England victory chances hit after Old Trafford washout

Play was abandoned without a ball being bowled on the third day in Manchester

The Report by Valkerie Baynes18-Jul-2020England need to take 19 wickets in two days if they are to keep their series alive against West Indies after the third day of the second Test at Emirates Old Trafford was a washout.With finer weather forecast for Manchester on Sunday and Monday and a fresh seam attack, England’s prospects are “not ideal”, to use Ben Stokes’ words, but they are not completely dire. Failure to force victory in the coming days, however, will mean West Indies retain the Wisden Trophy that they won in the Caribbean 18 months ago.”It’s looking like we’ve got to take 19 wickets in two days,” Stokes told Sky Sports. “But the wicket has offered something throughout the whole Test so far, so we just need to make sure that we can expose that and put as many deliveries as we can, challenging their defensive shots as much as we can.”ALSO READ: Archer cleared to play in third Test after fine and written warningStuart Broad is back in the team and likely to be hungry after his consternation at being overlooked for the first Test in Southampton, which West Indies won by four wickets. He is joined by Sam Curran, who made an early breakthrough when he had opener John Campbell out lbw late on Friday to put the tourists one wicket down still trailing by 437 runs.Chris Woakes is the other addition after England opted to rest Mark Wood and James Anderson following their efforts in the first Test and Jofra Archer was omitted on the first morning of this match for his unauthorised trip home en route to Manchester.Archer will be available for selection for the third Test, also at Old Trafford, after a disciplinary panel fined him £15,000 and gave him a written warning for his indiscretion.In the meantime, it will fall to Broad, Curran, Woakes and Stokes to get the job done for England, not to mention Dom Bess, who will have watched with interest as fellow offspinner Roston Chase claimed a five-wicket haul in the first innings after finding good spin and bounce.”It’s not only offering for the seam bowlers,” Stokes said. “We’ve got the options there that we feel we can bowl West Indies out twice if we have to.”It was Stokes’ performance with the bat that went a long way towards putting England in a commanding position at the end of the second day, his 176 combined with Dom Sibley’s 120 meant the hosts posted a first-innings 469 for 9 declared. Had England not lost the first Test, for the eighth time in ten series, their task over the next two days may not have been quite so pressurised.”If we use the first two days as a benchmark for how we want to bat then, then the better we’re going to become,” Stokes said. “We are a very good team at bouncing back from defeats and we’ve proven that.”If we can keep producing days and games like we generally do after a first Test then we’ll start coming closer to being the No. 1 team, which is obviously a goal of ours.”We’re in a great place as a side. We’ve got the right personnel, the right team, the right people helping the players out right now. And I think in two or three years’ time, all the tough times that we’ve experienced – in South Africa and this first game against West Indies – is a great learning curve, not just for the younger guys in the team at the moment but also for the more experienced guys.”If you are always learning from mistakes, it’s going to make you a better player as an individual, but also a better team.”

'I believe I have a World Cup left in me' – Robin Uthappa

He’s targeting the role of a finisher in the Indian team and has been training with that in mind

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Apr-202032:18

‘I still have that fire burning in me, I really want to compete’

Robin Uthappa, who last played for India in July 2015 on a tour of Zimbabwe, believes he “still has a World Cup” left in him, and is targeting a comeback to the Indian team in the T20 format.Uthappa, 34, has played 46 ODIs and 13 T20Is, and was part of the 2007 50-over World Cup campaign as well as the inaugural T20 World Cup played later in the same year. However, he was dropped from the team in mid-2008 and his international appearances since then have been sporadic, with a total of eight ODIs and four T20Is since his first comeback in October 2011.”Right now I want to be competitive. I still have that fire burning in me, I really want to compete and do well,” Uthappa told ESPNcricinfo. “I honestly believe I have a World Cup left in me, so I’m pursuing that, especially the shortest format. The blessings of Lady Luck or God or whatever you call it, plays a massive factor. Especially in India, it becomes so much more evident. I don’t think it is evident when you’re playing cricket outside of India. But in the subcontinent and India especially, with the amount of talent that we do have in our country, all of those aspects become evident.”You can never write yourself off. You would be unfair to yourself if you write yourself off. Especially if you believe you have the ability and you know that there is an outside chance. So I still believe in that outside chance. I still believe that things can go my way and I probably can be a part of a World Cup-winning team and play an integral role in that as well. Those dreams are still alive and I think I’ll keep playing cricket till that is alive.”Uthappa has scored 934 runs in ODIs at an average of 25.94 and a strike rate of 90.59, while in T20Is his corresponding numbers are 249 runs at 24.90 and 118.00. He has had great success in the IPL, initially with Royal Challengers Bangalore and then in more sustained fashion with Kolkata Knight Riders. He was the top run-getter in the IPL in 2014, and central to Knight Riders’ title run that year. However, underwhelming returns in 2019 meant the team released him, and he was picked by Rajasthan Royals in the last auction.

“I still believe in that outside chance. I still believe that things can go my way and I probably can be a part of a World Cup winning team and play an integral role in that”Robin Uthappa

On his numerous short comebacks in the Indian team – he played one T20I in 2011, one in 2012, five ODIs in 2014 and finally three ODIs and two T20Is in 2015 – Uthappa felt he had been batted out of position.”When I played for India [in 2007 and 2008], I scored all my runs opening the batting. Then [in his comeback phases] I ended up playing for India in the middle-order, which seems so… from one perception it seems very unfair,” Uthappa said. “That kind of cycle has repeated itself maybe three or four times in the three or four comebacks that I’ve made in the Indian team. I scored all the runs up the order, and I got to bat in the middle-order when I got back in the Indian team.”Stats-wise, Uthappa has slightly better numbers when he has not opened the batting for India. In the 16 ODI innings in which he batted at the top of the order, he has an average of 25.50 and a strike rate of 88.31 with four half-centuries. In 26 ODI innings in which he has batted lower down, he averages 26.30 at a strike rate of 92.44 with two half-centuries.Uthappa has opened only twice in T20Is, making 1 and 18* at less than a run a ball. When not opening the batting, he averages 25.55 at a strike rate of 121.69.In his comebacks in 2011, 2012 and 2014, Uthappa played as an opener and crossed 20 once in five innings. On another comeback in 2014 and a subsequent one in 2015, he batted in the middle-order.Uthappa said he was targeting the role of being a finisher for the Indian team and had begun training with that specific goal in mind, till the coronavirus pandemic enforced a standstill.”What I’ve been trying to do is to make sure that I’m well prepared,” he explained. “Opening the batting is something I can do at any point of time. I’m trying to make sure I’m well equipped to bat in the middle order as well. One of the things that we need today in Indian cricket is a good finisher, and that’s something that I’m pursuing and working hard on. It’s something I’m looking forward to improving on a day to day basis.”I’m actually missing practice really bad right now because that was one of the aspects I was working on and I felt like I was beginning to get somewhere. Because you know it’s a process. These kinds of things don’t just turn up on their head. You need to work on it and get better at it on a day to day, week to week, month to month basis. I felt like I was getting places. A small kind of sweet spot. God willing, I believe it will happen at some point in time.”

الاتحاد الأوروبي يصدر قرارًا ضد الحكم ديفيد كوت بعد واقعة الفيديو المسرّب

كشفت تقارير صحفية بريطانية، أن الحكم الدولي الإنجليزي ديفيد كوت، تم إيقافه من قبل الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم، بسبب الفيديو المسرّب له بإهانة كلوب وليفربول.

كان ديفيد كوت قد تولى مسؤولية إدارة مباراة ليفربول وأستون فيلا، السبت الماضي في الجولة الحادية عشر من الدوري الإنجليزي، وفاز ليفربول على أستون فيلا بهدفين دون رد على ملعب “الأنفيلد”.

وظهر أمس مقطع فيديو مُسرب لـ ديفيد كوت، يعود تاريخه إلى سنوات مضت، حيث ظهر خلاله وهو يوجه سبابًا بذيئًا إلى ليفربول ويورجن كلوب، مدربه السابق.

وقررت الهيئة المسؤولة عن التحكيم في إنجلترا إيقاف ديفيد كوت بشكل فوري لحين الانتهاء من التحقيق.

صحيفة “ميرور” البريطانية، أكدت أن الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم، قرر إيقاف الحكم الإنجليزي، بسبب فضيحة الفيديو الذي تضمن ألفاظًا بذيئة.

وكان كوت قد شارك في مباراة أيندهوفن وجيرونا ببطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا، كحكم فيديو، لكن الآن مسيرته المهنية أصبحت في مهب الريح، في انتظار نتائج التحقيق.

وتحاول الآن رابطة الحكام المحترفين في إنجلترا، معرفة متى تم تصوير الفيديو، وما هي الظروف التي أحاطت به، مع الاستماع لأقوال الحكم نفسه خلال الأيام القادمة.

Marnus Labuschagne aspires to Virat Kohli's all-forms mastery

After a summer of outstanding Test returns, Labuschagne is turning his attention to a new challenge

Daniel Brettig10-Jan-2020

Marnus Labuschagne acknowledges his century•Getty Images

Having dominated the home Test summer, Marnus Labuschagne wants to become a multi-format master in the vein of Virat Kohli, Kane Williamson, Joe Root and his friend and team-mate Steven Smith as he embarks on a first ODI tour for Australia to face India on the subcontinent.It was in the 50-over game that Labuschagne first showed promise as a busy middle-order batsman, winning player of the tournament in the domestic limited-overs tournament in 2016 for Queensland before being part of the National Cricket Centre intake the following year.He subsequently earned his chance for Australia in Test matches, making a quantum leap during the 2019 Ashes in England and then carrying on to still more masterful displays against Pakistan and New Zealand. Now, granted the chance to be part of Australia’s white-ball squad for the first time, Labuschagne has revealed the long-term consistency and a role across formats for the national team are his major goals for the future.ALSO READ: ‘Clinical’ Glenn Maxwell still in ODI frame – Aaron Finch”You look at the guys I look up to and aspire to – Steve Smith, Virat Kohli, Kane Williamson, Joe Root. They’ve been doing it for a very long time, five, six years they’ve been consistent, not just in one format, but two or more formats,” Labuschagne told ESPNcricinfo before departing for India. “So for me personally there’s a lot to learn and a lot to grow, because I’ve had some success this summer but the real challenge for me is to be more consistent going on and being able to keep putting continued performances on the board.”If I can continue to do that, then that’s obviously going to be the challenge for me, and getting an opportunity in this one-day series is an opportunity for me to show a slightly different part of my game that we haven’t seen this summer, but that’s a really exciting challenge too.”As an example for the type of adaptable, evolving batsman Labuschagne would like to be, he admitted that the standard set by Michael Hussey for Australia, where he started life as an opening batsman but developed into a player capable of playing just about any role in the top six, while also adding power to his game to dominate the back end of an innings, was a hard one to ignore.

“With the opportunities that might come in the next few months, we’ll have to see, but definitely Michael Hussey is a great person to learn from,” Labuschagne said. “The way he played the one-day game, the way he finished off the innings and the way he probably started his innings. There are a few similarities there, but I’m definitely not comparing myself to Michael Hussey. My job is to just enjoy these next couple of weeks and then we’ll go from there.”I can’t look too far ahead of myself and that’s one thing I’ve been able to do the whole summer, keep it really clear, take it game by game, enjoy the moment, make sure I’m really well prepared and really ready to go, but not getting too far ahead of myself is a really key thing for me.”The likelihood for Labuschagne is that he will play a somewhat different role for Australian than for Queensland, where this season he batted at No. 3. With Aaron Finch, David Warner, and Smith seemingly locked into the top order for Australia, Labuschagne, Peter Handscomb, Alex Carey and Ashton Turner will be juggled in the remaining spots. Labuschagne’s wrist spin bowling, part of the reason he was chosen for Australia’s Test side in the first place, will also be a factor, particularly in the absence of Glenn Maxwell’s off-breaks.Marnus Labuschagne celebrates his first List A century•Getty Images

“Whatever role I’m given is one I’m going to try and keep,” he said. “If that’s batting in the top four or even outside the top four, whatever that is, it’s just for me to be able to know I bat at three and four for Queensland so that role in the middle order is one that I’ll probably be given and for me it’s just to be consistent and play that role as best I can.”A big part of playing in India is how you play spin, so for me being nice and clear with my plans about how I play spin and then just trusting the processes I have. Batting in the middle order it’s about running really hard between wickets and trying to get those runs through the middle, then when you get the opportunity towards the back end to open the shoulders a bit.”The whole one-day game’s moved in that more aggressive, positive direction, but I’ve been lucky I’ve been able to move with that and play in this era where one-day cricket is a really high scoring game. As batters that’s your job, you need to put big totals on the board, especially if you’re batting first, and it’s also great because it’s going to be tough conditions in India and they’re obviously a very strong side. So just about enjoying the challenge and not getting too far ahead of yourself, taking it ball by ball and game by game.”As for what awaits Labuschagne after the brief India tour, he said he was hopeful of getting more of an opportunity to play for the Brisbane Heat in the closing stages of the Big Bash League. So far he has played just seven matches over three tournaments for the club, only getting to play one match last summer.”I’m not sure – I hope when I come back there’s an opportunity there for me to play, and I get some opportunities to showcase my T20 game, which is something that people probably haven’t seen yet,” he said. “But for now I’ll just enjoy this next challenge of one-day cricket and then go from there.”

Celtic struck gold by signing £3m star who’s "reminiscent of Trent"

Celtic brought manager Brendan Rodgers back to Glasgow last summer after Australian head coach Ange Postecoglou decided to make a move down south.

The now-Spurs boss enjoyed a terrific two years in Scotland and was particularly successful in the transfer market with several fantastic additions, including the likes of Jota, Kyogo Furuhashi, Joe Hart, and Cameron Carter-Vickers.

Ange Postecoglou

One of his last signings in charge of the Hoops, during the January transfer window at the start of last year, was right-back Alistair Johnston from MLS side CF Montreal.

Postecoglou struck gold by bringing the Canadian to Parkhead, as his value has since soared alongside his excellent front-footed displays for the club.

How much Celtic paid to sign Alistair Johnston

The Daily Record reported that Celtic splashed out a fee of £3m to sign the talented defender after his impressive performances in North America throughout 2022.

Johnston made 35 appearances in the MLS in the 2022 campaign and caught the eye with four goals and four assists from right-back, which shows that he provided an attacking threat from that position.

The Canada international also won 50% of his defensive duels during that period, as he stood up to the physical test of the division, and the Hoops then swooped to secure his signature midway through their season.

Appearances

14

Sofascore rating

7.20

Big chances created

5

Assists

1

Duel success rate

52%

He hit the ground running in the Scottish Premiership, as you can see in the table above, with an impressive return of five 'big chances' created in just 14 matches to help the team win the title.

Alistair Johnston's current market value

At the time of writing (26/03/2024), Johnston is valued at €8m (£6.8m) by Transfermarkt and this shows that Postecoglou and Celtic hit the jackpot with him, as his value has soared and his performances on the pitch have been, largely, superb.

The 25-year-old whiz has created eight 'big chances' and registered two assists in 25 Premiership matches for the Hoops so far this season, which means that he has racked up 15 'big chances' created in just 39 league games for the club.

Former Hoops man Steve Guppy, who worked with Johnston at Nashville in the MLS, heaped praise on the full-back's outstanding ability to cross the ball.

Trent Alexander-Arnold warming up for Liverpool.

He claimed that the right-back's style and technique when it came to passing and crossing the ball was "reminiscent of Trent Alexander-Arnold’s at Liverpool", and went on to say that he was "excited" to see the defender play for Celtic due to that quality.

Johnston has recorded two assists in his last four Premiership matches for the Hoops and both of those were crosses to Adam Idah, who converted one with his left foot and one with his head.

That is incredibly high praise when you consider that the England international recently broke the Premier League record for assists by defenders, with the 58th of his career so far – by the age of just 25.

At 25, the Celtic star still has plenty of time left ahead of him to develop and improve over the years to come. For now, though, it is hard to deny that he has been a terrific signing by Postecoglou, with his soaring value and Trent-like crosses in the Premiership.

Derby County ace sold by Rooney now plays in Europe’s 34th worst league

Derby County's disastrous 2021/22 campaign – which ended with relegation down to League One – is now very much a distant thought put to the back of the mind of many fans at Pride Park, who look to be currently watching a promotion-winning team.

The Rams certainly have the upper hand in the battle for the final automatic promotion spot up to the Championship after beating Bolton Wanderers last time out, a decisive header from Kane Wilson winning the box-office clash to give his side a four-point cushion in second place.

Although everything is going swimmingly well for Paul Warne and Co in the here and now, there might well be some intrigue from Derby fans to see where a selection of forgotten faces from yesteryear have ended up.

This ex-Rams youth product, for example, has had a bumpy time ever since waving goodbye to Pride Park two years ago, sold by Wayne Rooney to a Premier League buyer with major things expected of him that haven't yet come to fruition.

Derby County's former manager Wayne Rooney.

Luke Plange's time with Derby

Luke Plange would make his Derby debut in the same campaign that saw the Rams lose their Championship status, but the youngster was one very notable bright spark amidst all the doom and gloom engulfing Derbyshire at the time.

Formerly on the books at Arsenal as an academy product, Plange would finally get his moment in the senior spotlight relocating to the Rams.

Plange would be rewarded with a first-team debut against Bristol City in December of that season by Rooney, after bagging ten goals in 18 youth games for the club.

1. GK – Ryan Allsop

2. CB – Craig Forsyth

3. CB – Curtis Davies

4. CB – Phil Jagielka

5. RM – Kamil Jozwiak

6. CM – Graeme Shinnie

7. CM – Max Bird

8. CM – Jason Knight

9. LM – Dylan Williams

10. ST – Luke Plange

11. ST – Tom Lawrence

Sourced by Transfermarkt

It would take the 6 foot 2 centre-forward just two games to prove Rooney's bold faith in him was justified in the men's set-up, firing home a rebound effort to steer the Rams to a 1-0 win over Blackpool.

The Derby boss at the time wouldn't just utilise Plange as a youngster in isolation, bedding in the likes of Max Bird, Jason Knight and faces such as Eiran Cashin from off the bench to give the beleaguered Rams energy when needed.

Plange would go on to score three more goals that season for his eventually relegated side, but he wouldn't be sticking around to make up the numbers in any promotion push from League One that followed.

Crystal Palace would take a punt on the emerging Derby star after he had shone brightly in spurts for his doomed side, forking out £1m to land the raw talent just a matter of weeks after he burst onto the scene against Blackpool before immediately loaning him back to Pride Park to aid his growth.

Yet, ever since leaving Derby behind permanently, Plange has never quite managed to break through into the Eagles' first team in the same manner he did when sending tremors through the Rams set-up.

Once described as being a "clever" player by Rooney – high praise indeed from a man who was once a wonderkid himself before going on to have an esteemed career – Plange now finds himself stuck in a continuous loop of loans away from Selhurst Park instead of exploding into life for the South London side which now sees him plying his trade in Finland.

Luke Plange's time at Crystal Palace

The one-time Derby prospect has never started a senior game for Palace, only being restricted to U21s football to the dismay of the now 21-year-old.

Plange has netted four goals in four games playing in the Premier League 2 for the youthful Eagles – with a hat-trick recently picked up against Aston Villa U21s – but it's when he's been chucked out to various different clubs on loan to test his mettle away from these comforts that he's really struggled.

The two-time England U20 international has become a well-travelled striker consequently, playing for the likes of Carlisle United and Lincoln City in the EFL whilst also venturing out to far-away RWD Molenbeek to test himself in unfamiliar surroundings in Belgium.

Plange has unfortunately been goal-shy wherever he's ended up away from Palace, only managing to find the back of the net an unconvincing four times from 54 appearances as a nomadic loanee with his time at Sincil Bank seeing him fire routine blanks across 18 torrid games.

Still, regardless of all these shaky spells away from south London, new Palace boss Oliver Glasner would gift Plange a spot on the substitutes bench during his first Premier League match as manager to take his total times on the Eagles bench to five for the campaign.

One final chance for Plange in Finland

Glasner was clearly impressed by his form for the Palace youth side, but Plange now finds himself at his fourth loan club regardless and arguably his most unique one yet in HJK Helsinki, playing in a division ranked as the 34th best among UEFA's coefficient of European nations.

Plange will now view Finland as his home until January 2025, having put pen to paper on a deal with the Finnish first-tier side just this month.

The 6 foot 2 youngster will hope he can lead the line with confidence for his new employers, reawakening a deadly streak potentially in senior football that hasn't really been present since his electric beginnings in Derbyshire.

If Plange was to struggle in the Veikkausliiga – where his current loan side are the reigning champions – the patience held by those at Palace for him to come good could become very thin.

It's been an up-and-down time for Plange ever since walking out of Derby two years ago, whilst the Rams have rebuilt well ever since their former youth star exited to make breaking back into the Championship a very real possibility this campaign.

Navdeep Saini has got what it takes for Test cricket – Zaheer Khan

The improved fitness levels of Mohammed Shami. Jasprit Bumrah’s outswinger to right-hand batsmen. Also, India’s fast-bowling bench strength, and the facilities now available in the country; all these are indicators of Indian fast bowling’s great health, according to former pace spearhead Zaheer Khan. Still, Zaheer would like to see Navdeep Saini given a chance in Test cricket.”The longer format, that’s the format that suits Saini,” Zaheer told . “Saini has got the pace and consistency in length.”Saini, who was among India’s reserves for the World Cup, put his pace and short-ball skills on full display on the tour of Florida and the Caribbean in August. On T20I debut, Saini was on a hat-trick after getting Nicholas Pooran and Shimron Hetmyer off consecutive balls in Lauderhill. He finished that game with figures of 3 for 17, and the Player of the Match award.In the Test matches that followed, Bumrah was at his lethal best, with 13 wickets in four innings at an average of 9.23, including only the third hat-trick by an Indian in the format. Chief among Bumrah’s weapons in this series was the ball that moved away from the right-hand batsmen, and his newfound ability to bowl this delivery consistently makes him all the more potent, Zaheer said.”I have always said that if he had that outswinger for the right-handers, he will be a nightmare for the batting sides. I am glad that it has happened now,” Zaheer said. “He needs to work on his fitness and keep doing the things that have brought him this far. With experience he will keep getting better and better.”ALSO READ: Jasprit Bumrah – The complete bowler, whatever the formatZaheer said Shami – who had finished third on the Test-wicket charts in the West Indies, taking nine at 17.77 – was reaping the benefits of the work he had put into his fitness. “With Shami we all knew about the wrist position and the upright seam. The only iffy thing was fitness but now he has worked on that.”During the World Cup in England this year, Shami had spoken of how he had worked hard on that aspect of his cricket. Leg issues kept him out for parts of 2016 and 2017, and when he returned for India, it seemed obvious that his fitness levels were down. That phase culminated with him missing out on the Afghanistan Test in Bengaluru in June last year, after failing a fitness test.”I was heavy after the injury, I used to feel tightness in my knee after long spells, so I knew I had to do something extra if I had to play for a longer time,” Shami had said during the World Cup. “I have cut down on my food, I follow a diet and people laugh about it when I tell them that. It’s not strict, but I avoid stuff doctors tell me to. I don’t eat sweets or bread, it has helped me a lot.”Zaheer said the “hunger” Shami has shown to get to where he is at the moment was commendable. “He has been phenomenal in terms of getting his fitness level up to the standard that is required. This has been a huge plus for him. Ability was always there. Just that some injuries had kept him out for a year. He has come back strongly. A lot of credit has to go to him for how he is managing himself and the hunger that he has shown to come back and play at the top level.”When asked what has made the biggest difference in getting Indian fast bowling to the healthy state it is now in, Zaheer said: “Over the years, the infrastructure has improved. There is this access to better fitness facilities. There are these processes in place like the one at the National Cricket Academy where players are taken care of since Under-14s. There is also a proper passing of knowledge and that is helping in a big way.”

Marcus Harris fights for spot with fifty to delay Steven Smith's batting return against Derbyshire

Not even present for the tour game at Worcester, Australia’s coach Justin Langer underlined the impending pointy end of this Ashes series by intently watching day one of the encounter with Derbyshire from behind the wicket, accompanying the selection chairman Trevor Hohns for long segments of play at the county ground in Derby.What they saw, joined at various junctures by the captain Tim Paine, the resting David Warner and the former New Zealand coach John Wright, was more or less as might have been expected, save for the curious initial decision to field rather than bat first on a straw-coloured pitch.Michael Neser claimed two wickets in as many deliveries with the brand new ball and later added a third, Mitchell Starc went wicketless for 12 overs before blasting out three Derbyshire batsmen in his 13th, two by splaying the stumps, and Peter Siddle bowled eight overs for 11 runs while accounting for the hosts’ top scorer, the elegant Leus de Plooy.Wrapping up Derbyshire’s innings shortly after tea, the acting captain Usman Khawaja and the opener Marcus Harris then got comfortable against modest bowling, taking their time in the knowledge that only one of them is likely to play in the fourth Ashes Test at Old Trafford. Khawaja, as the senior player of the two, appears more certain of retaining his place, and one or two of Harris’ signature airy cut shots through a gully area not overly staffed by Derbyshire did not inspire a great deal of confidence.Nonetheless, he scored more freely of the batsmen, and in staying undefeated to the close, Harris and Khawaja ensured that Steven Smith’s return to the middle following his concussion substitution at Lord’s and subsequent absence from Headingley would be delayed by another day.”He’s always looking to score,” Paine said of Harris. “I think if you bowl a bad ball to Harry he puts it away and I think that puts guys under pressure. He’s just an attacking opening batter and he keeps the scoreboard moving, but as he’s shown in Shield cricket he’s got the ability to bat for a long time and score big hundreds when he gets in, we know that Harry’s got Test runs in him, and when he gets set hopefully he starts well tomorrow, gets a big score and he can continue putting runs on the board like he has for the last 18 months.”Steve Smith is going to come back in and play. So obviously someone from the last Test is going to miss out. There’s no doubt about that. You have the best player in the world coming back into your line-up. I suppose this tour game is important for guys to make sure that you’re keeping your name up in front of the selectors. And so far a few guys have done it, which is very pleasing. That’s what we want. We want to have depth and we want our selectors to have to make difficult decisions.”Steven Smith had an over before lunch on his return to action•Getty Images

In fact Smith’s only involvement was a single over of ropey off-spin, including one practice delivery that sailed over the head of a startled Siddle at mid off. Neser, Starc and Siddle all bowled better than that, demonstrating what the selectors could expect should they choose any for Manchester. Paine said that Starc’s bowling was steadily on the improve in terms of what the team needed him to do in English conditions.”I think if anyone’s stops trying to get better, that’s a problem,” Paine said. “We know what Starcy can do in terms of blowing teams away. We also know that coming to England in the past that hasn’t worked. So he’s been working really hard on getting his length right more so than anything. I think his opening spell today was really good. I thought he bowled in very good areas.”He bowled with good pace on a wicket that was very slow. So I thought the signs that he showed with the new ball were really good. And then, like we saw again at the end, when he can go back to what his strengths are, attack the stumps and use his short-balls, he’s a handful for the tail as well.”He’s been working on his length and I think he showed some really good control in his first spell. He bowled a long spell too [seven overs and eight overs] which he doesn’t do a lot when he plays for Australia. I thought he controlled pretty well and, the areas he has been trying to improve so he can be important for us in English conditions, I thought he showed today he’s going really well with that.”Rather less of a chance to figure in Lancashire is Cameron Bancroft, who must have been informed of a fairly lowly posting in the batting order after heading, at change of innings, for an extended practice session in the Derby nets. Langer, meanwhile, kept both eyes firmly on the middle.

'Nobody gets into the national team just by having a name' – Roberto Martinez insists Cristiano Ronaldo is in Portugal squad 'on merit' despite Saudi Arabia move

Portugal coach Roberto Martinez has defended his selection of 39-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo, insisting his place in the squad is deserved.

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  • Martinez defiant over Ronaldo selection
  • Portugal star questioned over club career
  • Scored 10 goals in Euro 2024 qualifying
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Martinez stressed that he picks nobody on reputation and that Ronaldo's prolific season in the Saudi Pro League was fully worthy of commanding a place in Portugal's squad. The Al-Nassr star scored 44 goals in all competitions last season.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Ronaldo took his club career out of Europe at the end of 2022 and, despite his advancing age, has seen his goal numbers shoot back up in a less competitive league. Yet, at the same time, Ronaldo was the second top scorer in all of Euro 2024 qualifying.

  • WHAT MARTINEZ SAID

    "Cristiano is in the national team on merit. Nobody gets into the national team by just having a name. Cristiano scored 50 goals in 51 games – consistent with his club in his league – and he scored [10] goals in our qualification rounds," Martinez said.

    "He's a goalscorer and, for us, he's someone who can make that final move. He can stretch defences and open spaces. Over the years, he has changed his way of playing slightly, but I can only say that Cristiano is in the national team on merit and the numbers are there to back that up."

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Ronaldo fell out with former Portugal boss Fernando Santos in the wake of being benched for the knockouts rounds of the 2022 World Cup, having known each for two decades prior. He has vowed to "respect the coach's decisions" this summer.

Flu nos últimos jogos, Vasco nos últimos anos: quem leva o clássico?

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A 7ª rodada da Taça Guanabara será iniciada com o clássico Fluminense x Vasco, nesta terça-feira, às 21h35 (horário de Brasília), em Volta Redonda (a cidade do Riode Janeiro não pode receber jogos até dia 4 de abril segundo decreto municipal). Sem engrenar até o momento, os rivais veem uma chance de ganhar moral vencendo o rival para subir na tabela.

O Fluminense é o 5º colocado com 9 pontos, enquanto o Vasco é o 8º com 6 pontos conquistados após 18 terem sido disputados. Ainda que ambos estejam na zona de classificação para o mata-mata, é muito pouco para dois dos maiores times do estado do Rio de Janeiro, com história riquíssima no futebol. E por falar em história, o retrospecto do clássico ajuda a contar quem vem levando a melhor sobre o rival.

Fluminense melhor nos últimos jogos
Já se foram quatro jogos desde a última vez em que o Vasco saiu de campo com vitória sobre o Fluminense. Desde o returno do Brasileirão de 2019, passando pelo Carioca de 2020 e pelos dois turnos do último Campeonato Brasileiro, o Gigante da Colina não derrota o Tricolor.

De lá para cá, foram dois empates entre os rivais e duas vitórias do Fluminense. Em 2019, os rivais ficaram no 0 a 0 e em 2020, na 25ª rodada do Brasileirão o clássico terminou em 1 a 1. Pelo Carioca do ano passado, 2 a 0 para o Flu fora de casa. No nacional, nova vitória, desta vez por 2 a 1.

Vasco superior nos últimos anos
O torcedor do Fluminense não quer nem lembrar como estava sendo a história do clássico antes desta sequência de quatro jogos. Em mais de dois anos e meio, o Cruz-Maltino emplacou 10 jogos seguidos de invencibilidade contra o Tricolor, maior marca de jejum da história. Em 27 de maio de 2017, pela 3ª rodada do Brasileirão, o Vasco venceu o Fluminense por 3 a 2, iniciando a série invicta que durou até o tal 0 a 0 pelo Campeonato Carioca, em 2 de novembro de 2019. Neste período, sete vitórias do Gigante da Colina e três empates.

Em Volta Redonda
Apenas uma vez na história centenária de Fluminense x Vasco o clássico foi disputado no Raulino de Oliveira, em Volta Redonda – e foi um jogão. Pela 17ª rodada do Brasileirão de 2005, os rivais duelaram no mesmo palco dessa semana, e o Flu venceu, de virada, por 3 a 2.

O Vasco de Romário e Alex Dias saiu na frente com gol do Baixinho após passe preciso de seu companheiro de ataque. O Fluminense empatou com o artilheiro Tuta ainda na primeira etapa. Logo na volta do intervalo, Diego colocou o Cruz-Maltino na frente novamente. O maestro Felipe deixou Beto na cara do gol para empatar mais uma vez.

O Gigante da Colina desperdiçou boas chances de matar o jogo e foi punido na reta final do clássico. Em cobrança de falta, a bola sobrou para o zagueiro estreante Milton do Ó encher o pé e dar a vitória ao Flu.

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