Oman's slinger, made in India

He was briefly on India’s radar a decade ago, but it took a move to Oman to earn a living for Munis Ansari to rise to the world stage

Sidharth Monga in Dharamsala12-Mar-2016It is November 26, 2005. India have just reached Mumbai after losing to South Africa on a green seamer in Kolkata, and having been booed by the partisan crowd upset at the exclusion of Sourav Ganguly. It is the time when Rahul Dravid is believed to have said it feels good coming back to India. Coach Greg Chappell comes to know the regional winners of Scorpio Speedster, a pace bowling talent hunt, are in Mumbai for their final round, which is being judged by Wasim Akram and Ajay Jadeja. Chappell calls them up for the nets. Harbhajan Singh draws his attention to a bowler with a slingy action, who is deceptively quick. They make a mental note.Next month Sri Lanka are in town. They have a young slingy bowler in their side who is a bit of an unknown quantity. India call that slinger from that talent hunt to bowl in the nets, to help them prepare against Lasith Malinga. Harbhajan is impressed, Chappell is impressed, selector Kiran More is impressed. They ask him where he is from. He says Sehore, a small town near Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh. They ask him why he is not playing first-class cricket, and he has no clue why. They put in a word with MP, but nothing comes of it.Regardless, the national management gets him selected for Cricket Club of India XI for a three-day match against the touring England side. The slinger takes out Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, and feels he might even be able to bypass the wall he has hit in his home state. For England’s next practice match, a proper first-class game against Board President’s XI, India try another quick out of nowhere. This one, Munaf Patel, takes 10 wickets in the match and, in his third season as a first-class player, debuts for India.Our slinger goes back to his home state, fighting the selectors there. His father is retired, his brother is the sole bread winner in the family, and he himself is 22-23 years old, a time when you have to start earning, especially if you come from a family of limited means. As he gets more and more desperate, a cricketer five-six years older than him, who is working in Oman, calls him up and asks him about his prospects. He says they look bleak, and is told there is a job waiting for him in Oman, where he has to work two-three hours a day and can play cricket for that company in the local leagues.So our slinger moves to Oman to work for shipping giants Khimji Ramdas for Rs40,000 (US$600) a month, which in 2009 for an unemployed man in his mid-20s, with no degree in hand, with a family that has started to ask him to earn, is a life-altering decision. But he keeps staying fit – half an hour of sprint and an hour in the gym everyday – and keeps playing cricket, slinging balls at the toes. Four years later he has served the qualification period and leads Oman’s charge towards the World T20 qualifiers in Ireland and Scotland. There he is the leading bowler for his side, and plays a big part in bringing Oman to the World T20 India 2016.

“I didn’t have family. I didn’t have friends. Coming back to an empty flat. Who’s there to check on you if you are unwell?”

Now he is called the “Omani Malinga” but Munis Ansari didn’t know Malinga existed until 2005. This is a perfectly natural action brought about by similar needs as those of Malinga: to hurl a tennis ball fast. His take on leaving India for Oman is pretty philosophical: ” [when you don’t get anything at home, you have to leave].” The sad part is, he was obviously a promising bowler, on the peripheries of the state team, but he doesn’t know of any attempts made by his state selectors to look for him when he disappeared from a camp of the Bhopal division team, one step below first-class cricket. “I have had no contact with them ever since I left,” he says, “but some people, when they see where I am now, make excuses.”Life for an Indian migrant worker in the gulf is strange. He makes more money than in India, but he also works harder, and mostly everybody’s aim is to save as much as they can to be able to provide for those back home and retire peacefully in India. For Ansari, though, work wasn’t hard, there was cricket, and soon enough he realised he could play for Oman. Still he missed home. “I didn’t have family,” he says. “I didn’t have friends. Coming back to an empty flat. Who’s there to check on you if you are unwell?”Ansari can’t forget the support he received from his brother, several years older and an employee in the government’s education department, when the family was after him to pull his weight. “He said, ‘Munis is only playing cricket, not doing something wrong.'” When Ansari brought home Rs10,000 (US$150) through Scorpio Speedster, the family realised there was potential, and started to support his choices. Still, going to Oman, knowing he was giving up four years of his cricket career, was a big risk, which he took on his own. Now having his brother up in Dharamsala to watch him take two crucial wickets and bowling tightly at the death in a close win over Ireland makes it all worth it.Even the original slinger has taken note. During the recently concluded Asia Cup, Oman’s coaches, Duleep Mendis and Rumesh Ratnayake, arranged a meeting. A generous Malinga gave him valuable tips. How to read what a batsman is trying to do. More importantly, to go with the yorkers, how to bowl the slower ball. Complete the action as if bowling really fast, but remove the thumb. Let the ball sit between two fingers and the ring finger, and don’t let the thumb touch it on the release. “The batsman thinks it is coming straight at his face, but it dips on his toes.”Ansari bowled Kevin O’Brien with the slower ball in their first match in this World T20, but he knows it was a normal slower ball, not the lethal Malinga slower ball, which behaves like it has been punctured mid-flight. Malinga has shown him how to perfect it, though. Bowl 15-16 such balls in every nets session. People around will laugh at you. At first it will land on top of the nets, into the side netting, all over the place, but there will be a day when you will get it right. Malinga took a year and a half.The problem with time, though, is Ansari doesn’t know whom he will be playing against next year. The next world opportunity will come in four years because the World T20 has now become a four-yearly event. That makes the game against Bangladesh, a straight shootout for a spot in the tournament proper, a massively important one. “Who has seen four years?” Ansari says. “I have to play this here as if my last game.”

Worth more than Bruno: Man Utd star could soon be a "Ballon d'Or candidate"

da casino: Chelsea left Old Trafford with no points for their Premier League tally and a sense of frustration after being defeated by a Manchester United side who have fallen by the wayside under Ruben Amorim.

da prosport bet: Not quite, actually. United played with coherence and tenacity against the Blues, even if Robert Sanchez was dismissed in the opening stages and then the Red Devils came together to rise two goals to the good.

That was not a team who played as if they were directionless and lost under their Portuguese tactician with his controversial formation. Could it be coming together? Time will tell, and consistency must be the order of the day if the Premier League giants truly wish to enter the ascendancy once again.

If this is truly going to be the case, and Man United are going to succeed under Amorim and challenge for silverware of the highest level once again, as is their due, then Bruno Fernandes is essential to reaching lofty goals.

Fernandes continues to inspire

Hardly a revelatory statement. Fernandes has been Manchester United’s talisman supreme right from the moment he shook Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s hand and signed for the club in an initial £47m deal.

The Portuguese Magnifico has been a pillar of strength throughout the turbulent river of a journey over the past five years, and against Chelsea, he scored his 100th goal for the club on his 200th Premier League appearance.

Operating in a different, deeper role than has been the norm this season to accommodate Amorim’s 3-4-2-1 system. It’s been somewhat rocky, but the 31-year-old continues to inspire and he has since been singled out by podcaster Adam Joseph for being a “truly special player” with a “remarkable” ability to maintain his fitness and form and presence as a leader.

To think that the captain came close to leaving his ship this summer, having been offered a lucrative package to leave Europe and forge a new career over in the Saudi Pro League.

Ultimately, Bruno opted to stay – a further illustration of his commitment to putting this club back on their perch. However, he can’t do it alone, and while Amorim and INEOS have completed a series of exciting summer signings, there’s an existing member of the squad who has the potential to step up and become a leader in his own right over the coming years.

Man Utd's future talisman

Fernandes isn’t quite a veteran of the game, but having turned 31, he’s certainly one of the most experienced superstars in the Premier League.

On the other end of the spectrum at Manchester United is Amad Diallo, whose breakout year in red last season has put his name on the map.

Signed from Atalanta for a £19m fee as a teenager in January 2021, the versatile winger had completed a series of loan spells before coming into his own last year, scoring 11 goals and assisting ten more across 41 matches in all competitions. His performances led journalist James Copley to hail him as a “wizard” when on the ball.

The six-cap Ivory Coast international has much still to learn, but he provided the Red Devils with a different attacking dimension last year, offering a focal point from across the wide positions.

Amad Diallo – Career Stats by Position

Position

Apps

Goals (assists)

Right winger

128

42 (35)

Attacking midfield

33

10 (3)

Centre-forward

22

9 (1)

Left winger

20

9 (4)

Data via Transfermarkt

He might not be on Fernandes’ level yet, but he can surely reach such a position with careful work over the coming campaigns, recorded by data-led platform FBref to rank among the top 4% of attacking midfielders and wingers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for pass completion, the top 19% for shot-creating actions, the top 13% for progressive carries, the top 6% for ball recoveries and the top 5% for tackles won per 90.

FBref also note that Amad’s most statistically comparable players are Paris Saint-Germain’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, as well as Marcus Rashford, who needs no introduction.

It was the 23-year-old who kept his composure to strike a vicious blow on an unforgettable occasion in last season’s Manchester derby. No such luck this year, but he did play an important role in claiming all three points against Chelsea, nestled behind Benjamin Sesko in the first half, alongside Bryan Mbeumo.

His continuing rise can be examined through his market valuation, which in recent years has skyrocketed up to something in the ballpark of £46m, data provided by Football Transfers. That’s over double the fee United first paid for him, so it seems they got this deal right.

As a reference point, Football Transfers also note that Fernandes is worth around £41m, which isn’t a fair reflection of his actual worth within the United squad nor indeed what Saudi suitors were willing to pay during the summer transfer window.

But, in any case, Fernandes no longer carries the same staggering price tag as he once did, having passed the barrier of his twenties over a year ago now.

Amad, eight years his junior, showed signs of a certain quality that would allow him to take the skipper’s proverbial place when the fateful day of his departure does arrive, having even been singled out as a “candidate for the Ballon d’Or” in the future by former Fiorentina goalkeeper Giovanni Galli in the past.

Tonight’s ceremony will not include the Ivorian’s name, but if Man United manage to rise to the fore once again, and Amad maintains a presence as one of the club’s biggest stars, he might just make good on such one-time praise in the coming years.

Earns as much as Mbeumo: Man Utd must sell star who's "nowhere near it"

Manchester United still need to make a series of changes in the forthcoming transfer markets.

ByAngus Sinclair Sep 19, 2025

Chelsea now dealt Xavi Simons worry as club threaten dramatic late hijack

Chelsea are in advanced talks over a deal for RB Leipzig starlet Xavi Simons, as has been the case for some time, but they may not have it all their own way.

Negotiations are far down the line for his signature, as widely reported, but Fabrizio Romano says that Chelsea are still attempting to make sales before pressing forward with a deal for the Dutchman.

Chelsea’s best performers in the Premier League last season

Average match rating

Cole Palmer

7.33

Moises Caicedo

7.02

Enzo Fernández

6.95

Nicolas Jackson

6.88

Noni Madueke

6.82

via WhoScored

“Chelsea remain in talks with RB Leipzig and Xavi Simons wants to go there,” said Romano on his YouTube channel around two days ago.

“There are advanced talks, but at the moment, there’s been no breakthrough. Why?

“It’s not been done for two reasons. The first one is that RB Leipzig are completely focused on the Sesko deal. So they’ll resolve that and then clarify Xavi Simons. Secondly, Chelsea are working on the outgoings. I told you that the contract and salary are almost agreed, but we have to wait for official statements for Armando Broja, Lesley Ugochukwu, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and all the rest.

“Then there’s the conversation on the price between the two clubs, which is something absolutely important.”

Despite some reports in the last 48 hours claiming that Chelsea have reached a ‘total agreement’ for Simons, it appears there is still some work to do for the 22-year-old’s signature.

The former PSG playmaker is determined to join Chelsea, though, and has removed Leipzig from his Instagram bio in a clear hint that Simons has his eyes on a move to Stamford Bridge.

However, as per Chelsea journalist Simon Phillips, a mystery club is now threatening to derail their pursuit of the Bundesliga sensation.

Mystery club threaten Chelsea hijack for Xavi Simons

Writing via his Substack live blog [16:38, Thursday], an unnamed side have now come in for Simons, and this could ‘complicate things’, or at the very least force Chelsea to up the ante.

“SPTC Sources have heard that another ‘unnamed club’ has now come in for Xavi Simons,” wrote Phillips.

“Source states it could ‘complicate things’ or it could ‘speed Chelsea up’.

“Simons has agreed personal terms with Chelsea and is and has always been waiting for the move to us, but I’m not sure it’s been a Chelsea or nothing attitude so this would concern me.

“Let’s just hope it speeds us up to agree a fee.”

Sky Sports reporter Kaveh Solhekol states that the Blues want to agree a deal for Simons below the £50 million mark.

Given Tottenham’s glaring need for a number 10 after James Maddison’s serious knee injury, we speculate that Thomas Frank’s side may well be the mystery club here.

After all, they were ready to spend £60 million on Nottingham Forest star Morgan Gibbs-White just last month before Evangelos Marinakis blocked the move, so Daniel Levy is quite clearly prepared to splash the cash on a new attacking midfielder.

Now worth more than Ekitike: Liverpool have hit gold on Klopp "superstar"

Liverpool might have ‘won’ the transfer window, but so often Premier League sides have flattered to deceive after spending liberally across the summer months.

In fairness, Liverpool lost the Community Shield against Crystal Palace last month and looked shaky in defence across their opening couple of fixtures. Florian Wirtz, £116m signing from Bayer Leverkusen, has yet to come alive.

That’s one way of looking at it. There’s also the fact that the top-flight champions have claimed nine points from nine to head into the international break at the summit, with Hugo Ekitike having scored three goals and supplied an assist across his first four appearances in Red.

Liverpool ended their incredible summer window with the record-breaking signing of Alexander Isak, who joins from Newcastle United on a £125m deal. However, some might feel that Ekitike might have already nailed down a starting berth, with three goals and an assist from four appearances.

He’s not the finished article, but Liverpool saw a chance to sign the burgeoning French forward and acted, with the view that he could soon become one of the very best in the business.

Why Liverpool signed Hugo Ekitike

After playing so confidently as Eintracht Frankfurt’s senior striker last season, talent scout Jacek Kulig remarked that Ekitike “could definitely reach world-class striker levels”.

Many feel that the jump from a division like the Bundesliga to the Premier League can be a step too far for some talented young players, but Ekitike is not part of that crowd and has indeed been one of Liverpool’s best players so far this season, scoring three goals and supplying one assist across his first four matches.

His fast start shouldn’t detract from the fact that the 23-year-old Ekitike is a work in progress, with his performance against Arsenal last weekend leaving much to be desired, failing to take a shot, blowing both attempted dribbles, completing two passes and losing six of eight contested duels, as per Sofascore.

Hugo Ekitike celebrates for Liverpool

Still, Isak’s going to have his work cut out on Merseyside this season, battling for a starting spot with this rising France striker.

Players like Isak and Wirtz are almost outliers in Liverpool’s transfer strategy, both having arrived on record-breaking deals this summer. There lies the truth of Liverpool’s new position of strength at the top of the food chain.

But Ekitike, though arriving for a hefty figure, has several years of development to undertake before he reaches the refined level of someone like Isak.

Liverpool saw an opportunity and they snatched at it. As is FSG’s way. Just look at the transformational signing of Alexis Mac Allister from Brighton & Hove Albion two years ago.

Liverpool struck gold with Alexis Mac Allister

Admittedly, Liverpool forked out a far prettier penny for Ekitike, wowing the Premier League when landing World Cup hero Mac Allister from Brighton for just £35m.

Jurgen Klopp oversaw the move, shipping off some of Liverpool’s long-standing midfielders in a clearout which sparked this new wave of success, Slot taking the wheel.

And while Dominik Szoboszlai, Ryan Gravenberch and Wataru Endo have all played roles of differing, yet noteworthy, importance, none have exuded Mac Allister’s control, composure and quality across the full span of their time on Merseyside.

The Argentina international’s first Premier League term with the Reds, he stabilised the ship. Then, after a change in management, the £150k-per-week talent played a talismanic part in winning the top-flight title, so authoritative and dynamic in the middle of the park.

Matches (starts)

33 (31)

35 (30)

Goals

5

5

Assists

5

5

Touches*

74.2

55.8

Pass completion

88%

87%

Big chances created

3

6

Key passes*

1.4

1.3

Dribbles*

0.5

0.5

Ball recoveries*

5.9

4.2

Tackles + interceptions*

4.1

3.3

Ground duels (won)*

5.0 (50%)

4.3 (50%)

Shifting between midfield berths was never going to pose a problem for the South American, whose technical qualities and athleticism lend themselves to different roles. Pundit Joe Cole took note of this, remarking that the “superstar” is adept enough to “play anywhere” he is tasked to perform.

He might not be positionally comparable to Mac Allister, but Ekitike might be required to occupy various positions in a similar way, jockeying for a place with Isak at the front of the Liverpool ship.

Arne Slot and Alexis Mac Allister for Liverpool

However, his early foray into life in Red certainly suggests that Ekitike has both the talent levels and the adaptability to thrive under Slot’s leadership, as has been the case for Mac Allister over his two differing years at the club.

Renowned for his shooting ability and maestro-like vision in the middle of the pitch, Mac Allister has also been one of the division’s consistent tacklers over his time at Liverpool, finishing sixth with 94 won last season and sixth with 98 during the 2023/24 season.

Is it any surprise that the former Seagull’s market value will have risen exponentially over these past few years? Indeed, according to Football Transfers, the 26-year-old is worth a jaw-dropping £116m fee right now, bearing testament to his progress across the past several seasons.

In fact, not only is Mac Allister worth a lot more than Ekitike, who might be hoped to follow a similar path, but the difference in value between Mac Allister’s £35m signing and his current worth exceeds the entire sum Liverpool paid Frankfurt for their Les Bleus forward just over one month ago.

That goes to show that Mac Allister made the right decision in furthering his career at Liverpool, and that Ekitike too could find himself falling into a similar ballpark, especially after his promising start to life in Red.

For now, though, Mac Allister is the man with the shiny price tag, having quietly put himself alongside the cream of Liverpool’s crop, those such as Isak and Wirtz.

Forget Leoni: Liverpool have a homegrown Guehi in 18-year-old "Rolls-Royce"

Liverpool may have to look inwards after missing out on signing Marc Guehi on deadline day.

1 ByAngus Sinclair Sep 2, 2025

جمال عبد الحميد بعد بيان الزمالك عن الأخطاء التحكيمية: "اضرب المربوط يخاف السايب"

علق جمال عبد الحميد لاعب الزمالك السابق، على بيان القلعة البيضاء المرسل إلى اتحاد الكرة المصري، بشأن الأخطاء التحكيمية التي شهدتها مباريات بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز، للموسم الحالي 2024-2025.

وكان مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك، برئاسة حسين لبيب، قد طالب اتحاد الكرة المصري بشكل رسمي الثلاثاء، بوجود خبير تحكيم أجنبي يتولى رئاسة لجنة الحكام.

كما نوه نادي الزمالك في بيانه إلى أن الأخطاء التحكيمية التي شهدتها مباريات الدوري الممتاز رأت العديد من الأندية أنها متعمدة لصالح نادي واحد حصل على العديد من النقاط غير المستحقة.

طالع | “أخطاء موجهة لناد واحد”.. الزمالك يقدم 3 طلبات لاتحاد الكرة بشأن التحكيم ويهدد بالتصعيد

وقال عبد الحميد خلال تصريحات عبر قناة “الشمس”: “أنا كمصري أريد أن المركب تمشي، لا أريد بلبلة في الكرة المصرية، الزمالك في بيانه الأول عندما رفض أن حكمًا معينًا لا يدير مبارياته، ثم تولى الحكم المباريات بشكل طبيعي، هذا الأمر سهل على أي مسؤول في اتحاد الكرة إنه يعتبر إن بيانات الزمالك أمر عادي”.

وأضاف: “لكن لو كان الزمالك أصر على مطالبه، لم يكن سيصدر بيانه الذي صدر اليوم”.

وتابع: “الخبراء الأجانب السابقين في لجنة الحكام لم يكونوا عادلين، حكام كانت تُخطئ ويديرون مباريات بعد ذلك”.

وواصل: “نريد خبيرًا أجنبيًا محايدًا، لأننا كنا ندفع عملة صعبة على الفاضي، نريد خبيرًا على مستوى عالي وتتم مراقبته، ولا يذهب لعزومات ولا مناسبات، يكون عمله في اتحاد الكرة فقط، وأن تكون هناك محاسبة للحكم الذي يُخطئ، ويكون مُعلنًا من أجل أن يتعظ الباقي، (اضرب المربوط يخاف السايب)”.

وأتم: “إذا حدث ذلك سيكون كل الحكام عادلين، لا أشكك فيهم، لكن هم يخشون من السوشيال ميديا ومن النادي القوي”.

Five-day gratification

How and why do we watch Test cricket in an age when time is measured in seconds and countless gadgets demand our attention?

Wright Thompson18-Jan-2012LONDON – After the torture of eight disconnected hours, the plane lands at Heathrow. We’re still rolling when I turn on both phones, hitting refresh on my email, burning at the twirling wheel. Effing phone and its thinking. The messages finally arrive but won’t load. I curse all the way to passport control, trying not to run into people as I scan emails and texts. Immigration officer No. 1268 waves me down to the right.”Why are you here?” she asks.”The Test match between England and India,” I answer.”When does it start?””Tomorrow.””When does it end?””Monday.””Why does it last so long?””I don’t know,” I tell her honestly. “It just does.”

****

ESPN covets the international sports market, so The Boss dispatched me overseas for a cricket match between India and England. This made sense, as I’d recently covered the cricket World Cup in the subcontinent. I knew the rules and knew that a Test match was the original and purest form of cricket, a game that can go on for five days. Forty hours. I thought the same thing any sane person would think: how can a sporting event that lasts five days possibly still exist?There was also a personal aspect of that question: how was I going to pay attention to a game that lasts five days? I’m a typically over-connected modern worker bee. Lately, as the trips run into each other and I go 50, 70 days on without one off, I often feel frantic, wondering what I might be missing. I have two phones. An iPad and a Kindle. Three MacBooks. I take my iPhone into the bathroom, to text and play Zombie Gunship. Sometimes I take a call, hitting mute to flush. I use airport urinals with a phone in the other hand. I compulsively check my email. At dinner. In bed. At funerals. No, really, I checked messages at my great-aunt Thelma’s funeral. I was a pallbearer. Lately, though I haven’t told anyone, I’ve been having trouble reading. Half-finished books pile up. I open stories in browsers and get a few paragraphs in before I’m distracted by another link, another pop-up video. I’m an addict.As I settle into my seat on my way to London, the plane over the Atlantic, I start a book called , which hypothesises that all our devices are removing the moments before and after important events, amputating both anticipation and reflection, robbing our lives of depth. I feel like the writer is inside my head. There’s a passage about each generation fearing the new, describing how Socrates believed the invention of writing would be the end of creativity and critical thinking, the permanence of words calcifying ideas. Writing was to Socrates what video games are to current parents. This is fascinating stuff, just the sort of modern philosophy I’m usually drawn to, but my strobing mind distracts me. I mark my place and never pick it back up again. Oh, and I’m reading a book about the poisonous effect of our devices… on my iPad. Such is the depth of my sickness as I leave passport control at Heathrow. And yet, as my cab heads straight to Lord’s Cricket Ground, I still feel in control. I mean, for instance, I don’t imagine this trip will lead me to reevaluate my life in a Buddhist temple on the seventh floor of a north London public housing building.

****

Lord’s is surrounded by leafy streets and hushed neighborhoods. Sir Paul McCartney’s house sits a half block from the North Gate. On match day, the sidewalks between the Marylebone and St John’s Wood tube stops fill with survivors of the old empire, mostly men, wearing pastel shirts beneath summer jackets. Knotted around many of their necks is the orange and yellow tie of the Marylebone Cricket Club, founded in 1787. Club members lovingly call the tie “egg and bacon”. Those who wear it are the protectors of the game. For them, this is a time of great angst.The third week of July has brought a random but significant intersection of storylines. This Test match is the 2000th in history. It is the 100th time that India and England have played a Test, and it is likely the ageing Indian star Sachin Tendulkar’s last trip to Lord’s. He is still chasing his 100th international century (scoring 100 runs in a game), and his first Test century at Lord’s.The match falls at a critical time in the history of the game. For its first three centuries, cricket matches spread out over a series of languid days. Almost 50 years ago, one-day cricket emerged. An ODI (one-day international) match takes eight hours and is the format now used in the World Cup. Eight years ago, Twenty20 was born, grinding a five-day game into three hours.The new game was invented by a marketing man named Stuart Robertson. He’d been hired by the England and Wales Cricket Board and inherited an unsustainable economic situation with domestic long-form cricket: rising debt, sinking revenue. He did what must have seemed obvious to him, which was to persuade a television network to fund elaborate consumer surveys.Unbelievably, this was the first time market research had ever happened in the long history of the game, and cricket wasn’t prepared for what it found in the mirror. The survey discovered that about half a million people followed cricket in the UK, but that around ten million more would watch if the game was played in three hours. Robertson prepared a presentation for the 18 chief executives of the county cricket clubs, who would decide whether or not a shorter game of cricket should be played. One slide silenced the room. Slide 40. It showed the only group strongly opposed to T20 was over the age of 55. Their fans were dying. The new game was approved, 11-7.It has spread around the world, for many of the same reasons that baseball has lost ground to football, and that the distilled violence of MMA has replaced the sweet science of boxing. Casual fans, advertisers and television executives love the flash and speed; meanwhile, attendance at Test matches has cratered. The Indian tour of the West Indies found empty stadiums, ennui in a place once known for the madness of its fans. Experts think the on-field quality of Test cricket has rarely been better, but the public doesn’t seem to care.In the 2010 installment of the Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture, given annually at Lord’s, former Pakistani great Imran Khan put words to the game’s new reality: “I am afraid that Test cricket will die.”His fear is widely shared. Waiting on the pre-match press conferences, I open the day’s papers. They’re filled with passionate defenses. Adjectives include “sepia,” “anachronistic” and “Victorian”. These are intended as compliments.The editor of , the bible of the cricket establishment, wrote, “It is everything marketing men tell you is out of kilter with everyday life,” as if the marketers are themselves the mirror, not the ones holding it. When we look at the destroyer of some treasured piece of ourselves, we often find that the face staring back is our own. Test cricket is suffering from the same problem as I am: struggling to find space in a hyped-up world.

****

We are waiting on the Indian captain, and you can guess my tolerance for waiting. I kill time by making notes about the England board’s conference room. The chairs are comfortable. Reporters gossip. A long window runs the length of one wall, looking out on a crumbling, ivy-covered wall. There’s nothing to give away the fact that this room is where the diminution of Test cricket began. This is where Robertson showed slide 40, where the vote passed 11-7, where the revolution began.After that vote, television networks jumped on board, as did corporations, leagues popping up globally, the most powerful of these leagues being the Indian Premier League. In the IPL, a star can make millions for six weeks work. A few younger players don’t even play Test cricket, and the kids in the streets of Mumbai idolise sluggers who excel in the shorter, simpler form of the game.

How could drama based upon the tides possibly compete with ? You spend 40 hours studying humidity and water particles. Me, I’m gonna pick up a virtual hooker and then beat her to death with a pipe. Isn’t the whole point of modern popular culture – to remove boring from our lives?

In America, television executives began looking at cricket, seeing the opportunities and marketing potential, knowing advertisers would salivate over the untapped global market. ESPN recently bought the rights to the next four years of the World Cup, and, with the fan interest rising, dispatched a reporter, who is now sitting in this conference room, watching as the Indian captain, MS Dhoni, arrives to a flutter of cameras.”Do you think Test cricket will survive another 2000 matches?” I ask.There’s a pause. The room snickers. Four seconds go by. Finally, Dhoni clears his throat.”That’s a really tricky one,” he says.

****

Many in the egg-and-bacon ties blame India and its exploding economy for the change that has come to the cricket world.A growing number of Indian fans now see their cricket team as an instrument of nationalism. Some believe that India no longer loves cricket, and instead loves how its dominance of the sport represents a new-found global power, which of course brings another level of drama to this Test. There seems to be the feeling in the quiet drawing rooms of the MCC Pavilion that England represents what is pure about the game, and India represents what is crass, and that this Test series is not just a battle of teams but a battle of values. That feeling is mostly unspoken. Mostly.In April, ? You spend 40 hours studying humidity and water particles. Me, I’m gonna pick up a virtual hooker and then beat her to death with a pipe. Isn’t the whole point of modern popular culture – to remove boring from our lives?”There’s an entire generation of people,” my ESPN colleague Andrew Miller says in the press box, “growing up without knowing how wonderful it can be to wait for something.”There will be dozens of little dramas in the next five days. The first is the coin toss. The two captains come out in white uniforms and blue blazers. Because of the overcast skies and the early advantage this will give to bowlers, it’s important to win the toss.India v England, Lord’s: the most anticipated Test of the year•Getty ImagesFans tune into the BBC’s on handheld radios, listening to Henry Blofeld narrate the proceedings. Blofeld is as English as scones and jam, and he has covered cricket for 50 years. (Yes, Ian Fleming was friends with his father and named the Bond villain in his dad’s honour as a joke.) Blofeld is famous for long digressions, describing the traffic on the streets outside or offering soliloquies on pigeons. Any good Blofeld impersonation involves a clenched-teeth, guttural, “Pigeons!” He’s a national treasure, and also confounding to modern ideas about media. When he retires his replacement will be much more about the play on the field. He’s 72. His eyes are going.The home captain, Andrew Strauss, flips the coin. India win, and Dhoni, as expected, elects to bowl first. There are no national anthems or pop stars in short skirts. No rolling smoke or roaring animals. A coin toss, a handshake, then the game begins. Well, I mean, sort of. Truthfully, little happens. As romantic as I want this experience to be, I’m bored. I’m reminded of an old story. Groucho Marx attended a match at Lord’s once, and the club president visited him in his seat and asked, “How are you enjoying the cricket?” Marx looked at him and said, “When does it start?”I’m watching, enjoying a sandwich, still a little baffled. Something’s off. I can’t figure out what it is. I’ve been in a lot of American stadiums, and in hindsight, I guess I’d internalised their rhythm. Live sports are packaged and marketed by experts, an experience designed for people who crave a constant barrage of data, in the form of flashing lights and pounding speakers and dancing girls and guns that shoot t-shirts, and guns that shoot hot dogs, dispensing with any pretence of subtle metaphor, literally attacking us with merchandise and unhealthy food.The stadiums I visited in India for the World Cup were very American in this regard. They gurgled with promotion and noise. So what’s different here? Then it hits me.The silence.The moments before and after each stanza of play are empty. The people in the stands are apparently free to use their imaginations to fill that silence with anything they like. Obviously, as someone who has experienced the orgasmic beauty of sensory overload, I think this is an enormous waste. I feel like a lost child. When do I cheer? What do I say? Should I say De-Fence? How will I know? When should I get on my feet? When do I maaaaaake some nooooooise?Tell me how to feel!

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Day 2My ticket for the second day takes me to a covered grandstand. Many people around me are texting or checking email, and I’m disappointed. The guy next to me has a cell in one hand and a BlackBerry in another, emailing someone named Rupert from JP Morgan, checking his calendar, writing to Barry: “my assistant tells me I do have some time at 1.”In my ear, like the voice of a god issuing orders his agnostic followers ignore, Blofeld thunders on in defence of Test cricket. Some newspaper guy wrote that yesterday’s play was boring. If Test cricket continues to play at this pace, the story said, the sport won’t last the decade.Blofeld is deeply offended. The first day was very dramatic, he thought. England escaped with only two lost wickets, with the clouds and weather making batting a nightmare. My neighbours and I discuss how play was rained out and how India lost its star bowler to injury. An Indian man squints at me.”Are you American?” he asks.I tell him yes.”That’s a rare sight,” he says. “An American at a Test match.””I’m the only one,” I say.”No, I met an American yesterday,” he says. “He kept saying how baseball is better. He left after an hour.”There are two meanings to “American”. There’s the physical being, i.e., me. Then there’s the idea of us. The blitzkrieg of culture. Whatever starts in America sooner or later ends up around the world. It’s in India now, swallowing the measured game of cricket. I feel like the advance scout for an army that will ultimately destroy everything around me.

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It occurs to me, sitting in this grandstand, that maybe I’m looking for answers in the wrong direction.For a few days now, I’ve been focusing on the game itself, reporting on the state of Test cricket. It obviously doesn’t fit in a modern world. People don’t have five hours, much less five days, to be disconnected. One look around the stands and you realise many don’t have five minutes, or at least they think they don’t: a parade of kids eating ice cream cones, holding hands with dads on BlackBerrys. The game is out of sync with today. But maybe it’s deeper than that. What if it isn’t the world that’s changing?What if it’s us?Gary Small, a professor at UCLA, is at the cutting edge of research on what our devices are doing to our brains. His findings are terrifying. The way we ingest information is changing us. When we read online, our mind, instead of focusing on the text, is subconsciously making thousands of instant decisions, each hyperlink or embedded video causing a series of chemical reactions: Yes or no? Yes or no? Connect. Disconnect. Connect. Disconnect. “Our brains get trained to work like a search engine,” Small says. “We jump from idea to idea. We’re not thoughtful. We’re not pondering. In some ways, we’re less creative.”Like a muscle, the brain strengthens the part of itself that it uses the most. This isn’t new. Scientists can point to the invention of the handheld tool hundreds of thousands of years ago, and a corresponding growth in the size of the frontal lobe. The internet is really just a sophisticated hammer. What will future anthropologists find out about our brains?The good news is that, for digital immigrants – people who grew up without these stimuli – a few weeks away will allow the brain to return to normal. But digital natives – those who’ve always known the internet and smartphones – might be forever different. Before the age of 20, there’s a significant amount of pruning of the synapses. The generation coming of age now might have permanently changed its brains. Studies show humans are losing some ability to interpret facial cues. What’s next? Will people one day be unable to read a novel? Or, say, watch a five-day sporting event?”Digital natives are very impatient with mental tasks that involve delayed gratification,” Small says. “That’s what you’re going to see with cricket. It will be very challenging for this long form of cricket to survive, except among a few aficionados. What’s happening to the brains of young people is going to affect the fan base as well as the player base.”That’s a new thought, a frightening one. Separate from the economics of television and advertising, from the money pulling at the players and the time required of fans, the biggest threat to Test cricket might be the reconstituted brains of those who watch it.The face in the mirror is our own. We created a world without space for a pastoral game. We created a world without enough hours in the day. Forget great generals and politicians; unintended consequences are the true drivers of history. When the clock was invented, there was no minute hand. Nobody really needed minutes until around 1700. The modern wristwatch was invented in about 1820. What happened in between? The Industrial Revolution. For the first time in history, people needed to be at work on time. Minutes mattered. Now seconds matter. So we check our email every few moments, even feeling phantom vibrations in our pocket – like pain in an amputated limb – wondering what we’re missing, even as we’re doing something we profess to love.

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A cab takes me to Hackney, a neighborhood famous for revolutionaries and union men. I’m hoping the man I’m meeting can give me further focus. Mike Marqusee is a cricket writer. He’s an American expat in his late 50s. A socialist. The book Marqusee wrote about falling in love with cricket, is a classic. It has inspired a generation of literary cricket writers, much like Michael Herr’s did for a generation of war correspondents. In a manner befitting his neighbourhood, he finally gives me some context for all the angst I’ve noticed about the future of Test cricket. In the first cricket book ever printed, he tells me, the author was already lamenting things that had been lost.

Bowling a cricket ball and the invention of the spinning jenny, the machine that ushered in the Industrial Revolution, happened at the same time. So much changed so quickly, and cricket becoming the national sport was a response to that change. The game was dying from the moment it was born

“The obituaries for cricket are constantly being written,” he says. “This goes back a long time. And now it takes the form of: will Test cricket survive? There’s this anxiety about losing that link with the past. And the anxiety is greater than the actual threat. It’s very English, that anxiety. It has to do with the English experience of modernity and paradox. This was the first modern nation. And precisely because of that, there are a number of emotional attachments to the pre-modern.”We’re sitting in a Turkish café, drinking coffee, laughing, talking about history. He’s been sick and his tongue is yellow, and a thin patina of foam dries in the corners of his mouth. He’s in a contemplative mood. I’ve imagined that cricket struggled to survive in a modern world because it was a sporting relic of a different time, of a pastoral England. No, Marqusee says.”It was created by industrial England. It’s actually not pre-industrial England, but that’s how people see it.”So it turns out cricket fit into a modern world. Englishmen have played variations of the game since the Middle Ages, but cricket evolved to its current form as humans changed the way we interacted with time. Bowling a cricket ball and the invention of the spinning jenny, the machine that ushered in the Industrial Revolution, happened at the same time. So much changed so quickly, and cricket becoming the national sport was a response to that change. In a world where time suddenly governed lives, sportsmen played a game that lasted five days. The game was dying from the moment it was born. In some ways, it was created to die, a symbolic martyr for a world crushed by the minute hand.Of course, the same people who created cricket as an antidote to spreading commercialism inevitably commercialised the game, unable to deny the impulses of their time. Once, cricket was played in open fields. Anyone could wander over and watch. People made bets, but the actual viewing of the game was free. That lasted until a businessman realised that he could put a fence around the grounds and charge admission. He’d make a huge fortune off this idea, and when he died, his will would leave his stadium to a club that made its home there.His name was Thomas Lord.

****

Marqusee walks me across the narrow street to a taxi company. We wait to catch the dispatcher’s attention, and he casually mentions that this building is where Daniel Defoe wrote . It’s true. There’s a small blue plaque on the building. In 1719, the darkest hell a writer could conjure was being stranded on an island. Now a chance to be disconnected from the world – and from my own mind – seems like paradise. I’m desperate to be shipwrecked.Do we all long for a way out of this age? When I imagine a vacation now, it’s not a vacation from climate. I want to go where I cannot be found. A day with my phone off in Tulsa is more relaxing than one in Paris with it on. This urge prompted the rise of cricket. The game was an island of pre-Industrial England. Even people who disagree about almost everything else can agree on this: if Test cricket is threatened, so too is our collective depth.When Marqusee describes the pleasure of attending a Test match, he lingers on the way he’s able to think. In the white spaces. I think about the silence at Lord’s, and I understand. Test cricket is different from the rest of the world because it was designed to be.”I like the idea I can go to a sporting match and bring my own mood,” Marqusee says, “and not have it spoon-fed moment by moment. The mood isn’t pre-determined or pre-packaged. You create the mood. It almost means cricket requires complex meanings because there is more interacting with the spectator’s mind. That horrifies the professional entertainment industry. You know, dead air. But it’s freedom for the spectator. Not everything is being pushed on us. We get the chance to let our minds free. It’s not demanding. It’s not shrill. It’s meditative.”Yes, but of course you have to be mentally able – or perhaps spiritually able – to receive this gift. I don’t know if I’m capable. Can I sit in the stands and just be? How will I ever learn to keep my mind and body in the same place?”We’ve lost the ability to meditate,” Marqusee says.

****

“Why Zen?” the monk asks.The voice is calm. It sounds the way a hand running lightly across your arm feels. The outside world slips away, as I try to relearn how to meditate, if I ever knew at all. An ice cream truck passes on the street. The tinny, sing-songy tune disappears. So too do the high-pitched Euro sirens. A few minutes ago I stepped out of the elevator on the seventh floor of a public housing building, having found an available monk on the internet. Now the only thing in the world is this voice. It gives me chills. The words have a physical quality, and I can almost see them move across the room. I know this sounds crazy, but it feels like the voice has the ability to extract my innermost thoughts.”I suppose you know about Socrates?” the voice asks.We lock eyes. A thick Polish accent is no longer hard to understand. Life is about questions, not answers: Zen.”It’s about sitting your body and sitting your mind,” it says. “It’s about sitting your mind. Nowadays, people use brain a lot. Sitting meditation is very helpful in calming down our minds. Basically three things are very important. Our body position. Our breathing. And also what to do with our minds. Zen means perceiving our true selves. Also to keep present, moment by moment by moment. The power of now. The air we’re breathing is reincarnation.”The voice is soft.”Clear mind.””Clear mind.””Clear mind.”.Thoughts intrude. Last night my dinner companion said, “The last vestige of the British Empire is Test cricket.” I need to let that go. Observe and let go. Forget deeper meaning. I should not be a reporter. I’m a traveller with the gift of a Test match at Lord’s. When will I ever get this chance again?The breeze comes in, blowing gentle on my face, cooling the slight burn from the sun. I hear birds. I write these details down, spoiling the moment.I look down at the pavilion pass I finagled. For the next few days, I can just be. A man nearby has on sterling silver Spitfire cufflinks. Another man is reading a novel. Everyone is working the ‘s crossword puzzle: 1 Down: “‘Submission to one – brings on another.’ Latin proverb”..In the Long Room bar, just behind the Long Room, there’s an oil painting of famous cricketers from the 1950s. Men in blue blazers, together in the pavilion. Nearby there’s another painting of stars from a later era, and if you look closely, the 1950s painting is hanging in the background. There’s a painting of a third generation of players, and it’s got both of the previous works in the background. Standing a few feet from me is MJK Smith, who is in these paintings, posed with a crossword puzzle in his pocket. Time doesn’t exist inside these walls. The men are contemporaries in the generation of cricket.

It’s as if there are two matches being played simultaneously, on top of one another. A lost wicket in an important Test match is reason for despair, and the Indian newspaper reporters in the press box are sharpening their knives. Me? I’m eating a scone with clotted cream and jam, watching the action

At 12:25 pm, on the third day of the Lord’s Test, Sachin Tendulkar walks through the Long Room to the field, a multimillionaire passing the oil painting of Thomas Lord, the man who figured out cricket could be a business. Sachin’s great wealth sprang from that long-ago realisation. The cheers echo around the grounds. The Indians chant, “Sa-chin! Sa-chin!” The two MCC members next to me talk about Don Bradman, the Babe Ruth of cricket.”Bradman was the greatest of them all,” one member, a former BBC newsman, says. “In 1948, he played his last Test match. He was cheered all the way to the wicket. Then he was clean-bowled on the second ball. Then he was cheered all the way back. The pity of it all: Had he scored four runs, his career average would have been 100.”Tendulkar digs in. The crowd wants history. The only thing missing from Tendulkar’s résumé is a Test century at Lord’s. Here, like the men in the trilogy of oil paintings, Bradman and Tendulkar exist in the same dimension. The men with me speak of Bradman as if he were standing inside, at the Bowler’s Bar, ordering a Foster’s on draught, which given one of many odd but strictly enforced club rules, even he would not be allowed to take across the hall to the Long Room Bar.”The theory was he was bowled because there were tears in his eyes,” the newsman says.His friend grumbles with scepticism.”Allegedly,” the newsman says.The crew whispers in my ear through my radio. Blofeld asks: “I wonder if Sachin Tendulkar woke up this morning a little bit nervous?” The English fielding strategy, I hear, contains three slips and a gully. A silly point. I’m not sure what that means, but the words are pleasing to hear. Just the sound of them. The Indians are staring at an English score of 474. The grind is slow. In Test cricket, only bad things happen quickly. Anything good takes time. Will this be bad or good?.Tendulkar rocks one between carefully placed fielders for a boundary, hitting off his back foot, with a fast bowler’s best stuff on the rise. That’s the shot he used to announce his greatness to the cricket world, playing Australia at the beginning of his career. He was still a boy. Most cricketers can score with only two or three shots. Sachin can always score, on a cover-drive, a straight-drive, a cut, a leg glance, a late cut, or even hitting a ball still rising at 95mph toward his head. The fans see that shot and edge closer to the field, which is the colour of pine trees after a rain. The uniforms are white. The pitch is brown. The sky is the colour of sky. The anticipation is as tangible as blue..Something special could happen today. Everyone at Lord’s knows it, and they can tell Tendulkar knows it, too. The break for lunch is approaching. What will happen in the next few hours?I exhale..

****

Sachin Tendulkar stands at the centre of Lord’s. Everyone looks at him, and he looks for chances to score. There is energy in the air, and it’s all for him. He bangs a four to the boundary. “He wants to make it a memorable occasion,” a fan sitting next to me leans over and says. “There’s no doubt about it.”The bowler begins his run, and the crowd noise builds with him. Sachin flexes his knees and waits. The ball sounds like a starter’s pistol when it hits his bat. Most he simply deflects, waiting on a moment to attack. To do something historic, he’ll have to concentrate for hours. Each previous swing buys him no quarter from the one that will come next.I met Tendulkar once. We were in the Royal Gardenia Hotel in Bangalore during the World Cup, the night after he’d scored the 98th international century of his career. It was the last time he’d faced England. The hotel manager had sent him a card congratulating him on this achievement, but the Indian star still simmered with anger that his team had managed only a tie.The room was heavily protected. The floor required a specially coded card to activate the elevator, and guards stared at me when the doors opened. Tendulkar is a prisoner in his fame. Sometimes, he drives through Mumbai in the middle of the night. That’s the only time he can be free of eyes.He’d just woken up. On one side of his bed was a laptop computer and a tangle of wires. On the other was a Hindu shrine. Two halves of himself. One modern, connected, the world that allows him his fortune and scrutinises him for it. The other is serene and calm. He chooses to live in both, and at this point, the nation demands it of him. But make no mistake. Sachin Tendulkar likes the rewards. He is not a monk. Therein lies the duality of modern life. Success both frees and traps him.The shrine on the right side of the bed is part of how he manages those worlds. It works for him. When asked later to describe Tendulkar, the word I used was calm. He exuded a sense of balance. Other people who know him say the same thing. His team-mate Rahul Dravid, a legend in his own right, said this about Tendulkar: “He doesn’t talk about the future. He just talks about what he needs to do now.”.I watch him stare down the bowler. The battle has taken on levels of meaning, and Tendulkar isn’t just battling the pressure and the opponents. He is battling himself. How can he take what he wants from the world without being undone by it?.His focus is nearly complete, until the 58th ball, in the 90th minute. A moment of vanity intrudes, or simple carelessness, and he tries to drive a ball he could have defended. Out. Ordinary batsmen wouldn’t have tried to score, but he is Tendulkar, who can score at any time. This time, he is a victim of his own talent. He was feeling in control, and he was, right up until he wasn’t. He walks slowly into the Long Room. The members form a tunnel, a wall of blue blazers and egg-and-bacon ties. Tendulkar’s expression doesn’t change as he passes the applauding crowd, but before he turns left and disappears up the stairs, he smacks his lips in disgust.

****

We rise and fall for the next two days.I’m in the crowd, a bottle of rosé in an ice bucket. There are endless tiny struggles, but with my phones switched off, I find I can focus on the build and release. I cancel interviews. I blow off the BBC. For two days of one-act plays, I am a fan. These moments turn one match into 50 smaller ones, and in the stands, each victory or defeat is anticipated and celebrated. We’ve all been here so long, as have the players, and all that invested time creates tension. I cannot believe this is the same game that lazily flitted along beneath Thursday’s grey clouds. Lord’s is suddenly electric. I meet a friend for a Pimm’s in the Long Room Bar. We are captivated.These days Sachin Tendulkar gets a standing ovation wherever he goes•AFPIndian star Dravid is chasing history. He is approaching his first Lord’s century. The score builds, 70, then 75. The crowd murmurs when it’s his turn to bat.There’s the competing drama of the “follow-on.” This is a strange cricket rule. If India can’t get within 200 runs of England, then England has the option of forcing the opponents to immediately bat again. In baseball, it would be like the visiting team suddenly being able to bat last. This would give a huge advantage to the English.It’s as if there are two matches being played simultaneously, on top of one another. The follow-on seems assured, as India loses wicket after wicket. A lost wicket in an important Test match is reason for despair, and the Indian newspaper reporters in the press box are sharpening their knives. Me? I’m eating a scone with clotted cream and jam, watching the action.With just two batsmen left, Praveen Kumar comes out. He’s a bowler, and like a pitcher in baseball, is barely an adequate batsman. But the Indians need runs, and he’s their only chance. In desperation, Kumar starts swinging from his heels, taking wild uppercuts. On this afternoon, he’s in the zone. The team is on his back. He lofts a shot over the defenders’ heads, and the ball runs out to the boundary for four runs (a ball that touches the boundary is four, and one that flies over it is a six). Another ball arrives, and he swings as hard as he can, again. Boom. Four. He follows that up with another wild swing. The crowd plugs in, humming now. The English fans cheer wildly for their opponent.Dravid feeds off the energy and adds a four of his own. He’s got 91 runs. Nine more.Kumar scores enough to get India within 200, avoiding the follow-on. When he finally gets out, he receives a standing ovation as he walks to the Long Room. As he heads upstairs, old guys slapping him on the back, an enormous smile spreads across his face. All the drama now focuses on Dravid. Can he reach his long-awaited century?He’s on 98. The fans know his story. Fifteen years ago, in his first appearance at Lord’s, he scored 95. He’s never equalled that success, until today, near the end of his career. Finally it happens. Dravid reaches his century, and he runs down the wicket with his bat raised in the air. He throws a fist pump, content. He’s as simple a man as a celebrity athlete can be. He can take his family out in public. Keeps his kids grounded. His talent has brought him respect, money and fame, but never the rock-star treatment or compensation of his team-mate. He’s kept some essential piece of himself that Tendulkar lost, but like anything else, it came at a cost. Tonight, in the hour of his triumph, reporters will ask him about… Sachin. He responds with a smile, as if he knows something the questioners don’t.

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Day 5The last day of a Test match is for the people. Often there is no fifth day, so advance sales don’t work. Tickets are first-come, first-serve. They cost only £20, and children under 16 get in free. Today is the first day of British summer vacation, and fans start lining up at 2am, a silent queue stretching through those hushed neighbourhoods, cricket lovers on the sidewalk just outside Sir Paul’s mansion. Most of them are Indian supporters. They are entering the castle.In the hour before play begins, the players walk around the pitch. Dravid touches the wicket with his bat. He stands at the crease, staring down an imaginary bowler, wiggling his toes, tapping his bat on the ground. Behind him, a random and enormous cheer erupts from the grandstands. The groundskeeper doesn’t need to look.”That’s Tendulkar,” he says.The stage is set. India needs to chase down 458, which would be the highest chase in Test-match history. It’s not impossible; India have what some consider the greatest batting line-up ever. These are the 1927 Yankees. Tendulkar will have one more shot at his Lord’s Test century, and England need to take 10 wickets. They’ve got eight hours.”People can’t understand a game that can last five days,” the groundskeeper says, “but we have a position here today where any of the four results in cricket are possible. Either side could win. The game could come to stalemate. Or it could actually end up being a tie. Very unusual you get all four results possible.”

****

I’m waiting on a call.Robertson, the inventor of T20, is coming to the grounds today. Until he arrives, though, the phones will stay mostly in my pocket. I’m into the rhythm. I enjoy the silence. I work a crossword puzzle, looking up every minute or so to see the bowler begin his run. A thought assembles in the white spaces. Being here feels like a vacation, not just because the days are free of responsibility, but because they feel so different from the rest of my life. The world is full of people trying to slow down. There’s the slow food movement, a rejection of consumerism and industrial convenience. Knitting, baking, urban farming. There’s yoga. Folk music is inexplicably huge in England again. People are seeking something.Maybe Test cricket is part of that search. Maybe slowness won’t kill Test cricket, but instead will spark a revival: the right game at the right time. Not long ago, I read a magazine excerpt of a new book, , by astrophysicist Adam Frank. He believes we are living at a vital moment in the history of time. For thousands of years we’ve been shrinking time, making minutes important, then seconds. Frank says we can’t shrink it anymore. An enormous change is imminent. Oil will run out and with it cheap transportation, both of goods and people. He believes that, contrary to our view of a world always growing smaller, the planet will spread apart again. Only the extremely wealthy will be able to afford flying to Europe, for instance. Global shipping will regress. Email won’t be as commercially important since the businesses it exists to support will lag behind. “We’re at a breaking point,” he says. “We just can’t organise ourselves any faster. We’ve grown up with this amazing idea of progress. That’s operating with the mindset that science will provide miracles. There really are limits. One of the things I think about this generation we’re living in: this is the age of limits.”There’s a story I heard recently that seems appropriate. A friend was giving his interpretation of , about a group of people taking refuge from the plague, telling stories which preserved some spark of the humanity being killed in the city they left behind. Test cricket could offer the same protection for a quaint idea such as a sport existing outside the tyranny of money and time.That romantic notion lasts until my phone rings.

****

Robertson meets me behind the futuristic press box. His young daughter Charlotte is with him and they’re enjoying the sunshine. We make small talk, which is interrupted by a sudden jolt. A cheer, though that’s a feeble description. It’s a treble explosion, a solid wall for the first 30 seconds, as if from one being. The crescendo never breaks. That first blast is high-pitched, with a backbeat of claps, each landing a moment after the last. Then it breaks apart, just a little, individual pieces recognisable. A whistle. A shout. The noise downshifts, growling now, all low-end and gut muscles, with the occasional rising shriek. After a minute the cheer dies down and is replaced by the rhythmic chant of a single name.”Sachin Tendulkar,” Robertson explains to his daughter. “Best batsman in the world.”

The world is full of people trying to slow down. There’s the slow food movement, a rejection of consumerism and industrial convenience. Knitting, baking, urban farming. People are seeking something. Maybe Test cricket is part of that search. Maybe slowness won’t kill Test cricket, but instead will spark a revival: the right game at the right time

Robertson and I find a bench where we can see a little corner of the green pitch. He no longer works for the ECB. There’s a new venture, Cage Cricket: an even shorter form of the game, or as he puts it, more democratic. He wants to take the final step in the evolution of cricket and completely remove teams. Six individual stars, in a plexiglass cube, where hits off different parts of the square result in different run totals. The bowler can score by getting someone out, as can the fielders. Losing your wicket costs you 40 runs. The game lasts 30 overs, and all six men get to bowl, field and bat. He sees basketball arenas and great swells of hype. “The guys will come in like prizefighters,” he says. “Then we’ll take that around the world. We’re talking to India, the Caribbean, Australia, the States.”

****

I’m walking around the concourse, headed toward the pavilion, when a groan comes from the stands. It can mean only one thing. People near me sprint for the nearest portal. I follow them, just in time to see the umpire raise a finger. Tendulkar is out. There will be no Lord’s century. I turn on my radio in time to hear the guys narrate Sachin’s long trek back across the pitch. This is the last time he’ll ever make that walk, they say solemnly. The crowd rises to cheer, Indians and English alike, just as the crowd did 50 years ago for Don Bradman. The difficultly of cricket means that ends are almost always disappointing, and Bradman’s ghost walks next to Sachin, step for step.”He disappears from our view into the Long Room,” Blofeld says.There’s only one drama left. Three hours of daylight left, and five Indian batsmen to dismiss. The English defence, sturdy for the first four days, has turned sloppy. The mistakes pile up. The English drop an easy out, then another, then misplay a ball. “This is a disaster,” an English fan near me says. There’s a new buzz: India might hold on for a draw.Then Dhoni is out, caught by Prior. Four more wickets to go. Then three. Kumar comes back out, to an ovation, but the English bowlers aren’t risking a repeat. They pepper him with short balls, which are bouncers that come flying for the head. He’s out soon. In the concourse, a father and son carry a cardboard tray of fish and chips with a side of mushy peas. The son looks at the people headed for the exits.”Why are the Indian fans leaving?” he asks.”They know they’ve lost,” the father replies.The last man bats for three minutes and then the Test is over. After five days, England has won. England captain Strauss is cheered as he leaves the field. In the pavilion, a guy near me slams a glass of wine. The egg-and-bacon ties say their farewells and head down the grand staircase. Right outside the front door is a wall of Indian fans, six and seven deep, allowing a thin alley of space for members to leave the pavilion and head home. The crowd is waiting for Tendulkar.The mostly old, mostly white men, wearing their ties, leave the hushed walls of their castle to see an endless sea of foreign-looking faces. One group of members exits and their eyes get wide.”To see Sachin,” one man says.”I’ve never seen anything like it,” he says.The future is only feet away.

****

The next day is the rarest of gifts, one mostly free in a city I love. The weather is perfect. I feel calm. I’ve slowed myself down for a week. I see a cricket ground in a park, one without bleachers, just a pavilion for players and a wicket. I stop to stare at it, outside the Royal Hospital, built in the 1600s by Sir Christopher Wren. I focus on a spot in the green grass and meditate, resting on a bench..The devices in my pocket aren’t all bad. I punch an address into my phone and follow the directions to Ovington Park, where my mother lived when she was just out of college. I try to imagine her here. Her father died a few months into her trip and she went back home, where she met my dad. This was the last place she existed outside of other people. I find the apartment and take pictures. I interview neighbours, recording them with my phone, and they tell me this street belongs to foreigners now, using solid English real estate as an investment. One house, a woman tells me, hasn’t had anyone stay overnight in seven years, but there are fresh-cut flowers arranged every day, just in case. Finally I stand in front of my mom’s old balcony and call her, describing the street, which she tells me hasn’t really changed.I head over to Chelsea for lunch, where I’m meeting Henry Blofeld. He seems like the perfect way to end this journey. Someone who will leave me with a sense of an old world, who will remind me about the importance of not being ruled by the latest modern thing.

****

As I walk into the pub where Oscar Wilde once drank, waiting on Blofeld to arrive, there are things I don’t know about the future. I don’t know that I’ll order a satellite dish to get cricket on television but cancel the order when technicians can’t find a clear view of the southern sky. I don’t know that for a few glorious weeks I’ll wake up early and take my coffee onto my porch to listen to . I’ll follow scores on the internet and make sure I’m tuned in every time Sachin comes to bat, hoping to hear his 100th century. I’ll start checking on local Buddhist temples. My wife and I will make plans to attend one Saturday. But something will come up and I won’t ever make it. Soon I’ll miss a Test match on the radio, finding myself working early in the morning, on deadline, trying to get ahead. There will be plenty of time for cricket later. I programme dozens of future matches into my calendar, set with alarm bells. Every now and then, at 2:30am, one will go off and I’ll feel a pang, for just a moment, before I switch it off and roll over again.I don’t know that I’ll begin to plan a trip back to a Test match, hoping to recreate how I felt for five days during an English summer. Maybe I’ll finish my ESPN contract and rent a small flat in St John’s Wood, near Sir Paul’s gated home, and spend my days filling the silence around the bowler and the batsman. That’s what I’ll do.Someday.

****

The pub is airy, with leaded glass bending the light. Blofeld comes in, wearing red socks and blue shoes, an open-collar madras shirt. His family has lived on the same estate near Norfolk since 1520. He looks like it.Henry Blofeld: outlasted the world he represented•PA Photos”I’m in a foul mood,” he says. “I need a large glass of Chablis. I need one. I’ve lost every number.”He points at his iPhone. In the process of syncing, he accidentally lost all his contacts, and a frustrating three-hour morning at the Vodafone store couldn’t retrieve them.”Oh,” the waitress says, “for goodness’ sake.”We’re quickly trading cellphone horror stories, about cracking their fickle screens and leaving them in cabs, or rental car buses or on top of bars. Oh, yes, bars.”Do you drunk-text?” I ask Henry Blofeld.”No, I don’t,” he says. “I never text after dinner.””Smart.””Yes, I know exactly where you are coming from,” he says. “When I go out to dinner, unless it’s a very good reason, I tend to leave my mobile telephone at home. Then you can’t get in trouble. You can’t send one girlfriend a message that was intended for another one.”His voice has a wonderful vibrato. There’s a slight buzz on the end of every word, and the two glasses of wine make the words more pleasing. He orders a Rhone with the rabbit. He knows his time as the conscience of Test cricket is coming to an end. In some ways, he has outlasted the world he represented.”It goes on as long as… dot… dot… dot,” he says. “Until I die or my eyes give out. Two or three more years. Then I think I’ll find it terribly hard to see. Which is sad.”He shrugs and goes back to his lunch. We spend our time talking about Test cricket and how I think I’m in love with the game, and what I believe it could mean for a changing world. He looks up.”Are you, coming from America – you must be – looking at it in a different perspective than we are here?””How do you think I would be looking at it?””You’re romanticising it because it’s new to you,” he says. “Of course you are. When you come to anything new, you come to it with, not exactly preconceived ideas, but with a framework which is peculiar to you. With your life and background in the United States, if we write of an identical age, I would come to it in a very different way.”Nobody comes empty-handed. Nobody leaves empty-handed, either. That’s a dream.”Everyone’s reality is peculiar to them,” he says. “It has to be. Thank God.”We finish our meal and leave the pub. I feel changed by the past few days of silence, certain my exploration can continue even after the noise returns to the white spaces. I promise myself that I’ll listen to for years to come, and find my own Zen teacher back home. There’s a peaceful walk before me, but first a few things need doing. People need answers. I walk past that cricket ground, past the hospital designed by Christopher Wren, returning emails and a call. I write a headline. I check with a friend about dinner plans. I use the GPS to find my hotel. I feel the phones in my pocket, certain that I control them and not the other way around. I stop and stare at Buckingham Palace. The sun shines off the gold angel of victory. I take a photo and reflexively email it home, proof of how unplugged I am on this lazy afternoon.

لاعب فاركو: راضون عن التعادل مع البنك الأهلي.. ونخوض الدوري كمباريات كؤوس

أبدى محمود جهاد لاعب الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي فاركو، رضاه عن نتيجة التعادل الذي حققه فريقه أمام البنك الأهلي، في المباراة التي أقيمت بينهما اليوم السبت.

وتعادل فريقا فاركو والبنك الأهلي، سلبيًا، في اللقاء الذي أقيم ضمن مواجهات الجولة الثانية من عمر منافسات بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

وقال جهاد خلال تصريحات عبر قناة “أون تايم سبورت”: “راضون عن المباراة بسبب مستوانا، لأن طالما أداءنا جيد سنحقق الفوز، وسعيد بجائزة رجل المباراة ولكن هي للفريق كله”.

طالع | زهير المترجي بعد تعادل فاركو مع البنك الأهلي: أتمنى أن تكون لنا كلمة في الدوري

وأضاف: “المباراة الماضية لم نكن موفقين، ودخلنا لقاء اليوم ونحن مصممون على الفوز، لأن كل مباراة بمثابة كأس، حاولنا من أول اللقاء وحاربنا والحمد لله على أي نتيجة”.

وأكنل: “عانينا الموسم الماضي بسبب ظروف معينة، هذا الموسم مجلس الإدارة والجهاز الفني تحدثوا معنا عن الموسم الجديد، لأن كل المباريات مثل الكؤوس في ظل النظام الجديد للدوري، والمباراة التي تمر لن نعوضها، وأي لقاء نلعبه لا نستهدف إلا الفوز”.

فاركو يحتل المركز الخامس عشر في جدول ترتيب الدوري المصري، برصيد نقطة واحد، من تعادل في مباراة اليوم، وخسارة في الجولة الأولى أمام الاتحاد السكندري.

Better than Wissa: Newcastle lead race to sign "extraordinary" £65m striker

Where will Newcastle United’s striker search take them next?

The Magpies were in the race to sign Benjamin Šeško, even agreeing a £70m fee with RB Leipzig, but the Slovenian chose to move to Manchester United instead, a transfer that was officially announced on Saturday morning.

RB Leipzig's BenjaminSeskobefore taking a penalty

So now, has Eddie Howe identified his latest top target?

Newcastle's striker search

It’s been a busy summer in terms of Newcastle United strikers, both in terms of players at the club, as well as ones they’d like to bring to Tyneside.

Callum Wilson was released earlier this summer, while Alexander Isak is yet to feature in pre-season, as he aims to force through a move to Liverpool although, as reported by Luke Edwards of the Telegraph, the Swede has been informed he ‘will not be allowed’ to move this summer, the latest twist to this saga that is drawing no closer to a conclusion.

Meantime, on top of Šeško, the Magpies have failed in their attempts to sign fellow strikers João Pedro, Liam Delap, Hugo Ekitiké and Matheus Cunha, all of whom have joined Premier League rivals, while they’ve also seen a £25m bid for Yoane Wissa rejected by Brentford.

Sam Tabuteau of the Evening Standard believes that the Magpies are ‘preparing a fresh bid’ for the DR Congo international, but should they go for a different striker from within the Premier League?

Well, according to Ed Aarons of the Guardian, Newcastle currently lead the race to sign Nicolas Jackson from Chelsea, adding that the Senegalese striker has informed the Blues of his desire to leave, falling down the pecking order following the arrivals of the aforementioned Pedro and Delap.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Aarons adds that Jackson has ‘trained alone’ at Cobham, valued at around £80m by Chelsea, albeit the Blues are ready to ‘accept’ a fee closer to £65m.

So, could Jackson soon swap West London for the North East?

How Nicolas Jackson would improve Newcastle

Despite often being widely ridiculed, Jackson’s statistics since arriving at Chelsea two summers ago are largely impressive.

He scored 17 goals during his debut campaign in England, before adding a further 13 goals to his tally last time round, despite sitting out around three months of the campaign due to a hamstring injury.

Jacek Kulig of Football Talent Scout labels him an “extraordinary” talent, while Moe Adikwu of Breaking the Lines praises his work rate and ‘ability to get into goal-scoring positions’, projecting he will become a ‘top striker’.

Liam Twomey and Mark Carey of the Athletic agree, outlining his ‘excellent’ pressing, with Ed Dove of ESPN documenting how Chelsea’s form nosedived during his injury last season, describing his ‘broader contribution… without the ball’ as invaluable.

So, would Jackson be a better signing than Newcastle’s other target, Wissa?

Let’s compare the pair to find out.

Appearances

65

69

Minutes

5,050

5,437

Goals

24

31

Assists

10

9

Shots

2.8

2.61

Shots on target %

46.2%

41.4%

Goals – xG

-7

+1.9

Shot-creating actions

164

133

Touches

30

28

% of touches in the box

17%

17%

As the table documents, Jackson and Wissa are stylistically very similar players, emphasised by the fact they accumulate a very similar number of touches per-90, registering an identical percentage of these touches in the opposition’s penalty area.

Jackson’s most eye-catching statistic is the fast he has underperformed his expected goals by seven across the last two Premier League seasons, missing a whopping 43 Opta-defined big chances, which is significantly more than anybody else.

Nicolas Jackson

Flipping that into a positive, it proves that the Senegal international is getting into good positions but just not taking these chances, a skillset he could improve in the future.

Still only 24 years old, while Wissa’s 29th birthday is coming up next month, Jackson would represent the more shrewd investment from Newcastle, given that the pair are pretty similar in quality at this very moment, but the current Chelsea forward has the potential to become one of the best strikers in the Premier League in the longer terms.

Jackson upgrade: Newcastle line up "proper No.9" as £60m Samu alternative

Newcastle need to sign a centre-forward in the summer transfer market.

ByAngus Sinclair Aug 8, 2025

'We can't afford to have the states focusing on silverware'

As a selector and national talent manager, Greg Chappell has his work cut out in steering Australia out of their current trough

Interview by Daniel Brettig13-May-2011How do you reflect on your first season in the role of national talent manager and national selector?
I certainly looked forward to the challenge, having been involved with the Centre of Excellence the previous two years. I had a pretty good idea of what our talent pool was like and what we had to look forward to, so from that point of view it was an exciting opportunity, I suppose. The unknown [factors] were around the new role as national talent manager, trying to establish the network below the national selection panel. I suppose the last 12 months have been about trying to put in place that talent management network, and I think by and large that’s gone well. I believe we’ve got some really good people involved in those roles in the states, which probably made it more systematic.How has the selection job evolved since you finished your first stint in 1988?
It’s very different in that we have professional first-class cricket now as opposed to the 80s, when I was originally involved. Being a full-time selector obviously makes it different. There’s a few more layers in the system these days, and my role on the national selection panel has a very large youth component to it. I am full-time and I am working with people in the states and the Centre of Excellence. There’s a bit more depth to it and a bit more day-to-day responsibility than just turning up to selection meetings and picking teams. But the process hasn’t changed that much.How are the lines of communication between the selectors and the players?
I think it’s in a good place. Can it be in a better place? Probably. You’re always looking to improve those relations, and particularly the communications. Most players like to know where they stand. Some of the more established perhaps feel pretty confident and comfortable with where they’re at, but there might be players on the fringe of the team or just new to the surroundings who probably need a bit more comfort and discussion about the position, the role and all the expectations.The players are always saying they’d like open and honest appraisals of where they’re at. Trying to achieve that is a constant exercise, but receiving bad news is never easy, delivering bad news is never easy. The chairman of selectors is the one who has to deliver that news and it isn’t always well received, obviously.At the moment hard decisions and tough conversations are not easy to avoid. Do you think that has been difficult for those experienced players who lived through the previous era of great success?
Yeah, maybe. I don’t think it’s ever easy to get to the stage of your career where the end is closer than it once was. So dealing with all of that is the challenge we as a selection panel have to deal with.At selection time, Andrew [Hilditch] deals with the media and the players. I have more of a day-to-day role after those major events. I’m obviously more available than Andrew is, and I am constantly conscious of [having to be] not at cross-purposes with the selection process and what the chairman’s talked about. Trying to make sure the messages are consistent, concise and up to date is the critical thing.One of the early signs that you would bring something different to the panel was the pre-Ashes suggestion to Ricky Ponting that he should move down to No. 4 in the batting order. How do you view that dialogue now?
It was throwing around options and ideas really. We were just looking at the best way to use our resources. A lot of discussions go on about a whole range of things. Some come to fruition, some don’t.There’s no doubt the Australian team is at a low point in the cycle, if you believe in cycles. How can the team break out of that?

I think if you get caught up in the moment and the emotion of the moment, if you get caught up in wins and losses, you can confuse yourself. The fact of the matter is, players take time to develop. The players coming out of our youth programme into first-class cricket – I think the talent levels are pretty solid and reasonably consistent with what’s gone before. You do have periods of extended success like we’ve had in recent times, but nothing lasts forever and no one team stays up forever. The challenge is to try to ride out the troughs and the peaks.What we want to try to avoid is being in a long trough, so that exercises everybody’s mind, not least the national selectors, as to what the tactics and the strategies are to come out of it. You constantly look to produce the best team you can. Put combinations together because teams are about combinations, whether it is opening batsmen or opening bowlers, spin bowlers…You look at opening batsmen, there is often consideration to left-hand and right-hand combinations, but we had a great left-hand combination of Matthew Hayden and Justin Langer for some time. They played differently. One was a tall, strong front-foot player, the other one was shorter, more compact and a very good back-foot player. So that combination worked very well because bowlers had to constantly adjust their length.You’re looking to put out combinations that give you a chance, and if you can find some outstanding match-winning players, that’s great, but if you haven’t got them, you do the best you can with the combinations you can put together. That’s the challenge for us over the next few years. We can see we have got some potential champions on the horizon, but it’s going to take time for them to get to the point where they’re going to be ready to play for Australia. In the meantime you’re looking for the best combinations you can get.

“I think if you get caught up in the moment and the emotion of the moment, if you get caught up in wins and losses, you can confuse yourself”

The nature of Australia’s domestic structure, and particularly the introduction of age restrictions in the second XI competition or Futures League, has faced heavy criticism. Do you think the system is working as it should be?
I think it is developing in the right direction. Not to say it can’t be reviewed – it is being reviewed, and no doubt there’ll be more discussion before decisions are made on the future of the Futures League. For what it was brought in to do, I think it’s been quite successful. We had a situation where the average age of state-contracted players gradually crept up, and I think there was a feeling that that was not in the long-term interest of Australian cricket.We have six state teams, we have 100-odd players on contract, but only 66 can play at any given time, and we need to have a reasonable number of those players as potential match-winning players for Australia. If we have only got one or two in each state who are in that bracket of being young, talented and potentially match-winning, we’ve only got about six to pick from. If we have got five per team we have got 30 to pick from.I understand the argument that you need hard-headed players, and I agree, you do need players who make the competition as strong as possible, who can either directly or indirectly teach the future generation what the game’s all about. But equally you’ve got to have available to you potential players for the future. So the restrictions on the age are about giving the next generation chances to bat in the top four, to be opening bowlers or spin bowlers, to learn what it’s all about. The less spots you have available, the less opportunities there are to develop, and to face the challenges they need.I think a lot of the criticism comes from particularly players who are in the over-23 bracket. While it’s understandable that they are going to have that view, it’s very important there are people in the organisations and in CA who look at the big picture. We can’t afford to have states focused on silverware at the domestic level. It’s not about silverware; it’s about development and silverware. If the focus is on winning competitions at that level, it’s going to impact what happens at the top level. So we’re trying to get a process in place that seamlessly takes people from youth programmes into our adult programmes, giving them the challenges they need, recognising the players have attributes that will be useful to Australia down the track, and as quickly as possible getting them to play for Australia.First-class pitches have also been a recurring theme, and the CA playing conditions committee that meets at the end of May is sure to discuss the prevalence of “result wickets”.
I’m on the committee, so I’ll get a say when the time comes. We want a variety of wickets in Australia. I think the great strength of Australian cricket through its history is that each centre has had slightly different conditions and therefore players are more likely to be able to adapt to the variety of conditions that are available or encountered internationally. There is some criticism that a few states have tried to produce result wickets to help them win silverware. Now I certainly don’t agree with that. What we want is the best cricket wicket available in each centre – hopefully wickets that challenge batsmen and bowlers alike, and help us produce players who are going to have a better chance of being successful at international level. If we’re making cheap runs or taking cheap wickets it’s not going to help Australian cricket in the long term.Can the rise of Twenty20 as another source of money divert Australian cricket’s focus?
Yes, it can. I think Twenty20 is good; the changes to the Big Bash League have the potential to be very positive for Australian cricket. Dealing with the challenges that it presents will be important at many levels – at a state level and at the national level. Being an employee of CA, and a member of the NSP, I have a focus on Australian cricket. There’s no doubt that the money available with Big Bash leading into the Champions League means that the franchises, the states as owners of the franchises, have some focus in that area, which just means that all our other competitions and how they are run… the focus on those competitions is going to be even more important than in the past.The Centre of Excellence in Brisbane is another target for critics for varying reasons. There appears to be quite a divergence of views as to what it is there for?
It’s a constantly evolving thing and it’s often difficult to satisfy every stakeholder. But I don’t think there should be any argument on what our focus is. The strategic plan for CA is to be the No. 1 in all formats of the game. If that’s our focus then doing what is best from the national point of view is important, and the Centre of Excellence is very much part of the pathway from youth cricket through domestic cricket to international cricket. The Centre of Excellence was moved from Adelaide to Brisbane because it is a winter project. It’s an opportunity to have identified players from our youth programmes and our domestic first-class programmes get some further development in the off season.I think half the time the sort of criticism I hear is that a lot of money goes into it and that money might be better spent in the states. If it was just about producing state players, maybe it would be, but you’re looking to develop international players. From a CA point of view the Centre of Excellence is a very important part of that development process. I think there’s a level of comfort around that that says it will continue. Can it get better? Can it do a better job? Probably. And we’ll be aiming to do that.”Hopefully [the state] wickets will produce the batsmen and the bowlers who have a better chance of being successful at international level. If we’re making cheap runs or taking cheap wickets it’s not going to help Australian cricket in the long term”•Getty ImagesAustralia’s Under 19s recently played a series against West Indies in Dubai and lost. How do you view those talent stocks?
I think it’s pretty healthy. Again there’s a lot of discussion about what our youth programme should look like. I don’t think we’re far away from what we want. If you make youth cricket a destination, it’s going to impact negatively on what you can produce at the international senior level. The U-19s programme isn’t about winning games, it’s about developing players. History tells us most of them won’t become outstanding senior cricketers. That’s just a fact. A lot of them will choose to do other things, but for the two or three or four or five, however many in each intake, who will choose cricket as a career and will be potential Australian cricketers, it is a fantastic opportunity.Two or three of our best bowlers were unavailable for the series. The management of the tour made the decision to give everybody opportunities rather than to play the best team or try to win games, so the teams were changed around and opportunities were created. For instance, we won the toss, batted first and won the first one-day game. In the second one-day game, we probably had a better chance of winning the game batting first, but the management chose to bat second to experience the challenges of batting second under those conditions. It’s always nice to win, but if you judge everything by wins and losses alone, you’re likely to make a lot of mistakes.Australia have tours of Sri Lanka and South Africa this year. The team haven’t been subjected to back-to-back overseas Test tours since the fateful summer of 1969-70.
If you want to look at it in that light, it is, yes, but if you want to look at it as an opportunity for us to get better, I think it’s a great opportunity. There will be different challenges on each tour; much like 1969-70, there will be very different conditions on the two parts of the tour, so it will be a challenge. The good news for this generation is they won’t have to go back to back from one set of conditions to the other; the Champions League will intervene, so the opportunity will be there to pick specialist groups for the two tours.In India Duncan Fletcher has been appointed national coach. Given your experiences over there how do you think he’ll fare?
I think it’s an interesting appointment. He’s a very experienced coach. I think he’ll bring a lot to the job. Coaching at that level is a challenge in any environment. We know how fanatical India is about the game of cricket, with the population and the media population, that brings with it different challenges. Duncan’s been a proven coach and has experienced India from the other side, so he’ll be as ready as anyone.If he sees out his contract he’ll likely have to manage some quite high-profile retirements, too.
Cricket teams are always in a state of flux. I don’t think you’ve ever got a finished product – you’re always dealing with the need to regenerate it at one level or another. Duncan’s been through all that sort of stuff. He will be as experienced as anyone could be to handle that.

Ipswich eyeing swoop for £40k-p/w "animal" to instantly replace Moore

da marjack bet: Ipswich Town will be very relieved about recent developments involving Kieran McKenna, with the in-demand Tractor Boys boss now looking likely to extend his stay in Suffolk by signing a new contract, instead of spreading his wings to move elsewhere.

da bet7: In the running for the Chelsea vacancy previously among other high-profile positions, before Enzo Maresca became the overwhelming favourite from fellow promoted outfit Leicester City, McKenna will now want to press on and start adding new additions to the ranks at Portman Road away from wild gossip surrounding his future.

The 38-year-old hot property could even be tempted to raid Chelsea this summer to boost the attacking spots at Ipswich, potentially replicating the masterstroke loan deal of Omari Hutchinson in the process, whilst also replacing the out-going source of goals in Kieffer Moore – who is now back at AFC Bournemouth after a short but sweet stint in Suffolk.

Ipswich eyeing up £40k-per-week attacker

A report from the Express recently suggested that Chelsea could slash the excessive £50m price tag once put above Armando Broja's head which might encourage Ipswich to go after his services, especially with their newly acquired Premier League cash after promotion.

Armando Broja celebrating a goal for Chelsea.

It won't be straightforward for McKenna's men to win a deal for the £40k-per-week-man however, with the likes of AS Monaco and Borussia Dortmund interested from Europe alongside Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Ham United based in the top-flight also being keen.

Broja could be Hutchinson 2.0

Excelling in the Chelsea youth set-up before eventually going on to make 38 senior appearances for the Blues, the 22-year-old could well view what McKenna managed to get out of Hutchinson – who also starred at youth level for Chelsea – at Portman Road as a key factor in getting a move done to relocate to Ipswich over other suitors.

Broja vs Hutchinson – numbers for Chelsea youth

Player

Games played

Goals scored

Assists

Broja

53

21

8

Hutchinson

25

8

10

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Hutchinson managed to score 11 times this season for his promoted loan side from down the wings, with Broja in need of rediscovering his clinical edge in front of goal too, which saw him net nine times for previous employers Southampton in just one Premier League season back in 2022.

If McKenna can get the 6 foot 3 forward firing on all cylinders again too, after a forgettable move to Fulham didn't go to plan with eight goalless appearances managed, he could fill the gap left behind by Moore who starred in the Championship briefly alongside Hutchinson.

Why Broja is the perfect Moore replacement

Similar in stature to the Welshman, who stands at an equally lofty 6 foot 5, Broja will hope he can be an adequate replacement for the prolific journeyman if signed.

Moore would bag an impressive seven goals from just 18 Championship games for his short-term employers to help them in their promotion push, before returning to the South Coast shortly after celebrating the glory of moving up to the Premier League.

Whilst Moore operates more as a poacher-style figure whenever he's been selected up top for his many sides, often using his imposing frame to his advantage to beat players and score, Broja could suit the likes of Nathan Broadhead and Conor Chaplin even more at Portman Road with his tricky skills on the ball.

In the last year, when comparing the two on FBref, Broja beats Moore for successful take-ons and progressive passes received – coming in at 2.49 take-ons and 7.31 progressive passes averaged per 90 minutes, contrasted with the Welshman's lesser 0.47 and 6.39 respectively.

Armando Broja

Described as an "animal" in the past by the Athletic's Jacob Tanswell during his goalscoring peak at the Saints, Ipswich could be the location where Broja justifies this label again, having seen first-hand the transformative impact McKenna had on Hutchinson.

Ipswich eyeing "outstanding" signing to compete with Tuanzebe

Axel Tuanzebe would be kept on his toes at Ipswich Town if this move gets over the line.

ByKelan Sarson May 28, 2024

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