Chasing the century

The idea that Sachin Tendulkar might be a fallible human like the rest of us doesn’t sit well with many Indian fans. And so the wait for the milestone continues

Wright Thompson14-Mar-2012EDISON, N.J. – Not long ago, a group of Indian expats gathered in a restaurant to discuss the continuing struggles of cricket star Sachin Tendulkar. The men could have been in India, so closely does Edison resemble a subcontinent city, or at least the upscale suburb of one. Strip malls line the main artery of Oak Tree Road, block after block of sweet shops and takeaway storefronts, family-owned businesses selling saris and butter chicken. (The word for butter in Hindi is ” Coke. He’s worn a fake beard as a disguise. He’s driven his Ferrari in the middle of the night for a brief taste of freedom. His national importance is so great that he is protected by the Indian equivalent of the Secret Service. Election planners take into account his schedule; politicians know people are unlikely to vote when Sachin is batting. Once, when he failed to reach a century during the past year, a distraught fan killed himself (there were rumours of a huge gambling loss). And all these years, he’s never been ensnared by scandal, or boasted about his wealth and power.These layers of meaning are of utmost importance to the billion fans who follow Indian cricket. No figure in the game shoulders more symbolic power than Tendulkar, whose ascent to global stardom has mirrored India’s own economic rise. Both Sachin and the concept of media-fuelled narrative are children of that rise; heroes and impossible expectations are the Cain and Abel of any society that bruises its way out of the pre-modern.Through more than 20 years, his only real failure was the inability to lead India to a World Cup title. Then, 11 months ago, he achieved that, another storybook ending. It seems important to note here that, while this is slowly changing, a hallmark of Bollywood movies is white-hat saviours and black-hat villains, and crowds have actually set theatres on fire upon the introduction of gray. So the famous T-shirts that say “If cricket is religion, then Sachin is God” are more significant than if they were worn here in New Jersey.After the World Cup was won, India stopped. Crowds of euphoric fans shut down the streets of Mumbai and other cities and towns. Pizza places stopped delivering. They couldn’t get through the throngs. The most common spontaneous chant in Mumbai, echoing down the beautiful Marine Drive, was “Sachin! Sachin!”There was nothing more to accomplish.But there was. He finished the World Cup with 99 international centuries. For cricket neophytes, a century is when a player scores 100 runs in one at-bat. It is like a basketball player dropping 50 points in a game, but more prestigious. The drumbeat began in the press. Indians love statistics and symbolic displays of success. This was a perfect storm, managing to touch the soft underbelly of both national arrogance and insecurity: Thus began a media-driven quest. The 100 comes from adding Test centuries and one-day centuries, which no one had ever thought to do before. It’s not a real statistic, emerging organically like 56 or 61, but born full-grown by the narrative machine. Reaching this record, which wasn’t really a record at all, could deliver the complete victory of the myth. An easy and fitting coronation, it seemed. The defining century shouldn’t take long. He averaged one for every seven or eight times he went to bat.He’s tried 32 times since then. His last century happened 366 days ago.Never-ending symbolism
The longer Tendulkar stays marooned on 99, the more anxiety spreads through the global Indian cricket community. This includes expat neighbourhoods and colleges in the US, where this story has been hiding in plain sight from the rest of us, dominating conversation at tables and in dorm rooms while never raising a peep in the papers. Atul Huckoo’s three dinner companions host a local call-in radio show, and they’ve heard the anxiety creeping into the voices of their listeners, which grows with each failed attempt.”They want to know why,” co-host Amit Godbole said.A year ago from this chilly Monday, Tendulkar scored a century, his 98th, in a dramatic World Cup tie versus England. He got his 99th on March 12, against South Africa. The closest he’s come to 100 since was in November, against West Indies, playing in Mumbai.The at-bat lasted two days. He inched closer, crossing 75 runs, then 80. The crowd chanted his name. At Rutgers University, around 1 am, new graduate student Bhavya Sharma’s phone rang. Campuses, especially those with strong connections to India, are where the Tendulkar watch has been kept most closely in the US, as students explain to class-mates why so many Indians look like zombies in the morning. For reasons such as, say, a phone call from Sharma’s dad in India.”Are you watching?” he called into the phone.She found the match on the internet. Tendulkar was on 90. He scored four more runs. Six to go. The bowler landed it short, the ball bouncing halfway up Tendulkar’s chest. At the last split-second, Sachin opened the face of his bat just a little, and the ball sliced into the hands of a defender. Out on 94. He sighed, and as he reached the edge of the pitch, he looked around at the silent fans.

So many things are happening at once, and they have nothing to do with each other, except in the way that all things are connected. The growth rate is down. Inflation is up. The Indian cricket team is struggling. Its stars are fading. And not only is Tendulkar coming to the last act of his career, he is doing it in failure

Sharma turned off the game. Across town, a group of her friends did the same, heading for late-night food. It was Thanksgiving break, and the campus was empty and dark. It fit the mood. For these students’ entire lives, everything stopped when Sachin came to bat. One student’s grandmother won’t let anyone in the house move positions. Another’s mom refuses to cook as long until Tendulkar leaves the pitch. Everything stops until Sachin finishes. The past year has awakened people to the reality of Tendulkar finishing for good.In the same way the 1950s symbolically died with Elvis, the first rush of hope created by the new Indian economy will end when Sachin retires. The next generation will be successful but lack some hard-to-define simplicity and earnestness. So many things are happening at once, and they have nothing to do with each other, except in the way that all things are connected. The growth rate is down. Inflation is up. The Indian cricket team is struggling. Its stars are fading. And not only is Tendulkar coming to the last act of his career, he is doing it in failure.Listen to former Indian captain Dilip Vengsarkar. He told the on Jan. 7: “We might have left the best behind. We’ve been spoilt by success in the past 10-12 years. The big batting guns have long covered up other shortcomings but they are nearing the end. The increased dependence on Tendulkar after more than two decades is a sign of poverty.”What an odd choice of words to describe sporting failure..Blaspheming his own legacy?
The critics have drawn their long swords.Tendulkar has committed the great sin of being fallible. That’s not good enough. Everyone has an opinion about not only his life but about the inner workings of his mind. Fans and former players are calling for him to retire from one-day cricket, saying his play and his cherry-picking events are damaging both the present and future of the Indian team. One paper called the past year a “terminal decline”. The minority view that Tendulkar chases personal records instead of team wins, and that he crumbles under pressure, no matter how disproved by statistics, has gained tenuous traction.”Maybe his time has come,” a former Indian captain said.”He has to go,” said another.”It’s a monkey on his back, which is now a gorilla,” said a former Indian star.”After 50 runs,” tweeted another, “Tendulkar battles the demons in his head.”Those demons, if they exist, are his alone. Team-mates say he hasn’t mentioned the century, even in the safety of the dressing room. Sachin has said little to nothing publically about the close calls, offering a brief and contradictory interview to an Australian television station.”It is easier said than done,” he said. “It is just a number.”People can only wonder. They watch him eat lamb cutlets at his favourite curry house on Beaufort Street in Perth. They see him at a steakhouse in Adelaide called the Stag Hotel, where a DJ spins records on both levels. They follow him in the Sydney airport, Sachin smiling at the firing line of microphones and cameras, barrels bunched together, each attached to the outstretched arm of a reporter desperate for comment. They get none.The rest of the Indian team walks through baggage claim with little fuss. They climb onto an idling bus. This year has been bad for all of them. The entire team was slumping, swept in a Test series by England, then by Australia. Back home, India was boiling, calling for heads, focusing frustration onto Sachin’s personal quest, perhaps hoping this milestone, if achieved, would disinfect the rot of the past year. Or even offer a symbolic fresh start.The beauty of failure
The ghost of an Australian named Don Bradman looms over all of this. Bradman was the greatest cricketer who ever lived. Millions watched his funeral on television. Even in life people deified him, just as they’re doing to Sachin. His son, John Bradman, has spoken out against that worship. , he likes to remind people. John struggled with his dad’s legacy; for a period in the 1970s, he changed his last name, before accepting his fate and changing it back.Bradman entered his last at-bat in 1948 needing just four runs to retire with a career average of 100. The crowd at a stadium in London stood to cheer its dangerous opponent, the rumble and roar raising goose flesh around the stadium. The legend – however much part of a creation myth – says that the reaction brought tears to the stern eyes of Bradman, and, his vision blurry, he was bowled out on the second ball. That last part isn’t myth. The failure is real. He got out on the second ball and disappeared into the pavilion, his average forever 99.94 runs per game. Over the years, this number has turned into a sort of poem about the inevitability of human frailty, and the nature of the game itself.Cricket is defined by failure. In one-day cricket, a batter gets a single at-bat (an innings). In Test cricket, he gets two. A great innings takes hours, even days, and one slip of concentration, one misread of spin or bad angle with the wrists or conspiring crack in the ground – anything – results in an out. With a game so dominated by failure, it’s seen as appropriate that the greatest career ended with it, as a warning against the hubris of future generations. Men come and go. The game always wins.The last days of an epoch
The streets lay cold and empty at half past two in the morning. Suhrith Parthasarathy walked up Broadway, crossed 115th Street, arriving at the stone gates of Columbia University. As a child in India, he and his grandfather woke up at 5:30 in the morning to see matches from Australia, catching a few hours before school. Now a graduate student, he swiped his card and headed to Room 504C of the journalism school, where the window looks out at a bare tree in a tight quad, backed by the soaring glass walls of the library. Tendulkar was about to bat on this Monday night two weeks ago. Suhrith found the feed on the internet and logged into Twitter, joining in a global community.”Everybody wants him to get it,” he sighed, “so they can bloody well go on about their lives.”At Suhrith’s home stadium in Chennai, he’s seen a few Tendulkar centuries, including a famous 136 in a losing effort against Pakistan. A friend who grew up in Dubai found Suhrith in 504C and pulled up a chair. Hiten Samtani has also seen Sachin centuries in person, including two of the most famous. In April 1998, against Australia, India needed a miracle to stay alive in the Coca-Cola Cup. Before Sachin took the pitch, he told his coach: “Don’t worry. I’ll be there till the end.” Sachin finished with 143 and led India into the finals. Two days later, on his 25th birthday, he took India to a win against Australia, scoring 134. The television announcer said, 14 years ago, “This little man is the nearest thing to Bradman there’s ever been.”In the room at Columbia, the monitor glowing green from the pitch, Hiten remembered those long-ago days. “There were no physical constraints on what he could do,” he said. “He could do anything.”That night, Sachin reached 39 runs and then got his feet tangled, blocking a ball bound for his wicket with his leg. Hiten sighed. Suhrith rubbed his hands over his face. They switched off the computer and headed back out into the cold. For two days, they thought this would be Sachin’s last chance until September. Then news broke about the line-up for the Asia Cup, stunning the experts. The Indian cricket board had chosen Tendulkar. An important detail soon emerged:Sachin spoke to the selectors himself.A fleeting triumph over myth
He might never make it to 100.However unlikely, there exists the possibility that the Asia Cup will come and go, and then the next series, then another, with no century. Tendulkar is expected to play Test cricket for a few more years, which means he’ll get chance after chance. But what if he fails? A cricket writer in England, Jon Hotten, argued that, as there is beauty in Bradman’s 99.94, there would be a similar beauty if Tendulkar retired on 99. “It will contain in it this kernel of romance,” Hotten said. “He didn’t quite get the hundred hundreds, because no human being should be able to do that.”Like Bradman’s 99.94 career average, the 99 would be a poem about humanity, and failure, and about the nature of Tendulkar’s career. Because the interesting thing about the past 366 days isn’t simply that he’s failed over and over again, but that he’s kept trying under such global scrutiny. This seems like a final siege of expectation in a career flanked by it, the final struggle between the reality and the myth. What could be a more fitting coda?When you look back, it is not his unapproachable statistics that draw the most admiration, but that he managed them with a billion people on his shoulders. He’s almost at the end, and the final test isn’t of his sporting ability, but of something deeper. “Tendulkar’s greatest achievement,” Hotten said, “is he’s resisted the mad circus that’s around him. Tiger Woods, for example, it’s obviously driven him crazy in some respect. This has happened so many times with people you attach the label of genius to. I don’t know how Tendulkar has remained sane. In a way that will end up being the biggest mystery of all: How did he survive it?”The last year has been tough for fans of Indian cricket•AFPTendulkar is a closed book. He smiles and walks to the centre of the pitch. His play suggests he is bending under the weight, but he’ll never admit it. Nobody knows how he feels about the century. Bradman, for instance, never mentioned his career average in a lifetime of correspondence with the dean of English cricket writers, David Frith. There are all sorts of grievances and private insecurities in Bradman’s crowded, upright hand. But not a word about the failure that came to define his success.What does Tendulkar think about the quest? He cares enough to keep chasing it, but maybe the media and the ex-players and the manic fans are missing the point. Scoring the century doesn’t define his career, but the chasing of it does, the willingness to risk failing for the chance of success. In the past year, Sachin hasn’t blasphemed his career. He has reaffirmed it. The failure to achieve this one thing opens a rare window into the cost of all that’s been achieved already, and elevates, for a moment, the attempt above the result.The sacred journey is a familiar idea in his family. His father, a poet named Ramesh Tendulkar, often explored the theme that life is about the hard work of travelling, not the easy peace of arrival. Once he wrote these words, which now speak for his silent ageing son: .

Responsible Clarke just what Australia needed

There was only one thing the team needed from Clarke on the fourth day – a match-saving century – and unless there is a shocking collapse late on Sunday he has delivered

Ali Cook01-Nov-2008

Michael Clarke had some lucky escapes but produced a crucial century
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Michael Clarke is at his most watchable when he is flashing drives and lofting the ball, but it is an innings like this one at Delhi that confirms his status as Australia’s next captain. There was only one thing the team needed from Clarke on the fourth day – a match-saving century – and unless there is a shocking collapse late on Sunday he has delivered. He is now so confident he thinks Australia might even be able to steal a win.At times he was lucky, solid, nervous and gritty, but Clarke avoided all the obstacles to register his eighth Test century at a crucial moment. When he finally reached three figures with a cut for two off Virender Sehwag, Clarke swayed his bat in relief. It had been a taxing day that had started in uncertainty and ended in fulfillment.Four years ago Clarke arrived in a flurry of stunning shots and the cricket world was amazed by the sparkles during his 151 on debut. Since then he has journeyed in and out of the side, become vice-captain and assumed responsibility not only for his own performances, but for the welfare of his team-mates.Occasional rashness remains in his batting and his bright start in the second innings in Bangalore last month ended on 6 when he aimed a firm drive and found cover. Since then he has been more attuned to resisting extravagant urges – although he was fortunate not to be punished for three mistakes on Saturday – and was the most settled of Australia’s batsmen in registering 69 to reduce the huge losing margin in Mohali.A week late in Delhi and Clarke did what his more experienced team-mates could not by getting a century. Dropped by Ishant Sharma before adding to his overnight 21, he battled with his defence, escaped the strike with nudges and occasionally went down the pitch to lift the spinners. Not until he entered the 90s, a stage where he has faltered a couple of times, did the old feelings return.He top-edged a sweep off Sehwag on 90 and had started to leave for the dressing room when VVS Laxman dropped it. Four runs later he attempted a similar shot and was relieved to see Amit Mishra’s miss at deep midwicket. “I was very lucky today, especially in the 90s,” Clarke said. “Without doubt, it certainly helped.”After being dismissed for 112 trying to hit Mishra for six over long-on, Clarke watched as Australia scraped to 577, 36 behind India’s first innings. “All the boys played well,” Clarke said. “We knew with 600 on the board we would have to bat well to put us in a position to win. For me, personally, it’s very rewarding.”By the end of the day, when the visitors had removed Sehwag and the nightwatchman Ishant, Clarke was so pleased with the recovery he was looking at an unlikely, series-levelling victory. “I think we can bowl them out tomorrow,” he said. “India won’t set us a target, they showed that by sending out a nightwatchman tonight.”He dreamed of a repeat of the 2006-07 Adelaide Test when Australia upended England on the final day to win by six wickets. “I hope so,” he said. “We’ve seen this evening what India’s thoughts are, sending a nightwatchman out. They are pretty defensive.”Australia will certainly be the one team out there trying to win the game. We will try and take a couple of wickets early and whatever we have to chase with the bat, we can get those. We will be attacking.” Having thoughtfully got his team into position, Clarke will be ready to return to his youthful ways if the bowlers follow his plan.

Mumbai Indians sign Luke Wood as replacement for injured Behrendorff

Mumbai Indians have signed English left-arm fast bowler Luke Wood as a replacement for the injured Jason Behrendorff for IPL 2024.Wood has been signed for his base price of INR 50 lakh.Wood has 147 wickets from 140 T20s, including five matches for England. While he has featured in several T20 leagues like the BBL, PSL and BPL, apart from The Hundred, this will be his first IPL stint.Behrendorff was ruled out of the IPL after he broke his leg in a freak accident while training in Perth last Thursday just before leaving for India.The injury to Behrendorff, who returned 14 wickets from 12 games last season, compounds problems for Mumbai in their fast-bowling department. Sri Lankan left-arm seamer Dilshan Madushanka picked up an injury during the second ODI against Bangladesh which has likely ruled him out from the initial stages of IPL 2024.Related

  • Behrendorff's T20 World Cup hopes dented after suffering broken leg in freak training accident

  • Madushanka to miss rest of Bangladesh tour, initial stages of IPL 2024

  • Suryakumar Yadav in doubt for Mumbai Indians' season opener

  • 'I've been fit since January' – Hardik confirms he will bowl in IPL 2024

South African fast bowler Gerald Coetzee is also recovering from a pelvic inflammation and could be unavailable for Mumbai’s first few matches.Jasprit Bumrah, Akash Madhwal, Nuwan Thushara and Arjun Tendulkar are the other fast bowlers in Mumbai’s roster, while their new captain Hardik Pandya has confirmed that he is fit to bowl in the tournament. They also have Romario Shepherd as a seam-bowling allrounder.Star batter Suryakumar Yadav, who is recovering after two surgeries, is also a doubt for Mumbai’s opening match against Gujarat Titans.

Newcastle name their price! Magpies to 'seriously consider' Alexander Isak exit if Liverpool submit £130m bid for unsettled striker on deadline day

Newcastle United are prepared to sell striker Alexander Isak if Premier League rivals Liverpool submit an offer of £130 million on Monday.

Newcastle ready to sell Isak to LiverpoolHave set a final price tag of £130mMagpies to cash in even if they can't sign a new strikerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to a report from , Newcastle's Saudi-based owners Public Investment Fund (PIF) have decided to let their guard down and are prepared to facilitate Isak's departure if Liverpool can table a £130 million (€150m/$175m) bid for the striker. Reports earlier this week mentioned that the defending league champions would return with an offer worth £130m, which would break the British transfer record set by Liverpool after capturing Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen for £116m.

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The report explains Newcastle will not stand in Isak's way if Liverpool make an offer worth considering, despite having insisted on a £150m (€173m/$203m) fee all summer. The Magpies have tried hard to sign two forwards and recently completed a club-record move for Nick Woltemade from Stuttgart. Newcastle have made big efforts to land Brentford's Yoane Wissa and Wolves' Jorgen Strand Larsen, but approaches for both players have been rebuffed. However, it is understood that Isak's potential exit will not hinge on Newcastle's success in signing another player for the attack.

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Isak's relationship with Newcastle and their fans is at an all-time low. Having joined the club in 2022, the Sweden international became one of the best strikers in the world after scoring 54 goals in just 86 Premier League games. In the last two seasons, he has registered tallies of 21 and 23 goals in the top-flight, which earned Isak a demigod status among Newcastle fans. However, he has been training away from the squad and hasn't made a single appearance this season after publicly expressing his desire to leave. Since then, fans' love for Isak has turned to borderline hatred, with shirts reading the words "Isak is a rat" put on sale outside St James' Park.

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Earlier this week, Newcastle's owners met with Isak at the player's house to reach a resolution regarding his future. However, the 25-year-old has stood firm on his decision to seek pastures new this summer. Newcastle's hierarchy is believed to have offered Isak a new contract in an attempt to keep him at the club for another season. The new contract would reportedly include an exit clause which would allow Isak to leave next summer for a fixed price. Liverpool sending a formal proposal for the ex-Real Sociedad marksman is not set in stone as things stand, however. They signed Hugo Ekitike in a big-money move from Eintracht Frankfurt earlier this summer and the Frenchman has started his life at Anfield with a bang, scoring thrice in his first four games.

Vipers batters survive Thunder scare

Vipers wobble to 136 for 6 needing 207 after Seren Smale’s 99 puts Thunder in strong position

ECB Reporters Network01-May-2024Nancy Harman got Southern Vipers over the line in a tight three-wicket victory over Thunder to give the holders three wins in a row.Allrounder Harman, in her first appearance of the season, came to the crease with Vipers wobbling on 136 for 6 needing 207 – and behind the DLS with rain about. But she beat her previous best of 23 not out to guide her side to victory, and continue Vipers’ unbeaten record against Thunder.Earlier, England A batter Seren Smale beat her previous best of 94 – scored against Central Sparks last season – and bagged her third career Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy fifty but ended up heartbroken after being run out on 99.Vipers chose to bowl first and strangled Thunder in the opening 10-over Powerplay, with Shachi Pai bowled by Linsey Smith and only 16 runs coming.But Smale and Katie Mack got the innings into gear with a risk-free approach of singles and only eight boundaries making up their 94-run stand. The partnership underpinned the innings, albeit not coming at any great speed, as Smale reached her half-century in 84 balls.She earned lives on 53 and 65 – a caught and bowled spilled by Smith and a drop at deep midwicket – but showed great skill to pepper her innings with six fours, all coming in the V.Mack and Fi Morris both fell with the score on 111 within two balls of each other. The Australian was involved in a classic run-out mix-up before Morris skied a pull to give Alice Monaghan the Vipers’ first wicket to pace this season.Ellie Threlkeld was bowled trying to ramp Mary Taylor and Naomi Dattani drove straight back at Charli Knott, but Danni Collins joined with Smale to put some impetus into the back end of the innings.All eyes were on whether Smale could convert to three figures for the first time in her career. She had to contend with not getting a great deal of strike and wickets falling at the other end.Collins – after putting on 41 in a 21-ball 23 – and Tara Norris fell to Smith in consecutive balls. The left-arm spinner ended up with 3 for 19, and the most economical spell for a Vipers bowler for the second week in a row.Phoebe Graham was castled by Taylor as Smale needed five runs in the final two overs. But she only faced four balls before she was run out attempting to reach the landmark and she remained sprawled in her dived state for a while before dragging herself off.Vipers’ reply got off to a stuttering start as Norris hooped an in-swinger to bowl Ella McCaughan with the fifth ball of the innings before Knott ended her run of 41, 58 not out and 40 when she hit to short midwicket.With rain around, Vipers tried to match the DLS target – Georgia Adams crashing a series of straight boundaries with aplomb. But Abi Norgrove advancing and getting castled to make it 46 for 3, saw DLS rocket from 52 to 70.Adams and Georgia Elwiss put Vipers comfortably ahead of the rate with a partnership oozing in quality before Elwiss was strangled down the leg-side and Emily Windsor was beaten for pace by Graham.Adams reached her 50 in 62 balls – her 15th half-century – but top-edged Dattani behind to swing things back to the visitors. Then Rhianna Southby, Harman and Monaghan scored the last 72 runs to guide Vipers to victory with 39 balls to spare.

The NUCLEAR option! Alexander Isak considers incredible move to force through Liverpool move as Newcastle wantaway trains alone

Alexander Isak’s hopes of securing a switch to Liverpool have taken an unexpected twist, with the Swedish forward now reportedly ready to consider a nuclear option that could see him unilaterally terminate his contract at the club.

  • Isak wants to force an exit from Newcastle
  • The forward is training alone with Sociedad
  • Could even unilaterally terminate his contract
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Magpies initially claimed that an injury had prevented him from travelling with the squad on their recent tour of Asia. However, it has now become increasingly apparent that the striker’s absence stems from his determination to engineer a move to Anfield, as revealed by

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    Isak has made it known to Newcastle’s hierarchy that he has set his heart on joining the Premier League champions. His representatives have reportedly communicated his desire to leave St James’ Park and relocate to Merseyside, emphasising that Liverpool is the only destination he is interested in.

    Despite Isak's clear stance, Liverpool have yet to submit a formal bid for the striker. The Reds recently completed the £65 million ($86m) sale of Colombian winger Luis Díaz, a move expected to free up funds for a potential incoming marquee signing. The Magpies have placed a hefty £150m ($198m) valuation on their star forward, who ended last season as the club’s top scorer. The Saudi-backed ownership group at Newcastle are reportedly unwilling to entertain any offers below that figure, hoping to maximise the return on a player who played a key role in their 2023/24 campaign, including a goal in their Carabao Cup Final triumph.

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    Behind the scenes, there is growing concern that the standoff could escalate further. Should Newcastle continue to block a transfer or price Liverpool out of a deal, Isak and his team may explore a drastic alternative, unilaterally terminating his contract.

    This potential ‘nuclear option’ has become more feasible following a landmark ruling by the European Court of Justice in 2023. The court sided with former Chelsea and Real Madrid midfielder Lassana Diarra in a case that challenged some of FIFA’s longstanding transfer rules. The decision ruled that certain restrictions placed on players were inconsistent with European Union law, particularly regarding labour mobility and anti-competitive behaviour. Isak’s camp is believed to be aware of the implications of this ruling and may view it as a last resort should Newcastle hold firm on their valuation.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ISAK?

    With less than a month to go before the Premier League kicks off, time is running short for all parties to find a resolution. Newcastle remain hopeful that they can convince Isak to stay or at least secure a fee that reflects their valuation. Meanwhile, Liverpool may be biding their time before making a formal approach, knowing that the player’s growing frustration could eventually force Newcastle’s hand.

Endrick 'puxa fila', e outros jovens do Palmeiras podem receber oportunidades em 2023

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Sem a intenção de investir em grandes contratações para a próxima temporada, o Palmeiras deposita todas as fichas nos bons nomes que tem na base. Além de Endrick, que vem se destacando nos últimos jogos, outras cinco “Crias da Academia” devem aparecer no time de Abel Ferreira em 2023.

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>20 dias para Copa: redação do LANCE! aponta maiores favoritos ao título

A base do Verdão é uma das mais vitoriosas dos últimos tempos. Essa geração possui inúmeros títulos de expressão, incluindo o Brasileirão Sub-20, conquistado recentemente sobre o rival Corinthians com um gol de Endrick. A ascensão do garoto de 16 anos, inclusive, pode ser um fator crucial para que novos nomes surjam na equipe principal.

O que pode ser interessante, já que o próprio treinador Abel Ferreira já deixou claro em uma coletiva que o clube irá “valorizar todo o trabalho que já é feito, fazendo poucas mexidas, já que acredita no processo que está sendo construído”.

> Simule todos os resultados da reta final do Brasileirão!

Além de nomes mais consolidados como Danilo, Gabriel Menino, Vanderlan, o próprio Endrick e o meia Fabinho, que já recebem inúmeras chances com o português, o LANCE! listou cinco jogadores que merecem atenção.

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Jhon Jhon

O meia-atacante Jhon Jhon tem se destacado na equipe Sub-20 do Palmeiras, sendo um dos principais nomes nas últimas campanhas vitoriosas da categoria, incluindo o título inédito da Copinha conquistado neste ano. Como já possui forte instinto de liderança por ser o dono da camisa 10, o jogador de 20 anos pode aproveitar uma oportunidade que pode se dar com a saída de Gustavo Scarpa ao final da temporada.

Já que Tabata será o substituto imediato e uma vaga no setor como reserva poderá ser aberta, Jhon Jhon deverá ser visto com mais atenção pela comissão técnica que visa investir nas “Crias” em 2023.

Pedro Lima

O meio-campista Pedro Lima é um jogador que, assim como Jhon Jhon, já deve começar a ser tratado como presença iminente no time de Abel Ferreira na próxima temporada. Já que o setor sofrerá baixas, é importante que o garoto, que possui um estilo mais ofensivo e mais clássico, de visão de jogo, esteja preparado para ser colocado como uma peça de apoio fundamental no ano que vem.

O garoto de 19 anos teve seu contrato renovado recentemente e o título do Brasileirão Sub-20 só escancarou sua personalidade e responsabilidade com a camisa alviverde, podendo ganhar oportunidades no time de cima e brigar por posições.

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Luis Guilherme

Com apenas 16 anos, Luis Guilherme é frequentemente convocado para a Seleção Brasileira Sub-17 e dono da camisa 10 na equipe alviverde da categoria. Com contrato profissional assinado recentemente com o Palmeiras, o canhoto transmite segurança e confiança no setor ofensivo, além de muita efetividade nas finalizações.

Luis Guilherme pode refazer uma dobradinha de sucesso com Endrick no profissional, atuando como um armador de jogadas e tendo velocidade quando necessário, podendo ganhar chances quando a intenção for descansar Veiga ou o próprio Tabata.

Naves

Apesar de ser uma posição “ingrata”, com disputa complicada já que Gómez, Luan, Murilo e Kuscevic pouco oscilam, Naves pode começar a ser utilizado com mais frequência na próxima temporada, servindo como peça de apoio para um calendário longo e desgastante.

O garoto de 20 anos já mostrou que dá conta do recado em duas partidas disputadas pelo profissional neste ano. Para além disso, Naves vive sua última temporada na base, onde é titular absoluto, atuando também como volante quando necessário.

Giovani

O atacante já é trabalhado para integrar o elenco principal do Palmeiras com frequência. O que atrapalhou uma continuidade após os cinco jogos disputados pelo profissional este ano, aliás, foi uma lesão grave que o afastou dos gramados.

Aos 18 anos, o atacante possui bons números e certa experiência no profissional, tendo entrado em campo em 14 jogos em 2021. Abel Ferreira já enxerga o jogador com bons olhos para que Rony tenha no banco um substituto com a velocidade equiparada e as boas jogadas individuais também, além, é claro, da personalidade.

CA makes neck guards mandatory for batters despite Smith and Warner's preference

Follows ECB’s lead with all Australian players to wear neck guards from October 1 or face sanctions

Alex Malcolm14-Sep-2023

Steven Smith and David Warner have preferred not to wear neck guards•Getty Images

Cricket Australia will make neck guards mandatory for Australia and domestic players from October 1 meaning the likes of Steven Smith and David Warner, among others, will be forced to wear them on their helmets having resisted doing so since their introduction in 2015.Mandatory neck guards are one of a number of changes made to CA’s playing conditions ahead of the 2023-24 season including a change to the automatic six rule for balls that hit the roof at Marvel Stadium in the BBL, with the umpires now to make a discretionary decision on whether the ball was travelling over the boundary. Several other changes were made to speed up play in the Big Bash leagues, including time limits on injury stoppages and streamlining stumping reviews.But the decision to make neck guards mandatory will have the biggest impact on Australia’s men’s players with Smith, Warner and Usman Khawaja among the major names not to use them since their introduction. Players will have to wear neck guards on their helmets when facing fast or medium-paced bowling only. The rule does not apply to facing spinners or for wicketkeepers and close-in fielders.Neck or stem guards were designed in the wake of Phillip Hughes’ death. Warner, who was playing in the game when Hughes was struck, made a very strong written statement in the New South Wales coroner’s inquest into Hughes’ death about why he would not wear neck or stem guards.”I do not and will not wear them,” Warner wrote. “When I turn my head…wearing a StemGuard, it impedes my neck and restricts the movement of my neck when I turn around to face bowlers. I have tried a StemGuard and it digs into my neck. It is uncomfortable and is a distraction.”With safety, the helmets are getting heavier. As a player, it is what you feel comfortable with. I go with being able to see better, and being able to move my neck.”Steven Smith did wear a neck guard briefly in the 2019 Ashes•Getty Images

Smith has also avoided wearing them with the exception of a couple of occasions. He was not wearing one when he was concussed after being hit by Jofra Archer in a Test match at Lord’s in 2019. He spoke about having to wear one on his return from concussion during that series.”I’ve tried them before and I tried them the other day when I was batting [in the nets] and I reckon my heart rate went up about 30 or 40 straight away,” Smith said. “I just feel claustrophobic. I compare it to being stuck in an MRI scan machine.”They’re probably going to become mandatory, so I’m going to have to get used to them. I’m sure the more I wear them, the more I practice with them, my heart rate will come down and everything will be okay.”Smith did wear one in the Old Trafford Test of that series and made 211 and 82 but has avoided using one since with the exception of his three-game stint with Sussex earlier this year as it was mandatory in county cricket under ECB rules – the game was briefly stopped when Smith was told he had to get them added to his helmet. It is not mandatory for overseas players in Test matches in England so he did not wear one during the 2023 Ashes.CA has now introduced similar rules on neck guards to the ECB with umpires to enforce their use in domestic matches, but those standards will apply to Australia’s international players only in all matches both home and away, although international umpires can’t enforce them under ICC rules. Australian players choosing not to wear them will now face CA code of conduct penalties.”Protecting the head and neck is extremely important in our sport,” CA head of cricket operations Peter Roach said. “The neck protector product has come a long way in recent years and the decision to make them mandatory comes off the back of a lot of advice and consultation with a wide range of experts and stakeholders.”A number of players have hit the roof at Marvel Stadium•Getty Images

Changes to stumping reviewsIn other changes to the playing conditions, balls hitting the roof at Marvel Stadium in Melbourne are no longer automatically six. The on-field umpires will now make a judgment call on whether the ball was travelling for six and if they decide it was not, it will be a dead ball. This follows several examples where top edges that went straight up into the roof were awarded six runs despite clear evidence that the ball would not have landed beyond the inner circle.Also in the BBL and WBBL, any umpire reviews for a stumping will not include a TV umpire review for caught behind as well. The TV official will only adjudicate on the stumping. Captains will need to use the DRS to query a caught-behind decision and the review must be taken before the TV umpire adjudicates on a stumping.There were also several new conditions added to speed up play. On-field injury assessments, with the exception of concussion assessments, are now limited to one five-minute window. Players needing further treatment will need to leave the field, meaning batters would be forced to retire hurt.CA has also removed the Covid-19 substitute rule from their playing conditions in line with the ICC doing the same.

Woakes feared he would never play again a year before Headingley rescue mission

That Chris Woakes was awarded player of the series for the 2023 Ashes was impressive given a sample size of three Test matches from a possible five. But such was the influence of the Brummie Botham, helping England win two of the final three Tests to draw 2-2 with Australia, the decision made perfect sense once you gave it a moment’s thought.As big a feat, however, might be that Woakes is even here at all. A year before parachuting in to save England at Headingley, the 34-year-old feared he would never play cricket again.Following a packed 2021-22 winter in which Woakes was the only bowler to play the T20 World Cup, the Ashes and tour of the Caribbean, he arrived back in the United Kingdom with the chronic issue in his right knee worse than ever before. The pain was so excruciating when he bowled that he wondered if a Test career of fits and starts, was finally coming to an end. One which climaxed with a dismal return of 11 dismissals at 52.36 across six appearances in unforgiving circumstances.Thankfully,we know Woakes’ story has a happy ending. The operation last summer, performed by knee and sports specialist Andy Williams, was such a success that Woakes was able to help England secure the 2022 T20 World Cup within months. Now, he has the Compton-Miller medal to add to a collection that includes the 2019 50-over World Cup. His bowling average is now under 30 (29.13), he picked up a first five-wicket haul against Australia in the fourth Test and his stock has never been higher with English supporters.Related

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“The way my knee felt, I wasn’t sure if I was going to play cricket again,” Woakes admitted. “If I could be at the end of that tour again (Caribbean), at no point did I think I’ll be stood here now with what I’ve achieved. So yeah, it’s pretty incredible to think about.”You don’t always get what you want and what you’re kind of destined for. But I turned down the opportunity to go to the IPL (2023) for a number of reasons, one being the opportunity to potentially be a part of this series.”At no point did I think I’d be stood here. That’s not how far your mind works. You don’t think ‘I can’t wait to be player of the series in the Ashes’. You just want to be a part of it, contribute and hopefully win. So to think that I’m stood here now actually… I think I need to let it sink in.”The last four of the 19 dismissals at 18.15 came on the final day of the series, split between two spells; the first accounting for both set openers Usman Khawaja and David Warner, the second taking out Steve Smith, who had got Australia to within 110 of their target of 384. A collapse followed, capped off by a brace for the departing Stuart Broad.Woakes was initially a doubt for this Test and revealed a “tiny” quad tear which he felt during his 10th over in the first innings. He powered through to bowl 25 – taking 3 for 61 – before another 19 in the second. His durability throughout has covered for his fellow quicks who waned as the series drew to a conclusion.Chris Woakes celebrates a wicket•AFP/Getty Images

There were runs, too, notably the 32 in the Headingley chase which got the comeback up and running. Every time England needed to someone to stand up in the back end of this Ashes, Woakes was more often than not that man. Unsurprisingly, he rates this as high as any of his other achievements, particularly given how the team rallied from 2-0 down.”The last three weeks have been a bit of a whirlwind – just amazing to be a part of. Just turning up at Headingley knowing that I was going to play and I think the belief in the dressing room at that point was still that we could win 3-2, which is amazing.”I think, in the past, we may have thrown the towel in but it was never the case. You know, the captain and the coach aren’t interested in draws so we knew that they were going to be results games. And coming off the back of Headingley, we felt that we could go on and win. Were it not for the weather, maybe we would be standing here 3-2.”Broad’s retirement, and question marks over James Anderson, who turned 41 on Sunday and returned just five wickets at 85.40, puts Woakes in a unique position in the latter stages of his career. Since debuting at the Oval against Australia in 2013, he has never played more than nine Tests in a row, partly because of their longevity.”When he’s not playing anymore it will all be ‘if he wasn’t in the era of Jimmy and Broad, he would have been more consistent in the England team’,” stated Ben Stokes after the match. Typically, Woakes rallies against the assertion they were ever obstacles in his career.”I’m pretty sure I’ve answered this a few times, but I feel very lucky to have played with Stuart as well. Jimmy’s the same. The stuff that I’ve learned from them has had a huge impact on how I’ve bowled about over the years. It’s extended my international career if anything.”So we obviously won’t know what would have been if they hadn’t been around. But I can only have good things to say in terms of the knowledge that they’ve passed on and the games that I have been a part of with them. It’s been an honour really.”James Anderson and Woakes chat during a net session•Getty Images

Nevertheless, there is a job up for grabs for an experienced head to oversee a transition for the bowling attack. And Woakes wants it, even among all his lucrative options on the franchise circuit.”Yeah, definitely. I want to play for England for as long as possible. Still, for me, playing international cricket is the pinnacle. You want to be a part of days like today. You don’t get it any anywhere else. So, you want this to last for as long as possible whilst you’re still performing, obviously. I think it’s important that the older guys in the team do pass on the knowledge to younger guys coming through.”I think there’s a big thing to be said for that. Because the international game is very different to what we play at county level. So much information can be passed on and hopefully, I can be part of that.”Even last summer when Woakes was out of action, Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum had touched base with the Warwickshire allrounder because they knew he would fit their approach. That has played out to a tee, and now, as with many others in the set-up, you wonder how things would have been for Woakes if this management style was around five years ago.Woakes approached that philosophical question with a philosophical answer: “Would I be here today without what’s been? I don’t know.” He’s got a point.Even at the end of an Ashes series that thrilled but could have been better, there are no regrets. Least of all from Woakes.”I’m just proud of myself. It’s quite fitting to be where I was where I made my debut 10 years ago. I think I’ve played 47 (more) games in that time which, in 10 years, is not that many as an international cricketer. A lot would have played a lot more.”But, stood here now, I would have snatched your hand off for anything that I’ve achieved.”

PIF and Newcastle bid £50m+ to sign Premier League star who Shearer loves

Newcastle United have made an offer worth more than £50m to sign a new player this summer who has already received praise from club legend Alan Shearer.

Newcastle celebrate Carabao Cup win as PIF plot for summer signings

The Magpies took advantage of not having a game last weekend by celebrating their Carabao Cup triumph with a trophy parade. Ant and Dec, along with Shearer, were amongst those to join fans for an open-top bus parade which produced some brilliant moments for supporters.

Talking about the scenes, Shearer said: “The players must have absolutely loved it because they got some reception. I know they absolutely deserved it but they must have loved it because to be a part of that, on the bus with the trophy and the fans what they were giving them must have been incredible for them.

“Then to get on the stage and have another 150,000 to 200,000 cheer you on, it was just a great day. The way everyone mixed and got on, the atmosphere was brilliant.”

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Away from the parade, though, Newcastle and PIF are seemingly working behind the scenes on some summer transfers for Eddie Howe’s side.

Recently, it has been claimed that Bournemouth’s Dango Ouattara is of interest and that contact has been made for the £33m+ forward. Now, it looks as if Newcastle have gone one further and made an offer for a Premier League player.

Newcastle make £50m+ offer to sign Liverpool’s Harvey Elliott

According to reports in Spain, Newcastle have made an offer to sign Harvey Elliott from Liverpool. The bid made by Newcastle is thought to be worth €60m (£50.2m), with Elliott impressing due to his ‘vision, ball-handling skills, and ability to contribute both in attack and defence’.

Harvey Elliott celebrates for Liverpool

The report then goes on to add that the offer could be hard to refuse for Liverpool, with Elliott out of contract in 2027 as things stand.

The 21-year-old has progressed through the ranks after joining the Reds from Fulham in 2019 and has gone on to make 140 appearances for Liverpool in a variety of attacking and midfield positions.

Right-winger

103

Attacking midfield

65

Central midfield

36

Left-winger

14

Centre-forward

3

Second striker

1

He’s also been hailed by Shearer, who said on Elliott: “He’s a real talent isn’t he, he’s brilliant. What I like about him now, he can play midfield also. We all knew he could play midfield but he’s not just okay because Salah’s playing on the on the right and he wants to come in on his left foot.

“He can play in a variety of different positions and every time he plays it really shows me that he’s good enough for this level now, it really does. As long as he can get some consistency, I think we’ve got another top player on our hands.”

Now, it looks as if a move to St James’ Park could be one to keep an eye on.

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