Athapaththu: 'Rejection is a kind of motivation for me'

Despite a stellar 2023, the Sri Lanka captain was initially overlooked at both WBBL and WPL

S Sudarshanan06-Feb-2024

Chamari Athapaththu was the second-highest run-getter in the WBBL•Getty Images

Sri Lanka captain Chamari Athapaththu said she was “not shocked but surprised” after finding no takers at the 2024 Women’s Premier League auction and added that rejections are “some kind of motivation” for her.Athapaththu had a stellar 2023 in T20Is, scoring 470 runs – the fourth-most among players from Full Members -at an average of 31.33 and a strike rate of 130.91. With the ball, she picked up eight wickets at an economy of 5.97. She also led Sri Lanka to an ODI series win over New Zealand at home and a T20I series win against England away. And yet she was overlooked initially at both WPL and WBBL.”I am not shocked, I am surprised because they didn’t pick me,” Athapaththu said in a media interaction on Tuesday. “But these things are not in my control. I think of what I can control because these decisions are taken by someone else – some coaches or some [team] management. I can’t control these things, but what I can control is my batting, my bowling. I just want to do what I can do. I take these decisions in good spirit and do my best.”Related

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Warriorz name Athapaththu as Bell's replacement

In the overseas draft ahead of the WBBL, Athapaththu was left out before being drafted in as a replacement player. She lit up the tournament with 552 runs – only five behind the top run-getter Beth Mooney – at 42.46 and a strike rate of 127.18. She also returned nine wickets at an economy of 6.83.But even those numbers did not land her a gig at the WPL, and it was only after Lauren Bell withdrew – to be available for England’s tour of New Zealand – that UP Warriorz signed her.”Rejection is some kind of motivation for me,” she said. “It is good for me because sometimes I can learn and I want to show what I can do. If someone says it can’t be done, be the first one to do it – that is my philosophy. I just want to prove what I can do.”At Warriorz, Athapaththu will face stiff competition from captain Alyssa Healy, Danni Wyatt, Tahlia McGrath, Grace Harris and Sophie Ecclestone for a spot in the playing XI. Such was the problem of plenty last year that even South Africa fast bowler Shabnim Ismail had to mostly sit out.Athapaththu, who opens the batting for Sri Lanka, will have to jostle with Healy and Wyatt. But she is prepared to bide her time and is ready to bat in the middle order if need be. The last time Athapaththu played as a non-opener for Sri Lanka in T20Is was in February 2019.”I know Alyssa Healy is an opener, my favourite Danni Wyatt is also an opener, even Tahlia McGrath can open, Grace Harris opens for Brisbane Heat [in the WBBL]. We have to adjust, and the important thing is the [requirements of the] team. If the coaches and team need me to, I am happy to bat everywhere between Nos. 1-6. I can do anything for my team, I am always a team player.”Athapaththu also hoped Sri Lanka would organise a franchise competition for the women and said that such tournaments are not all about the money.”These leagues are important for all cricketers around the world. Some people think these leagues are about the money. It is not like that. We can share our knowledge and culture with other players. I can share the dressing room with the world’s best cricketers, learn a lot from them and share my knowledge – with them as well as with our young players in Sri Lanka.”

Pelo Total Acesso, São Paulo abre venda de ingressos para jogo com o Atlético-GO; saiba os preços

MatériaMais Notícias

O São Paulo abriu a venda de ingressos para o jogo contra o Atlético-GO, pelo Campeonato Brasileiro, que acontece no dia 27 deste mês, no estádio do Morumbi, às 20h.

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Saiba quem pode sair do São Paulo no final desta temporada

Veja tabela do Campeonato Brasileiro e simule os próximos jogos

Com o valor dos ingressos variando entre R$15 e R$ 170, as vendas acontecem somente por meio da plataforma online Total Acesso (no sitespfc.totalacesso.com), sem a possibilidade de venda em bilheterias.

Até o momento, somente sócio-torcedores podem adquirir os bilhetes. As vendas estão abertas nesta quarta-feira (19) para o plano Diamante. Nesta quinta-feira (20), abre para o plano Tricolor, às 10h (de Brasília). Na sexta-feira (21), no mesmo horário, para o plano Preto. No sábado (22) e domingo (23), respectivamente, para os planos Branco e Vermelho.

Torcedores comuns poderão realizar a compra dos seus ingressos na segunda-feira (24), a partir das10h (de Brasília). Quanto aos camarotes, as vendas serão feitas diretamente com estes.

Veja os valores para São Paulo x Atlético-GO

ARQUIBANCADAS

Arquibancada Norte – Setor Popular (Amarela) > R$ 30 / R$ 15 ½ entrada
Arquibancada Sul (Laranja) > R$ 60 / R$ 30
Arquibancada Bitso Leste (Azul) > R$ 70 / R$ 35 ½
Arquibancada Oeste (Vermelha) > R$ 70 / R$ 35 ½

CADEIRAS SUPERIORES

Cadeira Superior Norte (Amarela) > R$ 50 / R$ 25 ½
Cadeira Superior Sul (Laranja) > R$ 100 / R$ 50 ½
Cadeira Especial Leste (Azul) > R$ 170 / R$ 85 ½
Cadeira Especial Oeste (Vermelha) > R$ 170 / R$ 85 ½

CADEIRAS TÉRREAS

Cadeira Térrea Bitso Leste (Azul) > R$ 100 / R$ 50 ½
Cadeira Térrea Oeste (Vermelha) > R$ 100 / R$ 50 ½

CAMAROTES
A compra deve ser feita direto com os camarotes

CAMAROTE DOS ÍDOLOS
A partir das 10h de 19/10 até às 10h de 27/10 em spfc.totalacesso.com > R$ 250
O acesso ao camarote ocorrerá pelo Portão 5-A, com abertura exclusiva antecipada a partir das 15h.

CAMAROTE CORPORATIVO SPFC
A partir das 10h de 19/10 até às 10h de 26/10 em spfc.totalacesso.com > R$ 200

> VENDA DE INGRESSOS PARA TORCIDA VISITANTE
Arquibancada Visitante (Vermelha) > R$ 70 / R$ 35 ½
Venda nos dias 24, 25, 26/10 em spfc.totalacesso.com
No dia do jogo (27/10), venda na bilheteria 5 do estádio do Morumbi (portão 15-A), das 13h às 19h45.

Sheffield Shield previews: Western Australia eye hat-trick, who can challenge them?

New South Wales

Captain Moises Henriques
Coach Greg ShipperdSquad Sean Abbott (CA), Jackson Bird, Pat Cummins (CA), Joel Davies (R), Oliver Davies, Ben Dwarshuis, Jack Edwards, Matthew Gilkes, Chris Green, Ryan Hackney, Ryan Hadley, Liam Hatcher, Josh Hazlewood (CA), Moises Henriques, Baxter Holt, Daniel Hughes, Hayden Kerr, Nathan Lyon (CA), Blake Macdonald, Blake Nikitaras, Jack Nisbet (R), Kurtis Patterson, Ross Pawson, Will Salzmann (R), Jason Sangha, Tanveer Sangha, Lachlan Shaw (R), Steven Smith (CA), Mitchell Starc (CA), Chris Tremain, Hunar Verma (R), David Warner (CA), Adam Zampa (CA) CA = Cricket Australia contract | R = Rookie contractIn Jackson Bird, Joel Davies, Chris Green, Blake Macdonald, Ross Pawson
Out Trent Copeland, Liam Doddrell, Mickey Edwards, Lachlan Hearne, Daniel SamsHow they shape upThe only way is up after a winless campaign last season, for the first time in 84 years, which left them bottom of the table. Change was already afoot before that campaign was over with Phil Jaques sacked and captain Kurtis Patterson dropped. Greg Shipperd, a coaching doyen in Australian cricket, is back in charge while Moises Henriques is the permanent replacement for Patterson. NSW need Patterson to rediscover his run-scoring; overall there were just four centuries in the Shield last season. Jackson Bird will add experience to the attack but it’s time some of the younger players stand up to avoid further talk that the talent pipeline in the state, at least when it comes to four-day cricket, is drying up.Player to watchJason Sangha, who first made a mark when he took a century off England in just his second first-class match in 2017, is one of those young batters NSW will need to start seeing more from. At 24 he still has time on his side, but last season he averaged 28.14 with a best of 54, a significant decline on the previous season where he topped 500 runs, and after 34 matches his overall first-class return is under 30.Australia radarAs usual, there will be mass absences, compounded this season by the ODI World Cup during the first two months of the season, but NSW are used to it. However, they should see a good amount of Nathan Lyon as he returns from the calf injury that ended his Ashes tour. They will hope to get at least five Shield games out of him before the Tests. There is a chance some of the other Test players could squeeze in a game before the Pakistan series. Adam Zampa could be available in the latter part of the season.Queensland will see plenty of Usman Khawaja in the first part of the season•Getty Images

Queensland

Captain Usman Khawaja
Coach Wade SeccombeSquad Xavier Bartlett, James Bazley, Max Bryant, Hugo Burdon (R), Joe Burns, Jack Clayton, Blake Edwards, Liam Guthrie, Aryan Jain, Usman Khawaja (CA), Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne (CA), Ben McDermott, Michael Neser (CA), Jimmy Peirson, Will Prestwidge (R), Matthew Renshaw, Gurinder Sandhu, Jack Sinfield (R), Mark Steketee, Bryce Street, Connor Sully, Mitch Swepson, Hugh Weibgen (R), Tom Whitney (R), Jack WildermuthIn Ben McDermott, Aryan Jain, Hugh Weibgen, Tom Whitney
Out Kane Richardson, Sam Heazlett, Sam Truloff, Matthew WillansHow they shape upThey were in touch throughout last season but were ultimately pipped in the finals race by Victoria’s surge, who handed them a costly defeat after the BBL. They have a stable squad that should again be a title contender with Ben McDermott’s arrival from Tasmania potentially adding further depth to the top order if he can bounce back from average just 18.30 last summer.Their bowling attack looks solid and one of the interesting decisions will be how they use Mitch Swepson and Matt Kuhnemann with the Gabba, especially, rarely a two-spinner venuePlayer to watchIt’s been a challenging 12 months for Mitchell Swepson after cracking into the Test side the season before. He averaged 39.66 in the Shield last summer, was selected for India but did not feature in the series then lost his CA central contract. He had a four-game stint with Glamorgan that brought 14 wickets, albeit at considerable cost but has remained around the Australia A set-up. He took eight wickets in two games in New Zealand and started with three more in Brisbane last month, before registering 0 for 119 in the second innings. Domestically he may not be an automatic pick in the Shield if Kuhnemann’s form warrants selection and Australia does not have another subcontinent tour until early 2025.Australia radarMarnus Labuschagne’s late move into the World Cup squad means he won’t be seen much in the first half of the season, but Usman Khawaja should be around ahead of the Test matches. Matt Renshaw will hope to push for David Warner’s spot at the top of the order. Michael Neser seems destined to forever be a reserve for Australia. Kuhnemann and Swepson are unlikely to be needed on home soil barring a spate of injuries.Jordan Buckingham is part of an exciting South Australia pace attack•Getty Images

South Australia

Captain Jake Lehmann
Coach Jason GillespieSquad Wes Agar, Kyle Brazell (R), Jordan Buckingham, Aidan Cahill (R), Jake Carder, Alex Carey (CA), Harry Conway, Brendan Doggett, Daniel Drew, Jake Fraser-McGurk, David Grant, Travis Head (CA), Isaac Higgins (R), Henry Hunt, Thomas Kelly, Jake Lehmann, Ben Manenti, Harry Matthias (R), Nathan McAndrew, Nathan McSweeney, Harry Nielsen, Lloyd Pope, Liam Scott, Henry Thornton, Spencer Johnson, Kelvin SmithIn Jake Fraser-McGurk, Kelvin Smith
Out Jake Weatherald (Tasmania), Bailey Capel, Ryan King, Nick WinterHow they shape upSigns of improvement last season as back-to-back wins either side of the BBL helped them finish mid-table, although the campaign closed with two defeats and a draw. Earlier this year, coach Jason Gillespie lauded his pace attack as the best in the country and the group of Spencer Johnson, Nathan McAndrew, Wes Agar and Jordan Buckingham can certainly be potent, backed up by Brendan Doggett and Henry Thornton.Ben Manenti carried the spin bowling, but a lot of faith is being shown in Lloyd Pope even though he did not play a game last season. Jake Lehmann has taken on the captaincy and will need to average more than the 31.23 he managed in 2022-23.Player to watchCould easily pick out one of the impressive quicks, but it will be worth tracking Henry Hunt as he looks to bounce back from an underwhelming season. After starting with a defiant 97 not out off 326 balls to secure a draw against Victoria, he averaged 25.94 to slip down the pecking order of potential further Australia openers after three centuries in 2021-22 plus another in Sri Lanka for Australia A. He relinquished the captaincy before the end of the summer having struggled to combine his two roles and did not feature for Australia A against New Zealand A.Australia radarTravis Head and Alex Carey are part of the World Cup squad so may, at most, get one Shield outing before the Test summer. Johnson, who has returned from India with a hamstring injury, is on the selectors’ radar across all formats. It’s unlikely anyone else will be required for national duty, but Thornton, Agar, Buckingham and Nathan McSweeney have been around the A-team set-up.Caleb Jewell has impressed for Australia A•Getty Images

Tasmania

Captain Jordan Silk
Coach Jeff VaughanSquad Gabe Bell, Iain Carlisle, Nick Davis (R), Paddy Dooley, Jake Doran, Nathan Ellis, Jarrod Freeman, Brad Hope, Caleb Jewell, Riley Meredith, Lawrence Neil-Smith, Mitch Owen, Nivethan Radhakrishnan (R), Sam Rainbird, Jordan Silk, Billy Stanlake, Matthew Wade, Charlie Wakim, Tim Ward, Jake Weatherald, Beau Webster, Mac WrightIn Paddy Dooley, Jake Weatherald
Out Tom Andrews, Jackson Bird (NSW), Ben McDermott (Queensland), Peter Siddle (Victoria)How they shape upTasmania have made significant list changes as they look to rebuild their attack with Jackson Bird and Peter Siddle both departing to completely change the age profile of the squad. They only won two games last year and finished second-last having narrowly missed the final in 2021-22. Their bowling lacked penetration, as they conceded nine 300-plus scores last season, more than any other team. With their best two bowlers from last season having departed, much of the load will fall on the likes of Riley Meredith, Sam Rainbird, Gabe Bell, Lawrence Neil-Smith and Nathan Ellis, when he is not playing white-ball cricket.Billy Stanlake could also return to the first-class ranks after two years out. Left-arm orthodox white-ball specialist Paddy Dooley has been added to the squad and could play a role. The batting has been strengthened. They already possess an Australia A opening combination in Caleb Jewell and Tim Ward. Jake Weatherald joins the squad and may get an opportunity to bat in a different position having been a long-time opener for South Australia.Player to watchCaleb Jewell has made a name for himself over the last two years as a potential international player and has only enhanced his reputation with his performances for Australia A this year, including a stunning century in the recent series against New Zealand A.That has vaulted him into the conversation as a possible long-term Test match opener. Prior to the A series, he appeared to be behind Harris, Renshaw and Bancroft in the pecking order but that gap has closed. A fast start to the summer and some big scores, especially on the always challenging early-season Bellerive Oval surface, will only help his cause.Australia radarAside from Jewell, Ward is another who is popular with the selectors having played in the last two Australia A series, and could also put himself in the mix as a Test candidate. Meredith is always a player of interest to the national selectors when he is fit and he started the Marsh Cup season with a lightning spell of bowling at the Junction Oval. His red-ball bowling has long been a work in progress, but his raw pace and skill make him an attractive player to the selectors.Todd Murphy will have the chance to be the No. 1 spinner•Getty Images

Victoria

Captain Will Sutherland
Coach Chris RogersSquad Liam Blackford (R), Scott Boland (CA), Dylan Brasher (R), Ashley Chandrasinghe, Xavier Crone, Travis Dean, Sam Elliott, Matt Fotia, Peter Handscomb, Sam Harper, Marcus Harris (CA), Campbell Kellaway, Nic Maddinson, Glenn Maxwell (CA), Cameron McClure, Jono Merlo, Todd Murphy (CA), Tom O’Donnell, Fergus O’Neill, Wil Parker, Mitch Perry, Will Pucovski, Tom Rogers, Matt Short, Peter Siddle, Will Sutherland, Douglas Warran (R)In Peter Siddle, Matt Fotia, Tom O’Donnell, Tom Rogers, Liam Blackford, Dylan Brasher, Douglas Warren
Out Aaron Finch (retired), Jake Fraser-McGurk (South Australia), Brody Couch, Zak Evans, Mackenzie Harvey, Jon Holland, Tom O’ConnellHow they shape upVictoria surprised even themselves by making back-to-back finals with a young squad but they feel they are ready to take the next step. Last year they lost to Western Australia, unable to win the key moments with bat and ball in the decider. But a year older and wiser they look like they have all the pieces in place.They will play under a new captain with Will Sutherland taking over the Shield captaincy from Peter Handscomb. The return of Will Pucovski will strengthen the top-order batting significantly and the attack will be well-balanced with Scott Boland available for most of the first part of the season.They have added Peter Siddle to fill in when he is rested. Sutherland, Mitch Perry and Fergus O’Neill are all fit and ready for a full season while Todd Murphy will be a banker as their No. 1 spinner.Player to watchMarcus Harris is the player who has both the most to gain out of the first half of the season and the most to lose. He appears to be next cab off the rank to be the Test match opener whenever David Warner finishes.He does not have much to prove at domestic level but some big early scores, particularly at the WACA and the Gabba could actually put pressure on the national selectors to move Warner on earlier. Conversely, if Harris has a lean early season run, which can happen as an opening bat, the likes of Renshaw, Bancroft and Jewell will all be pressing their case to be next cab off the rank.Australia radarVictoria have a good contingent of players on the fringes off the Test team with Harris, Boland and Murphy all touring England with the Ashes squad. Handscomb did not make the Ashes squad despite playing very well on the tour of India and he is keen to prove he is not just a subcontinent specialist.Sutherland’s stocks continue to rise as both a leader and a player. Australia’s allrounder resources are flush at the moment but if Sutherland can improve his long-form batting after a maiden first-class century last season and 83 in the final, he can elevate his standing even further. Pucovski always remains a player of interest, but Australia’s selectors are set to be very patient with him and let him try and get some continuity at domestic level for a season or two.Lance Morris’ pace will put him in Australia’s planning•Getty Images

Western Australia

Captain Mitchell Marsh
Coach Adam VogesSquad Ashton Agar (CA), Cameron Bancroft, Mahli Beardman (R), Jason Behrendorff, Hilton Cartwright, Cooper Connolly, Sam Fanning, Cameron Gannon, Jayden Goodwin (R), Cameron Green (CA), Sam Greer (R), Aaron Hardie, Liam Haskett, Josh Inglis (CA), Bryce Jackson, Matt Kelly, Mitchell Marsh (CA), Hamish McKenzie, Lance Morris (CA), Joel Paris, Josh Philippe, Jhye Richardson (CA), Corey Rocchiccioli, D’Arcy Short, Charlie Stobo, Marcus Stoinis (CA), Ashton Turner, Andrew Tye, Josh Vernon (R), Sam Whiteman, Teague WyllieIn Liam Haskett, Mahli Beardman, Josh Vernon
Out Shaun Marsh (retired), David MoodyHow they shape upWA are chasing a rare Shield hat-trick. It has only happened three times since 1977-78 when it became a six-team competition. They are in strong shape to do it with the squad hardly changing from last season. Shaun Marsh has retired but he only managed to play one game last season. WA’s major challenge will be managing their fast bowling and the coming and going of international players.Jhye Richardson’s availability is going to be limited early in the season coming off hamstring surgery. Lance Morris will also be carefully managed and could be involved in the Test squad at times. Joel Paris tweaked his hamstring playing for Australia A while Hilton Cartwright is coming off knee surgery. But the core of the group remains strong with a new young left-arm quick Liam Haskett set to be an exciting addition.Player to watchAll eyes will be on Cameron Bancroft at the start of the summer. He appears to be a few positions back in the queue in the race to be Australia’s next Test opener. He missed out in the recent Australia A series with Jewell throwing his hat in the ring alongside established candidates Harris and Renshaw. But Bancroft has scored more Shield hundreds (six) than any of them in the last 18 months. If he adds more in the first six rounds he can put a lot of pressure on Australia’s selectors for a recall.Australia radarAside from Bancroft, Morris is the one that looms largest on Australia’s radar. He will be carefully managed through the first six rounds of the Shield season to ensure he is fully fit for the Pakistan Test series, as he may be in line for a Test debut if any of Australia’s established Test quicks get injured at the World Cup.Richardson will be monitored closely. If he can get back up and running and play consistently without injury, then Australia’s selectors will come calling. Josh Inglis is the other one who can push his Test credentials if he can ever play a game for WA when he’s not with Australia’s white-ball teams.

WI switch to T20 mode as CPL stars look to topple India

India are missing several regulars, meaning Tilak Varma, Yashasvi Jaiswal and Mukesh Kumar will all be looking to make a mark

Deivarayan Muthu02-Aug-20231:09

Jaffer: Tilak Varma brings versatility to India’s XI

Big picture: IPL heroes vs CPL starsThough West Indies failed to qualify for the main event of the last T20 World Cup – and the upcoming ODI World Cup – their T20I side seems to be in better health than their ODI and Test teams. Either side of the T20 World Cup’s first round in 2022, West Indies challenged New Zealand in a 2-1 series defeat at home, and beat South Africa 2-1 away. They will be bolstered further by the return of Nicholas Pooran, who propelled MI New York to the MLC title last Sunday with a sensational 137 not out off 55 balls. Allrounders Jason Holder, Odean Smith and Akeal Hosein are also back in the mix.India will be without Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj for the T20I leg of the West Indies and USA tours, but their line-up still drips with power and class, thanks to their IPL heroes. After having lit up his Test debut with 171 in Dominica, Yashasvi Jaiswal could potentially make his T20I debut on Thursday in Tarouba, and open alongside Shubman Gill. There could also be a debut for Tilak Varma, who has been the engine room of Mumbai Indians’ middle order since Hardik Pandya moved to Gujarat Titans in the IPL. Varma will now combine with Pandya to marshal India’s middle order.Related

Avesh Khan ready for reboot after being 'all over the place'

Hetmyer, Hope, Thomas return to WI T20I squad for India series

Hardik still 'turtle, not the rabbit' as he builds bowling workload

This could be another opportunity for Sanju Samson and Ishan Kishan to prove their white-ball chops and firm up their cases to be India’s back-up wicketkeeper behind KL Rahul, who is on the road to recovery from injury.For West Indies, this series marks the beginning of a long T20 home season, with the CPL set to begin on August 16, three days after the end of the T20I series against India in Lauderhill, USA. Strong performances in this series – and the following CPL – could help West Indies shape their side for their home T20 World Cup next year.Mukesh Kumar could end up making his Test, ODI and T20I debuts on this tour•AFP/Getty Images

Form guideWest Indies WLWLW (last five completed T20Is, most recent first)
India WWLWLIn the spotlight: Powell and MukeshRovman Powell is among West Indies’ leaders in white-ball cricket, but he was dropped for the last two ODIs against India, with Keacy Carty replacing him. He had also been dropped from the ODI side during the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe. But Powell is now set to return, this time as the captain of the T20I team, and with a point to prove – particularly against the spinners. Powell has a strike rate of only 115.03 while facing spin in T20 cricket, while that number jumps up to 153.20 against pace.Mukesh Kumar had to slog for years to make it to India’s squad, but if he gets picked on Thursday, he will end up making his Test, ODI and T20I debuts in a fortnight in the West Indies. Mukesh usually operates in the lower 130kph range, but he can get the ball to skid and seam off the pitch like he did in the ODI series decider in Tarouba on Tuesday. With a number of senior quicks absent once again, Mukesh is likely to get a good run in the five-match T20I series.Team news: Will India pick an extra spinner?This will be West Indies’ first T20I under coach Daren Sammy, but there might not be too many changes from the team that toppled South Africa in South Africa. ODI captain Shai Hope might compete with Johnson Charles for the No.3 spot. West Indies will look up to the returning Pooran and Shimron Hetmyer to counter India’s spinners. Hosein could be West Indies’ main spinner after having returned from the MLC.West Indies (probable): 1 Brandon King, 2 Kyle Mayers, 3 Johnson Charles/Shai Hope (wk), 4 Nicholas Pooran, 5 Shimron Hetmyer, 6 Rovman Powell (capt), 7 Roston Chase, 8 Jason Holder, 9 Romario Shepherd/Odean Smith, 10 Akeal Hosein, 11 Alzarri Joseph/Oshane Thomas1:13

Jaffer: WI need players to commit to the national team

If the pitch that was used for the final ODI is rolled out once again, India might consider bringing in an extra spinner. And it remains to be seen whether the visitors can fit both Kishan and Samson in their XI.India (probable): 1 Shubman Gill, 2 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 3 Ishan Kishan/Sanju Samson (wk), 4 Tilak Varma, 5 Hardik Pandya (capt), 6 Suryakumar Yadav, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Kuldeep Yadav, 9 Yuzvendra Chahal/Ravi Bishnoi, 10 Arshdeep Singh, 11 Mukesh Kumar/Umran Malik/Avesh KhanPitch and conditions: Rain could interrupt the gameThe Brian Lara Cricket Academy has hosted just one T20I so far, in 2022, when India piled up 190 for 6, and then defended it with considerable ease against West Indies. The Tarouba pitch is usually friendly to batters, but a used one could offer more assistance to the bowlers. The forecast for Thursday isn’t particularly promising, with a 40% chance of rain.Stats and trivia Suryakumar Yadav has a strike rate of 175.76 in T20Is – the highest among all batters who have faced at least 250 balls in the format. Holder (53) is two wickets away from surpassing Samuel Badree (54) as West Indies’ second-highest wicket-taker in T20Is. Dwayne Bravo tops this list with 78 strikes. India are set to play their 200th T20I on Thursday. Only Pakistan (223) have played more T20Is than India.

Arsenal plan "imminent move" for one of England's "most exciting" youngsters

Arsenal are ready to swoop for a young centre-forward very soon, and it is believed Mikel Arteta’s side are in pole position to secure his signature ahead of the likes of Chelsea, Manchester City, and Liverpool.

Andrea Berta to target new striker for Arsenal this summer

The club’s new sporting director, Andrea Berta, is set to target a new striker for Arsenal this summer.

Arteta wants "world-class" player with Arsenal in advanced talks to sign him

The Spaniard is a major admirer.

ByEmilio Galantini Mar 29, 2025

Berta put pen to paper on a contract to replace long-serving transfer chief Edu Gaspar around three weeks ago, according to Fabrizio Romano, and a new number nine is said to be high on the Italian’s agenda heading into this summer.

Fulham (home)

April 1st

Everton (away)

April 5th

Brentford (home)

April 12th

Ipswich Town (away)

April 20th

Crystal Palace (home)

April 26th

Arsenal have already identified targets, with the likes of Eintracht Frankfurt star Hugo Ekitiké, Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak and Sporting CP’s Viktor Gyokeres all linked to joining Arteta’s side before the start of next season.

As well as the aforementioned trio, Arsenal have been sporadically linked with homegrown stars like Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap, who former Tottenham manager Tim Sherwood recently urged Berta to sign.

“That is a no-brainer for me,” said Sherwood.

“I put Delap in front of [Ollie] Watkins, considering what Arsenal need at the moment. And he’s ahead of [Benjamin] Sesko, who Arsenal have been touting around for. Ipswich would be consigned to the Championship already without him. I think £40m would get him now.

Liam Delap against Manchester United for Ipswich Town.

“He would really develop under [Mikel] Arteta and give Arsenal something different, he’s strong, holds the ball up, runs from deep. He knows the league. I think he is an absolute no-brainer for Arsenal. If Ipswich get relegated, his value will still be up there, about the same price. £40m is nothing for Arsenal, he’s got a huge future ahead of him.”

Both Gabriel Jesus and Kai Havertz won’t be available for quite a long time after sustaining serious injuries, so a prolific new forward is quite simply imperative for Arsenal, with the only question being who is their most ideal fit.

Arsenal ready to make "imminent move" for Blackburn starlet Harvey Higgins

Alongside the senior team, Berta will be overseeing the development of their youth setup, and Arsenal reportedly have their eyes on one of England’s brightest, up-and-coming forward talents.

That is according to journalist Pete O’Rourke, who writes that Arsenal are ready to make an “imminent move” for Blackburn Rovers sensation Harvey Higgins.

The Gunners are apparently “in the driving seat” to strike a deal for Higgins, who is “regarded as one of the most exciting talents in the country”. The 16-year-old is also attracting attention from Chelsea, City, and Liverpool, but Arsenal are hoping to win the race for his services by swooping first.

Higgins could even end up replacing former Arsenal youth striker Chido Obi-Martin, who departed N5 for Man United recently and has already made senior appearances under Ruben Amorim.

رحلة انتهت بكأس مصر.. رسالة وداع من أيمن عبد العزيز لجماهير الزمالك

حرص أيمن عبد العزيز، المدرب العام السابق لفريق الزمالك، على توجيه رسالة وداع إلى جماهير القلعة البيضاء بعد رحيله رسميا، مع الجهاز الفني بقيادة أيمن الرمادي.

وكان مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك، برئاسة حسين لبيب، قد أعلن رحيل الجهاز الفني للفريق بالكامل بقيادة أيمن الرمادي، بشكل رسمي أمس، الإثنين.

طالع| محمد عبد المنصف: الزمالك يحتاج لاعب الأهلي السابق

وضم جهاز الرمادي المعاون كلاً من: أيمن عبد العزيز مدربًا عامًا، وأحمد سمير، وحمادة السيد مدربَين مساعدَين، وعماد المندوه مدربًا لحراس المرمى، وماريو تومليانوفيتش مخططًا للأحمال، ومحمد الشافعي معدًّا بدنيًا، ومحمد طارق محللًا للأداء.

وجاءت رسالة أيمن عبد العزيز، عبر حسابه الشخصي على موقع التواصل الاجتماعي “إكس”، كالتالي:”(وَأَنَّ اللَّهَ لَا يُضِيعُ أَجْرَ الْمُؤْمِنِينَ)”رحلة قصيرة من مشوار كبير داخل بيتي الزمالك انتهت بكأس مصر بعد موسم صعب”.

وأضاف: “الحمد لله على بطولة جديدة تضاف لسجلي كمدرب عام بعد الكونفدرالية، شكرًا لكل من دعمني، ودائمًا في خدمة الكيان وجماهيره العظيمة”.

واستطاع أيمن عبد العزيز، أن يحصل مع الزمالك على لقب بطولة كأس مصر للموسم الماضي 2024-2025 بالفوز على بيراميدز في المباراة النهائية.

Johnson, Madsen, Manenti sign up for Berg's Italian Job

Trio set to feature for Azzurri in July with 2024 T20 World Cup qualification on the line

Matt Roller22-Feb-2023A 90mph/145kph left-arm fast bowler, a legend of modern county cricket, and a double Big Bash League-winner are among the players set to lead Italy’s bid to qualify for the 2024 men’s T20 World Cup.Italy will vie for one of two available spots in the tournament when they play in July’s seven-team T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier in Scotland, where the hosts and Ireland are clear favourites.But ESPNcricinfo can reveal that Spencer Johnson – the breakout star of the 2022-23 Big Bash – is set to feature along with Wayne Madsen and Ben Manenti, after months of discussions with players around the world led by captain-coach Gareth Berg.The Europe Qualifier will be held in Edinburgh from July 20-28, in round-robin format. The seven teams involved are Austria, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Jersey and Scotland, with the winners and runners-up progressing to the 2024 T20 World Cup. Two European sides, England and the Netherlands, have already qualified for the tournament.Related

Berg named playing head coach of Italy

Which Australian opener went on to play T20s for Italy?

Tall, left-arm and fast: Johnson grasps his second chance

Italy are ranked 32nd in the world in T20Is, sandwiched between Tanzania and Saudi Arabia, but Berg and his assistant Kevin O’Brien have led a drive towards semi-professionalism in recent months, running regular weekend training camps in Milan, Bologna and Rome.They hope to supplement the leading Italian-based players with a handful of full-time players from around the world, with Berg himself continuing as captain at the age of 42 alongside his commitments with Northamptonshire in county cricket.Johnson, the left-arm seamer, starred for Brisbane Heat on their recent run to the BBL final, taking nine wickets in the tournament and bowling several fast, hostile spells with the new ball. Johnson’s grandfather moved to Australia from Italy as a young man, and his manager confirmed to ESPNcricinfo that he has recently obtained his Italian passport and intends to play in July’s qualifier.”He’s dead keen,” Berg told ESPNcricinfo. “He’s going to be a huge boost for us. It’s always nice to have someone that can bowl close to 150 clicks at that level. He’s had quite a tough time with injuries but he’s coming back pretty strong now. He’s raring to get involved in July.”Joe Burns could soon qualify for Italy•Getty ImagesMadsen, meanwhile, has scored nearly 20,000 runs across formats for Derbyshire since signing for the county in 2009, playing thanks to his Italian passport. “He’s wanted to play for the last few years now,” Berg said. “He’s at the stage of his career where he could probably slip away for a week or two to play in a big tournament like this.”Madsen would miss two County Championship fixtures if selected. Kent’s Grant Stewart – who has already played 10 T20Is for Italy – is also expected to miss two games in order to play in the qualifier.Manenti, the offspinning allrounder who was part of Sydney Sixers’ BBL title wins in 2019/20 and 2020/21, is also due to debut and could play alongside his younger brother, Harry. He has thrived with the bat for South Australia this season, and also provides a reliable offspin option.Joe Burns, the former Australia opener, is expected to qualify at the end of 2023. While Italy do not anticipate having him available this summer, Berg believes Burns will be in the mix for World Cup selection “if we pull off a miracle and qualify in July”.’They’re coming to play for the Azzurri’The prospect of Italy turning up to the Europe Qualifier with a handful of professionals in their ranks will not be universally popular in the Associate game. “But at the end of the day, they all have the entitlement to come in and play for us through their passports or through their bloodlines,” Berg said. “I’m more than happy for them to represent the national team.”It’s not like we’re throwing cash at them or anything like that. They are coming to play for the love of the blue blood, coming to play for the Azzurri. As soon as I mention it, they’re straight on board with it and willing to help out. Yes, we have pros available, but we also have our local players that are pushing for spots. It’s heartwarming for me and the guys working with me that these guys are pushing themselves really hard.”Berg still plays county cricket for Northants•Getty ImagesBerg, the South African-born allrounder who has enjoyed an extensive county career with Middlesex, Hampshire and Northants, first played for Italy in 2012. He has become extensively involved over the last three years, initially as captain and later as playing head coach.”When I came into the job, I wanted to push and direct Italian cricket into a more professional set-up,” he said. “”he one thing that we struggle with at times is players getting time off work. A few of the guys work double shifts or double jobs, so time away from work is tough. We have to play in advance and it can be really tough.”Our squad for this summer on paper looks as good as any in that tournament, but our biggest focus has to be the week before the tournament. That’s key for us: the bonding, gelling, getting to know each other and working out each other’s strengths and weaknesses.”Hopefully we can catch teams like Scotland and Ireland on a bad day and knock them over. But we are generally moving in the right direction. If this July tournament doesn’t work out for us, then hopefully we have everything in place to push for the next one.”

England bank on Baby Boom to reinvigorate long-term Test prospects

The Test readiness of England’s rookies is perhaps secondary to the sense of purpose that their inclusions project

Andrew Miller at Lord's08-Aug-20181:47

Pope gets the nod for England, but who’ll miss out?

The kids are alright, you know. For the fourth time in 2018 alone, and for the fifth time since the selection of Haseeb Hameed on the last tour of India in November 2016, England have plumped for youth over experience, excitement over stability, the bold approach over the same old narrative with interchangeably seasoned campaigners.At the age of 20 years and 219 days, Surrey’s Ollie Pope will bat at No.4 for England in the Lord’s Test – a position that effectively leaves him man-marking one of the game’s all-time great batsmen in India’s captain, Virat Kohli, the scorer of 200 formidable runs in last week’s Edgbaston Test.With just 15 first-class matches under his belt, Pope slots into England’s Test history as their third-youngest specialist batsman behind Denis Compton (19 years and 83 days) and Hameed (19 years and 269 days), and does so in the wake of his Surrey team-mate and fellow 20-year old, Sam Curran, being named as Man of the Match for a precocious allround display in the first Test.Throw into the mix the bloodings of Mason Crane (20 years and 320 days) at Sydney in January, and Dom Bess (20 years and 306 days) for the Pakistan Tests in May and June, and is clear that the only thing being fast-tracked more quickly than young English talent is a sense of revolution from the new national selector, Ed Smith, who whiled away his time during England’s nets session by patrolling the Nursery Ground outfield with phone glued to ear and with shades and rolled-up shirtsleeves transmitting a stockbroker’s air of urgency.What could possibly go wrong? Well, everything and nothing, in the opinion of England’s captain, Joe Root (who was himself a grizzled 22-year-old when he made his own Test bow at Nagpur in 2012-13). Before this sudden baby boom, England had chosen just 19 under-21s in their first 140 years of Test history – most recently Steven Finn as a last-minute replacement on the tour of Bangladesh in 2010. But with the team’s current Test record perhaps as erratic as it has been in a generation, there is arguably a perverse prudence to such an abrupt change of strategy.”If you’re old enough, you’re good enough,” Root said. “A lot of the selections of late have been quite bold, we’re not shy of being a little bit brave and doing things slightly differently. It’s worked out for us so far.””I think when you give exciting young talents responsibility, they tend to surprise you,” he added. “We’ve seen that so far. The challenge for them moving forward is to try and sustain that and not put too much pressure on themselves and too much expectation on them to deliver on a really consistent basis.”Ollie Pope and Sam Curran warm up ahead of training•Getty ImagesThe issue of youth and renewal is one that cuts to the core of everything in English cricket at present. The question of whether the likes of Pope and Curran are truly ready for the step-up in class is perhaps secondary to the sense of purpose that their inclusions project.Much as was the case with Adil Rashid’s recall at Edgbaston (and maybe, if you want to extrapolate even further, the ongoing mayhem that is The Hundred), the noses that get put out of joint by the ECB’s sudden predilection for thinking outside the box are less important than those outside the game’s usual confines who get wind of this disruption to the status quo, and poke their noses in for a first sniff of the action.Certainly Root was at pains to make it clear that the door is not closed to county performers who earn their recognition through the more traditional formula of runs and wickets over time. But, tellingly, he also seemed less interested in immediate dividends, even with a series as important as a five-Test rubber against India on the line. The long game is what really matters as England attempt to reboot their red-ball fortunes.”I think we’ve got to be really realistic that these guys are exciting young players and they will do some very good stuff,” said Root. “It might not all happen straight away and we have to be a little bit patient with that.” Join us for the ride, in other words, and invest in these guy’s stories. Whatever transpires, it is unlikely to be dull.Even India’s captain seemed rather engaged by Pope’s tale. “We want to try and knock him over as early as possible, but on a larger front, I am happy for him,” Kohli said. “As a cricketer I understand how important it is. I will tell him to enjoy the occasion, and not get too many runs!”The prospect of Pope having his credentials scrutinised by the best batsman in the world may be daunting, but it is not as if England’s rookies are being thrown into the fray without a serious support network behind them. In Alastair Cook, James Anderson and Stuart Broad – not to mention Root himself, whose 6000 Test runs are still only the start of what he could achieve – this team’s senior pros are among the most senior ever to have played the game.”We’ve got some very good experienced players around them so they can learn and mould their games at the highest level,” said Root. “For young guys coming in, that’s exciting for this team, and for people around it, seeing a young man in Sam performing how he did last week with a real bright future, it’s exciting for English cricket. That should fill a lot of other lads around the country with a huge amount of confidence.”And if the beauty of Test cricket lies in its narrative, then what could be more beautiful than these kids-turned-veterans, looking back in 15 years’ time on the priceless nuggets of wisdom that they received first-hand in their earliest outings? It may be wildly out of kilter with everything that English cricket has preached about Test cricket in the course of its first 990-odd engagements. But since the turn of the year, there’s been a turning of the page. And are you not entertained already?

Sri Lanka's shortest innings after electing to bat

Stats highlights from the first day’s play in Pallekele, where the hosts were bowled out for 117 in just 34.2

Bharath Seervi26-Jul-201634.2 Number of overs that Sri Lanka’s first innings lasted, which is their shortest after electing to bat. Before this, they had lasted 38.4 overs, bowled for 95 against South Africa in Cape Town in 2000-01.1 Number of lower totals for Sri Lanka against Australia at home, than the first-innings 117. They were bowled out for 105 in Galle in 2011. Tuesday’s total is the lowest total by any team in Pallekele. Sri Lanka themselves had previously made 174 against Australia in 2011.22.30 Test average of Sri Lanka’s top three batsmen at home since July 2015, which is the lowest among all teams. In 36 innings, their top-three has managed only two centuries and one half-century.10.50 Sri Lanka’s average opening partnership in home Tests since July 2015 – again, the worst among all teams. In 12 innings, only once have their openers put on more than 50.2003 The last time Sri Lanka fielded two or more debutants in the same Test. Sri Lanka handed out debut caps to Dhananjaya de Silva and Lakshan Sandakan on Tuesday. Against New Zealand in Colombo (PSS) in 2003, Kaushal Lokuarachchi and Prabath Nissanka made their Test debuts. De Silva’s first scoring shot was a six, which makes him the first Sri Lanka player to start off his Test career with a six.

Players getting off the mark in their Test career with a six
Player Team Against Venue Date
Eric Freeman Aus Ind Brisbane 1/19/1968
Carlisle Best WI Eng Kingston 2/21/1986
Keith Dabengwa Zim NZ Bulawayo 8/15/2005
Dale Richards WI Ban Kingstown 7/9/2009
Shafiul Islam Ban Ind Chittagong 1/17/2010
Jahurul Islam Ban Eng Dhaka 3/20/2010
Al-Amin Hossain Ban SL Dhaka 1/27/2014
Mark Craig NZ WI Kingston 6/8/2014
Dhananjaya de Silva SL Aus Pallekele 7/26/2016

1 This is the first Test in Sri Lanka in which both teams’ openers were dismissed for single-digit scores in the first innings. Overall, there have been 19 such Tests, the last of which was at Wanderers in 2006-07 between India and South Africa.2006 The last time Sri Lanka’s top five were all dismissed for 15 or fewer runs in a Test innings at home, against Pakistan in Colombo (PSS). This is the sixth such instance for Sri Lanka in home Tests.19.16 Angelo Mathews’ average in his last six Test innings against Australia, with a highest of 35. In his first six innings against them, he averaged 87.25 – he remained unbeaten twice – with a century and three half-centuries.2 Consecutive ducks for David Warner in Tests against Sri Lanka. Warner was dismissed for a duck in the first innings of this Test, as well as in the second innings of the SCG Test in 2012-13. Incidentally, in the other four innings against them, he has made half-centuries. Sri Lanka and India are the only teams against whom Warner has two ducks.

Ashwin finds peace with the offbreak

R Ashwin has reaped the benefits of reverting to classic offspin bowling and with the confidence his captain shows in him, he can become deadly

Alagappan Muthu in Fatullah15-Jun-20152:00

Insights – Insights – Ashwin India’s go-to spinner in Asia

“Have they shook hands?”The thought couldn’t be helped. India had bowled Bangladesh out in 66 overs, and with enough in the bank to cash in on a follow-on. But the clouds had gathered again and there was only an hour or so left in the game. Barely two days’ play has been possible in the Fatullah Test. Chances of a result had gone down the drain, along with rain water to fill three dozen swimming pools. Yet with the potential for 30 overs including extra time, Virat Kohli wanted one last gamble. And he took out his ace in the hole: R Ashwin.An offbreak fizzed from outside leg, as it was supposed to. It drew Imrul Kayes into a prod, as was planned. The edge hitchhiked off the thigh pad to the first of two slips but was put down. If Bangladesh survived long enough, play was certain to be called off by the mandatory 15 overs. As it was. But Ashwin wouldn’t make it easy.India have said they are on the hunt for wins. So the lead spinner will be pestered for miracles. Trying too much can never be ruled out under such circumstances. But Ashwin had secured his first (of 10) five-wicket hauls outside India – 5 for 87 in 25 overs – through classic offspin bowling in the first innings. He would loop the ball up and then get it to dip. Turn and bounce become academic after that. He trusted his stock delivery, the only variations he tried were those of pace and length and he stuck to a rhythmic, repeatable action. Nothing needed to change.”He’s priceless, to be honest,” Kohli said, “In a subcontinent Test match, you won’t get any better than him. He can bowl at right-handers, at left-handers, he can deceive people with pace, with spin, with bounce. I mean you name it and he has it.”So nothing needs to change looking ahead either. Even in limited-overs cricket, Ashwin had worked out that he is at his best when dealing the ball enough flight. The results were on show at the World Cup: 13 wickets at an average of 25 and an economy of 4.28. Among spinners, he’d bowled the most overs – 77 – and maidens – 6 – and was only two wickets shy of Imran Tahir and Daniel Vettori’s tally.A clever Ashwin is an asset, but an Ashwin who is clear enough in his mind to base his attack around his offbreak can be deadly. Especially in subcontinent conditions. Batsmen are most nervous when the length of the ball prevents them from deciding whether to go forward or not. Often times that means they push with their hands to make up the distance. As Tamim Iqbal did, to be stumped here. As Mushfiqur Rahim did, to be caught. As Shuvagata Hom did, to be caught again.But with a well-stocked bag of tricks comes the compulsion to dip into them. There have been times when the carom ball was strutted out so often that the offbreak might have felt like the jealous understudy. Then there were the changes he often made to his bowling action. As though it had fallen behind the times and he wanted to stay hip. Ashwin had even ceded as much to explain his borrowing Sunil Narine’s action, replete will the full-sleeved shirt that hid the elbow.”I just wanted to see if you can get more revs on the ball, if you can do a little bit with your elbow, as much as [is allowed], that is,” he had said after the Asia Cup in March 2014. “That’s what it was all about. You can get a lot of advantage with these things. So why should I lag behind if someone else is getting a competitive edge?”He’d returned to his normal routine immediately after that match against Bangladesh, including ditching the full-sleeves.Besides, his own tinkering, captains have assigned defensive mandates to him. Especially in away Tests. And when protecting runs enters into a spinner’s equation, it can get ugly. The switch to a limited-overs mindset can come unbidden. The urge to bowl around the wicket and at the pads would seem appropriate. The fact that the batsman is quite comfortable with that, since you are diminishing your chances of getting him out, slips the mind. And the good ones find ways to milk that line far easier.Ashwin had discovered that on his first tour to Australia in 2011: 168 overs, 565 runs, nine wickets. On his next trip abroad, he was dropped after the Boxing Day Test in Johannesburg. Eight months outside the Test team. The murkiest time of his career so far. It is difficult to ascertain if he had fallen off the wagon himself, or if his confusion was a byproduct of the team wanting his role to be summarily overhauled: from attack to contain.”I think he is not being handled properly,” former India left-arm spinner Maninder Singh had said in February 2014. “Somebody who came into the Indian side because he had the capability and the urge to take wickets, he was eager to take wickets in 20-overs cricket, becomes defensive in Test cricket where you are supposed to take wickets … Something is going wrong somewhere, someone is giving him the wrong advice.”So Ashwin decided to block out the noise. The World T20 arrived. He did too, with a simple action and a fetish for flighted offbreaks. India waltzed into the final and wowed the audience with the guile their spinners persisted with even in the one format where they were supposed to be most endangered. The flatter trajectory was as good as outlawed, and Ashwin said, “The ball is landing exactly where I want.”There were evidences of similar form in Fatullah. He was able to assess the pitch quickly, the batsmen’s weaknesses in double that time, plan his traps and spring them. The confidence he had was exemplified when he was miffed at the appointment of a deep cover towards the dying stages of the fifth day and demanded he stride back inside the circle.”He understands the game well,” Kohli said. “As a captain, you don’t need to tell him much because he’s very clear about what he wants to do, and I’m pretty confident of his contribution in the coming season, and he’s pretty geared up as well. He’s going to be really important for us.”It would take courage and self-belief not to abuse his variations. More so against batsmen he will meet soon: AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla and Kumar Sangakkara can frighten bowlers to dig for plan Z and beyond. But the offbreak is a classic and there is a reason why the classics are highly rated.

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