Predicted West Ham XI vs Rapid Wien - team, injury news

West Ham will host their first-ever Europa League group stage match at the London Stadium this evening and David Moyes will be looking to build on their recent form.

The Irons kickstarted their quest for glory in Europe with an impressive 2-0 win at Dinamo Zagreb, arguably the toughest of all the teams in their group.

Meanwhile, back in the Premier League, the Hammers secured a last-gasp victory against Leeds United on Saturday afternoon, meaning they have lost just once across all competitions since the start of the 2021/22 campaign.

Moyes has plenty of selection headaches facing him heading into kickoff, especially with a clash against Brentford this weekend, so what sort of side could we see in east London tonight?

Here’s what Football FanCast are predicting…

There could be as many as six changes from the win at Elland Road as the Scotsman balances injuries and rotation.

We may see PSG loanee Alphonse Areola return between the sticks, handing veteran shot-stopper Lukasz Fabianski a rest, whilst there is one enforced change to the backline.

It’s believed that Vladimir Coufal is a doubt for this clash, so he may not be risked, even if he does make the squad and with his usual back-up, Ryan Fredericks also out through injury, Moyes may have to turn to 21-year-old academy graduate Ben Johnson.

He will join Kurt Zouma and Aaron Cresswell, who both remain from Sunday, with Issa Diop coming back in after he was described as a “colossus” for his performance against Manchester United in the Carabao Cup last week.

The 6 foot 4 titan’s involvement also allows Angelo Ogobonna a rest.

Elsewhere, Declan Rice was doing pre-match press duties, which could provide a clue into him starting but he may be joined by Alex Kral, rather than Tomas Soucek as the usual Czech starter needs a break.

Further up the pitch, we could see Manuel Lanzini and Nikola Vlasic return to the starting XI, playing alongside Pablo Fornals and Michail Antonio.

It means there is no place for either of Said Benrahma or Jarrod Bowen, who are likely to start on Sunday against the Bees.

AND in other news, ExWHUemployee drops exciting behind-the-scenes West Ham claim. fans are surely buzzing…

Sri Lanka favourites against rusty Pakistan

Cricinfo previews the Super Eights game between Pakistan and Sri Lanka to be played at Lord’s

The Preview by Osman Samiuddin11-Jun-2009Match Facts
Friday, June 12
Start time 1330 local (1230 GMT)
Kamran Akmal’s batting seems to have rediscovered its spark, and his keeping has improved significantly•Getty ImagesBig Picture
Is there a team more fascinating to watch than Sri Lanka? Of all the teams that have come into the Super Eights undefeated, none has done it as beautifully as Sri Lanka. South Africa have been too efficient to love, India too imposing (and under-tested) to admire. But Sri Lanka? They have made art in comprehensively defeating Australia and West Indies in the group of death.No batting order has as many contrasting styles of scoring quick runs, from Tillakaratne Dilshan’s get-go bluster (which incidentally he discovered as opener against Pakistan earlier this year), Sanath Jayasuriya’s berserker ways, to the silk of Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara. No attack has as many ways of getting you out, from Lasith Malinga’s freaky changes of pace, to the wonderful spin of the two Ms – Murali and Mendis.It is why they are forever the neutral’s favourite for any tournament and why they ought to be outright favourites against Pakistan. The 2007 World Twenty20 runners-up have been sluggish in warm-up losses and a thumping by England almost derailed the whole thing. They did more than enough to dismiss Netherlands from the equation yet still haven’t looked an entirely settled outfit. Abdul Razzaq is on his way though is unlikely to feature in the game.But history doesn’t quite allow Sri Lanka to be inked in as winners. As they are likely aware, Sri Lanka’s big-game record against Pakistan is appalling. Pakistan haven’t lost to Sri Lanka in any World Cup game, 50 overs or less (they beat them in a vital game in the inaugural edition in 2007). In 13 games at big, multi-team tournaments, Pakistan have won 10. In World Cups and Champions Trophy matches, Sri Lanka have only won one out of 11. Just as at the 2006 Champions Trophy, Pakistan sometimes have won when they had no right to – such a shambles they were. So as the best Asian fielding side takes on the worst, predictions will be thin on the ground.Form guide
(last five matches, most recent first)
Pakistan: WLWLW
Sri Lanka: WWLWWWatch out for
Sri Lanka’s bowling attack of four Ms: Malinga, Angelo Mathews, Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis. With that much skill and variety, preserving a wicket, let alone scoring off them will not be easy. Pakistan played the two spinners with some success earlier in the year, but a big game, with little time to think, is a different contest altogether. Pakistan have only faced Malinga in a limited-overs game once, so the unfamiliarity is still there. It won’t have escaped Pakistan’s notice either that Jayasuriya has found form again.Kamran Akmal has been Pakistan’s stand-out player of the last few months. It is probably no coincidence that his batting has rediscovered its spark just as his wicketkeeping has – finally – come out of the abyss in which it found itself over the last two years. He is good enough to win a game with the bat; four stumpings against Netherlands and no dropped chances for a while means he may be good enough to not lose one with the gloves.Team newsSri Lanka are unlikely to make too many changes – why would they, with the kind of form they are in?Sri Lanka: (probable) 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk, capt), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Jehan Mubarak, 6 Chamara Silva, 7 Angelo Mathews, 8 Isuru Udana, 9 Ajantha Mendis, 10 Lasith Malinga, 11 Muttiah MuralitharanPakistan will tinker; Salman Butt will surely go now, for his fielding if nothing else. Sohail Tanvir seems likely to be free from the back niggle that hampered him against Netherlands.Pakistan: (probable) 1 Ahmed Shehzad, 2 Kamran Akmal (wk), 3 Shoaib Malik, 4 Misbah-ul-Haq, 5 Younis Khan (capt), 6 Shahid Afridi, 7 Fawad Alam, 8 Sohail Tanvir, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Mohammad Aamer, 11 Saeed AjmalStats and triviaLasith Malinga, Ajantha Mendis and Saeed Ajmal have all taken 5 wickets each in the two matches at identical strike rates of 9.6. At 5.37, Ajmal concedes the least runs per over. Tillakaratne Dilshan is the leading run-scorer in the tournamentQuotes”In this form it is better to take it easy and have fun. It is like WWF.”
.”He is a genius, what else can I say?”
.

Draw despite brave SLC declaration

With little chance of an out-and-out result, it was rain that brought a premature end to the third day

Cricinfo staff01-Jul-2009
Scorecard
Suraj Mohamed’s two wickets was as good as it got on the third day•AFPWith little chance of an out-and-out result and rain threatening to mar proceedings, SLC XI captain Thilina Kandamby gave Pakistan their best shot at a win in the tour game, declaring at 137 for 2 and setting the visitors a tempting target of 83. However, a mini-collapse which saw Pakistan lose 4 for 29 put an end to the possibility of an outright result.The Pakistanis would no doubt have their team strategy in place ahead of the first Test against Sri Lanka in Galle, with Fawad Alam looking in good touch and Salman Butt’s welcome return to form. With both Mohammad Yousuf and Abdul Razzaq failing to impress, Fawad’s success gives Younis Khan a good selection dilemma.The third and final day began with Fawad continuing from where he left off the previous day. Confident strokeplay helped him bring up his half-century in quick time. Suraj Mohamed, who had picked up two catches and taken two crucial wickets on the second day, dismissed overnight batsman Faisal Iqbal in the sixth over of the day and removed Kamran Akmal three balls later. He then caught Razzaq to give Farveez Maharoof his first wicket of the match as Pakistan slid to 322 for 8. But Pakistan rode Fawad’s superb innings, comprising six boundaries, to go past SLC XI’s total and declared 55 runs ahead.Openers Upul Tharanga and Tharanga Parnavitana ensured a steady start for SLC XI, putting on 66. But the introduction of spin yielded immediate results with Saeed Ajmal getting Upul caught behind. But Paranivitana held firm after missing out in the first innings, stringing together a 56-run partnership with wicketkeeper Kaushal Silva. Paranavitana though, was dismissed just short of his fifty, falling to Danish Kaneria before the heavens opened up, and Kandamby spiced up the game.

Van de Beek could join Everton in January

Fabrizio Romano is ‘sure’ Everton target Donny van de Beek ‘will leave’ Manchester United in January if his situation doesn’t improve. 

The lowdown

Everton director of football Marcel Brands recently confirmed that Van de Beek was ‘on our list’ for the summer transfer window.

They hoped to sign him on loan in the final knockings of the window but ‘at the last minute it was cancelled’.

He said it was ‘hard to say’ at this point whether the Blues would revisit the potential move come January.

When Everton visited Old Trafford on Saturday, Van de Beek was unused substitute for the seventh time this season. In fact, he’s played a meagre six minutes in the Premier League so far (via Transfermarkt).

His only domestic starts of 2020/21 have come in the Champions League and Carabao Cup.

The latest

Speaking to The United Stand, Romano said that ‘as of now’, Van de Beek is ‘planning to leave Manchester United in January’.

He could remain in the Premier League, ‘with Everton one of the clubs interested’, but there are also said to be suitors in Italy and Spain.

Barring a turnaround in his fortunes in the next ‘two-three months’, he’ll be departing.

The verdict

Van de Beek apparently nets £120,000 per week at Old Trafford, and it remains to be seen whether Everton could cover the entirety of the sum or whether a split with United would be necessary in a loan deal.

You can’t help but feel sorry for the Dutchman, who must have been given assurances during the transfer window that he had an important part to play.

As it’s transpired, he’s been given the number of minutes you’d expect for a promising Under-23 player, maybe even less than that.

You’d hope that United don’t stand in his way next time.

In other news, these comments had Everton fans buzzing. 

We need to start all over again – Sangakkara

Kumar Sangakkara has played down Sri Lanka’s tag of overwhelming favourites for the two-Test series against New Zealand

Sa'adi Thawfeeq17-Aug-2009Kumar Sangakkara has played down Sri Lanka’s tag of overwhelming favourites for the two-Test series against New Zealand, saying instead that the past mattered little when it came to game day.”It doesn’t matter what we done against Pakistan we’ve got to get into this Test series as a new game and play tough, fair and really competitive cricket and do what we know really well. If we do that we got a great chance of winning,” said Sangakkara. “Day by day over five days if you can perform better than New Zealand yes, we will win. But if we go into a match thinking we are going to win on recent form, walk in there with no plans and no attitude, no positive body language or intent then we are not going to do well.”Sri Lanka are bound to target the inexperience of New Zealand’s batsmen against spin in hot and humid conditions and especially against Ajantha Mendis, against who they struggled in the ICC World Twenty in England. None of the batsmen have played a Test in Sri Lanka and this is a factor that the hosts are looking to put pressure on.In that aspect Mendis stands the likely choice to partner the world’s leading wicket-taker Muttiah Muralitharan despite the fact that left-arm spinner Rangana Herath played a major role in Sri Lanka’s 2-0 win over Pakistan with 15 wickets.”If it comes down to the choice of picking Mendis or Herath it will be one of the most difficult ones. But at the end of the day you’ve got to make the right choice,” said Sangakkara. “To do that sometimes the decisions are tough but they got to be made. Whichever way they go the decision will be made for the good of the side and towards winning the Test match.”Having watched Mendis bowling against New Zealand in the Twenty20 we’ve also got Murali who’s coming back after injury. We got a very strong spin attack and both of them have been spinners who’ve won us games. We are looking forward to having that same combination. Herath’s had a wonderful Test series against Pakistan we have the choice but once you make that choice you’ve got to go out there and really perform.”Also returning to the Test side after injury is specialist wicketkeeper Prasanna Jayawardene whose presence forced Sri Lanka to change their opening batting combination. Malinda Warnapura, who opened with Tharanga Paranavitana against Pakistan, will have to make way for the return of Tillakaratne Dilshan who is being promoted to open the batting. “Dilshan will play a very important role. We know that he’s been our No. 1 opener in the shortest version of the game,” said Sangakkara. “We might ask him to do that role in Test matches as well. He’s one player who can win matches for us he’s done it in the past.”In recent times Sri Lanka’s bowling has moved away from spin to seam as their main weapon for success with the advent of bowlers like Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara, who spearheaded the bowling against Pakistan. The Galle pitch too has interestingly not proved to be what it has been over the years.”It’s not been a traditional Sri Lankan pitch which is really good for the make up that we have in the side,” said Sangakkara. “We’ve got lots of fast bowlers coming through, most of them are bowling 140 plus now and we’ve got two of the best spinners in the world going around. We’ve got the balance of the side to meet the requirements of the wicket and opposition.”New Zealand’s got really good and capable players it’s a very interesting mixture. We’ve seen most of them over the years and they’ve got a lot of quality as well. They are a side that you really can’t take for granted for the variation they have, the spinners and fast bowlers. We know they got their bases covered what we got to do is try and play better cricket.”

Liverpool linked with Ousmane Dembele

It’s safe to say Liverpool have been an attacking force to be reckoned with so far this season with 17 league goals scored in seven games as well as having more shots at goal (147) than any other Premier League side.

Additionally, Jurgen Klopp’s side have had seven different goalscorers getting their names up in lights in the top flight.

Nevertheless, it seems as though the club have their eyes on signing a new attacking talent at some point in the future.

What’s the news?

It has recently been reported by the Daily Mail that the Merseyside club have already started negotiations to sign Barcelona winger Ousmane Dembele on a free transfer during the next summer window.

Prior to joining Barcelona, the 24-year-old racked up a total of 10 goals and 22 assists in 50 appearances for German club Borussia Dortmund before securing his move to the La Liga giants for a massive fee of £135.5m in the summer of 2017.

During his time at Barcelona, the Frenchman – who is currently valued at £45m according to Transfermarkt – has scored 30 goals and provided 21 assists in 118 appearances across all competitions.

Potential Salah heir?

Regarding a potential move to Liverpool, we think that the club should definitely persist with their reported negotiations over trying to secure a free transfer for Dembele, who has been described as a “phenomenon” by former Barcelona star Lionel Messi, in the summer.

Given how there has been some speculation over whether or not current Reds winger Mohamed Salah will sign a new deal at the Merseyside club when his contract expires in 2023, we feel that Dembele could potentially be a solid replacement for Salah if the Egyptian leaves when his current deal ends, especially if Liverpool can sign the Frenchman on a free transfer.

Furthermore, with Dembele making more dribbles per game (2.1) in La Liga last season than Salah (one) managed to in the Premier League, perhaps this could be an area where the 24-year-old would improve Klopp’s side if the Egyptian were to depart.

However, he would need to work on his goals and assists output if he were to follow in Salah’s footsteps at Anfield, with the latter consistently netting more than 20 times a season for the Reds. However, one thing which should be taken into consideration over a potential move for Dembele is the hefty number of injuries he has suffered during his time in Spain.

Overall, though, if Liverpool can sign him on a free transfer, this could be a great bit of business from the Reds given how much experience he has of playing at the top level under his belt in the Bundesliga, La Liga and Champions League.

In other news: Liverpool could be set for big blow as transfer claim emerges, fans would be fuming

Starfelt ran the show v St Johnstone

With Ange Postecoglou’s Celtic side heading into Saturday’s Premiership clash in an excellent run of form, the  Bhoys manager would undoubtedly have been hoping for another positive performance when St Johnstone visited Parkhead.

The 56-year-old would not be disappointed, as goals either side of half-time from Georgios Giakoumakis and Josip Juranovic capped a dominant display by the Hoops, with the 2-0 win moving Postecoglou’s side to within one point of the Premiership leaders.

As is to be expected after such a result, a number of Celtic’s players turned in very impressive performances over the course of the 90 minutes this afternoon, with the two aforementioned goalscorers particularly impressing.

However, it may be Carl Starfelt who is most pleased with his display against the Saints, as the centre-back ran the show from the heart of the Hoops’ defence.

Won 16 duels

Despite enduring something of a shaky start to his Celtic career, the Sweden international has really started to come into his own in recent weeks, with his performance against St Johnstone arguably being his best for the Hoops to date.

Indeed, over the course of his 90 minutes on the pitch, the £2.7m-rated defender played a key role in his side keeping a clean sheet, making three tackles, three interceptions and four clearances and winning a monstrous 16 duels.

The 26-year-old also saw a significant amount of the ball, enjoying a whopping 152 touches, the most of any player to feature in the match; completing 127 passes – again, the most of any other player – and picking out a team-mate with two of his three attempted long balls.

These returns saw the player who the Everything Celtic Twitter account described as “solid” receive a SofaScore match rating of 8.0, with no player from either side earning a better score than the £14k-per-week defender.

As such, it would certainly appear that the more experience Starfelt has of playing under Postecoglou, the better the 26-year-old is getting. That would appear to bode very well indeed for everyone involved with Celtic.

In other news: £1.9m out of pocket: Lawwell had a mare on “exemplary” Celtic sensation, he’s thriving

Trott buries Australia with debut ton

Jonathan Trott produced a debut hundred of the highest class to set Australia a huge 546 for victory, but they aren’t about to give up without a fight

The Bulletin by Andrew Miller at The Oval22-Aug-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJonathan Trott sprints through to reach his maiden Test hundred•Getty ImagesJonathan Trott entered Ashes folklore with the innings of an instant veteran, as England’s batsmen sauntered into a position of absolute dominance, only for Australia’s openers to keep their nerves a-jangling with a coolly compiled 80-run stand, on another enthralling day at The Oval. Trott’s 119 from 193 balls was the 18th century by a debutant in England’s Test history and the first against Australia since Graham Thorpe in 1993, but given the magnitude of the occasion, it ranked among the finest of all time. His efforts left Australia facing a climb as forbidding as Mont Ventoux, as Andrew Strauss declared on 373 for 9, with a massive target of 546 in the bag.But Australia, to their credit, refused to yield to any presumptions of defeat and decided attack was the best route to the summit. Simon Katich and Shane Watson banished any lingering demons from the first innings, and backed themselves to play their shots against the new ball, and the policy paid off in an opening stand of 80, as they reached the close with their hopes renewed and England’s anxieties sharpened in a manner reminiscent of the final day at Lord’s. Nevertheless, as the ball lost its hardness and Stuart Broad’s offcutters began to grip, it was clear that survival will become harder and harder the longer the innings wears on. Having collapsed from 73 for 0 to 160 in their first innings, Australia know just how tough the next six sessions are sure to be.The Oval pitch, the subject of much controversy overnight, carried on producing wild puffs of dust from almost every delivery, but as England’s lower-order clubbed a supine attack to all corners of South London, adding 205 in the last 37 overs of the innings, the heat went out of the debate about its merits. In fact, England’s progress seemed at times almost too comfortable for their series prospects, as Australia’s bowlers abandoned any hope of salvaging their team’s situation and instead settled for damage limitation with a view to batting out for the draw.Nevertheless, the steep bounce that the part-time spinner, Marcus North, had continued to extract was enough to confirm the suspicions that batting last, with men packed around the bat, would be a fraught experience. Sure enough, Swann entered England’s attack as early as the ninth over, and though he didn’t make a breakthrough with the still-hard new ball, he found sufficient purchase to suggest his time will come. For the time being, however, North, who came into the game with just two Test wickets to his name, emerged as the most potent spinner on show, with 4 for 98 from 30 testing overs.If the expectant buzz around The Oval had been dampened a fraction by the close, then it would never have become so electric in the first place, had it not been for Trott’s magnificent scene-setter. For the second time in consecutive Ashes battles at the venue, England’s visions of glory were filtered through a South African-born lens, and perhaps that same filter removed the fear of failure as well, because as with Kevin Pietersen’s unforgettable 158 in 2005, Trott scarcely blinked for an instant.He had been a controversial selection for such a pressure-cooker contest, but to give the selectors credit where it is due, the skill, determination and confidence of his performance made the men around him in England’s middle-order look like the international novices. His nerveless shot selection, at an even tempo of roughly a run every two balls, provided the scaffolding for a series of carefree cameos at the other end – including a farewell frolic from Andrew Flintoff, and a spanking 63 from 55 balls from Swann, who fine-tuned his confidence going into the defining fourth innings.Aside from a brush with a Peter Siddle bouncer, and a hairy moment on 97 when he deflected Ben Hilfenhaus inches past his leg stump, Trott barely played a false stroke until the very moment of England’s declaration, when he chopped Stuart Clark to North in the gully. In fact, his most palpable moments of alarm came from his first two deliveries of the morning, first when Siddle believed he had made the breakthrough with an off-stump lifter (umpire Asad Rauf correctly ascertained that the ball had flicked only the thigh pad on the way through to Brad Haddin) and then when Trott followed up that escape with an awkward spoon into the covers off a leading edge.Graeme Swann hit a swashbuckling 63 to increase England’s lead•PA PhotosWith impressive ease, however, he put those dramas out of his mind, perhaps sensing that he’d experienced the most capricious deliveries that could come his way. He added 118 for the fourth wicket with his overnight partner Andrew Strauss, to ensure there would be no continuation of the late-evening hiccup that had taken a layer of sheen off England’s remarkable second day, and as early as the first hour of the day, Australia’s hopes of an attainable run-chase had been quashed.Strauss’s contribution was an unflappable and agenda-setting 75, which served as a moist flannel on his country’s fevered brow. He left the ball with nerveless certainty outside off, demanding that Australia’s bowlers bowled to his strengths rather than probe for non-existent weaknesses, and when he lashed Clark for three fours from nine balls faced as England upped the ante in the half-hour before lunch, he looked a dead-cert for his, and England’s, second century of the series. With four balls remaining of the session, however, he was lured by a ball of fuller length from North, who extracted enough rip off the track to find the edge to slip.Matt Prior, for once, played only a minor role in England’s momentum shift – although he did manage to send Ricky Ponting into the lunch break with a mouthful of blood after drilling the ball into his face at silly mid-off. Three overs after the break, he called for a crazy single after picking out the dead-eyed Katich in the covers, and was run out by a distance for 4. Nevertheless, his departure ensured that the crowd got one last glimpse of the man they really wanted to see, and when Flintoff clubbed his second delivery violently through midwicket for four, it was abundantly clear how he intended to pace his final Test innings.Three more boundaries followed, each greeted with rapture, but alas the magic could not last. With 22 from 17 balls to his name, Flintoff came down the track once more to launch North into the Harleyford Road, but Siddle steadied himself on the long-on ropes to pouch a simple catch. The Aussies stood in the middle to applaud Flintoff back to the pavilion as he saluted all corners of the ground, while down the steps – replacing him in every sense – came the man of the moment, Broad.He did not disappoint either. Feeding off Mitchell Johnson’s regressive line and length, he dabbed the first of his five fours through backward point, then climbed into North in a violent over containing three further biffs down the ground, the first of which went arrow-straight back over the bowler’s head to land just inside the boundary’s rope. He eventually took one swipe too many, and picked out Ponting in the covers, but into the fray strode Swann, in a mood for violence – just as he had been in the final innings at Headingley two weeks ago, when England’s predicament could hardly have been more different, but when the licence for thwacking had been every bit as liberating.With Trott trotting along beside him, Swann belted two-thirds of England’s runs in an eighth wicket of 90 from 80 deliveries that left observers wondering if he’d win the race to three figures. Australia took the new ball in that period as well, but offered Swann far too many opportunities to unfurl his exuberant drive, which accounted for six of his nine fours before Hilfenhaus pulled his length back at last and skidded a bouncer off a miscued hook to Haddin.For the best part of their day in the field, England had simply had it too easy, and by the close, Watson and Katich had shown them just how ready Australia are to hand over their urn. All the same, the series is coming to a crescendo, and as in that unforgettable summer of 2005, there is an air of anxious expectation in SE11.

Everton injury news on Doucoure

Lots of Everton fans have been left buzzing as some news emerged on Abdoulaye Doucoure.

As per Fabrizio Romano, the central midfield player is now set to back from injury earlier than initially expected.

He is preparing to come back in between four and four and a half weeks, after the next international break has finished.

Doucoure is currently ranked as the Merseyside club’s second-best player in the Premier League so far this season, only behind Dominic Calvert-Lewin with an average rating of 7.3 given by WhoScored, and his swift return will no doubt be welcomed by Rafa Benitez given their last couple of results at Goodison Park, in which they have lost 1-0 and 5-2 to West Ham United and Watford respectively.

A return after the international break would rather crucially mark him fit for the visit of Liverpool on December 1.

Everton fans on Doucoure injury news

These Toffees supporters were left buzzing as the injury news on Doucoure was shared on Twitter, with one Blue even going as far as to claim that it is ‘brilliant news’:

“Yes!! Great news”

Credit: @mspickles19

“Finally some good news”

Credit: @ToffeeTosh1878

“No way this club got some good news that’s mad”

Credit: @EFC18786

“Yess”

Credit: @AndyVale27

“Wow, that must be my birthday present”

Credit: @Dan082617

“Brilliant news”

Credit: @_evertonreport

In other news, find out what Benitez news has been lauded by Evertonians here!

Wilf Diedricks dies aged 64

Former South African umpire Wilf Diedricks died early on Tuesday morning after a lengthy illness at the age of 64

Cricinfo staff18-Aug-2009Former South African umpire Wilf Diedricks died early on Tuesday morning after a lengthy illness at the age of 64.Diedricks became a well-known figure in South African cricket as a first-class umpire post-1991. But his contribution to non-racial cricket from the mid-1970s to 1991, both at provincial level in Kwazulu Natal and nationally, was enormous.In the 1969 season, he linked up with Universals Cricket Club in the Durban Districts Cricket Union at Tills Crescent. It was during this time that he began his umpiring career. Diedricks stopped playing just prior to the first attempt at unity in 1976-1977 and together with Krish Mackerdhuj and Sagren Naidoo, joined the umpiring ranks.He helped to establish the Natal Umpires Body which was followed by the SA Cricket Board Umpires Association. In his first assignment, under the auspices of the United Cricket Board, Diedricks, along with Brian Jerling, umpired the match between Eastern Province B and Natal B at the University of Port Elizabeth .Diedricks’ first four-day game was a New Year affair at St Georges Park in a match between Eastern province, captained by Kepler Wessels, and Orange Free State, led by Hansie Cronje.He officiated in just the one Test, between South Africa and India in Port Elizabeth in 1992-93. He also stood in 31 ODIs, the last being the Standard Bank Triangular Tournament match in 2001 between South Africa and Kenya.Diedricks is survived by his wife Ethne, a cricket scorer, and his four children.Cassim Docrat, the KwaZulu-Natal Cricket Union chief executive, said the passing away of Diedricks was a tremendous loss to South African cricket. “He was a person who had committed and dedicated his life to the improvement of the game in all facets,” he said. “His administrative skills will be sadly missed and we extend our condolences to his family during this difficult time.”

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