'He can be successful as an opener' – Watson thinks Smith should stay put

Former Test opener believes Smith should stay at the top against India after requesting the role last summer

Yash Jha08-Oct-2024Who will open for Australia? Who should open for Australia? Should Steven Smith continue at the top of the order or shift back to number four? These questions have surrounded the Australian Test set-up for a while, and are only gaining traction ahead of India’s visit to Australia next month.”Steve Smith made the call to be able to go and open, and I think he should stay there”. That’s the verdict from Shane Watson as the clock ticks down to the year-end Border-Gavaskar Trophy.”Obviously the safety blanket for him would be moving back to No. 4, but I would love to see him continue to take on the opening spot because he’s got the skill to be able to do it,” Watson said at the sidelines of the launch of the International Masters League in Mumbai on Tuesday.Related

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Is this the end for the Gabba?

Smith’s move up the order following David Warner’s retirement after the New Year’s Test against Sydney has been a subject of widespread debate, with no clear winner. Watson himself had backed Cameron Green to succeed as Test opener before Smith’s promotion, but has been convinced otherwise by Green’s performances – headlined by a career-best match-winning 174 not out against New Zealand in Wellington.”Cameron Green came in and batted at No. 4 and did a brilliant job,” Watson said. “His hundred that he got in New Zealand was something very special and he’s the perfect No. 4 candidate now with the future, moving forward.”As if not tricky enough already, Australia’s situation has been further complicated as they sweat on Green’s availability for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, which starts in Perth on November 22. The 25-year-old allrounder was flown home from the UK following the third ODI against England after complaining of soreness in his lower back. He has had four previous stress fractures prior to his Test debut in 2020 but the exact nature of his current injury has yet to be confirmed. Cricket Australia’s medical team have been carefully assessing scans over the past two weeks to map out a plan for his recovery with an announcement on his availability for the India series expected to come this week.Smith’s four-Test stint as opener so far has yielded 171 runs – over half of which came in one innings against West Indies – at an average of 28.50, but Watson thinks it’s not a problem caused by his batting position.”I believe the reason why he didn’t do so well over the previous couple of Test matches is just [that] he was a little bit off with his technique,” Watson said. “You see [saw] him getting out a couple of ways which I’ve never really seen him get out before.”I know he would’ve had time just to go away, make some little technical adjustments, and if he opens and he makes those little adjustments, he can be incredibly successful as an opening batter knowing the incredible skill that he’s got.”<Should Brisbane have been the venue for the first Test instead of Perth?The Gabba will not host the first Test this summer•Getty ImagesWatson also voiced his dissatisfaction with the decision to keep Perth as the venue for the opening game of the five-Test series and not Brisbane, traditionally the starting point of Australian Test summers."I'm a traditionalist at heart. Growing up, the Gabba was always the first Test match and that's the Test match I used to go to," the former Australia allrounder said before highlighting the challenge Gabba poses to visiting sides."The Gabba is a more challenging place to play for the foreign teams because there's bounce, there's seam, there's swing, and it's hot and humid. So it just provides a few more challenges, whereas Perth, for example, it's not humid, the ball doesn't swing as much, doesn't necessarily seam as much as well."I always just love the Gabba as being the place for the touring team to be able to come in and have to try and just take on the Australian conditions at their most challenging."The 'Gabbatoir' had been an Australian stronghold for decades, with Australia boasting a 16-2 win-loss record in Tests in Brisbane in the last 20 years. But the fortress has been breached of late. West Indies claimed an upset 8-run win in January, while India famously clinched the 2020-21 series by handing Australia their first Test defeat at the Gabba in 32 years. The ground is also coming towards the end of its use for life with CA only signing a two-year agreement to play Test matches there with doubts over the Gabba's viability beyond that as Brisbane requires upgraded infrastructure to host the 2032 Olympic games.

Gyokeres will love him: Arsenal agree personal terms to re-sign £68m star

While Arsenal supporters have been craving additions in attack this summer, it’s actually the midfield that’s seen the biggest upheaval so far.

Jorginho has departed for Flamengo while Thomas Partey, a player Mikel Arteta reportedly wanted to keep at the Emirates Stadium, now looks set to leave when his contract expires at the end of the month.

Terms haven’t been agreed on a new deal and as a result, the Gunners have had to move fast to secure a replacement.

Martin Zubimendi is widely seen as the replacement for Partey and is set to arrive in a deal worth just over £50m from Real Sociedad.

He’s due to be joined in the middle of the park by Brentford captain Christian Norgaard.

The Dane has been with the Bees since 2019, but Arteta now views him as the player to fill the leadership void left behind by Jorginho.

Zubimendi, Hato, Norgaard – Arsenal

So, what’s next on the agenda for Andrea Berra and Co?

Arsenal's transfer plans post Zubimendi & Norgaard

Surprise, surprise, Arsenal are in the market for another defender.

Amid links to Ajax wonderkid, Jorrel Hato, it was reported by various sources on Thursday that Valencia’s Cristhian Mosquera is now on the club’s radar.

According to BBC Sport’s Sami Mokbel, the Gunners have already opened talks to bring the 20-year-old to England this summer.

That said, it’s not all about the defence and the midfield at Arsenal with Berta ready to strengthen out wide.

Transfer Focus

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

Real Madrid star Rodrygo remains a primary target, but as per journalist Ben Jacobs, they have now added Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze to their shortlist.

Eze possesses a £68m release clause, which, according to Arsenal insider Teamnewsandtix, can be paid in three instalments of £20m with £8m in add-ons.

Crystal Palace's EberechiEzecelebrates with the trophy after winning the FA Cup

The same source actually reports that the club have already agreed personal terms with the FA Cup, further fuelling that Arteta and Co are extremely keen on signing him this summer.

How Arsenal's new look attack with Eberechi Eze could shape up

If Arsenal were to bring Eze to the club this summer, it would be a landmark moment for the England international, primarily because he’s already spent time in the Hale End academy.

Now 26, the Eagles sensation has become a “superstar” in the words of data analyst Ben Mattinson, having initially been in the Arsenal academy but released at the age of 13.

Speaking about that time previously, Eze admitted:

Well, he now has the opportunity to return and live out that dream as a man, and as one of the most exciting players in the Premier League.

In 2024/25, the Palace no.10 had an outstanding personal season, scoring 14 times and supplying 11 assists across 43 matches. To put that into context, only Kai Havertz (15) scored more goals in the Arsenal side, while only Bukayo Saka (14) and Martin Odegaard (12) provided more assists.

While Eze largely played as an attacking midfielder last season, he can also play on the left flank, thus possessing the ability to help provide depth and additional quality in two key areas for Arteta.

Potentially providing competition for Odegaard behind the striker or taking over from Gabriel Martinelli on the left, he could be game-changing for the shape of Arsenal’s attack.

Games

40

31

43

Goals

10

11

14

Assists

4

6

11

Mins played

2,686

2,285

3,303

Let us not forget that a new striker could join too. Benjamin Sesko and Viktor Gyokeres are the two players in the pipeline, but at the moment it feels like the latter is the leading contender to become Arteta’s new number 9, having reportedly fallen out with the Sporting hierarchy.

The scorer of a staggering 54 goals in 52 games last term, the idea of Gyokeres and Eze playing together in the same attack is certainly a mouthwatering one.

Vikor Gyokeres at Sporting Club.

The latter is a pure magician on the ball, a player who oozes class and can unlock a defence with a dazzling piece of play, much in the same way Saka can.

Throughout last season’s Premier League campaign, he ranked inside the top 10% of attacking midfielders and wingers in the division for successful take-ons, the best 11% for shot-creating actions and the top 18% for key passes.

As a result, he seems like the ideal player to help someone like Gyokeres hit the ground running at Arsenal if both arrive.

Together, they could be dynamite. The big Swede isn’t just a goalscorer either. Capable of running in behind, he ranks among the best 3% of strikers in Europe’s top five leagues and premier competitions for progressive passes received, indicating that he’s always making himself an option for the creative hub of the team he’s playing for.

While some Arsenal fans might be sceptical about signing either Gyokeres or Sesko, there’s no doubting that they’d thrive if partnered with Eze in the final third.

This could be just the duo Arteta needs to really catapult his side to the next level.

A better move than Zubimendi: £68m star "will sign" for Arsenal this summer

The game-changing international could be sensational for Arsenal.

1 ByJack Salveson Holmes Jun 26, 2025

Bryce sisters star as Blaze lift Charlotte Edwards Cup

Kathryn Bryce makes 62, Sarah 52 not out after Josie Groves and Heather Graham stifle Stars

ECB Reporters Network22-Jun-2024The Blaze 144 for 3 (K Bryce 62, S Bryce 52*) beat South East Stars 141 for 9 (Redmayne 25, Graham 3-16, Groves 3-33) by wicketsKathryn Bryce continued her outstanding season with a match-winning 62 off 44 balls as The Blaze, who were losing finalists in both women’s regional competitions last season, beat South East Stars by an emphatic seven wickets to lift the Charlotte Edwards Cup at Derby.Bryce, who led the Scotland side she skippers to qualification for their first T20 World Cup earlier in the summer, shared a decisive partnership of 79 with her younger sister Sarah, who herself rose to the occasion with an unbeaten 52 from 46 balls as Stars’ total of 141 for 9 was passed with eight balls to spare.Kathryn finishes the competition as leading runscorer for good measure, having hit an impressive five half-centuries in a tally of 477.It rewarded The Blaze captain Kirstie Gordon for her own strong leadership after the heartbreak of losing both finals to Southern Vipers last year. Her team have suffered only one defeat and avoided Vipers this time after the defending champions were knocked out by Stars in the semi-finals, in which The Blaze beat Central Sparks by five wickets.That sole defeat was inflicted by Stars, who bowled Blaze out for 84 in a five-wicket win on the same ground last Sunday. A repeat victory for the 2021 competition winners never looked on the cards here.The Blaze conceded 22 in the first over after opting to bowl first, yet bowled with discipline and skill thereafter to restrict Stars to 141 for 9, Australian allrounder Heather Graham taking 3 for 16 and legspinner Josie Groves 3 for 33.Georgia Redmayne top-scored with 25 and Alice Davidson-Richards 23 for Stars in what looked like a sub-par total even on a deteriorating surface.Despite left-arm seamer Grace Ballinger’s expensive first over, Stars were limited to 45 for 2 in the powerplay. Bryony Smith (17 from seven balls) was leg before sweeping Gordon’s left-arm spin, and Phoebe Franklin bowled by Graham for 10, having not batted in Stars’ semi-final win over Southern Vipers.More setbacks for the Stars followed as Groves, stepping up in the absence of England star Sarah Glenn, found turn and bounce in a deteriorating surface to have key batters Sophia Dunkley and Paige Scholfield stumped, leaving Stars 62 for 4 in the ninth.Emma Jones clobbered Groves for six square on the on side but she was bowled by Graham in the next over. A recovery of sorts by Redmayne and Davidson-Richards ended when mid-on Marie Kelly, having dropped the latter on 19, made amends off the next ball, giving Groves her third wicket.Having added 31 with her sixth-wicket partner, Redmayne was out when she failed to clear mid-off before Tash Farrant was caught on the square leg boundary off a Gordon full toss in a penultimate over that went for only three, The Blaze skipper finishing as the competition’s leading wicket-taker with 22.Graham bowled Dani Gregory, her last over costing just two after The Blaze restricted their opponents to 16 in the last four.The Blaze chase was finely poised at 49 for 2 after six overs, Kathryn Bryce shaping up nicely again on 29 from 16, although they had lost Tammy Beaumont, run out backing up in a piece of brilliance by bowler Farrant, before Kelly miscued to extra cover. By halfway, Kathryn and sister Sarah were still together, with the target down to 58 more.Kathryn, who had made 44 in the semi-final, edged two slightly fortunate boundaries off Franklin before completing her fifth half-century of the competition from 31 balls.Her hopes of being there to finish the job were ended when she was bowled attempting to reverse sweep legspinner Gregory, leaving that privilege to Sarah, who completed her own half-century off 45 balls before Graham heaved Ryana MacDonald-Gay over mid-off for the winning boundary.

Top target: Liverpool confident they're leading race to sign £45m "mad man"

Liverpool are now confident they’re leading the race for a defender, who has been identified as a top target for the summer transfer window, according to a report.

Reds set sights on new full-backs

Virgil van Dijk has committed his future to the Reds, in a major boost for Arne Slot, but the manager may still be tasked with reshaping his defence in the summer transfer window, as Trent Alexander-Arnold has now confirmed his decision to leave.

With Trent heading for the exit door, Slot may choose to install Conor Bradley as his first-choice right-back, but there have also been links with Bayer Leverkusen star Jeremie Frimpong, with the Dutchman believed to be keen on a move to Anfield.

Not only may a new right-back be required, but Slot could also look at bringing in a replacement for Andy Robertson, with the Scotland international now arguably in the twilight years of his career at the age of 31.

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Jamie Carragher also suggested Robertson was past his best earlier in the campaign, saying: “I just think Andy Robertson, who is an absolute legend, is just hanging on in every game.”

According to a report from TEAMtalk, AFC Bournemouth’s Milos Kerkez is now the top target for Liverpool at left-back, with his current employers set to hold out for a fee of £45m, amid widespread interest in his signature.

AFC Bournemouth's MilosKerkez

Real Madrid and Manchester City are also keen on the Hungarian, with the Spanish side scouting him this season, but the Reds believe they are still leading the race.

"Mad man" Kerkez could be ideal Robertson heir

The Hungary international has established himself as a vital player for Bournemouth this season, making 36 appearances in the Premier League, during which time he has showcased his attacking threat by picking up two goals and six assists.

Robertson is also very capable on the front foot, having amassed 67 assists during his time with the Reds, so the Bournemouth star could be a like-for-like replacement in that regard, while he has also caught the eye of journalist Zach Lowy.

Bournemouth teammate Marcus Tavernier is clearly a big fan of the 21-year-old too, saying: “He’s a mad man! He’s great, I love that guy to pieces. He brings a lot of energy to the team when it’s quiet and stuff. He has come into the team and been great.”

Having proven himself in the Premier League, Kerkez could be the ideal replacement for Robertson this summer, and Liverpool should look to secure a deal before Real Madrid or Man City step up their interest.

9/10 Leeds star proved he can be their new Raphinha in the Premier League

Expectant Leeds United supporters packed into Elland Road couldn’t have dreamt up a better Easter Monday if they tried, with the Whites resoundingly beating Stoke City 6-0 whilst their promotion foes in Sheffield United suffered a slim 2-1 defeat away at Burnley.

Off the back of both important results, the West Yorkshire titans are now out of the grip of the Championship and heading back up to the top table, re-entering the Premier League in style, hopeful that Daniel Farke can help Leeds become a top-flight regular again.

This will be easier said than done, but the three-time promotion-winning German will hope his top performers from this brilliant win over Stoke can shine bright when stepping up a division.

Leeds' star performers vs Stoke

The obvious place to start here is with Joel Piroe’s devastating attacking display as Leeds’ main marksman, with the Dutchman staggeringly putting Stoke to the sword with four first-half strikes.

Any worries that he was deep in a patch of poor form in front of goal quickly evaporated, resulting in the ex-Swansea City man now finding himself on a bumper 19 goals for the season and ready for the might of the Premier League.

Moreover, Jayden Bogle was equally gung-ho throughout down the left channel, with the full-back picking up an assist in the big win to play his part in promotion being sealed, as well as hitting the post in the build-up to Piroe’s fourth of a frantic afternoon.

But, there’s one face that is yet to be mentioned that put in another stunning display for the promotion winners. Perhaps he might be Leeds’ next Raphinha in the Premier League…

Farke's very own Raphinha

Leeds will have to be proactive in the transfer market to ensure they stand a chance at consolidating themselves as a Premier League worthy club.

While not every capture the last time they were among the big boys went down a treat, a certain Raphinha was brought in as a statement buy way back in 2020 and it showed that the Whites were serious about staving off an immediate EFL return.

Former Leeds forward Raphinha.

The spectacular Brazilian was nothing short of a sensation in Yorkshire, notching 17 goals and 12 assists in total for the Whites from 67 appearances, with 11 of those strikes coming during the 2021/22 campaign to help keep Leeds afloat in the top-flight.

Now at Barcelona, the Brazilian is among the best on the continent and is in with a genuine shot of winning the Ballon d’Or having scored 30 goals and registered 23 assists across 48 appearances.

Back in the EFL, Farke and Co will now be searching for their next Raphinha and they could find that by making Manor Solomon’s loan move a permanent one now promotion has been sealed.

An underrated but superb servant in helping Leeds earn a place back in the Premier League, the spellbinding Tottenham Hotspur loanee was a standout performer again versus the bewildered Potters.

He got Leeds up and running against Stoke to instantly ease the nerves when combining well with four-goal hero Piroe for the opener and he then supplied Willy Gnonto’s header, looping an inch-perfect cross to the back stick.

As a result, the 25-year-old went on to amass four key passes overall during the one-sided affair.

Firing two efforts of his own on the constantly bombarded Stoke net, the electric number 14 will have trudged off at the end ecstatic that his team were edging closer to promotion, but somewhat irked that he didn’t get to bag another league strike during the 6-0 bloodbath.

Games played

37

Goals scored

9

Assists

11

Big chances missed

6

Big chances created

19

Still, he will be very pleased with his role during Leeds’ promotion success, considering Solomon can boast a hefty nine goals and 11 assists from 37 clashes, resulting in a bumper 19 big chances being created for the likes of Piroe and other consistently on-fire attackers.

A tricky, energetic livewire, Leeds will be looking for a Raphinha-like figure to boost their hopes of beating the drop next term, and they may well find that the Israeli is the best-equipped to live up to the tag.

Handed a 9/10 match rating by Yorkshire Evening Post journalist Graham Smyth, it will be interesting to see if the winger decides to stick it out with his loan employers this summer to prove himself in the division above. Twisting and turning Championship defences for fun is one thing, but as Solomon has already found out, the Premier League is a different beast.

Once upon a time, Raphinha cost just £17m to obtain, with a £20m move for Solomon in the pipeline, perhaps going down as a similarly golden move, especially if he’s able to translate his devastating second-tier form to the top-flight.

Shades of Ian Harte: 10/10 Leeds star was just as breathtaking as Piroe

Leeds United put in a promotion-worthy performance as Daniel Farke’s rampant Whites hammered Stoke City 6-0.

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Celtic now ready move for "amazing" £5 million star, Rodgers is a huge fan

Celtic find themselves on the cusp of another Scottish Premiership crown and could now be set to test the water for a talented winger who their manager is a huge fan of, per reports.

Celtic look to make summer mark with domestic clean sweep on the table

With Rangers lingering in the distance, Celtic are on course for a domestic treble and need a maximum of nine points to claim a fourth Scottish Premiership title in quick succession under Brendan Rodgers.

The Bhoys face St Johnstone this weekend before taking on Kilmarnock in their last pre-split fixture. They also have a chance to progress to the Scottish Cup final against the former as their dreams of a clean sweep remain in motion.

Celticmanager BrendanRodgerscelebrates with the trophy after winning the League Cup

Looking ahead to the summer, Rodgers has hinted that Daizen Maeda’s Celtic progress could soften his hunt for a new striker, claiming the Japan international could be his number-one choice moving forward.

He stated: “I think he can be (the number-one striker). I think it’s one where to replace, to move him onto the side and take him out of the middle, with all due respect, it’s probably easier for us to get a top winger than it is a top striker.”

Daizen Maeda’s prolific campaign for Celtic – all competitions

Appearances

43

Goals

30

Assists

9

Backed up by the recent rumour mill, Celtic appear to be focusing on movement elsewhere and have identified Augsburg’s Elvis Rexhbecaj as a target to compete with Callum McGregor in the engine room.

On the same token, Liverpool’s Wataru Endo has been mentioned in dispatches at Parkhead. Now, true to his word, Rodgers is ready to revisit a move for a winger who he has had his eye on for a while to help strengthen the Hoops’ forward line.

Celtic ready to pounce for Royal Antwerp's Michel-Ange Balikwisha

According to The Scottish Sun, Celtic are ready to relaunch their interest in Royal Antwerp’s Michel-Ange Balikwisha after sending scouts to the Belgian side’s recent 5-1 defeat to Union Saint-Gilloise, where the DR Congo international registered an assist.

Valued at £5 million, Rodgers has had the 23-year-old on his radar for quite some time, even if fitness problems scuppered the potential of a January move to secure his signature.

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The former Celtic star was described as “the next Van Dijk” by his former manager.

ByDan Emery Apr 3, 2025

Frustratingly, injury problems have limited Balikwisha to eight appearances this campaign, though he has created five chances and won 11 duels on Jupiler Pro League duty.

Labelled “amazing” by analyst/writer Ben Mattinson, Rodgers has previously taken a personal interest in pushing a deal over the line for Balikwisha, so it won’t come as a major surprise to hear that he is back on Celtic’s recruitment department’s agenda.

Champions League qualifiers are likely to provoke a swift turnaround in Glasgow, and there is every chance the Congolese star could be one of several arrivals ahead of 2025/26.

Harmeet Singh's dramatic arc: from young star to villain to a hero's return

The allrounder faced several setbacks in trying to make a career in India. In the USA, he has been able to dream again

Shashank Kishore and Nagraj Gollapudi21-Jun-2024Harmeet Singh’s life might make for a Bollywood script. A spinner who was likened to Bishan Bedi as a youngster, faced rejection and controversy in the prime of his career, and went on to get a second chance and a new life in the United States.In early 2020, his stop-start career received a lease of life when American Cricket Enterprises, the organisation that partnered with USA Cricket to run Major League Cricket (MLC), offered him and a bunch of other subcontinental players multi-year contracts. Four years on, he is renewing his career with his adopted country at the T20 World Cup 2024.”Even thinking about a World Cup from a situation where all club cricketers were practising indoors [during the pandemic]… and from there to suddenly beat Pakistan, it is a big deal,” Harmeet says on Zoom from New York, two days before USA faced India in the tournament. “The goal was to play the World Cup for your country and win it, which couldn’t happen [for India] for whatever reasons. But I’m trying to live my own dream in a different way.”Harmeet, a left-arm spinning allrounder, arrived in the USA just before the Covid-19 pandemic, in March 2020, but had to quickly put cricket on the back burner until lockdown and travel restrictions were lifted. In this period, he moved to multiple cities – Atlanta, Houston, Seattle – and worked odd jobs.Related

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No winds of change (yet), but USA aren't here just to make up the numbers

It wasn’t until mid-2021, when cricket restarted, that he began to make a mark. Even as the launch date of the first MLC season kept getting postponed, Harmeet put in compelling performances in minor league cricket and supplemented his club earnings with part-time coaching gigs.In March 2023, Harmeet became the first pick in the domestic-player draft for the inaugural MLC when Seattle Orcas (co-owned by Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella) signed him for US$75,000. He picked up seven wickets in seven games at a thrifty economy of 7.13 in Orcas’ runners-up finish.Even before that, Harmeet had turned in impressive performances, most notably leading Seattle Thunderbolts to the Minor League Cricket T20 championship in August 2022. These, and the fact that he had fulfilled the three-year residency criterion, were the springboard for his international debut with USA in June 2024.In his fifth international match, he struck an unbeaten 13-ball 33 to help beat Bangladesh. At the World Cup, he has been part of the XI in their wins over Canada and Pakistan that took them through to the Super Eight. USA’s performance at this World Cup has allowed them direct entry into the next edition, in 2026.Teenaged Harmeet celebrates the U-19 World Cup win with his India team-mates in 2012•Ian Hitchcock/ICC/Getty ImagesHarmeet can’t quite believe how things have transformed in American cricket in such a short period. “When I moved to the US, there was no proper practice facility [in Atlanta]. There were zero turf wickets to play on. There were only concrete surfaces. The outfields were maybe ten times more sluggish than what you saw in New York [during the T20 World Cup]. So the challenges were very, very different.”Earlier this week, Harmeet might well have added another page to his unlikely story in USA’s Super Eight clash against South Africa in Antigua. After he dismissed Quinton de Kock and David Miller for figures of 2 for 24, Harmeet hit 38 off 22 balls from No. 7 to put USA in a position to cause another upset. But his dismissal when they needed 28 off the last two overs crushed their hopes. However, even in defeat, USA had sounded a warning to the other teams that they can’t be taken lightly.”I said it at our first [team] meeting, that we’re going to surprise ourselves at this World Cup,” Harmeet says. “We’re not worried about the results. We’ve been right up there with our body language. We’ve been right up there on the attitude.””I did not even get a chance to fail”
Eleven years ago, his life had looked vastly different. One day in June 2013, Harmeet woke up to rumours that he had been suspended by the BCCI. During an enquiry by the Delhi police into the IPL spot-fixing scandal that year, a bookie had revealed that Harmeet, then contracted to Rajasthan Royals, had been one of their targets.Ian Chappell saw similarities between Harmeet’s bowling and that of legendary India spinner Bishan Bedi•Matt Roberts/Getty ImagesThe 20-year-old was questioned in the matter and subsequently exonerated. The BCCI never actually suspended him, but the investigation caused problems for his already flagging career.”I didn’t get the feeling of having someone with me [as support] at that point,” Harmeet says of the period when his name cropped up in the spot-fixing controversy. “Also, I bore the consequences of not having good PR skills. When I look back now, I could have easily sued a few publications or gone after some people because there was so much misinformation about me.”So much wrong reporting was happening at that point, especially during the IPL. And my name was dragged into it for so many reasons. Eventually nothing surfaced. I faced no ban, suspension, nothing. But there were a few publications that went on for a year, saying ‘Harmeet is suspended pending inquiry.’ It just kept tarnishing my image.”Harmeet broke through in the 2009-10 Ranji Trophy season and picked up 12 wickets in his first two games. Straight off his U-19 World Cup success in 2012 he was drafted into the West Zone squad for the Duleep Trophy on the recommendation of Sandeep Patil, the national selector then. Harmeet’s figures in the match against North Zone read 44.4-5-147-2.”The perception around him took a U-turn after that performance,” a senior Mumbai coach says. “Everyone’s opinion was unanimous. That Harmeet had a long way to go. There were three other left-arm spinners: Vishal Dabholkar, Ankeet Chavan and Iqbal Abdulla, who were doing well. How could he have overtaken all of them? He was talented, but very raw. He also may have been swayed away by that early fame. It took him some time to come out of that.”Harmeet managed just one more game in the three seasons following his debut. His career appeared to have hit a dead end when his name cropped up in relation to the spot-fixing scandal.”I was always the kind of guy who used to be like, ‘Oh, don’t worry, my performances will talk,'” he says. “But I did not get a chance to perform anywhere. And the media was just writing, writing and writing.”The game I got at the end of the 2014-15 season – I picked up a four-wicket haul in Baroda. And I thought I’ll take off once again, but next year, I was out again.With his wife, Viola, daughter Heer and son Kabeer at the T20 World Cup•Matt Roberts/ICC/Getty Images”Those four to five years of no first-class cricket for your home state, and you are at your peak – I would say I did not even get a chance to fail. If I had gotten chances and failed, I would have taken it on my chin.”Harmeet tried to switch sides to Vidarbha ahead of the 2013-14 season, but the offer of a two-year contract that had been made to him was withdrawn because he had not till then been given a clean chit in the spot-fixing case by the BCCI. By the time it came, the season had begun. He admits to feeling lost during this period. “I did not have a very good, solid mentor. I lacked a lot of things because my family also did not have a cricketing background.”As a spinner, Harmeet had the ability to impart revolutions on the ball, and he was not afraid to challenge the batter with loop and drift. Ian Chappell, one of the game’s most astute observers, was impressed by his bowling at the 2012 U-19 World Cup and said he was ready for an international call-up right away. “A cricketer like Harmeet will stagnate if he’s left for too long at a lower level, because that leads to sloppy habits,” Chappell wrote on this website back then. “Harmeet is ready to be considered for national selection.”But here he was, struggling even to break into Mumbai’s second XI. “I was playing at Shivaji Park Gymkhana [in this period]. Ian Chappell doesn’t have access to the gymkhana to know what this guy is doing. He rightly said that anyone [in these circumstances] will stagnate. I can now relate to young talent – in India, USA or wherever – if you don’t give him proper opportunities, he’s bound to stagnate. And that’s what happened.”Now, I’m getting the opportunities and exposure, but it’s not served on a platter. I worked for it and got this opportunity, but you know, at that point, I needed one first-class season, which I did not get.”Harmeet made some crucial lower-order runs in USA’s World Cup match against India, but could not seal the chase•Getty Images”I did not kill people. I did not run over people”
By the start of 2018, Harmeet had played only 14 first-class and four white-ball games since he first broke through nearly nine years before. That included a stint with Jammu & Kashmir, which had not gone very well either.In 2017, when he returned to Mumbai and served out a cooling-off period, required for players looking to switch sides, before he could try to resume playing for his home team, he was in a dark place. In a bizarre incident, he drove his car onto the platform of a Mumbai suburban railway station. Eyewitnesses have different versions – some said he was intoxicated – but Harmeet insisted he was en route to training when he was misled by people around him while taking a diversion.He argues that a mere traffic violation was blown out of proportion. “When the railway [platform] incident happened, I was not playing any cricket, so what business did anyone have [to tarnish my image]? Yes, I can be a small public figure, but you can’t hold that against me. I wasn’t with any team. I wasn’t with anybody at that point. And it was a traffic violation. I did not kill people. I did not run over people.”Harmeet moved his cricketing base to Tripura in the north-east in 2018, but playing for a significantly weaker team gave him little joy. A sense of helplessness prompted him to explore opportunities elsewhere. In late 2019, when he received the offer from the USA, he took the leap of faith.”America, at that point, was not everybody’s cup of tea, especially if a professional athlete wanted to move,” he says. “Corey [Anderson] had his family here, so he made that move. But I think the guys who made the move from India [Unmukt Chand and Milind Kumar among them] at that point were really brave.With his USA team-mates Nitish Kumar (centre) and Shadley van Schalkwyk (right)•Matt Roberts/ICC/Getty Images”And we bought into the dream we were sold at that point that America will have its own league, its own domestic structure, in three years’ time it will host a World Cup and you guys will be qualified to play and all of that (laughs). It was just too good to be true at that point, but at the end of the day we sort of accomplished everything.””There’s always been a point to prove”
At the start of this World Cup, the profile photo on Harmeet’s player page on ESPNcricinfo was from his U-19 days. Facing us on the Zoom call is a man in his early 30s, a father of two young children. The beard is thicker and his words are well thought out. You can sense he is disappointed his career didn’t pan out the way he would have liked it to.”The guys who are currently playing for India – Axar [Patel] and Kuldeep [Yadav] – we played U-19 together. So there’s the feeling that, oh, I could have been there [playing for India]. At that point I was far ahead of both of them as well. I got picked for the [U-19] World Cup [2012], Axar didn’t.”If you see Axar or Kuldeep, see how the state has backed them, just check out their games in first-class – I’m sure they have played [lots of games]. That’s where you become a player and that’s where your true potential comes out after a couple of seasons.”Then you understand, oh, I need to work on my fitness, on my shoulder, or need to gain more strength. Because only then you know that’s the toil I need to go through, this is what technically, or mentally, physically, I need to work on. Then when you are in the system, the onus is on you to work hard and reap the rewards.”At his engagement, Harmeet with his father Jasbir (standing, left) and mother Paramjit (standing, right)•Harmeet SinghHaving got the opportunity to play international cricket now, Harmeet is content, but he says he has some things on his agenda to tick off. “There’s always been a point to prove that all my team-mates are playing cricket, and I’m not. It did not matter to me what cricket I’m playing because my love for the game would never change but in my heart, I’ve always wanted to be at the top, playing cricket against the best.””It was my mother’s dream that I played at the highest level”
In 2021, Harmeet faced the most difficult time of his life so far when he lost his mother, Paramjit Kaur, to Covid. Due to the global travel ban in force at the time, he had to watch her funeral online from the US. He talks of how she and his father, Jasbir, never hesitated to make decisions that put his cricketing ambitions ahead of everything else.Jasbir has been unable to be at the 2024 World Cup because of a chronic health issue, but he was the one who decided to move the family to Borivali in northern Mumbai so Harmeet could attend Swami Vivekananda International School (where Rohit Sharma studied), which he was told would be good for his son’s cricketing future.”My father sold his house without even knowing what talent I possess. Someone just said, ‘Oh, he is talented, take him to this school’ and he just did it in a flash. Now, being a father myself, if I’m asked to do it for my kids, it takes a lot of guts to be able to think on those lines, but he took that decision then.”His mother also played a big part in his cricketing journey.”The toil Mom had with me – every day taking me to Shivaji Park Gymkhana [over 20km from where they lived] and then coming back in peak hours in the Mumbai local [trains], I can never forget that. She lived the dream with me and it was her dream that I play at the highest level. Till I played Ranji Trophy, she would travel with me everywhere. Wherever she is, she will be very happy. And I know she is blessing us all from there.”

Namibia have big plans, and Lahore Qalandars are helping them along the way

Performance at the 2021 T20 World Cup had a big impact, and Cricket Namibia is hoping to make the most of the momentum

Umar Farooq20-Aug-2022The national team’s performance at the 2021 men’s T20 World Cup appears to have had a positive impact on Namibian cricket overall. A repeat – or a better show – later this year in Australia, however, depends on their preparation, and Namibia Cricket chief executive Johan Muller expects the Global T20 tournament against two club sides to be critical in that regard.”The performance of the national team in the 2021 World Cup [they beat Ireland and Netherlands in the first round, and Scotland in the main event] had a significant impact on interest, exposure and the growth for the game in Namibia,” Muller told ESPNcricinfo. “We clearly see that in the way the players performed, which was the best team performance in any sport in Namibia at a world-class event.Related

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“It had a real in-depth impact not just with spectators taking interest in the game but in development programmes too. Our quarterly programme was the biggest in Africa last year in 2021. We had 69,000 kids playing mini cricket, meaning one out of every five primary-school kids had the opportunity to participate in cricket in 2021.”That’s a significant number if you compare that to any other country out there, which got registered numbers in term of participants in any country with its development programme. We qualified for the 2022 World Cup and ensured that we didn’t have a short period of exposure. It added another year to the build-up to this event, which clearly has an impact on the country. Besides all that, the co-hosting of the 2027 ODI World Cup has led to some significant changes in ministry, government, and the local communities to view cricket, specifically with a focus on developing the structure.”Namibia have played ODI cricket against Nepal and Scotland in the 50-over World Cup League 2, and T20Is against Jersey and USA in a tri-series at home in the past month-and-some. Cricket Namibia has also arranged a T20 tri-series against club sides from Pakistan and South Africa in the lead-up to the T20 World Cup. From Pakistan, there is a representative side (sans international players) from Lahore Qalandars, the current PSL champions. And from South Africa, Imperial Lions, who won the CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge Division One in April.David Wiese is, by some distance, Namibia’s best, and most well-travelled, cricketer•Getty Images”There are actually quite a number of reasons for this tournament. The first is on-field preparation for the World Cup in Australia. Playing high-quality opposition in the T20 format is critical for our preparation,” Muller said. “This is something that created a lot of success for us last year and something we want to duplicate. We did manage to play Zimbabwe earlier this year and to play with top teams in member countries, which got a lot of depth in our cricket structure.”You always find exceptionally talented players in those teams that are high-calibre and on-field preparation is key to us in performing in T20 World Cup.”The second reason is commercial. The T20 commercial space is getting saturated and I think there is value in top players from different countries playing in a team set-up against a top Associate Member country like Namibia. I hope this completion will be a platform to showcase the talent we have in Namibia and few players on the world stage.”This was planned as a four-team tournament, but Indian domestic side Bengal had to withdraw, since the BCCI doesn’t allow Indian cricketers to take part in T20 tournaments outside India. The tournament was then tweaked, and Namibia will play two one-dayers against Qalandars.”It was a bit of a setback for the Bengal team not to be able to come,” Muller said. “It [the withdrawal] was quite late, which I think was the biggest impact, because we had already planned a four-team tournament, and we couldn’t advertise up till final confirmation from the BCCI. The impact is mostly from a commercial perspective, in the sense that we couldn’t track the sponsorship we actually wanted in terms of broadcasting.Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton was recently in Pakistan, training in the Lahore Qalandars academy•Getty Images”It obviously would be great to have an Indian team, they bring a lot of flair and a lot of different ways of playing the game into your country, and from just an exposure perspective of cricket in Namibia, it would have been great if the Bengal team was here too.”Earlier this month, Namibia had sent four cricketers, including Jan Nicol Loftie Eaton and Pikky Ya France, from Windhoek to Lahore to train in the Qalandars academy.”We did send four players to Lahore Qalandars as they have got a world-class facility where they cater to a lot of international players,” Muller explained. “They built quite a big academy in terms of developing players not only for Lahore Qalandars but for Pakistan. It was a very clear strategy behind sending players to their academy, which is an international facility and some real talented players.”So it was a scenic change for our players with particular focus on the spin bowlers to be able to generate more impact in the game in the middle period, which is critical these days in the modern game.”Namibia will play an ODI tri-series in Papua New Guinea after the tri-series at home before leaving for Australia, where they are grouped with Sri Lanka, Netherlands and UAE in the first round.

The day Tim Southee beat illness, odds – and Virat Kohli

He shouldn’t have been out on the park at all, but Southee ended up striking the most decisive blow for New Zealand

Karthik Krishnaswamy08-Feb-2020Keep the ball away from his off stump. Stay in that wide channel: sixth stump in name, more like tenth in reality. Make him long to feel bat on ball. Move him across his stumps. Then bowl one at the stumps, with a bit of inward movement. And hope he’s having a slightly off day.Teams try this plan all the time against Virat Kohli. It works sometimes, and doesn’t at other times, but when it does, it’s often memorable: think back to Vernon Philander at Newlands, or Trent Boult at Old Trafford.New Zealand didn’t have Boult on Saturday. Or Matt Henry. Or Lockie Ferguson. All three members of their first-choice ODI pace attack were out injured.The man leading their attack in their stead would have been out too, if New Zealand had any sort of bench left over in the midst of their injury crisis. Illness should have ruled him out, but Mitchell Santner was a few degrees ill-er, and New Zealand could only afford to have one of them sit out. By the end of this day, they would have Luke Ronchi, their assistant coach, come out as substitute fielder.And so we came to the sight of Tim Southee, ball in hand, ghostly expression on face, looking like he’d rather be anywhere but Eden Park.Illness aside, Southee came into this game under a certain amount of pressure – from New Zealand’s fans, certainly, if not from his team management. He had gone for 85 in his 10 overs in the first ODI, spraying the ball around and looking nothing like his best self. Before that, he had bowled two losing Super Overs in consecutive T20Is.Southee didn’t begin particularly well on Saturday evening. He was getting the ball to swing away from the right-handers under the lights, but every so often he was offering up a freebie. Short and wide at the end of his first over, full and wide midway through his second, and Prithvi Shaw slapped both to the off-side boundary.But a well-defined plan can often snap a bowler’s radar back into place, and Southee discovered this when Kohli walked in, after Hamish Bennett had sent back Mayank Agarwal at the other end.Southee had seven fielders on the off side – including, at one point, three slips and a gully – and only mid-on and fine leg on the leg side. To execute the Kohli plan, he would have to be precise with his line and length.And Southee, grimacing between deliveries, clutching his hip every now and then, walking back to his mark pale-faced, was just that. The swing, perhaps unusually for white-ball cricket, was persisting into his third over. Kohli reached out for an outswinger and missed. He drove at the next one and sliced it squarer than intended, towards backward point rather than into the covers.

‘We came to the sight of Tim Southee, ball in hand, ghostly expression on face, looking like he’d rather be anywhere but Eden Park – almost by default.’

At the other end, making his debut, Kyle Jamieson had bowled Prithvi Shaw with an inducker. Now he nearly had Kohli caught-and-bowled, the reflex chance refusing to stick in his left hand. Then he teased Kohli with more wide-of-off-stump bowling. Kohli left two balls alone, and pushed or jabbed the rest into the off side.When Kohli came back on strike to Southee, he moved down the track and across his stumps, to get closer to the pitch of the ball and manufacture a double into the vacant square-leg region. Southee responded with the widest outswinger of his spell, wide enough to make the umpire signal wide.Kohli, continuing to shimmy out of his crease, jabbed the next two balls into the off side, and left the last ball alone.After eight overs, India were 47 for 2 chasing 274. Kohli had negotiated this sort of situation numerous times, but on 8 off 18 without a boundary, he was looking just a touch edgy, just a touch too keen to assert himself. Or this could simply be hindsight arranging events into an easily recognisable shape.Either way, Southee bowled three more balls to Kohli on Saturday evening, and two of them – either side of a single to get off strike – were offcutters angled into the stumps. Kohli missed both of them.It’s rare for Kohli to miss two incoming balls in a row, but that’s what happened at Eden Park. Southee, with a bit of help from Jamieson, had caused a little kink to appear in Kohli’s technique. His eagerness to walk across his stumps was causing his head to fall over ever so slightly, and that, combined with the big gap at midwicket, was causing him to play around his front pad and across the line of the ball. At his best, Kohli would have hit both balls towards mid-on, with a straight bat.On this day, both balls beat his inside edge. The first could have been lbw had the umpire thought so. The second, fuller, seam scrambled in the air, left no doubt in anyone’s mind, brushing the front pad before crashing into middle and leg stumps.This was the ninth time Southee had dismissed Kohli in all international cricket. No other bowler has dismissed him as many times. The moment might have given way to an explosive celebration on another day, but Southee, still under the weather, barely managed a smile as he exchanged weak high-tens with his team-mates.He somehow got through another over, to end with first-spell figures of 6-0-33-1. That could have been that, given his state, but he came back in the 19th over for another spell, New Zealand deciding to bowl him out early and allow him to go off the field for good.This four-over spell was perhaps even better than the first one. The length was a little shorter in deference to the ball’s age – though the swing hadn’t entirely gone away – and to the short straight boundaries, and cross-seam deliveries were interspersed among seam-up balls that continued to wobble this way and that. Kedar Jadhav, batting on 9 off 32, looked to drive one that wasn’t quite pitched full enough, and spooned a catch to cover.Ravindra Jadeja, new to the crease, struggled with the angle across him and the movement from just short of a length. There was a poke and a miss, a couple of nervy jabs into the off side, a wild yahoo after jumping out of the crease, and an educated slash that flew over the slips for four.And then, having bowled 10 out of the first 25 overs of India’s innings, having taken two out of five wickets, Southee dragged himself off the field, all expression drained from his face as his team-mates’ pats rained on his back.

Allen to miss start of India T20I series if Scorchers reach BBL finals

If Scorchers don’t qualify, then Allen should be available for the full series

Tristan Lavalette10-Dec-2025

Finn Allen last played for New Zealand in March•Getty Images

Opener Finn Allen could miss the start of New Zealand’s upcoming five-match T20I series in India due to BBL commitments.The series, which starts on January 21 in Nagpur, serves as important preparation for the T20 World Cup to be played in India and Sri Lanka. It is the second leg of New Zealand’s white-ball tour with three ODIs slated from January 11-17.But Allen might not be available until possibly the fourth T20I on January 28 if Perth Scorchers reach the BBL final set to be played on January 25. Scorchers wrap up their regular season against Melbourne Stars on January 17 in Perth. If they don’t qualify for the finals, then Allen should be available for the full T20I series.”Pending selection, I’ll head straight to India once the Big Bash finishes up for us [Scorchers],” Allen told ESPNcricinfo.Allen, 26, is one of five players who signed casual agreements in order to have some flexibility between playing for New Zealand, remaining within the high-performance system, and taking up franchise opportunities overseas.”Playing for New Zealand is still, for me, the pinnacle and the reason why I love playing is to represent my country,” Allen said. “But cricket’s obviously evolving and changing year on year.”New Zealand Cricket’s been really good to work with over the last wee while. [I’m] confident about getting back into some Black Caps stuff after the Big Bash and hopefully can continue that.”Gearing up to partner Australia T20I skipper Mitchell Marsh at the top of the order for Scorchers, Allen will be making his return to competitive cricket after being sidelined with a foot stress fracture sustained in the MLC in early July.In the season opener of MLC, Allen had smashed 151 – featuring a T20 record of 19 sixes – in San Francisco Unicorns’ victory over Washington Freedom at the Oakland Coliseum.Allen last played international cricket in March, where he hit 27 off 12 balls in New Zealand’s eight-wicket victory over Pakistan in Wellington.

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