looking at the possibility of them having an office within the board.Just prior to your appointment it was alleged in the media that the previous administration, headed by Jayantha Dharmadasa, extended the Ten Sports television agreement from the end of the current contract, due to expire at the end of 2008, to 2012 without a proper bidding process. What is the status of this?
The sports minister has put a stop to the deal for the time being. We now need to sit and discuss with the lawyers to find out what has happened and whether everything has been handled in a legal manner. All the documents are with the lawyers and we are awaiting their advice. It is too early to make any further comment, but it is an issue that we are addressing as a matter of importance.There was also talk of a corruption probe – is that taking place?
We want to do an independent financial and management audit and we are already speaking to leading audit firms about this. There has been 10 years of financial wastage in this cricket board and this needs to stop. We don’t have the money to waste – we have to spend our cash wisely. Thus, we feel professional expertise is required to get our financial and administration procedures right. We hope the audit can take place within a time frame of four to six weeks and that the recommendations will form part of the report or plan we forward to the sports minister.There have been several selection problems and controversies in recent times. How are you going to address this?
We do need to sort out the unpleasantness that has happened over the past year or so regarding selection. But to be honest I think a lot of this has resulted from miscommunication. With better communication we can have a much better system. We’ve already had a really constructive dialogue with the selectors. We don’t want to get directly involved in selecting teams. That is the job of the selection panel and not the cricket board, but I do feel that we need to better define their role within a national cricket policy. They need directives so we are all pushing in the same direction. For example, we need to be clear as to criteria for selection – should this be provincial or club cricket? We need to discuss and come up with a clear and open plan understood by everyone.


‘There was a time, in the 1980s and even early 1990s, when a handful of cricketers, perhaps five or six, could be accommodated into the national squad straight from the school system – a school system that was the envy of the world. Sadly, this is no longer the case’
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What are your initial thoughts on long-term development projects – is Pallakelle Stadium in Kandy going ahead and are any more big projects in the pipeline?
Yes, Pallakelle is going ahead although we have to raise the funds first. However, I also think we have enough international stadiums now. We also don’t have the money to keep spending millions on big projects. If outside investors come in, that’s fine. We can look at that, but we have to be sensible with our finances. Instead, my opinion is that our development focus should be on developing high-performance centres in each province and also a good ground and training facility in each district. These projects will be less costly and will ensure a greater number of cricketers island-wide will have access to quality facilities. It will spread opportunity and help us tap the huge talent in our outstations.In the past you have been quite outspoken about foreign coaches and critical of Sri Lanka’s failure to develop homegrown coaches. Will you be looking to develop more local coaches, physiotherapists and physical trainers?
We have top coaches and most of these are employed overseas. So this shows we have talented coaches in Sri Lanka. What I’d like to see is this talent being developed. And, in addition, we have to encourage more first-class cricketers into coaching and umpiring positions especially. We need to be able to fast-track them to make it an attractive career opportunity.In general, what are your ambitions in terms of the national team?
I want us to raise our standards to be able to compete with Australia. This is a very achievable objective if we can close the gap between domestic and international cricket. As I have said before, we have the talent here in Sri Lanka. We should be looking at the 2011 World Cup as a major priority. We have a great chance of winning that if we get things right now. That will also entail protecting some of our older players, like Murali, who I think should be playing in only major ODI tournaments in future. He is a huge asset for Sri Lanka and needs to be protected very carefully.How will your appointment change Sri Lanka’s position in terms of other nations? Will you, for example, aim to develop a close relationship with India?
We have to have a strong and close relationship with India, but we also have to have healthy relationships with the other Test nations. I think we have done pretty well in recent years in terms of attracting top teams to Sri Lanka, but I would like to see more proper tours. Two Test matches in a series is too little and we should aim for a minimum of three per series. In addition, we need to look at the A team and make sure they are playing at least one series outside Asia, one in Asia and one in Sri Lanka each year. We need them to be feeding players into the national team and that means they have to be playing more series in the likes of Australia, New Zealand and South Africa to gather more experience of different conditions.

Duncan comes to the party

We’ve observed him from afar, sat through cliché-riddled press conferences and become infuriated at his brooding demeanour. Will the real Duncan Fletcher please stand up?

Will Luke18-Nov-2007


We’ve observed him from afar, sat through cliché-riddled press conferences and become infuriated at his brooding demeanour. Would the real Duncan Fletcher please stand up?At last, in his autobiography, , he has – and how. The week preceding the book’s publication caused an understandable media furore, with revelations of Andrew Flintoff’s drinking and of the back-room decisions Fletcher was forced to make. Equally predictably, though less understandably, Fletcher was made a scapegoat for revealing these brilliantly juicy insights.Anyone who has read the anodyne (and often premature) autobiographies of sporting figures which litter the shelves won’t mind one little bit. may be slightly ill timed – no cautious forward press, here – but dull it is not.Fletcher is a man who places great emphasis on trust and loyalty, and it comes as no surprise that Steve James, his former comrade at Glamorgan and friend of many years, helped write it. Broken up into 13 chapters, the book spans his life from childhood right up to the World Cup, when he resigned.He begins with a fascinating background to his happy childhood in Zimbabwe, growing up on a farm with a protective (and revealingly, loyal) family. His five siblings – four boys and Ann – were, we are told, far more talented at sport than the young Duncan. This rivalry instilled his determination and sharpened his mental focus on his one sport, cricket.It’s the later chapters, involving his time with Glamorgan, and then as England coach, that contain the most salacious insights. His difficulties with David Graveney; his surprise when offered the England coaching job; his spat with Henry Blofeld (surprising), and the “mutual dislike” of Geoffrey Boycott (less surprising). And, of course, the Flintoff saga in Chapter 13 which is rather dramatically entitled “The Winter from Hell”.But something jars. The book lives up to its title – we are certainly given an insight into a previously mysterious man – but it has an underlying seam of bitterness and resentment which, for someone who has achieved so much, is a disappointment and a little sad. Chapters are sprinkled with insistences that the reader “must understand”; that the media twisted his words and cheated the truth; that he is right and everyone else is wrong. If he never cared about the media during his tenure, why bother now?But this is Fletcher, after all. Dogged, determined and stubborn as a mule. Forthright views are no less than we expect. He and James should be lauded for producing a book that remains interesting from cover to cover while never dodging sensitive issues from the past.

'He's been in a lot of pain' – Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta reveals Jorginho has been playing through injury as he lauds man of the match display in victory over Liverpool

After Arsenal’s win over Liverpool, Mikel Arteta was full of praise for Jorginho who he revealed has been playing through pain for some time.

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  • Arteta praises Jorginho for performance
  • Reveals midfielder playing through pain
  • Arsenal win 3-1 over Liverpool
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    After the Gunners' 3-1 win over league leaders Liverpool, Arteta praised the Italian, whose performance on the night was crucial for Arsenal leaving the Emirates with three points. The 32-year-old had not started a league game since November, and the Arsenal manager claimed that he had played through agony to aid the club while suffering from a persistent physical issue that has not been revealed by the Spaniard.

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  • WHAT ARTETA SAID

    Talking to the media after the game, Arteta said [via The Athletic]: "(He was) Unbelievable. I always say that he’s an example, a role model. He’s been in a lot of pain because he’s had an issue he’s been carrying for months. He didn’t want to stop, he’s been playing with that. He’s been training, always the first one in and the last one out.

    "For all the kids at the club, if you want to look at somebody, just look at him. He’s won everything but if you ask him not to play or play one minute last week he’s happy to go there. Ask him to play 90 minutes at that rhythm and he’s able to do that. I’m really lucky to have players like this.

    "It’s a game that I had in my mind. I was imagining how much we were going to need him. He’s a really intelligent player, his biggest quality is that he makes the people around him better. He connects everybody. I think he was man of the match."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Arsenal won convincingly at Emirates Stadium thanks to goals from Gabriel Martinelli, Leandro Trossard, and Bukayo Saka. Arsenal now sit just two points behind Premier League leaders Liverpool as a result of the outcome. With two games in hand, Manchester City trail Liverpool by five points and are the clear favourite to take the lead in the Premier League until the number of games equalises.

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR JORGINHO?

    The Italian has been touted by Arteta earlier as a key part of his system at Arsenal and will likely be in action against West Ham on Sunday, February 11.

Neymar aims dig at Kylian Mbappe as superstar looks set to follow Brazilian and Lionel Messi out of PSG with Real Madrid move

Neymar hints at a rift with former PSG team-mate Kylian Mbappe after 'liking' an Instagram post criticising the Frenchman for his decision to leave.

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  • Neymar hints at Mbappe rift
  • Brazilian star 'liked' post criticising ex-team-mate
  • Mbappe set to leave PSG in summer
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Influential Brazilian social media account Jogada Ensaiada, which has 189,000 followers on Instagram, posted a damning assessment about the nature of Mbappe's influence at PSG and the state of the squad now that he is readying to leave – potentially for Real Madrid – on a free transfer. Neymar 'liked' the post, which had the overall caption "No player should be bigger than the institution", suggesting he endorsed its content.

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  • WHAT THE SOCIAL MEDIA POST SAID

    The Jogada Ensaiada account said: "PSG, an example of football management. They knew how to bring together the best players and had the best team on the planet. When the team started to do well, the ego of a 'certain Frenchman' began to disturbed the atmosphere. Mbappe started to feel excluded, most of the team members spoke Spanish and he threatened to leave. To not lose his precious, PSG started selling those who did not were not aligned with Mbappe's thoughts and brought in the French players he wanted. After doing everything to make everything go his way, Mbappe communicated to PSG that he would leave the club for free at the end of the season. And in the end, this is what remains at PSG."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Having become the second most expensive player in history when signing for PSG permanently in 2018, behind only Neymar in the all-time list, Mbappe is running down his PSG contract. There are already reports in Spain that an agreement with Real Madrid is in place for a five-year deal that would pay €15m (£13m/$16m) to €20m (£17m/$22m), with bonuses on top. That would make him Real's highest-paid player, albeit on less money than he has been earning in Paris since his most recent new contract in 2022.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MBAPPE?

    As he prepares to leave PSG and France altogether, Mbappe has a few things he could achieve to properly cap off this chapter of his career. Both he and PSG are yet to win the Champions League but have one foot in the quarter-finals following last week's 2-0 first leg win over Real Sociedad in the last 16. Mbappe is also thought to want to represent France as a designated over-age player at this summer's Olympics on home soil. An Olympic gold medal is something that both Neymar (2016) and Lionel Messi (2008) have in their respective collections.

South Africa's natural born thriller

Mark Richardson talks to Herschelle Gibbs about betting scandals, the Test series against Australia and dropping the 1999 World Cup

17-Dec-2005


Herschelle Gibbs wants this tour of Australia to be memorable because of his batting deeds
© Getty Images

Herschelle Gibbs knows he won’t be able to slip under the radar this summer. Australian fans never let him forget his role in a betting scandal which brought down his captain Hansie Cronje, or the moment of madness when he dropped Steve Waugh at the 1999 World Cup.On his third tour of Australia, Gibbs is intent on making his name through his deeds with the bat rather than as the target of a Waugh sledge which, he believes, probably never happened. Despite the pressure he will face from fans and foes, Gibbs knows he has the natural resilience and ability to succeed on the toughest tour of all. But he believes he has yet to show his true abilities, starting with a first tour in 1998.”I wasn’t really an established player but I played in a couple of Tests and four or five one-dayers,” he tells . “We actually probably had our best and most established side at this time. Allan Donald was really quick, Polly [Shaun Pollock] was still firing at around the 140kph mark and we still had Hansie [Cronje], but for me it was very much a learning experience.”And what did he learn? “It is the toughest tour from a mental point of view,” he says. “It is just so mentally tough and draining – on and off the field. It is not just the players you play against; the media and public are very much in your face too.”In 2001, South Africa returned to Australian shores being touted as the second best team in the world. It was a series so keenly awaited that in a moment of frustration against New Zealand, who were the summer’s entrée, Glenn McGrath enquired of a batsman: “When are you lot going to bugger off so we can play a real team?”The Kiwis eventually “buggered off” and in stepped the South Africans. “We didn’t just lose; we got hammered in all three Tests,” Gibbs says. “It was such a disappointment. There was so much tension going into the first Test at Adelaide. Justin Langer described it as being like two heavyweight title fighters apprehensively waiting for the first big punch to be thrown, which I reckon was a pretty accurate description.”The first telling blow was landed and it came in the form of the tag-team duo of Langer and Matthew Hayden. “We simply got outplayed,” he says. “Langer and Hayden made merry all throughout the series and set Australia up for scores of 500 to 600 in all three Tests. We simply couldn’t get in the fight.”And his disappointment doesn’t start and end with the team’s results. “I’d come off a Man-of-the-Series performance against India so I can’t say I was short on confidence and in fact I got off to a good start with 80-odd, but after that I guess the nerves just got the better of me,” he says. “I got too up for the challenge and in the second Test when McGrath chirped me about the Hansie thing I reacted badly. It was a mistake on my part. I’ll admit to being intimidated, but that is quite a common thing for many players in Australia.”


Herschelle Gibbs, who is bounced by Glenn McGrath, admits he’s been intimidated by the Australians
© Peter J Heeger

However, Gibbs bounced back from some pretty nasty episodes to fashion a very impressive Test and ODI record. Without a doubt the nastiest episode was his six-month ban in 2000 for his part in the match-fixing scandal. “Perhaps Hansie was as much to blame for my downfall as his own, but I accept I made a mistake,” he says. “Everyone makes mistakes in their lives and their chosen careers and yes I made a big one, but I’m just glad I only got six months off and have been allowed to move on.”Boy it was hard coming back and first-up against Sri Lanka I was so nervous. I think I got a couple of ducks straight up and then in Australia in 2001 I copped a heap from the crowds. But time heals most things and even though I expect to get a little ribbing this time round, I accept it is in my past.”Also in the past is the famous dropped catch off Waugh, who reportedly told him he had just dropped the World Cup. Gibbs believes that story is more myth than legend. “If he did say it I didn’t hear it,” he says. “Maybe he made comment of it in the press conference, but I definitely didn’t hear anything on the field.”That was in limited-overs cricket and Gibbs has pretty strong views as to where that rates. “You never hail the one-day heroes,” he says. “You never really hear about one-day runs. No, it is all about Tests. The greats are measured on their tally of Test runs and averages. I’m not really bothered about my ODI average, strike-rate is perhaps more important.”When it comes to Tests there is no doubt Gibbs is aiming for a tally that will place him among the world’s greats. “I aim to score 1000 Test runs per calendar year,” he says. “If I play another five years I then should have 10,000 Test runs.”Five years is quite conservative for one of the game’s better athletes and a man who has taken over the fielding mantle of Jonty Rhodes. He takes his fitness seriously and prides himself on being in the top three when the South Africans are assessed. It is an understatement when he says: “I’m blessed with natural speed.”This summer Gibbs will have more faith in his natural ability than on the past two tours. It probably helps that his last Test innings against Australia was a century made in the final match of the home series in 2002. “It started to fall into place because I got a little more comfortable against them,” he says. “In the past they knew they could rattle me and I’d lose concentration, but I’ve played a lot more games now and this time I’m where I want to be and it is comforting to know what I’m up for as not much has changed with them.”For many Tests he had been the more flamboyant half of two successful opening partnerships; firstly with the retired Gary Kirsten and later with Graeme Smith as they began to build a record to rival the Langer-Hayden combination. Gibbs is now walking in to bat at No. 5 and while it may not be his favoured position, he has accepted the challenge. He even reckons Australia may not be the worst place to find success in the middle order.


Inside Cricket’s December issue
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“I got frustrated in the West Indies,” he says. “I’d come in with 300-odd on the board, the ball would be soft, no pace to work with and I just couldn’t play my natural game. In Oz, at least the wickets are quicker, which might help with my natural game.”So how does a natural born ball striker and opener with a terrific record find himself in the middle order? “We didn’t know what to do with AB de Villiers – he has done so well, however no one has really filled their boots at No. 5 or 6 so I’ll do it and see if can provide some solidity. I mean at the end of the day I could have said stuff the team and de Villiers would have had to bide his time, but putting the team first is more important.”It is an attitude that shows Gibbs is far from the naive kid once influenced and manipulated by Cronje. He is now a leader and along with Jacques Kallis carries the experience in the batting lineup. “This is possibly the best top six we have had for a while: inexperienced but talented,” he says. “Obviously myself and Kallis must lead by example but looking at the others they are all quite attacking. We all must play our natural games. We will definitely have a few discussions about going out and being natural.”

Jenni Hermoso says 'football continues to give her life' as Spain star appears in first press conference since Luis Rubiales World Cup non-consensual kiss controversy

Spain forward Jenni Hermoso has spoken out in a first press conference since Luis Rubiales' non-consensual kiss at the Women's World Cup.

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  • Hermoso takes press conference for Spain
  • Speaks amid ongoing Rubiales controversy
  • Forward says football "continues to give her life"
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Hermoso was involved in a scandal with the now disgraced former Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) president, after he forcefully kissed her following Spain's World Cup triumph in the summer. Hermoso has since testified in a case that will now go to trial, which also sees ex-La Roja coach Jorge Vilda implicated. And during such a trying time, the Tigres forward admits playing football has been a form of escapism.

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  • WHAT HERMOSO SAID

    Hermoso told reporters on Tuesday: "My last press conference was before the semi-final, a lot of time has passed, a lot of things. I wouldn't know what to say to this team because I'm sure that anything I say to them would be wrong. I'm happy, I feel good. Football continues to give me the life I need. I want to keep enjoying the national team, Tigres and I'm working to keep enjoying this sport. It has changed a lot of things for me. Football-wise and personally I've been able to change a lot, but it has made me a stronger girl. I'm proud of everything I've done and will continue to do. It's been a long, hard process, of understanding a lot of things, of getting to know others."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Hermoso was one of three players on the scoresheet as Spain cruised to the Nations League final with a 3-0 win against the Netherlands on Friday. On the opportunity to add to their World Cup crown in Wednesday's final against France, the Tigres forward added: "We are making a lot of history in a short time. What better for a team to feel like world champions. We have a beautiful ambition and tomorrow we have the chance to win another title. The team is getting better and better. We have a clear idea of what we want to do and the players enjoy it, they want the ball and are more aware of what they can become. Maybe that's where we've changed. Before we didn't believe in it as much as we do now. We have evolved individually and as a group we have managed to become world champions."

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR HERMOSO?

    Hermoso's words about football as a form of escapism echo her recent statements thanking the support of "thousands of players" during a testing personal situation. She will try to put that controversy behind her and do the talking on the pitch – as she did on Friday – when Spain come up against France in the Nations League final on Wednesday.

Rishabh Pant stars as India A pull off superb comeback to beat West Indies A

India overcome 110-run deficit to chase down 321 in the fourth innings courtesy half-centuries from Rishabh Pant, Karun Nair and Hanuma Vihari

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Rishabh Pant’s unbeaten 67 off 71 balls helped India A complete a stirring come-from-behind win in the second four-day Test against West Indies A in Taunton. They chased down 321 with five wickets in hand to clinch the series 1-0.While Pant saw the chase through, the foundation was laid by half-centuries from Hanuma Vihari (68) and captain Karun Nair (55) on Thursday. This allowed India A, who resumed the fourth day needing 107 to win, to rally despite losing two wickets inside the first five overs of play. Jayant Yadav, the offspinner, made 23 not out in an unbroken 100-run stand with Pant for the sixth wicket to seal the win.Two days into the contest though, India A were well behind. They were bowled out for 192 in the first innings, with left-arm seamer Raymon Reifer taking five wickets as West Indies A claimed a 110-run lead. But a sensational fightback led by India’s seamers resulted in West Indies A being bowled out for 210 in their second innings.Half-centuries from John Campbell and Jermaine Blackwood apart, there was little of note in the West Indies second innings; they lost their last nine wickets for 85. Mohammad Siraj picked up four wickets while Rajneesh Gurbani, on India A debut, finished with three. Siraj finished with match figures of 8 for 132.Chasing a huge score, India A openers R Samarth and Abhimanyu Easwaran put on 51. Then Nair, pressing for a middle order berth in India’s Test squad for England, struck eight fours in his 63-ball 55. His 136-run stand with the in-form Vihari put West Indies A on the back foot. Their wickets early on the fourth day threatened to take the game away, but Pant chose to make his mark on the tour with a responsible knock to guide the side home.India A’s final tour game is a one-off Test against England Lions from July 16, one where a number of Test specialists like M Vijay, Mohammed Shami and Wriddhiman Saha are likely to feature ahead of the first Test against England on August 1 at Edgbaston.

Man Utd issue fresh statement on Marcus Rashford following showdown talks with Erik ten Hag after Belfast clubbing controversy

Manchester United have issued a fresh statement on forward Marcus Rashford in the wake of crunch talks with manager Erik ten Hag.

  • Rashford missed Newport win
  • Has been spotted nightclubbing
  • Met with Ten Hag for talks
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Rashford was back at Manchester United on Monday for talks with Ten Hag after missing Sunday's FA Cup win over Newport County. The Red Devils said Rashford was absent from the game due to illness, but he has become embroiled in controversy after being spotted in a nightclub in Belfast and missing training. United have now issued a further update on the situation.

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    WHAT MAN UTD SAID

    The club said in a statement: “Marcus has taken responsibility for his actions. This has been dealt with as an internal disciplinary matter, which is now closed."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Manager Erik ten Hag has history of exiling players who do not fit in with his methods, or who misbehave outside of the club, with Jadon Sancho one such example. He claimed the United boss had made him a "scapegoat" and thereafter, refused to apologise. He was subsequently loaned to Borussia Dortmund.

    By comparison, Rashford is back in training and is available for selection against Wolves on Thursday.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    United take on Wolves looking to bounce back from a loss to Nottingham Forest and a draw with Tottenham in the Premier League. They were last in action against Newport County, winning 4-2 in the FA Cup.

Inter Miami urged to provide 'reasonable explanations' why Lionel Messi was able to play against Vissel Kobe by Hong Kong government as tour controversy continues

The Hong Kong government has asked for explanations from Inter Miami as to why Lionel Messi was able to play against Vissel Kobe.

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  • Messi and Miami asked for explanation
  • Argentine missed Hong Kong match
  • Played three days later against Vissel Kobe
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Inter Miami's pre-season tour of Asia has has been mired in controversy after their Argentine superstar failed to appear for a friendly match against Hong Kong XI due to an injury, despite having a contractual obligation to do so. However, the Herons have now been asked for a 'reasonable explanation' for his absence after the eight-time Ballon d'Or winner appeared just days later in a friendly against Japanese side Vissel Kobe in Tokyo.

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  • WHAT THEY SAID

    The Culture, Sports, and Tourism Bureau of Hong Kong expressed their disappointment at Messi's nability to play in the city and questioned his involvement against Vissel Kobe in a statement: "However three days later, Messi was able to play actively and freely in Japan … the government hopes the organisers and teams can provide reasonable explanations."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Over 40,000 people attended the match in Hong Kong, with some supporters spending close to HK$5,000 ($640) for a ticket. The Consumer Council of Hong Kong stated it had received 547 complaints on Messi's absence, involving a total of HK$3.64 million (US$465,466), according to the Chinese state-run Global Times. Fans in China admitted to feeling a "bit scammed" after missing out on seeing the World Cup winner.

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR INTER MIAMI?

    The Herons have had a rather poor pre-season so far with just one win in six games. They started with a draw against El Salvador, followed by losses against Dallas, Al-Hilal and Al-Nassr before the win against Hong Kong followed by the shootout loss against Vissel Kobe. They will play their last friendly against Messi's former side, Newell's Old Boys before starting their MLS campaign against Real Salt Lake on February 21.

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