Namibia, Hong Kong to kick off Intercontinental Cup

The first round of fixtures of the ICC Intercontinental Cup for eight Associate Nations was announced on Tuesday

ESPNcricinfo staff06-May-2015First-round fixtures of the Intercontinental Cup

10-13 May – Namibia v Hong Kong in Windhoek
2-5 June – Ireland v UAE in Malahide
2-5 June – Scotland v Afghanistan in Stirling
16-19 June – Netherlands v Papua New Guinea in Amsterdam

The first round of fixtures of the ICC Intercontinental Cup for eight Associate Nations was announced on Tuesday. The winner of this first-class competition will get the chance to play Test cricket in 2018 in an ICC Test Challenge against the lowest-ranked Test team at the time.The tournament begins on May 10 and will be spread out over two years. Ireland are the defending champions, winning the competition four out of six times since its inception.First-round fixtures of the ICC World Cricket League

15 May – Namibia v Hong Kong in Windhoek
17 May – Namibia v Hong Kong, Windhoek
22 June – Netherlands v Papua New Guinea, Amsterdam
24 June – Netherlands v Papua New Guinea, Amsterdam
25 June – Kenya v UAE, tbc
27 June – Kenya v UAE, tbc
25 July – Scotland v Nepal, tbc
27 July – Scotland v Nepal, tbc

“The ICC Intercontinental Cup is now the platform for emerging nations to fulfil their ambitions of playing Test cricket,” ICC chief executive David Richardson said. “It will therefore be fantastic to see the strongest Associates face off in an exciting competition, with great context, that will showcase world cricket’s growing pool of talent.”Namibia and Hong Kong begin the tournament on May 10, with the other three matches of the first round featuring Ireland, Afghanistan, UAE, Scotland, Netherlands and Papua New Guinea scheduled to be played in June.The line-up for the first round of the ICC World Cricket League, a one-day tournament for the Associates that takes place along with the Intercontinental Cup, was also released. Kenya and Nepal have been included among the eight participating teams in place of Afghanistan and Ireland, who have earned one-day status and are now part of the Future Tours Programme.

Luden stays as Pakistan fielding coach

Grant Luden, Pakistan fielding coach, was reportedly about to quit after a dispute with the players. But the PCB denied those allegations and confirmed that Luden will continue in his role until his contract ends in May 2016

Umar Farooq18-Feb-2015Grant Luden, Pakistan fielding coach, will remain in his role despite reports of his resignation, the Pakistan Cricket Board has said. Reports suggested Luden was contemplating quitting his job after a dispute with the players but the PCB denied that and confirmed that Luden will continue until his contract ends in May 2016.ESPNcricinfo understands Luden was unhappy with the attitude of some players during drills. The players had also appeared upset and were seen exchanging harsh words with the coach, apparently questioning his lack of a high-profile record as a player. Luden has not played first-class cricket, but worked with the Bangladesh team as a coach from June 2008 before joining Pakistan in May last year.After the argument, Luden had wanted to resign but PCB director of operations Zakir Khan intervened, resolved his concerns and requested him to stay on.”The Pakistan Cricket Board and the team management as well as the boys hold the job he is doing in high esteem, and are keen that he continues to serve in his present role,” said a PCB spokesperson, “The entire team trained together Tuesday afternoon, in a spirit of camaraderie, under the supervision of head coach Waqar Younis with each of the other coaches and assistant manager Shahid Aslam actively involved throughout the extended four-hour session. Ditto for Wednesday, where some players were put through their paces by all coaches, with Mr Luden putting in an extra hour on both days with a select group of players”Luden had previously spoken with the PCB about parting ways after the World Cup due to personal reasons, but subsequently reversed his decision after further discussions.

Sterling and Sane among Man City stars in Premier League team of the week

The league leaders once again lead the way as the two forward each got on the scoresheet and added an assist against West Ham

Getty Images1Leroy Sane | Manchester CityLeroy Sane has both scored and assisted in a PL game on seven occasions since the start of last season – only Mohamed Salah can match that total (also seven).AdvertisementGetty Images2Aleksandar Mitrovic | FulhamAleksandar Mitrovic accounts for each of the last four occasions in which a Fulham player has scored two or more goals in a league game.Getty Images3Raheem Sterling | Manchester CityRaheem Sterling has had a hand in more Premier League goals at the London Stadium than any other visiting player (six – one goal, five assists).ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Getty Images4​Christian Eriksen | TottenhamChristian Eriksen created seven chances against Chelsea – the most of any player in a PL game against the Blues since Philippe Coutinho in April 2014 (also seven).

'Takehiro Tomiyasu has a glass heart' – Liverpool star Wataru Endo explains his strange description of Arsenal defender and Japan team-mate

Liverpool midfielder Wataru Endo has described Japan team-mate Takehiro Tomiyasu as having a 'glass heart'.

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Endo and Tomiyasu are team-mates for JapanTomiyasu is a perfectionistArsenal defender has rediscovered best form(C)Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

At the press release of his book Duel, which includes the tagline: "30 ways of thinking that don’t need correct answers", Endo had been asked which teammate would benefit the most from reading it. The Liverpool midfielder replied, saying that he would like to give the book to the Arsenal defender Tomiyasu because he has a 'glass heart'.

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Questioned what he meant by Endo explained Tomiyasu's perfectionist nature forces him to look for answers to questions that cannot be answered. He said: "Tomiyasu, he is sometimes thinking too much. Like when he gets an injury — it is because he has eaten something, or it’s his car. He always tries to change something. Like superstition.

“I understand that reaction but, actually, don’t think too much. That’s what I always told him: don’t think too much. I think he has the book — but I don’t know if he read it.”

(C)Getty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Tomiyasu, after a bright debut season in north London, struggled with injuries and consistency in his second season as he was dislodged at right-back by Benjamin White.

However, perhaps even after reading Endo's book, he has been reinvigorated this season – impressing at both left and right back. The defender earned an assist in the Gunners' win over Wolves, backing up a spectacular cross-field-switch assist for Gabriel Martinelli against RC Lens in midweek. He has impressed so much that he is expected to be offered an improved contract by Arsenal to ward off any potential suitors.

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(C)Getty ImagesDID YOU KNOW?

Endo and Tomiyasu have not only played together for Japan, but they were teammates for a season in Belgium for Sint-Truidense. The pair helped their country upset the odds at the 2022 World Cup, earning wins over Spain and Germany to progress from the 'Group of Death'.

Alyssa and Gisele Thompson exclusive: Angel City duo on their 'crazy' rise, following in the Williams sisters' footsteps & balancing USWNT dreams with teenage life

The two Angel City stars sat down with GOAL to talk about playing with their idols, off-field life and everything in between

"Life is so much different than I would have ever dreamed of and, at such a young age, it's crazy to think about how things can happen so quickly."

If there's a sentence to describe the ongoing journey of the Thompson sisters, that's the one. It's all happened, and continues to happen, so quickly for two of the brightest young stars in American soccer.

Older sister Alyssa, the 19-year-old superstar-in-the-making whose reflection gave us our intro for this story, is one of the future faces of the U.S. women's national team, a player with a World Cup already on her resume. Younger sister Gisele, 18, is following right behind. She's already joined her sister at Angel City FC and is oh so close to making her own USWNT debut. Two sisters, two journeys, but both seemingly headed for the same place: the very top.

And, as Alyssa says, it's all happened rather quickly. Just two short years ago, the sisters broke onto the national scene by becoming the first two high school athletes to sign NIL deals with Nike. Now, with both still in their teenage years, both seem like seasoned veterans and feel the pressure to act like they are exactly that.

In their hearts, though, there are still some aspects of teenage life desperate to break through. There's the fun, the moments by the beach, the shopping trips with friends and family. Those moments are still there, of course, but there are new moments, new memories, being created every day, ones that the average teenagers their age can never even fathom. Those moments are coming alongside icons, idols, legends. Some of those legends are players that the two now call teammates, which is still a bit weird to both of them.

It's all happened so fast, as Alyssa says. There's been little time to adjust to it all. But, on the other side of it, this is the life they've been working for. Years and years of effort have gotten them here. It's going quickly, but this is also just the beginning.

"It's definitely hard when you're doing it alone," Alyssa Thompson tells GOAL, "but it's so much easier when my sister gets to do it with me."

Ahead of the 2024 NWSL season, GOAL sat down with Alyssa and Gisele Thompson to discuss their rise, their lives, and what makes them so much like, and so different from, just about everyone else their age…

Getty ImagesLessons from Alyssa's rookie year

At the time she essentially became the most expensive player in NWSL history, Alyssa Thompson was a senior in high school. Earlier in that senior year, she'd made her USWNT debut. By April, she was back with the USWNT and, in June, she was named to the World Cup squad as far and away the youngest member of a star-studded squad.

By the time 2023 was all said and done, Alyssa had gone from high schooler to superstar. She scored four goals in NWSL and earned seven more caps with the USWNT, taking her total to nine. And, while all of this was going on, Gisele was watching somewhat patiently, eagerly awaiting her own chance.

Before 2023 came to a close, the sisters officially became teammates again as Gisele signed with Angel City. It was a foregone conclusion, really. She had trained with the senior team before and was always seemingly destined to begin her professional career right alongside her sister.

"I was in preseason with them," Gisele tells GOAL, "so I kind of got the experience without actually being on the team. I learned that you always have to be on. You can have your off days, but always being at your best is important because everyone expects so much from you all the time.

"It is hard but also making friends off the field and having that positive environment around me has made it so much easier for me to be a professional. It is fast-paced, and they're all very physical, but I think playing with boys has helped us make it an easier transition into this game."

Gisele has a point. The Thompsons initially rose to prominence during their time in MLS NEXT, where they competed against some of the top boys in the country. That experience prepared them physically for what was to come, but jumping to the pro game is a different animal altogether. These are the best of the best. Physically but more so mentally, being a professional soccer player is very, very hard.

That was one of the lessons Alyssa tried to teach her younger sister from her own rookie season. It sounds a bit silly, a 19-year-old serving as the wise mentor, but, in this scenario, it works. It's what being an older sister is all about, after all.

" I think the thing that I needed to get adjusted to the most was just being a professional and just being in that environment," Alyssa tells GOAL. "And I told Gisele like, 'When you're professional, they expect you to be professional. It's not like, just because you're young or whatever, they'll give you some grace. Once you're in, you're in and I think Gisele has learned from that and I've told her that. You really have to be a professional."

Advertisement'They call me their teammate now!'

Some of the biggest tests of professionalism haven't come on the field, but rather off of it. Both Alyssa and Gisele have had moments where they've been just a little starstruck.

How couldn't you be? The two will have grown up watching and idolizing the likes of Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe and Julie Ertz. This past summer, Alyssa played alongside them at a World Cup. It was all a bit of a shock, and understandably so.

"I think my first or second camp is when I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I can't believe I'm here right now with the people that I've watched since I was younger'. It's crazy to think that I was on a team with them," Alyssa says. "They called me their teammate! Being at the World Cup with them was so surreal and I couldn't believe that I was able to get to that point. I feel like I'm such a big fan of theirs and being able to just learn so much from them and grow as a player because they're there with me was really cool."

Gisele, not to be left behind, is on an Angel City team loaded with international stars, players like Christen Press, Amandine Henry and Sydney Leroux. She was also recently a member of the USWNT's Gold Cup squad as a guest for training, allowing her to rub shoulders with the best in the country ahead of her imminent international debut.

"I think being able to go to camp with them and just learn from them was such a great experience," she says. "It was very nerve-wracking because I've watched them play and I know it's a very tough environment because everyone expects a lot from you. Just having them all there and encouraging me was super helpful throughout the whole entire camp."

TOCAFollowing the Williams sisters

It's not just teammates that have left the two teenagers starstruck. Being in and around the USWNT introduces you to some of the best of the best of the soccer world, but the team's reputation also brings players into contact with celebrities from all walks of life. It doesn't hurt that the two play in LA, either, for a star-studded ownership group that includes Natalie Portman, Mia Hamm, Eva Longoria, Sophia Bush and Serena Williams.

And it was Williams that left Alyssa the most speechless the first time she encountered the tennis icon.

"I don't think she knew who I was, but when I met Serena Williams, I was like starstruck," she says with a laugh. "I've never been like that! I couldn't believe she was at our game and I was just like, 'Oh my gosh, I can't believe I'm meeting her right now'! because we have looked up to her and Venus for so long. Just being able to see sisters do it at a high level like we want to be and be considered the best in the world. It was so cool to meet her."

Gisele, meanwhile, had her biggest fangirl moment when meeting another soccer superstar: Manchester United and England striker Marcus Rashford.

"He didn't know who I was, but just like being able to see him and be able to talk to him about just soccer. He was so young when he came through, too, so it was just so amazing. Looking up to him and watching him play made it even more incredible."

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TOCAStepping into the spotlight

Part of being in the spotlight is everything that comes with it: the sponsors, the pressure, the expectations. Those are weights on just about any professional athlete, even more so when those athletes aren't yet 20.

"It's obviously hard," Alyssa says, "but we have such an amazing team around us. Our family is our number one support system. Our agents have been super helpful with just being able to pick out brands and partners that we'll have longevity with. We are just super excited that we get to have these opportunities and super grateful that they're all coming our way."

Gisele adds: "Yeah, I also think it is really hard but like it's super fun, too. Having partnerships that we align with and use in our everyday lives makes it so much easier. It's also about having a balance with it, like not only soccer-related but also having other things outside of soccer is very helpful for us."

The sisters' latest partnership is close to their heart. The Thompsons recently partnered with TOCA, a tech-enabled soccer experiences company that features Harry Kane, Leah Williamson and Abby Wambach as ambassadors. The two sisters, who trained at TOCA during their youth careers, have signed a multiyear deal that also sees them become stakeholders in the company.

"It's amazing being able to partner with TOCA," Alyssa says. "We went there when we were like really young, like seven and eight, and I think it helped us so much and we had so much fun. The trainers were really, really excited for us to be there and really helpful with just making us better. I think it's amazing that we get to be named with these amazing people and such iconic legends. We're just super grateful and excited to be a part of it."

Watson may quit Test cricket after axeing

Shane Watson is considering his future in the game after being axed from the squad for the Mohali Test on disciplinary grounds

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2013Shane Watson is contemplating his future in the game after being axed from the squad for the Mohali Test on disciplinary grounds and then leaving the tour to be with his pregnant wife. Watson was one of four players punished by the team management for ignoring team orders.Since being named Michael Clarke’s vice-captain in 2011, Watson’s Twenty20 and ODI displays have remained strong but his Test appearances have been neither consistent nor convincing. His struggles in India despite being one of only two batsmen to have made a Test hundred on the subcontinent were a major contributor to Australia’s 0-2 deficit.There is little doubt Watson’s T20 career will continue for he is scheduled to return to India in April for the IPL, where he had also indicated he would return to bowling for his franchise rather than his country. In ODIs he has the lure of the 2015 World Cup to sustain him. But it is now plausible that at 31 he has played his final Test match.”Any time you’re suspended for a Test match unless you do something unbelievably wrong, and obviously everyone knows what those rules are … I think it is very harsh,” Watson told reporters at the team hotel in Chandigarh. “At this point in time I’m at a stage where I’m sort of weighing up my future and what I want to do with my cricket in general, to be honest. I do love playing, there is no doubt about that, but at this point in time I’m going to spend the next few weeks with my family and just weigh up my options of just exactly which direction I want to go.”There are lot more important things in life – I certainly do love playing cricket and that passion is still there and I feel like I’m in the prime years of my cricket career. From that perspective I still feel like I’ve got a lot to give. But from a holistic perspective I’ve got to sit down with my family and decide which directions they are.”Watson, along with James Pattinson, Usman Khawaja and Mitchell Johnson were told this morning by the coach Mickey Arthur that, in an unprecedented decision, they would not be considered for the third Test. After the loss in Hyderabad, inside three and a half days, Arthur had asked every member of the squad to let him know three points on how their individual performances and those of the team could be improved. These four players did not comply with the directive.Watson said he had been going to tell the team management that he would need to miss the fourth Test to be with his wife, who is due at the end of the month, but had been informed of his axeing before he could do so. “I was about to communicate that to Mickey and the leadership group today but they obviously beat me to it by telling me I wasn’t selected for this Test match,” he said. “Also overnight, things have changed and Lee wasn’t going to tell me things had changed because she knew how much it meant to me to be able to play this Test match. It was due in a couple of weeks but it’s looking like things have sped up a little bit.”With four players unavailable, Australia’s squad is down to 13 players for the Mohali Test, and if wicketkeeper Matthew Wade’s ankle does not heal, they will have to pick a team from 12.

Sarfraz impressed by fast bowling talent

The ongoing two-week emerging players camp for fast bowlers at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore has helped iron out flaws in promising bowlers, Sarfraz Nawaz has said

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Jul-2011The ongoing two-week emerging players camp at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore has helped iron out flaws in promising quick bowlers, former Pakistan fast bowler Sarfraz Nawaz said. He was impressed with five of the bowlers during the camp, featuring current Test players and youngsters with the potential to represent Pakistan.”There is a lot of competition at the camp, and friendly rivalry. Mohammad Talha has impressed me, as have Sohail Khan, Tanvir Ahmed and Sohail Tanvir, who is an improving bowler. Aizaz Cheema, who is deceptively quick, has also impressed me,” he told . “All of these boys have a lot of potential.”Talha – who has played one Test match in early 2009 – had an issue with his follow-through, said Sarfraz, which he worked on at the camp. “There is a lack of coordination with his [Talha’s] body in the follow through. He was stopping abruptly. I’ve told him to put all his weight down on his front foot, release the ball when his front leg straight, rather than bent as he is doing now. He has not been getting the impetus upon delivery, as his front knee was bent when he released the ball. Since we’ve spoken to him, he is hitting the deck a lot harder.”He has also worked on issues that Sohail Khan, who has played one Test and four ODI’s, had with his grip. “When he was releasing the ball, the way he was holding the ball was not ideal. [But] Already we can see improvements.The camp had the bowlers working with the red ball through week one. This week the focus is on the white ball with an eye on the rule change in one-day cricket that comes into effect in October. The bowlers will be coached in dealing with the “reduced chance of reverse swing in the 50-over format” that the new rule entails, Sarfraz said. “[We will] ensure that the bowlers are getting advice to better prepare them for all formats of the game.”

Brooks four leads Northants win

Jack Brooks took four wickets as Northamptonshire romped to an innings victoryover Kent on the third day of their County Championship Division Two matchat Wantage Road

16-Apr-2011
Scorecard
Jack Brooks took four wickets as Northamptonshire romped to an innings victoryover Kent on the third day of their County Championship Division Two matchat Wantage Road.Northamptonshire added 51 to their overnight score before being bowled out for480 with their captain Andrew Hall eventually departing for 146 off 297 ballsand Simon Cook taking 3 for 72.Brooks then ripped through the Kent top order on his way to 4 for 36 asKent were skittled out for 119 to go down by an innings and 159 runs.Northamptonshire started the day on 429 for 7, 227 runs ahead of theiropponents, with with Hall resuming on 141 and James Middlebrook on 50. Hall added five to his overnight total before his brilliant innings came to an end when he was superbly caught by substitute fielder Ashley Shaw at mid-wicket off the bowling of Robbie Joseph.Lee Daggett made 14 before he walked after edging edged Cook to Kentwicketkeeper Geraint Jones. Cook then ended the innings when he forced Brooks to nudge him to James Tredwell at first slip for a duck.That left Middlebrook unbeaten on 74 off 122 balls with his knock including sixfours and four sixes. Trailing by 278, Kent’s second innings got off to a catastrophic start when Joe Denly (five) edged Chaminda Vaas to wicketkeeper Niall O’Brien in just the thirdover.Captain Rob Key followed him cheaply in the next over after scoring just twowhen he slashed Brooks recklessly to Hall at first slip. And the visitors were left floundering on 15 for three when Brooks’ searing delivery clipped Sam Northeast’s off stump to send him back for seven.Amazingly, it was 25 for 5 at lunch with Brooks on fire again when he forcedJones to edge to edge behind for three before Vaas took out Martin vanJaarsveld’s off stump.Kent’s woes continued in the third over of the afternoon when Darren Stevenswas trapped lbw by Brooks off the first delivery he faced. Daggett was brought into the attack in the 22nd over and he ended Alex Blake’s resistance on 18 by forcing him to fend to David Sales at second slip.Stephen Peters then took a superb one-handed catch at short mid-on to dismissMatt Coles off Daggett before Middlebrook pinned Cook lbw, both batsmen fallingfor 13.Victory for Northamptonshire was then secured when Tredwell, who made abattling 35, launched Alex Wakely straight to Middlebrook at point.

Mushtaq predicts high quality contest against Pakistan

Mushtaq Ahmed, England’s spin bowling coach, has played down the home advantage Pakistan will enjoy during the series against England in the UAE

Umar Farooq16-Dec-2011Mushtaq Ahmed, England’s spin bowling coach, has played down the home advantage Pakistan will enjoy during the series against England in the UAE, saying his team has grown used to playing on pitches that are slower than the ones at home. England and Pakistan will play three Tests, four ODIs and three Twenty20 internationals in Abu Dhabi and Dubai in January and February 2012.Pakistan have been hosting their home games in the UAE after the terror attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore in 2009 forced the suspension of international tours to the country. They have played two Test series there since then, drawing against South Africa and beating Sri Lanka. Mushtaq, however, said England would not struggle against Pakistan’s spinners on the pitches in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.”England batsmen have learned to play spin bowling. They can manage spin with good control,” Mushtaq told ESPNcricinfo. “We won a World Twenty20 in the West Indies where conditions are similar. At the end, it all depends on individual players, they have to understand and learn the things to survive. And they are very hard workers.”Pakistan no doubt has improved a lot and rankings sometime don’t reflect your standing. And England has been in top form over the last two to three years. So I expect it would be a good quality series.”Spinners have played a significant role in Pakistan’s performances in 2011 and they are likely to hit England with a strong attack: Saeed Ajmal, Abdur Rehman and Mohammad Hafeez in the Tests, as well as Shahid Afridi and Shoaib Malik in the limited-overs matches. England may play just one spinner, Graeme Swann, in the Tests, but Mushtaq didn’t think the mismatch in slow-bowling resources was a problem.”I understand the pitches in the UAE are slow and Pakistan will obviously use their home advantage. We have Jimmy Anderson, Stuart Broad and Chris Tremlett – all of them can bowl 90 mph. I don’t think wickets do matter these days when you have quick bowlers who can bowl with muscle.”Swann’s back-up on the UAE tour is left-arm spinner Monty Panesar, whose last Test was the Ashes opener in Cardiff in 2009. It remains to be seen whether England will alter the combination – three fast bowlers, one spinner – that helped them beat India 4-0 at home to accommodate a second slow bowler in the UAE.”He [Panesar] has been a match-winning bowler and is still a good prospect,” Mushtaq said. “His performance for Sussex brought him back to contention as he took 60 to 70 wickets in the domestic season, which is a lot for a spinner. He is the sort of left-arm spinner who bowls his orthodox delivery with force.”England open their tour with two warm-up games, the first of which begins on January 7, ahead of the Tests.

Ireland batsmen scrap to first-innings lead

Andrew White’s unbeaten century led a fighting Ireland to a first-innings lead on the second day against Namibia at Stormont

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Sep-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAndrew White’s unbeaten century led a fighting Ireland to a first-innings lead on the second day against Namibia at Stormont.The bowlers had dominated the first day with 14 wickets falling and Namibia the happier of the sides but White found the right moment to produce his fifth first-class century. Things didn’t start well for the home side as Kevin O’Brien added just six more to his overnight total before falling. O’Brien is captaining the weakened Ireland side but the responsibilities of leadership clearly didn’t inhibit his aggressive style as he struck four fours and a six in his 38-ball stay.At 85 for 5 Ireland were in something nearing crisis when John Mooney joined White. Mooney was typically combative and the pair began laying the foundations for recovery. They added 69 with Mooney making 44 from 58 balls before driving crisply towards extra cover, where Gerhard Erasmus pulled off an excellent diving catch.When Stuart Poynter was bowled second ball it looked like the recovery was stalling but George Dockrell rode to the rescue. In his short Ireland career he has repeatedly impressed with the ball – collecting his first five-wicket haul on the first day – but this was the first time he’d shown talent with the bat.Dockrell dug in to support White and made his first first-class half century. His 53 came from 96 balls with eight fours and he helped add 100 runs for the eighth wicket with White that took Ireland into the lead. Eventually he fell sweeping but his job was done. White, at the other end, found enough support to register his century and finished unbeaten on 123, having faced 213 balls.In a batting line-up missing a clutch of first-choice players due to county commitments, his innings was vital. It looked as though Ireland would follow their fighting batting with quick wickets when Graeme McCarter jagged one back to a shotless Pikki ya France but Christ Viljoen and Stephanus Ackermann held fort in contrasting styles.Ackermann shut up shop – making 7 from 61 painstaking deliveries – while Viljoen blazed merrily. He made 48 from 49 balls to bring Namibia back ahead before the day was out.

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