Spurs: Gold drops Son transfer update

Alasdair Gold has dropped an update on the future of Tottenham Hotspur forward Son Heung-min.

What’s the latest?

In a recent post on Twitter, the football.london journalist revealed that, should Antonio Conte’s side have missed out on a top-four finish in the Premier League this season, Liverpool were set to launch an offer for the 29-year-old winger in the summer transfer window.

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In his tweet, Gold said: “Another bonus of Son’s goals and Conte leading Spurs to fourth place is that I understand it stopped Liverpool from making a big summer bid to test Tottenham’s resolve to keep the South Korean star. I can’t believe they would have accepted it anyway.”

Supporters will be buzzing

Considering just how important a part of the Spurs side Son undoubtedly is, the news that Liverpool do not look as if they are set to make an offer for the South Korea international this summer is sure to have left the Tottenham faithful buzzing.

Indeed, over his 35 Premier League appearances this season, the £72m-rated forward was in the form of his life, scoring a remarkable 23 goals, registering nine assists and creating ten big chances for his teammates, as well as taking an average of 2.5 shots making, 2.1 key passes and completing 1.5 dribbles per game.

These returns saw the £140k-per-week talent average a quite breathtaking SofaScore match rating of 7.50, not only ranking him as Conte’s best performer in the league but also as the third-best player in the division as a whole.

Furthermore, with an astonishing 19 of these goals and eight of the assists coming in the 29-year-old’s 26 Premier League outings under the management of the Italian head coach, it is clear to see just how crucial Son will be to the 52-year-old’s plans heading into the 2022/23 campaign.

As such, the news that Jurgen Klopp’s defeated Champions League finalists do not look as if they will be offering the South Korean what would certainly have been a tempting offer of a move to Anfield this summer is undoubtedly fantastic news for both Conte and supporters of the club alike.

AND in other news: Paratici could land Alaba 2.0 as Spurs eye £80m target who “everyone is talking about”

Celtic must secure Mohanad Jeahze transfer

Celtic ended their 2021/22 SPFL season with the best defensive record in the league having conceded just 22 goals in 38 games.

To further highlight their defensive strength, the Hoops faced fewer shots on target (76) than any other side in the top flight.

One figure that played a big part in Celtic’s title winning campaign at the back was Carl Starfelt.

Signed during the previous summer transfer window from Rubin Kazan on a four-year deal for a reported fee of £4m, the centre-back quickly became a prominent figure for Postecoglou.

Throughout his debut campaign, the Sweden international made 49 appearances across all competitions and played more minutes in the league than any other outfield player.

With the second-highest number of interceptions (42) and tackles won (30) to his name, Starfelt also had the joint-second highest average of clearances (3.5) and joint-highest average for aerial duels won per game (4.2) in Celtic’s ranks.

This highlights just how much of a capable defender he is and how significant he was for the Hoops this term.

Now that the campaign has drawn to an end, the summer transfer window will give Postecoglou the chance to potentially make some more changes to his squad so they can progress.

One figure that could potentially fit in the side well and possibly make a formidable defensive duo with Starfelt is Mohanad Jeahze.

The Hoops were linked with a reported £2m move for the Hammarby left-back, who has been labelled as a “class” player by Darijan Bojanic, last month.

With eight league appearances to his name this season, the defender has racked up the highest number of interceptions (18) and second-highest number of tackles (13) in Hammarby’s squad.

This shows how much of a tough defender he is and how he could be a solid fit next to Starfelt to make Celtic stronger on the left side of the defence.

Despite the current Celtic defender already showing his defensive talents, having another defensive full-back next to him, such as Jeahze, could make Postecoglou’s side an even tougher side to play against.

Taking into account how the Hoops will be facing off against some of Europe’s top teams in the Champions League next season, having some extra defensive reinforcements would not be a bad thing for the Parkhead club as they’ll be aiming to regain the SPFL title as well.

In other news: Better than Edouard: Celtic eyeing “feisty” 51-goal dynamo, supporters surely buzzing

Spurs: Gold hails ‘superb’ Romero challenge

Journalist Alasdair Gold has been full of praise for Tottenham Hotspur centre-back Cristian Romero following his ‘superb’ performance against Leicester City.

The Lowdown: Eye-catching performance

Antonio Conte named the 24-year-old in his starting line-up for the Premier League clash against the Foxes on Sunday afternoon as the Lilywhites secured a 3-1 victory at home, with goals coming from captain Harry Kane and a brace from Son Heung-Min.

The Argentina defender caught the eye of the football.london correspondent when making a challenge which ultimately led to Son scoring Spurs’ second goal of the match on the hour mark.

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The Latest: Gold praises Romero challenge

Gold took to Twitter immediately after the goal to share his thoughts on Romero’s fateful intervention, which prompted some Leicester complaints over what they felt was a foul on Caglar Soyuncu.

Providing updates on the match for football.london, the journalist wrote: “Son fires home to double Spurs’ lead, with Kulusevski setting him up. It all came from a huge, crunching tackle from Romero in the centre of the pitch. Full commitment from the Argentine, who has been superb today once again.”

The Verdict: Romero was excellent for Spurs

Aside from that moment, the £29k-per-week Romero was a standout performer against Brendan Rodgers’ side, proving to be an absolute rock at the heart of the defence. As per SofaScore, the Argentine made five clearances, three tackles and three interceptions, along with winning both of his aerial duels and five of his ground duels.

His challenge turned out to be a pivotal moment in the game because it helped to give Spurs a two-goal safety cushion, at a time when Conte’s side were lacking a bit of inspiration while the match was very much in the balance.

This crucial win for Tottenham sees them remain firmly in the hunt for a Champions League place at the end of the season, with just four games of the current campaign left to play.

In other news… a Spurs source has shared some big in-house player news

Warner more fluent than Smith as duo has first Australia nets since end of ban

Back from the IPL, both batsmen attended their first full day of training with the Australian team since their ball-tampering bans ended on March 29

Andrew McGlashan in Brisbane05-May-20190:42

Smith and Warner join Australia net session

It was another small and slightly symbolic milestone. For the first time in more than a year, Steven Smith and David Warner were hitting cricket balls as part of an Australian squad. Warner middled more than Smith, which is pretty much what it has been like for the past six weeks at the IPL.Both have been ill over the last few days so while the camp in Brisbane officially started on Friday this was the first full day for them. It remains to be seen whether they both play the opening match against New Zealand on Monday – Australia are certainly not short of players this week with members of the Australia A squad also in attendance – or are staggered across the three games.There are, it’s probably worth reminding, a few other things for Australia to settle on before the World Cup than just the return of Smith and Warner.However, it remains the main story in town for now. The bans officially ended on March 29, but it has been the slow comeback: a quick meeting in the UAE, the IPL, now Brisbane, with more warm-up matches to come in England before the World Cup opener against Afghanistan on June 1.Warner had an easier afternoon that Smith under the pristine blue skies of a perfect Brisbane autumn day. He faced a bit of spin and then plenty of throwdowns from head coach Justin Langer. As at the IPL, most of his shots came out of the middle.”You rarely see him out of form,” Glenn Maxwell said of Warner before the session started. “He’s such a good player and you look at his stats over there in the IPL, what he’s done for Hyderabad – he’s got an unbelievable record. I think he’s scored over 500 runs every time he’s been over there, which is amazing consistency and hopefully that continues in the one-day stuff here.”David Warner and Steven Smith look on before the start of the match•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesSmith, his troublesome elbow still well strapped and occasionally being flexed, also began in the spinners’ net before facing the challenge of the pacemen. Mitchell Starc, Sean Abbott and Michael Neser ran in hard (the latter two part of the Australia A squad) with more deliveries squirting off both edges of Smith’s bat than the centre – which didn’t escape Smith’s notice at one stage – but a couple of leg-side flicks showed promise.”They’re both superstars,” Maxwell said. “Steve made back-to-back fifties at the end there [at the IPL] as well and I watched both of them go about it as well, and they were absolutely brilliant over there. They’re striking the ball really nicely so there’ll be no worries about them coming back in.”Starc looked especially impressive after recovering from the pectoral injury he sustained in the second Test against Sri Lanka in February, which ruled him out of the one-day tours of India and UAE. He produced a searing delivery which climbed at Shaun Marsh to hammer into the gloves and was constantly testing Smith’s technique as he got to the ball to shape back.The main injury concern in the Australia camp remains Jhye Richardson after the dislocated shoulder he sustained in the UAE. On Friday, Langer said he hoped to have a better idea early in the week about Richardson’s prognosis. Kane Richardson and Josh Hazlewood, the latter who didn’t make the World Cup squad due to his back injury, are the first-choice reserves and are both attending the camp although Hazlewood won’t be available for the New Zealand matches.One final point worth noting about these three games is that they are scheduled to finish at 5pm. At this time of the year in Brisbane, even on a perfectly clear day, the light was barely playable at that point. While the results of these matches are not the important thing, it could be worth the chasing side having the DLS score handy. Which, coming into a World Cup, perhaps is not a bad practice anyway.

'Aggression is in my genes'

India’s Harmanpreet Kaur talks about her hard-hitting style, her stint at Sydney Thunder, and the various captains she has played under

Annesha Ghosh16-Jun-2017Describe your first day at work with Sydney Thunder. Was it a training session, a squad meeting or an ice-breaking session?
My flight to Sydney was scheduled the same evening we [the India women’s team] landed in Mumbai after winning the Asia Cup in Thailand. So I missed all the ice-breaking and training sessions with the Thunder girls and was due to play a match the very next evening. I landed there and did a few pressers and the team meetings. Was dog-tired after that but excited to hit the ground running in a few hoursYour 28-ball 47 on your WBBL debut featured a lofted cover drive for six that was described by Adam Gilchrist on live commentary as “as good a cricket shot as you will ever see”. Is that the best shot you’ve played till date?
One of the best, surely. I was pleasantly surprised to learn he was on air at that point. He even tweeted something after the game. [It’s] always nice when a legend like him appreciates your game.How did you feel when you had the bowler, Gemma Triscari of Melbourne Stars, in splits with that shot?
My first reaction action after hitting that six was… umm… confusion. I was like, “Hey, I smoked that one, and all she does in reply is burst into laughter!” The next match, which was also against the Melbourne Stars, and we needed 13 off 12, I remember I had closed out the game in the 19th over, with one four and two sixes. After I hit that winning six, I spotted Triscari laughing at short third man. I told myself, “Well, maybe, that’s her way of reacting to sixes!”How well did you get along with your team-mates?
Oh, it took me a while to remember the names. For the initial few days I wasn’t able to tell their faces apart. I would think, “Wasn’t this the same girl I was introduced to a few minutes ago?” But the first fielding session I had with them on match day was real fun. I had only four-five hours of sleep and was tired but the enthusiasm of the girls was infectious.Their English is starkly different from what we speak here in India. I would have to strain my ears to make sense of what they spoke. I would focus hard on a few words when the Aussie girls would interact with each other and then pick a few up from there. I guess I did pretty well as a student ().

“Sandwiches were a constant feature in breakfasts [at Sydney Thunder], and I absolutely hate sandwiches. I would be really annoyed every time I found it on the menu”

Were you able to rub off a bit of Hindi or Punjabi on your Thunder team-mates?
Oh yeah, I did, but only a smattering. They seemed to be already familiar with “” (let’s go), and it was kind of nice the way most of the girls used it while heading for the ground. I also remember many of them showing particular interest in the song from . Many a time, I would enunciate the words, explaining the lyrics to them, and to their credit, they were pretty quick at getting the pronunciations right. But they would also put me on the spot, asking me to translate words like “breakfast” into Hindi. I would wonder, “, India breakfast breakfast !” (Oh man, we call breakfast breakfast in India.)Did you develop a liking for Australian food?
Sandwiches were a constant feature in breakfasts, and I absolutely hate sandwiches. I would be really annoyed every time I found it on the menu. And then there was also bacon. I wasn’t accustomed to eating bacon before my WBBL stint. I don’t even like fish much. I have always been an all-things-chicken aficionado, as you’d expect of a Punjabi. But my room-mates would insist I tried a bit of bacon. I kept refusing for the longest time – and succeeded in doing so too. Thankfully, though, the Thunder manager, Merv Pereira, turned out to be an Indian. That was the biggest plus point (). He was almost like a godsend. And a lot of Punjabis based in Sydney would come to watch our games. My cousin lives in Sydney too. So, getting “” (home-style food) wasn’t much of a problem.You have been signed up by Surrey Stars for the upcoming season of the Kia Super League, England’s domestic T20 tournament. Were you offered a contract by any other franchise?
No, it’s only Surrey [Stars]. The BCCI informed me that the franchise wanted to rope me in for the tournament. Given that I don’t have any cricketing commitments during that time of the year, and the World Cup, too, will have been over by then, I decided to give it a shot.Batting for Sydney Thunder? Not a problem. Adjusting to the accents? Far trickier•Getty ImagesWith one wicket in hand, and eight runs needed off the last two balls in the final of the Women’s World Cup Qualifier, against South Africa, in February, you hit a six off the penultimate delivery and ran a couple the next ball to hand India the title. Talk us through that final-over finish.
We needed nine off the over, so I had made up my mind early that I would face all six deliveries. Raja [Rajeshwari Gayakwad], the No. 11 batsman, was at the other end, and knowing our tailenders rarely get to bat in matches, I was clear in my head I didn’t want to give her the strike, because doing that would have meant I had to hope for her to take a single.In such situations, you can’t hope for things to happen – you’ve got to make things happen. The South African quicks were also keeping it really tight in the end overs. We had lost the last few wickets to yorkers. My target was to hit at least two fours or one six, and I was anticipating where the ball would be bowled according to the field placements. But after I failed to execute in the first three balls, I realised perhaps the bowler was trying to out-think me by bowling completely opposite to the field setting. So, I decided to play the last two balls purely on their merit, and luckily, I connected the penultimate ball for a six. Whew!And what about the celebration that followed? Were you even aware your bat was on the verge of skyrocketing into outer space?
Such was the thrill of that win. Normally I wouldn’t even let my bat drop to the ground, forget hurling it up in the air. My bat means the world to me, so after the excitement tempered down, I kept apologising to my bat for hours on end. But yeah, I did watch replays of that frenzied celebration on social media and, as I said, it was frenzied.How was it being room-mates with West Indies captain Stafanie Taylor and batting in her company during the WBBL?
It was fun. Since most of the [Thunder] girls hailed from Sydney, they would travel from home. A few of us lived in the same apartment – Taylor, I, Sam [Bates], Cheats [Lauren Cheatle]. Taylor is a chilled-out girl – doesn’t talk much and mostly likes to keep to herself. But I thoroughly enjoyed batting with her. We would share our individual understanding of a bowler’s gameplan, share our views and experiences with each other. I got to learn a lot from her in terms of assessing tactics of opponents. She’s really good at that: 70-80% of her predictions about the bowlers’ lines and lengths would come true.Tell us one trait you admire the most in each of the captains you’ve played under – Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Anjum Chopra and Alex Blackwell, the Thunder captain.
Mithu has been immensely calm and focused as the leader of our side. Her experience as a top batsman for all these years reflects in her sound awareness about responding to a particular situation.Jhulu was as aggressive as captain as she’s always been as a bowler. I’m an aggressive player myself, so I like that trait in her.

“Normally, I wouldn’t even let my bat drop to the ground, forget hurling it up in the air. My bat means the world to me, so after the excitement tempered down, I kept apologising to my bat for hours”Harmanpreet on her bat-hurling celebration after hitting the winning runs in the Women’s World Cup Qualifier final

Anjum was a cool-headed skipper. She would underline that there were no hierarchies in the team, no senior-junior classifications. She would often say, “Irrespective of age and experience, all players representing the national side, even the debutant, are on the same plane.”Blackwell is an out-and-out team player. Often after the end of a match she would seek our opinion on the choices she had made in the field that day and ask us how differently we would have reacted had any of us been in her position. It was nice to see the importance she attached to the perspective of every player.The ideal way of describing your bowling style would be: right-arm everything. Your spin variations are marked by a deceptive use of pace and flight. How did you develop this brand of bowling?
It’s only been two or three years since I switched from medium pace to spin. I don’t focus much on the technicalities of the craft, to be honest. I just make sure I enjoy my bowling, which is what I’m glad I’ve been able to do so far. Much of the effectiveness of my spin bowling – offspin, legspin, wrong’uns or quicker ones – has its origin in the nets sessions I used to have in Moga.During my early years of formal training, my coach, Rupchand Sir, would make the girls try out all types of bowling. I’m happy those experiments – the looping, darting and all that – are coming to good use now.You’ve always said Virender Sehwag is your cricketing hero. How much of an influence has he been?
I grew up watching Sehwag, and he was the only reason I followed matches on television as a kid. I never had any other cricketing idol. I would meticulously follow his style of batting – his liking for scoring runs in fours and sixes, his approach in high-pressure situations. During my growing-up years, I would often try and execute some of the trademark Sehwag shots while playing with the boys in the neighbourhood. Even now, whenever I get to meet him, I discuss my game with him and try to learn something new.Is your on-field aggression a reflection of your admiration for Sehwag’s strokeplay?
Not really – the aggression is in my genes (). It’s been handed down by my father, Sardar Harminder Singh. I would tag along with him when he used to play club-level games. I think I picked up the hard-hitting style from him.Harmanpreet (right) with “firebrand and great dancer” Veda Krishnamurthy•IDI/Getty ImagesWhat is it like to be the connecting link between the two veterans – Goswami and Mithali – and the younger crop of players in the Indian team?
Spending considerable time over the years with Jhulu , Mithu and now with the youngsters as well, has helped me understand their mindsets. At times, when either side is not able to convey their thoughts to the other, I can play the communicator between them. The youngsters coming into the team may feel shy about discussing certain things with the two legends, while for them [Raj and Goswami], the concern may be to ensure their feedback is not misconstrued as putting undue pressure on the girls. That is where I can chip in and bridge the gap, if any. [It] helps the team-bonding too.What’s the worst sledge you ever copped on a cricket field and what was your response?
I’m not sure if I can recall the worst sledge but I do remember getting one from [Alyssa] Healy during the WBBL. I was at the non-striker’s end and the noise in the stadium was quite deafening, so I couldn’t hear what she said. But my partner told me between overs that Healy had uttered something unpleasant. Since I hadn’t heard it myself, I chose to ignore it and carried on with my game. However, after the end of the match, Healy came up to me and apologised.If there were a contest to publish most Instagram stories in a day, who among your India team-mates is likely to win?
Sushma Verma [the wicketkeeper] – hands down. No one in the team is a patch on Sush.Who’s the most fun on a night out?
I think it’s Veda [Krishnamurthy]. She is a firebrand and a great dancer too.Who’s the worst?
It has to be Smriti [Mandhana]. You know how graceful she is as a batsman. But, unfortunately, I can’t say the same about her dancing skills ().A catch goes up to win the World Cup final. Who do you want under it?
Myself. I trust my abilities the most.

Spinners derail Australia

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Jan-2016Having been sent in, India lost Shikhar Dhawan early to the returning Shane Watson, for 5•Getty ImagesRohit Sharma hit four fours and one six before Watson stuck again•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesVirat Kohli then took charge of the innings..•Associated Press.. even as Suresh Raina struggled for timing•Getty ImagesThe pair added 134 for the third wicket; India’s third-highest for any wicket in T20 internationals•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesRaina made 41 off 34 balls before he was bowled by James Faulkner•Getty ImagesKohli powered on to hit 90 not out off 55 balls•Getty ImagesMS Dhoni smacked a six and a four in a cameo as India finished at 188 for 3•Getty ImagesAaron Finch gave Australia a strong start in the chase•Getty ImagesDavid Warner contributed 17 in a 47-run opening stand before he was dismissed by debutant Jasprit Bumrah•Getty ImagesSteven Smith kept Australia ticking …•Getty Images… before Ravindra Jadeja scuppered the chase•Cricket AustraliaR Ashwin also chipped in to hasten Australia’s slide•Getty ImagesAfter a horror first over, debutant Hardik Pandya came back to take two wickets in two balls•Getty ImagesBumrah then returned and cleaned up the tail to seal a 37-run win•Getty ImagesThe Indian fans had plenty to cheer about as their side went 1-0 up under firework-filled skies•Getty Images

From the Bay to the Basin

Four scenic grounds in New Zealand’s North Island that didn’t make the World Cup cut

Will Macpherson04-Dec-2014What’s the most beautiful cricket ground in the world? Everyone has an opinion on this. You’ve probably had the same argument leaning on a bar or sitting in a stand or lying on a grass bank.Adelaide Oval probably features, or at least it would have done before a cricket ground became an AFL stadium. The same doubts probably bubble around the developments at Newlands. Arundel and Wormsley are most likely in the list of gorgeous grounds for their classical beauty, Dharamsala and Galle for their dramatic backdrops, Colombo and Antigua’s Rec for that ramshackle charm.Definitely you’ll have a ground in New Zealand on your list. Regardless of the seven grounds that will be seen and heard about during the World Cup, there will be some aesthetic absences. We take a look at seven grounds that didn’t make the World Cup cut. The reasons are logistical, but a return to these missing grounds will stir a whimsy: whether New Zealand emerged from the oceans simply to provide beautiful places to watch cricket.The North Island is home to four World Cup venues – Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Napier. The following four are the delights that the world will be missing.Pukekura Park, New Plymouth
Part of the weirdly beautiful Pukekura Park’s beauty is that it’s worth visiting even if not for cricket. it boasts a , lakes on which to boat, tea rooms, a seasonal festival of lights, lush lawns, wild bushwalks and all sorts of exotic flora and fauna alongside. Glorious.But the cricket ground, that’s something else entirely. It’s a typically stunning piece of rural New Zealand. is the key word. The air hangs thick with the smell of rhododendrons wafting over from the park; on one side, two adjacent steep hillocks provide natural, angular grandstands with grass poking through the layered wooden, levelled benches. Around the rest of the ground are further, sparser, steeper, more sporadic undulating humps that serve the same purpose; foliage, not uniform in height, forms a ring behind all but one end and provides beautiful dappled lighting over those seated when the sun shines.There’s a grand art deco gate at the only clear end, an end that serves as a window out to the real world that lies outside, however easy it is to forget it’s there. And there’s a perfectly conical volcano within a stone’s throw. The square is an oasis amidst this world of organic funk: a greener scene is not easy to imagine. I dare your jaw not to drop.Cobham Oval, Whangarei

Now this is a beautiful part of the world. Just south of the Bay of Islands, Whangarei is New Zealand’s northernmost city, a charming port boasting spectacular waterfalls, islands in the harbour, beautiful volcanic mountains, white sands, velvety conifers and, you guessed it, a classic cricket ground. Cobham Oval was approved for international cricket in 2011 and hosted its first ODI the following year, between New Zealand and Zimbabwe.Who was Cobham? That would be Charles Lyttelton, the 10th Viscount Cobham, Worcestershire captain in the 1930s and, later, the ninth Governor General of New Zealand. The ground in his name lies next to the Hatea River and minutes from the town centre. It draws on colonial design and an English village-green feel. The pavilion is grand and imperial – sandstone in colour and with a clock and turrets for decoration – dominating the scenery at third man, next to the sightscreen. Beyond that it’s simple: bunds and banks all around.Bay Oval: next door to the Pacific•Getty ImagesBay Oval, Mount Maunganui, Tauranga
“The Mount” is a pretty lovely place in which to summer. Thousands sprawl from the North Island’s urban centres and beyond every year to enjoy the spectacular, narrow peninsula on the Pacific: magnificent surf one side, sheltered bay the other, a dormant volcano at its tip and a cute little town to boot. It’s a lovely place to play or watch cricket too, as New Zealand and South Africa and thousands of fans discovered when Bay Oval hosted the first ever internationals to be played in New Zealand in October, earlier this year.Work started on this ground in 2005, with the excavation of huge amounts of dry land and sand. The result is stunning: a smart modern pavilion surrounded by lush green banks and a vast oval, all just a matter of metres from the sea. The ground feels made for Test cricket. That hasn’t happened yet but those two days against South Africa in October were a fine audition.Bay of Plenty doesn’t often see international sport so the hardy locals flocked in, even though spring was young. They created quite the festival atmosphere and it was a sea of white on green: tall green trees obscured the view of the white beaches; white steps ran from the pavilion to the green outfield, which in turn was flanked by a white picket fence, separating the fans, lounging on gentle green banks with that big green volcano in the background.Basin Reserve, Wellington

The Basin, like the city in which it dwells, has many peculiarities. The home of New Zealand Test cricket sits on Rugby Street, which says plenty about the game’s standing in the country, although it is one of New Zealand’s only sports grounds on the National Heritage list.It just appears from nowhere as you walk through town, is essentially a massive roundabout in the middle of Wellington, and is sheltered, in part, from the city’s famous elements by Mt Cook and Mt Victoria. That it only exists because an earthquake in 1855 flattened a swamp out enough to build a track adds to its charm.Charm it has in spades, and all of it has been retained. Fans are still invited onto the outfield during breaks in play, there’s a footpath that runs the perimeter of the pitch of the viewing areas, which are exquisite: the grass bank to the east is surely one of the most serene places to watch the game, with its rotund trees behind and the recently returned William Wakefield Memorial sat nobly in the middle. There’s ample covered seating opposite in the fanciful colonial Museum Stand (home, unsurprisingly, to the New Zealand Cricket Museum) and the tastefully designed RA Vance Stand next door. It is also solely a cricket ground, which is an important rarity in the Antipodes; it is why the Basin rarely feels misshapen or cavernously hollow like Eden Park can. On off days, you can just wander for a stroll, a lie-down, or simply soak up the unspoiled history of it all.On one such visit earlier this year, I found the Basin showing off about its place in New Zealand’s cricketing story, proudly emblazoning a DIY paint job on a window, reading “Crowe 299 McCullum 302” in honour of the pair’s remarkable feats at the ground. Thankfully, the recent threat of the ground falling in a flight path has been averted, so we can enjoy this virginal, unblemished, boutique cricket ground in the heart of the city just the way it always was.

Jadeja's punt, and Sammy's punch

Plays of the day from the sixth match of the Champions Trophy between India and West Indies

Andrew Fidel Fernando and Nagraj Gollapudi11-Jun-2013The punt
Ravindra Jadeja had bowled the delivery into the pads of Marlon Samuels, who responded with a bat-pad defence on the front foot. Although the Indian captain MS Dhoni had joined the chorus of appeals from the close-in fielders and the bowler, he was not entirely sure whether to opt for the one review given to each team. The doubt was whether it had hit bat or pad first. Once he got a firm nod from Jadeja, however, Dhoni signaled to Aleem Dar for the review. Jadeja’s hunch proved correct as ball had just brushed the pad plumb in front before it hit the bat.The stop
If you make Dhoni jog to you and shake your hand, you clearly must have done something special. The Indian captain is not a man for big gestures on the field, but today he was forced to acknowledge Rohit Sharma’s agility at point. Against a short and wide ball from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Darren Bravo moved swiftly into position to unleash a dashing square cut which was travelling fast towards the point boundary. However, Rohit was equally quick to move to his right and then dive to interrupt the passage of ball and convert a certain boundary into just a single.The punch
As soon as he had charged Jadeja to slap a powerful inside-out six over cover to get to his half-century, an ecstatic Darren Sammy turned to the West Indies change room and punched his right hand, a gesture loaded with significance. Ahead of the Champions Trophy, Sammy had been replaced by Dwayne Bravo as the ODI captain, and was dropped in the first match against Pakistan. Bravo had said one reason for Sammy’s exclusion was to strengthen the batting order. Sammy is no doubt a bowling allrounder, but on evidence so far he is a better batsman than at least Ramnaresh Sarwan, who has had a horrid tournament. So Sammy’s excited celebration was clear in its message: don’t you dare drop me next time. I am a good batsman too.The drop
India’s openers motored to 72 by the end of the 11th over, but when West Indies finally had an opportunity to break the stand, Kemar Roach allowed it to slip through his fingers. Spotting a Shikhar Dhawan top edge off Dwayne Bravo in the 12th over, Roach stepped off the boundary rope at fine leg and set himself for the catch, but misjudged the trajectory slightly, and had planted himself a foot short of where he needed to be. He could have still comfortably taken the catch falling forward, but perhaps put off by a raucous India crowd, could not get his hands around the ball, and the batsmen continued to progress swiftly.The lazy fielder
Often at slip, Chris Gayle has one of the least taxing jobs in the field, but if there is any way someone else can do his work for him, Gayle will not pass up the opportunity. In the 28th over, Dinesh Karthik edged Marlon Samuels safely towards third man, and initially, it seemed as if Gayle, running back from slip, would haul the ball in. He caught up with it just before the 30-yard circle, but as he did, saw Ravi Rampaul also approaching from third man. Instead of bending down to pick up the ball, which had stopped no more than a foot away from his boot, Gayle gestured to Rampaul to collect it and throw it in himself. Amused, Rampaul obliged him, and Gayle returned to his position with a broad grin as the crowd cheered his lethargy.

Pakistan let it slip through their fingers, literally

Pakistan may have overcome severe lapses in the field to win games in the past, but to expect to get away after handing four reprieves to Sachin Tendulkar is to expect a miracle

Osman Samiuddin at the PCA Stadium31-Mar-2011At some point over the next couple of days, Pakistan will come to understand just how close they actually got – with this side whom few gave a chance – to getting to a World Cup final. The margin of defeat looks comfortable enough but there wasn’t a whole lot between them and India, ultimately, other than a safe pair of hands somewhere, anywhere in the field.There are many frustrating ways to lose a game, let alone one as big as this, but few gnaw away at reason and rationality quite like those lost to dropped catches. In this age of the instant vent and search for a (criminal of the match), Misbah-ul-Haq’s innings is already being pilloried in Pakistan for its poor pacing. The reaction is misplaced and overdone, for the pitch wasn’t given to fluent strokeplay, particularly after the ball softened, and there had already been some momentum-losing poor shots earlier from the openers.Blaming the batting in any case misses the point. Pakistan are never comfortable chasers and 261, in a World Cup semi-final, at the home of the opposition is an entirely different kind of 261 from the ones they might chase down in a bilateral series in the UAE. The point is, they shouldn’t have been chasing that much in the first place.There are some truisms in cricket that Pakistan quite brazenly and joyously ignore; leading among them are those to do with catching. They win matches? Yes, but not as much as scoring runs and taking wickets,thank you. They once dropped Graeme Smith five times as he ground out 65 in an ODI in Lahore, and still won the match comfortably. They dropped seven catches in an innings in New Zealand in 2009-10 and won the Testcomfortably. These are to recall just two examples from a sizeable sample.But there are some rules in life you cannot defy, some batsmen you really cannot give a chance to. And if you give Sachin Tendulkar four chances – not one but four! Tendulkar! – you cannot expect to win a game, no matterwhat else you do. It was one of Tendulkar’s least fluent recent innings as well, but in the drops of Misbah, Younis Khan – their two best catchers -Kamran Akmal and Umar Akmal, went the game. It is as simple as that.It wasn’t – as it never is – just the runs that came after the drops, though Tendulkar did add 58 runs after the first chance went down. It was the mood that was lost each time. The first spill, with Tendulkar on 27, came as Pakistan were beginning to regain their senses after Virender Sehwag’s early blast. Tendulkar had just survived two torrid overs from Saeed Ajmal and a seminal moment was at hand.The second, on 45, came the over after Gautam Gambhir had gone. Momentum again was at stake. The third came a few overs after Wahab Riaz’s two-wicket over left India in a position of real danger. All chances, incidentally, were created by the tournament’s leading wicket-taker, the man to whom Pakistan look for inspiration, for breakthroughs, for controlling the middle overs of the game, their captain, a man who thrives on taking precisely such wickets, Shahid Afridi.The effects of this on a game cannot possibly be calculated, except to say the obvious, that it changes everything and goes beyond runs alone. Who knows what target Pakistan could have been chasing? There was another,less important, miss later, on 81, but a miss nonetheless and none of the outfield catches were difficult.”We made some big mistakes in fielding, we dropped some catches, and catches for Sachin,” Afridi said. He then quipped, referring to his much-discussed phantom statement in the build-up of trying to prevent a100th international Tendulkar hundred, “I told you he wouldn’t score a hundred.” It was gallows humour.It is sad – but also predictable – that ultimately it came down to Pakistan’s fielding, for that is the one area they have really worked hard on in training and actually thought about methodically, making sure for once of placing the right fielders in the right places. Younger players have come in who genuinely enjoy fielding, a couple of older ones have led the way.They have been very sharp as they were against Australia but also still capable of sudden, unexpected tragi-comedy as against Sri Lanka at the R Premadasa in the second half of the hosts’ chase and today. Overall, theyhave been considerably better than before, in particular with the energy they have brought on to the field. But there is much, much more to be done.If they are skilled and contrary enough to get away with it against most sides and players, to expect to do so against the game’s greatest modern-day batsman, in such a setting, is to expect miracles.

McGrath still at the top of his game

Like Mohammad Ali, the boxing legend who used to spend hours painstakingly scrawling out his spidery autograph, Glenn McGrath has reproduced his signature deliveries for almost 15 years

Cricinfo staff30-Apr-2008
Like Ol Man River, McGrath just keeps rollin’ along © Getty Images
Yo Mahesh is a stripling in the shade of a giant sequoia, but on Wednesday night he actually conceded one run less than Glenn McGrath from his four overs. For most of the 90 minutes though, he and pretty much every other pace bowler playing in this competition would have beenabsorbing a masterclass in the art of limited-overs bowling. Like his old mate in baggy green, Shane Warne, McGrath has been out of the game for a year, but you wouldn’t have known it if you’ve flown back from Mars and watched him bowl at the Feroz Shah Kotla.Like Mohammad Ali, the boxing legend who used to spend hours painstakingly scrawling out his spidery autograph, McGrath has reproduced his signature deliveries for almost 15 years. Not for him the beguiling variety of a Wasim Akram or the hair-raising pace of Brett Lee. The McGrath method has always been about perfect calibration, of pinpointing the centimetres outside off stump where the batsman is most vulnerable.From the minute he landed the first ball of the innings in the McGrath corridor, the Bangalore Royal Challengers would have known what they were up against. “They had to come out and play shots,” he said later, referring to the security of the 191 runs. Even then though, there was littlefiddling with the tried and tested. Praveen Kumar, a worthwhile experiment at the top of the order, did thump one over cover, but as he has done so many times over the past decade, McGrath had the last word.Ross Taylor, whose explosive strokeplay will surely be missed now that he’s off to join New Zealand’s tour of England, also attempted to disrupt the McGrath rhythm with a powerful shot or two, but then ruefully discovered the dangers of going cross-batted against a man whosereputation was based as much on the ability to extract bounce as it was on the accuracy.Wasim Jaffer was next, with steepling bounce again doing the trick. The speed gun never went past 130 kph, and the obsession with it was put into perspective by McGrath’s uncanny knack of landing the ball in what every bowler now refers to ‘the right areas’.His last act was the finest though. Jacques Kallis and Rahul Dravid, a combination perfectly equipped to bat through a full day in a Test match, had shown that quality can prevail in any form of the game with a superb 87-run partnership. Though the asking rate was still steep, Bangalore had seven wickets in hand to mount a late charge.Virender Sehwag, whose bowling changes and composure impressed yet again, then played his ace, throwing the ball to McGrath for the 16th over. A slower one and a yorker kept Kallis to one run from the first two balls, and when Dravid then gave himself some room for the big loft, McGrath calmly slipped the ball outside off. “Have a go”, he seemed to say. Dravid did, miscued it, and Sehwag made no mistake running across to mid-off.McGrath wasn’t the only ANZAC hero out there though. Daniel Vettori will play no further part in the tournament, but his farewell spell had Bangalore in a bind. Dravid spoke later of the overs from Vettori and Yo Mahesh that effectively settled the contest, and Sehwag too was gushingin his praise of a man he called one of the greatest T20 bowlers.While Sehwag answered questions in Hindi, a relaxed McGrath sat and grinned, with an “I agree” quip after one Sehwag reply inducing peals of mirth. “I’m a happily married man. I don’t look at girls anymore,” he said with a big grin when asked about the missing cheerleaders. “For an oldbloke, I’ve enjoyed every single minute of it [the IPL].”When asked about his team’s travails, Dravid spoke of the missing X-factor. On Wednesday night, it wasn’t missing, it was on the other side. A familiar face, a nemesis from another time and place. Like Ol Man River, McGrath just keeps rollin’ along.

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