Sunderland make offer for Troy Parrott

Sunderland have made an offer for Tottenham striker Troy Parrott, according to i News (via journalist James Copley).

The Lowdown: Parrott’s loan spell

The forward spent the 2021/22 season on loan with MK Dons in League One, where he made 41 appearances and scored eight goals for Liam Manning’s side, also providing seven assists.

The 20-year-old played in a number of positions last term, most notably as a centre-forward, but also on both flanks as a winger (via Transfermarkt).

To date, the Republic of Ireland international has made four senior appearances for Spurs.

The Latest: Copley’s claim

According to a report by i News, Sunderland are among numerous Championship clubs interested in taking Parrott on loan from the Premier League outfit for the upcoming season. Tottenham have requested that the youngster play as a centre-forward rather than a number ten.

Taking to Twitter, Copley shared the news of the Black Cats’ interest in the youngster.

The Sunderland journalist claimed: “Sunderland have made an offer for Troy Parrott. Personally think he would be an excellent addition but can’t help thinking the squad would need Nathan Broadhead as well to cope with demands in the Championship.”

The Verdict: He’d be a good signing

As per WhoScored, the striker averaged 2.2 shots, 1.1 key passes and 0.7 dribbles per game last season.

With strong experience in League One and 15 international caps for the Republic of Ireland, Parrott has a solid grounding to succeed in the Championship.

Alex Neil will be looking to add quality and depth to his squad ahead of the new season, so bringing in the likes of the 20-year-old on loan will help bolster the options available to the manager.

With no transfer fee required, there seems to be little risk involved, making this a good prospective addition to the Black Cats’ ranks.

Leeds: Taylor drops McAtee transfer claim

Leeds United have been tipped to launch a bid to secure a permanent move for Manchester City midfielder James McAtee.

What’s the talk?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, journalist Ryan Taylor had this to say on the matter.

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He said: “I think McAtee is one that Leeds will look at permanently. They’re partial to that kind of deal. We saw them sign Lewis Bate from Chelsea, that kind of high potential youngster that they’re willing to invest in, although it hasn’t quite worked out yet.”

As a product of City’s youth academy, which has produced players such as Phil Foden, McAtee has made 93 appearances for the club across their senior and youth sides.

Over those appearances, the 19-year-old has scored 44 goals and delivered 27 assists in the process.

His latest campaign saw the midfielder score 18 goals and provide seven assists in 23 league appearances for City’s U23s.

He also made six senior appearances for Pep Guardiola’s side, showing that he is on the fringes of breaking into the first team.

Leeds supporters will be buzzing

Should the Manchester club not be able to guarantee regular senior minutes for the teenager next season, perhaps a move away from the Etihad Stadium could be the best next step for him and his development.

Taking all of this into account, it’s safe to suggest that the Englishman would be an exciting signing for the Yorkshire club and have a lot of Leeds supporters buzzing to have such a promising young player in their ranks.

As Taylor also mentioned, the Whites have not been shy when it comes to signing young players from clubs across England.

In addition to Bate, figures such as Joe Gelhardt and Sean McGurk have made moves to Elland Road in recent years, highlighting just how eager the club can be when it comes to securing deals for young talents and developing them for the future.

Moving forward, if the Whites see an opportunity to potentially secure a loan, or even a permanent deal for the City starlet, this is definitely something that they should look to explore, as the possible long-term benefits could be huge for the club.

AND in other news: Marsch could seal the next £142m talent in Leeds bid for “magnificent” £16k-p/w target

Tottenham: Journalist shares major Richarlison update

Journalist Rudy Galetti of Tribal Football has now shared a major Tottenham Hotspur transfer update on the club’s pursuit of Everton striker Richarlison.

The Lowdown: Spurs eye move…

The Lilywhites are reliably believed to hold a serious interest in Brazil’s international attacker as manager Antonio Conte reportedly sets his sights on an alternative to star man Harry Kane.

According to reporter David Ornstein of The Athletic, some sources at Goodison Park even believe a Spurs move for Richarlison is inevitable and Everton could be forced to accept a fee lower than their desired asking price.

Now, as per Galetti, it appears the north Londoners could be about to seriously ramp up their Premier League transfer chase.

The Latest: Galetti shares major Richarlison update…

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According to the reporter, Tottenham now ‘want to speed things up’ for Richarlison and ‘decisive days’ lie ahead.

Galetti also explains that the Toffees value their star 25-year-old at ‘€65/70 million (£56/£61m)’ but Spurs would ‘like to shell out a little less’.

The Verdict: Get moving…

As backed by WhoScored, Richarlison stood out as one of Frank Lampard’s most crucial assets over 2021/2022 when at his very best.

He finished 2021/2022 as their best-performing player by average match rating whilst also racking up Everton’s most goals and assists combined (10G, 5A).

Richarlison attempted a threatening 2.4 shots at goal per 90 in that time, more than any of his teammates, leaving little surprise Conte and co want him through the Hotspur Way door as soon as possible.

Called ‘unplayable’ by Sky pundit Andy Hinchcliffe, the South American could be a real asset at Spurs.

In other news: Sky journalist: Tottenham hold ‘negotiations’ as Paratici also eyes ‘perfect player for Conte’! Find out more here.

Broja could be Everton’s next Richarlison

Everton avoided relegation from the Premier League by the skin of their teeth following a stunning 3-2 comeback victory over Crystal Palace earlier this month.

Frank Lampard will be aiming for better things next season, if he is still in the job by then, and this may require a few new faces in his squad.

The likelihood is that there will be some outgoings as well, with Brazil forward Richarlison attracting interest from European heavyweights such as Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain.

It would be a blow to lose the 25-year-old, and with two years remaining on the player’s contract, Lampard doesn’t need to make an immediate decision on his future, although there could be an ideal replacement being lined up.

Chelsea forward Armando Broja is firmly in Lampard’s sights, and despite a price tag of £58m being placed on his head by Thomas Tuchel, it could be a wise piece of business to bring him to Goodison Park.

The 43-year-old gave Broja his senior debut whilst Chelsea manager and the Albania international has been in splendid form on loan at Southampton this season, scoring six Premier League goals.

Everton’s next Richarlison

Although a move for the 20-year-old would depend on receiving transfer funds from player sales, Lampard could unearth the new Richarlison with a move for Broja.

Both players are similar in their style of play, although the Everton star is slightly more versatile than the Chelsea forward.

Both men are nearly identical in their pass completion percentage (61.9% for Broja and 61.8% for Richarlison) whilst in terms of shooting, the Brazilian takes more shots per 90 (2.5) than the 20-year-old (2.19).

Richarlison (10) has scored more goals than the on-loan Southampton forward (six), but it seems beyond doubt that the young Albanian would net more frequently if he were in a team with higher-quality players providing him with better service.

The statistics show the two forwards are alike, and if the Brazil international does move on from Everton, then Broja – who has been described as “dangerous” by Saints manager Ralph Hasenhuttl – would appear to be the perfect replacement.

AND in other news, Everton plotting summer swoop for £17.5m “fabulous finisher”, Lampard will love him

Tottenham: Conte holds ‘massive advantage’ ahead of Arsenal

Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte holds a ‘massive advantage’ as he prepares his side for their blockbuster Premier League clash against Arsenal this evening.

The Lowdown: Season defining…

The Lilywhites face off against their bitter north London rivals tonight in what is, perhaps, the most crucial derby between both teams in recent memory.

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Spurs and the Gunners will be competing in the race for Champions League football and all riches which come with that, not least the major financial windfall through revenue for 2022/2023.

Qualifying for Europe’s most coveted competition could also present either side with a bigger pull in the summer transfer market, a more crucial aspect for Spurs, as they look to appease Conte and back his reported overhaul.

The north Londoners will need every boost possible against Arsenal and Sky Sports pundit Paul Robinson says they have one ‘massive advantage’ ahead of the clash.

The Latest: Conte has ‘massive advantage’…

Speaking to Football Insider, the ex-Spurs goalkeeper claims playing at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in front of supporters could give Conte’s men a real boost.

However. he doesn’t personally believe this game is ‘season-defining’ despite what could be at stake – claiming both teams’ inconsistency could mean there are more twists to come.

He explained: “It’s a massive advantage being at home in a game of this magnitude.

“Is it a season-defining game? I’m not totally convinced that it is. If we were talking about Liverpool and Man City then we could presume that it is season-defining. But Spurs and Arsenal are so unpredictable you do not know what is coming.

“I was at the Arsenal game at the weekend and they struggled to beat a 10-man Leeds. It was not convincing by any stretch of the imagination. Spurs are exactly the same. They’re both too inconsistent.

“Listen, the north London derby is a huge game for both sides. But I wouldn’t put my house on both sides winning their two games after that.”

The Verdict: Correct call?

Arsenal could seal their place in Europe with victory over Spurs, while Conte’s men quite simply need to win all of their remaining games to claim fourth spot – including the looming derby (talkSPORT).

Taking this into account, we’re inclined to disagree with Robinson as this could certainly come as a season-defining encounter.

However, we do concur that the roar of Tottenham supporters at home will come as a big boost for the players who could certainly do with the ‘twelfth man’ for such a pivotal match.

In other news: Meeting held: Tottenham enter London talks with club chief as he offers out five players! Find out more here.

Jofra Archer gives glimpse of his talents, but rivals raise their game in selection showdown

Fast bowler shows a hint of the talents that have brought him to England recognition, but he’ll need more in the coming days

George Dobell03-May-2019It was the second spell that impressed. The first – four overs for 21 runs – was respectable enough. But Jofra Archer needs more than respectable: he is not, currently, in England’s 15-man World Cup squad. And he has only five more ODIs after this to persuade the selectors he should be.But that second spell offered hints of weapons that England do not currently have. It offered a sharp (86mph), well-directed bouncer that had George Dockrell jerking his head out of harm’s way. It offered a sharp (90.3mph), well-directed yorker to end the dangerous innings of Mark Adair. And it offered a well-disguised slower ball – every bit of 23mph slower than the deliveries that proceeded it – that rendered the quicker balls (he twice produced deliveries of 91.1mph in that second spell) all the more dangerous. With memories of England’s recent travails in the Caribbean fresh in the mind – all those times they had no answer to Chris Gayle’s power – it was, in many ways, a persuasive performance.Jofra Archer tries his new ODI cap out for size•Getty ImagesThe harsh truth of selection, however, is that it is not enough just to impress: Archer has to impress more than his rivals for the role. And while he claimed one wicket – albeit an eye-catching one – and showed some of the pace and incision that renders him such a seductive contender, his rivals ground out worthy performances that reiterated the view there is not an obvious vacancy in the squad.In a BBC interview just before the toss, Archer admitted that nerves had limited his sleep and accepted that he felt as if he were on “trial”. That is hardly surprising: not since Kevin Pietersen or, maybe, even Graeme Hick has an England debut been more anticipated. The changes to the qualification period required to represent England – from seven to three years – were made, many think, just to accommodate Archer (it hardly matters whether they were or not; it’s perception that counts in such circumstances) while some of the recent comments of his new team-mates did not suggest his arrival was universally popular.Take the words of David Willey, his opening partner here, who suggested in the Caribbean that he had doubts over the wisdom of unsettling England’s unit on the eve of a tournament for which they have been building for four years. “Whether someone should just walk in at the drop of a hat because they’re available, whether that’s the right thing, I don’t know,” Willey said. None of that, or the furore that greeted Chris Woakes’ slightly clumsy but more than slightly twisted “immoral” phrase, can have helped Archer. If there has been any upside to the Alex Hales debacle of recent days, it is that Archer has had a little respite from the spotlight.But it would hardly be surprising if that opening spell bore the sign of nerves. And any hopes he had of settling into it were dashed when Paul Stirling laced his first delivery – an entirely respectable ball that was nowhere near a half-volley – through the covers for four. Three more boundaries followed in that spell, though all were more due to Stirling’s ability than any failure on Archer’s behalf. He beat the bat a couple of times, but there were no yorkers, no bouncers, no slower balls and noticeably less movement than Willey managed. His most impressive moment in the opening hour of the game was a diving catch at mid-on to achieve the breakthrough. If he had any doubts about the standard of international cricket, they had been banished.Jofra Archer claims his maiden ODI wicket•Getty ImagesThis was not, perhaps, the easiest environment in which to make his debut. After all the glamour and noise of the IPL, Archer changed for this game in a prefabricated unit (there are few permanent features at this ground), bowled in front of what might generously be described as half-full stands and in conditions in which a polar bear would not go out without a muffler. He is not the first cricketer who has been asked to adapt to a 20-degree temperature change in a week – Joe Denly had a similar acclimatisation to make after his own stint in the IPL – but it is worth bearing in mind that he was undergoing this ‘trial’ in somewhat unfamiliar conditions. The surface – slow and low, as it was – probably negated his talents while playing to a couple of his colleagues’ stronger points. On the quicker, harder surfaces anticipated in the World Cup, that will not be the case.So, can we presume Archer is now certain to be in that World Cup squad? Well, no. It’s not that simple. Tom Curran and Liam Plunkett, his most likely contenders for that middle-overs bowling spot, claimed seven wickets between them here and each conceded fewer boundaries than Archer. Their skills may be less eye-catching, but they have credit in the bank and more experience in the format. They’re not going down without a fight. The selectors have a tough decision to make.They don’t, thankfully, have to make it just yet. But with Woakes, Mark Wood, Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali all certain to return to the side in the coming days, the opportunities to impress for some of these players could be limited. Archer, in particular, may have to be judged on a tiny sample size.You might be wondering why it is only Plunkett and Curran who are looking over their shoulders at Archer at this stage. Well, Wood and Woakes appear certain, if fit, to win selection. Willey also seems likely to gain inclusion on the basis of the variety – his left-arm angle – he offers and the fact that he gains some movement with the new ball. With many World Cup games starting at 10.30am – when the conditions may aid his style of bowling – and with Wood and Woakes requiring management to survive the schedule, Willey provides an obvious new-ball alternative. He is a much-improved death bowler, too.ALSO READ: Hockey player to death bowler: Meet Ireland’s debutant, Josh LittleDenly’s place in the World Cup squad also appears safe. Which is remarkable, really, given that this was his first ODI for a decade. And while his maiden ODI wicket – achieved with a stumping off a filthy leg-side wide – was more testament to smart keeping than good bowling, the team management have decided he is the utility player, who can bat and field in any position and fill in for one of the spinners if they suffer a short-term injury, and plug any holes that may appear over the course of the tournament.Which leaves Archer vying for that last seam-bowling spot with Curran and Plunkett. And while the figures of both were decent, there were moments – such as when Adair heaved Curran for two sixes in an over or when the variation between Plunkett’s slower ball and stock delivery seemed negligible – when you couldn’t help but wonder if England weren’t already really quite well-served by fast-medium seamers and that Archer’s skill might prove a valuable point of difference.It was an impressive second spell. But whether such fleeting evidence is enough to win selection remains to be seen.”If today goes well, there will be a tomorrow,” Archer had said enigmatically before the toss. The selectors really do face a tough decision.

Faulkner confronted by the finish line

James Faulkner’s eclipse as a member of Australia’s top echelon parallels that of Simon O’Donnell, another allrounder who found himself suddenly out of the picture

Daniel Brettig24-Apr-2017In the bowels of the MCG following a Sheffield Shield match, Simon O’Donnell’s voice wavered as he came to terms with his omission from Australia’s 1992 World Cup squad. Less than a year before, he had seemed indispensable, after being judged International Cricketer of the Year for a string of powerful displays, despite not playing Tests.But an ODI series won without him in the West Indies was followed by a niggling shoulder problem, and all of a sudden O’Donnell found himself dealing with the effective end of his international career. Having played in the same Shield game, players like Merv Hughes and Mark Taylor celebrated their own Cup inclusions within earshot. Hughes would go on to tag himself and Taylor “the Kon-Tiki brothers” for barely playing a part in the Cup.Twenty-five years on, it appears that James Faulkner, perhaps the cricketer most like O’Donnell in how he has contributed to Australia’s limited-overs cause over the past four years, has similar reason to wonder if his international days are over. Little more than two years ago he was accepting the Man-of-the-Match award in the World Cup final at the MCG, arguably one of the very first players picked for both that team and the squad it was drawn from.Now, however, Faulkner has been handed the news of losing not only his place in the ODI squad but also his offer of a Cricket Australia contract. The board’s recent rhetoric about domestic players “not contributing to financial returns” will cut particularly deep with Faulkner, for who else over the past four years has brought more Australian ODI crowds to their feet than he has?Right now Faulkner is taking part in the IPL for Gujarat Lions, though to date he has played only one match. O’Donnell was 29 when the curtain fell on his career, and Faulkner is only 26. But what is he to make of Moises Henriques and Marcus Stoinis, two players both comfortably older than he is, slipping into his Champions Trophy spot?Not so long ago, James Faulkner was Man of the Match in the World Cup final at the MCG•ICCIt was at the same ICC event, in the same country, that Faulkner first rose to prominence in 2013. Tough-hewn from playing club cricket as a Launceston teenager, he won a committed ally in Shane Warne with Melbourne Stars, and at the Champions Trophy that served as Mickey Arthur’s final gig as Australian coach, Faulkner stood out for his composure with both bat and ball in an otherwise woebegone campaign. He also showed the sort of combative streak that led one team-mate to term him “a great bloke, if he’s on your side”. As Faulkner put it during the tournament: “I suppose you can say it is easy to puff your chest out on the ground. I’d say the good players can do both. They can puff their chest out and play good cricket. There’s no point puffing your chest out and not playing good cricket, because you’re going to be looked at as a bit of a dill.”For the next 20 months, Faulkner did both in spades. With the ball he offered left-arm consistency and variation built on his teenaged infatuation with wristspin, which made back-of-the-hand slower balls a strong weapon after the fashion of O’Donnell, Steve Waugh and Ian Harvey, while also lessening concerns about his lack of a classical inducker to right-hand batsmen.With the bat he offered the power of Andrew Symonds but also the calculation of Michael Bevan, never better shown than in a pair of heists: in Mohali against India and then at the Gabba against England. A sobriquet of “The Finisher” was grandiose but fitting, and a Test appearance at The Oval earned him a baggy green. Six wickets and useful runs merited further chances, but Mitchell Johnson’s whirlwind left him 12th man throughout the home Ashes.By the time of the World Cup final, Faulkner’s was quite a startling ODI record. Though he was not required to bat that day, his seamers and slower balls clogged up New Zealand’s middle order to such effect that he earned the match award, then took a central role in Australia’s rowdy celebrations – much as O’Donnell had done in 1987. To that point, Faulkner had churned out 814 runs at 42.84, and 60 wickets at 30.08 in 44 ODIs, figures made all the better by a propensity to deliver when most required. He was still a young cricketer but played like a senior one.All things being equal, Faulkner should have expected to at least double all the aforementioned tallies. But as with many things in life, they were not. The sociable streak led to a drunk-driving offence while playing T20s for Lancashire, and summary suspension from Australia’s next limited-overs series in England. This seemed a most inopportune time to be missing, as the team was in transition. By the time Faulkner returned, he was no longer a young cricketer in an old side but a mature player in a new one.Despite a bad knee, Faulkner’s bowling numbers have improved ever since his return from injury•AFPWhatever the effect of losing ODI team-mates like Brad Haddin, Johnson, Shane Watson and Michael Clarke, another factor was starting to hurt Faulkner, in this case literally. A chronic knee problem required constant management, and scratched him from assignments in New Zealand and South Africa. When he did manage to get back to fitness, Faulkner’s training seemed geared as much towards preserving his body as pushing it – an “old-school” tendency increasingly at odds with CA’s increasingly high-performance direction.All these elements seemed to contribute to a loss of confidence with the bat in particular. Certainly his performances since the suspension went into free-fall: 174 runs at 17.4 with a top score of 36 in 23 matches are not the returns of a No. 7 or 8 batsman, even if his bowling performances – 35 wickets at 29.8 – actually showed marginal improvement over the corresponding period, bad knee and all. Faulkner himself seldom showed signs of being perturbed by this, putting it down mainly to a lack of chances for long innings.Most hurtful to his chances of going to the Champions Trophy, though, was the fact that in recent times his inclusion has not led to victories. His two most recent limited-overs outings for Australia, in New Zealand and then at home to Sri Lanka in T20 matches, resulted in series defeats. At Eden Park, an Australian collapse offered Faulkner the chance to bat time and mount a rearguard, but it was Stoinis who did so instead.Four years before, Faulkner had shown clear-headed prescience in summing up his value to the national team. “Every time you play for Australia, you’re playing as a team, and I know personally I’m not looking at how well I go,” he said. “The ultimate goal is to win games of cricket. I don’t look at it as keeping my spot, I just want to do as well as I can and the end result will be keeping your spot.”Those recent defeats thus opened the door for others, including Stoinis, Henriques and John Hastings, all of whom have eyed the consistent opportunities Faulkner became used to. In the wash-up to Australia’s failed 1992 World Cup tilt, many pined for a bit of the old O’Donnell magic. Faulkner, and the selectors who cut him, will now wait to see whether the 2017 Champions Trophy squad moves on more effectively.

Nepal turns its eyes to Dhaka

The country has turned its attention to a group of young boys who have taken the Under-19 World Cup by storm

Vishal Dikshit04-Feb-2016Cricket has not taken over Nepal completely yet. An impasse over their first democratic constitution is leading to political turmoil. The country is still recovering from the earthquake of less than a year ago. And when it comes to sports that take the focus away from these issues, it is mostly football that takes over.In Bangladesh, a group of 15 boys from Nepal are creating waves similar to the ones two years ago when the senior cricket team made it to the World T20 in Bangladesh. That team did not go past the first round to compete against the Full Member sides. This side, the Under-19s, however, has won its first two matches to make it to the knockouts.When other Under-19 teams were preparing for the qualifiers and Full Member sides were coming out of the World Cup, Nepal was ravaged by an earthquake last April. The Nepal Under-19 team had a tournament coming up in June – the ACC Premier League – featuring five other Asian teams even as the country struggled in the aftermath of the calamity.The Cricket Association of Nepal (CAN) managed to hold a 12-day camp in Kathmandu, but it was not going to be enough. They then requested the ICC and the BCCI to let them practise in India. Soon, Delhi became Nepal’s new base. They played on college grounds, travelled across the city, and played against local club cricketers to get up to speed.In June, they went to Malaysia for the Under-19 ACC Premier League and won four of their five matches, finishing behind only Afghanistan. Left-arm spinner Sushil Kandel took with 11 wickets at an economy rate of 1.68, easily the lowest in the tournament.In October, they headed to Malaysia again for the World Cup Qualifiers. Only one out of five teams could join the other 15 for the main event. Nepal emerged unbeatable. They routed Papua New Guinea for 48 runs, Uganda for 71, USA for 109, and restricted Ireland to 184. Clearly, bowling was their forte.”Our team has been together for five months for two-three tournaments,” coach Jagat Tamata says. “And our main factor is hard work. Every day we practise for six-seven hours, that’s why we are here today.”The team held another camp in Nepal before heading over to India again on December 30, this time to Dharamsala. And soon it was time to board a flight for Bangladesh, for the warm-up matches.Now, nearly 10 months after the earthquake, fans at home are gearing up to cheer for a group of teenagers who are the first in this World Cup to make it from the qualifiers to the quarter-finals. Several hours of load-shedding are not going to deter them. Generators have been arranged, movie halls have been booked to screen the matches, and school children will get together on a Friday morning to watch.”The first two matches weren’t live but now there is a big craze back home for the upcoming matches on TV,” vice-captain Aarif Sheikh says. “The fans are thinking, ‘How have they beaten New Zealand, how have they beaten Ireland?’ So all over the country, they are focusing on the big match.”At the Shere Bangla Stadium too, Nepali fans will throng the ground to match the local spectators, in decibel levels if not numbers. There will be massive flags, Nepal Cricket Fan Club T-shirts, and banners waving in support for the clash against Bangladesh. Plenty of young Nepali fans – most of whom study in Dhaka in different colleges – are planning to take the day off or exchange their interning shifts on Friday for what is probably the biggest cricket event for them since the World T20 participation.Happy times: the Nepal Under-19 players celebrate their win against New Zealand with a team selfie•International Cricket CouncilRam Thapa Chhetri, an MBBS intern who was at the Shere Bangla for the India match, says: “We are supporting our team everywhere. We are appearing in every venue.” When asked what his seniors thought of him giving cricket priority over work, he happily adds: “They are sitting there, two rows above me.”The Nepali college community in Bangladesh, who mostly study medicine and engineering, are between 3000 and 5000 strong, according to Chhetri. They connect using a Facebook page for days like these. They are helped by the team manager, Sudeep Sharma, in arranging for tickets, and they travelled to Fatullah, outside the city, to encourage their side in the wins against New Zealand and Ireland. They came in big numbers and took over the Grand Stand at Shere Bangla against India, cheered for every single run, and have big plans for Friday.”If we win the quarter-final and make it to the semi-final, then more Nepalis will come,” Chhetri says. “And we can win the final []. Nothing is impossible in cricket.”A lot of Nepali football fans also came to Dhaka recently for the Bangabandhu Gold Cup, organised by the Bangladesh Football Federation earlier in January, and decided to extend their stay in the euphoria after Nepal lifted the trophy.Subir Khadka is not among them. He works in Kathmandu and booked tickets for Dhaka after the U-19 team won two matches in a row. He got only a couple of days off and does not regret the fact that he cannot stay for the quarter-final.”This team needs more support,” he says. “The senior team has already made it big by playing the T20 World Cup. These boys were playing against India and I decided to come here only for this match.”Nepal have taken the World Cup by surprise. They are lucky Australia pulled out, says their coach, but they have put their hand up too. Legspinner Sandeep Lamichhane came up with a hat-trick, and other spinners closed the door on opposition teams one by one, but their batting needs to come together stronger to beat the hosts on Friday – which even some of the strong senior sides have found tough lately.”Our aim was to make it to the second round, anyhow, and we have achieved that,” Tamata says. “We assigned responsibilities to the players and they have worked very hard. Now we are challenging ourselves more. We won’t feel any pressure, we will face Full Members but we will keep things simple. It’s a golden opportunity for our boys. If you do well here, you will go to the senior side.”We need to improve in our batting. We got 238 against New Zealand but we were 10-15 runs short. Our target was to score 250 there.”The team has the skills and they go above and beyond physically. “Self-belief is very important. It’ a very inexperienced side. Only players like Aarif and Raju [Rijal] have some experience. The other guys are very new, they are working hard every day, skill-wise and mentally.”Normally we say to boys, enjoy yourself. That’s one of the first things. We tell them to not think about who the opposition is, just focus only on your game and play and watch the ball. Keep it simple.”Aarif says there is a “vast difference” in facing sides in a World Cup, be it in batting, fielding, pace bowling or body language. Tackling Bangladesh at the Shere Bangla Stadium on a Friday will show him and his team another side of cricket, which visitors sides have found hard to cope with lately. But if they can overcome that, cricket will take another big step back home.

India's to-do list

A lot has changed since M.S. Dhoni smashed that famous six off Nuwan Kulasekara to propel all of India into a frenzy on a breathless Mumbai night four years ago.

Rahul Oak13-Feb-2015A lot has changed since MS Dhoni smashed that famous six off Nuwan Kulasekara to propel all of India into a frenzy on a breathless Mumbai night four years ago. Although he did not play a major role in the finals, the quote on everyone’s lips as India won the ODI World Cup was “We did it for Sachin.” Virat Kohli echoed the sentiments of every Indian who grew up watching Sachin Tendulkar when he pointed out that carrying him on their shoulders was the least the Indian team could have done for him after he’d been carrying them on his shoulders for more than 20 years. There were speeches, there were tears, there were celebrations. However, that turned out to be the happy ending for a lot of the players on the team in more ways than one.The ephemeral nature of sport is truly reflected in the personnel changes that the Indian ODI team has experienced over the past four years. Of the XI that played in the final of the 2011 World Cup, only three are expected to feature against Pakistan on Feb 15. Sachin has retired from all formats and Virender Sehwag has all but followed his idol out of the game. Gautam Gambhir is a distant memory. Yuvraj Singh, India’s best player of the 2011 World Cup, fought cancer before making a heart-warming comeback only to slowly fade away. The entire bowling attack has undergone a massive overhaul. To get a sense of how far the team has moved on, you only have to remember that the three fast(ish) bowlers that accompanied Harbhajan Singh in the final in 2011 were Zaheer Khan, Munaf Patel, and (drum roll) S Sreesanth!Of the survivors, Suresh Raina will always be suspect on Australian pitches that offer bounce to bowlers who are willing to hit the deck. Although Dhoni retired from Test cricket in the middle of the series against Australia and sat out a Test through injury, he looks more jaded and in need of a break than most players who have been on tour. The grey hair growing around the captain’s temples makes him seem a lot older than his years. Kohli too looks spent after his exertions in the Test series. Rohit Sharma and, to a certain extent, Ajinkya Rahane are the only ones in the squad who look fresh, in form, and ready for the challenge. While the situation for most Indian fans seems all doom and gloom, fear not! Let’s try and look at a few things we can do to make the best of it.Firstly, we need to learn from the English. No, I do not mean the English cricket team. In as much as we’d like Umesh Yadav to replicate the control and swing of Jimmy Anderson, that’s just not about to happen in a hurry. I’m talking about the English cricket fans. Just like their football fans, their best and most endearing quality is an acute sense of realism and a coping mechanism built around dry humour and a generous pint of bitter ale (or three). They understand that while their team is unlikely to win the World Cup, they could still have a good time if they’re able to find little victories. Travelling fans will enjoy the Antipodean summer and warm beaches, sing sardonic songs on the terraces and treat every wicket taken and run scored as a bonus. And given that India’s World Cup prospects are even worse than England’s, we could do no worse than to follow suit.That is not to say that we shouldn’t hope for our team to win the thing. Far from it. The format is such that it does not reward the best or the most consistent team at the end of the tournament. And that is a good thing! It only means that any team could pull off a 1992 Pakistan, do just enough to reach the knockouts and then hope for three good days. India’s best chance of winning comes from a smash and grab approach. The XI just about picks itself: Shikhar Dhawan (due to lack of options), Rohit, Kohli, Rahane, Raina, Dhoni, Ravindra Jadeja, R Ashwin, Bhuvneshwar Kumar / Mohit Sharma, Yadav and Mohammed Shami.Let’s look at our matches, one by one:India v Pakistan: This is one of those self-fulfilling prophecies of our time. Because we’ve never lost means we can’t lose this one, right? Superstition and omens aside, however, Pakistan aren’t at their best either and this is one match that we could seriously think of winning. Plus, something about Pakistan brings out the best (or worst, depending on what side you’re on) in Kohli. Three points and four years of bragging rights.India v South Africa: I hate to be a negative Nelly on this, but we should assume that we are going to lose this one and move on. Let South Africa win every match in their group only to be beaten in the semi finals by New Zealand. The usual.India v UAE: Win.India v West Indies: Trickier than it looks on paper. The Windies may have their troubles and more infighting than Pakistan but given that India play them in Perth, this could turn out to be a challenge. India’s best chance is to bat first, score a decent total and get Gayle early. This is one of those matches on which India’s challenge rests.India v Ireland: Given that Boyd Rankin has decided to join the English, Ireland don’t have the serious pace and bounce to trouble India in Perth. This is the kind of match where Dhoni can pretend it’s the subcontinent, unleash the spinners and enjoy the show.India v Zimbabwe: They may have beaten Sri Lanka in the warm-ups, but this is still Zimbabwe. Please refer to UAE match note for instructions.If the stars align, India actually have a chance of finishing No. 2 in the group. To give the team the best chance of proceeding to the semis, we need things to conspire in the other group so that Sri Lanka end up being the opponent for the quarter finals. I, for one, will be watching the England v Sri Lanka game with utmost interest since it seems to be key to determining the 3rd and 4th place teams in the other group. Once it gets to the semis, it’s time for Dhoni to channel his inner Imran Khan, hope that Kohli/Rohit/Rahane wake up on the right side of the bed and that by some miracle, India’s bowlers manage to land enough balls in the proverbial ‘right areas’.So there you have it. I have put together this foolproof plan that I hope the Interwebs delivers to the Indian team. At this point, I feel like a war general who has done all the hard work of strategising and all that the team needs to do is the simple job of executing. Lady Luck has already started fluttering her eyelashes at the team if Ishant’s injury is anything to go by. It’s almost time to grab that ale, look for those minor victories and hope that Sir Jadeja proves each and every one of us wrong. Let the games begin!If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line.

Hampshire can add to one-day glory

Hampshire are one-day kings but they can also add promotion to their CV

George Dobell30-Mar-2013Last year: 4th, CC Div 2; Winners, FLt20; Winners, CB40.2012 in a nutshell: Excellent in limited-overs cricket and mediocre in the Championship. Hampshire won the limited-overs double in 2012 and, with three games to play in the Championship season, were in a promotion position. They lost all three (against Leicestershire, Essex and Derbyshire) and slipped into mid-table. They topped their CB40 group with seven wins from 10 completed matches and then defeated Sussex and, in the final, Warwickshire off the last ball to lift the trophy. In the T20 they reached finals day in Cardiff, beating Somerset in a low-scoring semi-final and outwitting Yorkshire in the final. Glenn Maxwell proved an astute signing, with slow bowlers Liam Dawson and Danny Briggs maintaining excellent control and Dimitri Mascarenhas providing a reminder of his excellence as a T20 cricketer.2013 prospects: Hampshire should continue to challenge in the shorter formats and must be considered one of the promotion favourites. Their top-order batting, containing Jimmy Adams, Michael Carberry, overseas player George Bailey and, from June, Neil McKenzie, is as strong as any in Division Two. Adam Wheater, Sean Ervine and James Vince will add impetus while Liam Dawson will be asked to bat long and slow. The bowling is, at first glance, slightly less impressive but, led by David Balcombe, strong as a bull and determined to make up for lost time in his career, and the left-arm swing of James Tomlinson, it will also be augmented by the spin of Saeed Ajaml for the last few weeks of the season. Having won four limited-overs trophies in the last four years, they clearly have a decent formula and there is little reason why that should change .Key player: Signing Adam Wheater as a wicketkeeper batsman was somewhat controversial. Not only did Wheater have a year of his contract to run at Essex, but his arrival threatens the position of Michael Bates, a homegrown Hampshire keeper who has made such a fine impression with the gloves. But Wheater, at 23, only eight months older than Bates, is a vastly superior batsman – he averages 20 more an innings – and will add depth to Hampshire’s batting line-up.Bright young thing: Such is James Vince’s talent that the England selectors ignored his largely unsuccessful season in Division Two last year – he averaged 24.52 and only passed 50 once – and took him on the Lions’ one-day tour to Australia. He struggled there but, at 22, remains a talented and unusually elegant young batsman, capable of scoring freely against decent bowling. His strength, at present, remains in the limited-overs formats – he averaged 55.50 in the CB40 and was Hampshire’s leading run-scorer in the FLt20 – but if he can curb his attacking instincts just a little, he can flourish in all formats.Captain / coach: Jimmy Adams will continue to lead the side in a positive, cheerful manner, leaving Giles White, the head coach, to continue in unobtrusive style. The days when Hampshire could rely upon being bankrolled by Rod Bransgrove are gone – it didn’t really work, anyway – leaving the club more reliant on player development. They seem stronger for it.ESPNcricinfo verdict: Hampshire look capable of winning promotion this year. The batting is unusually strong and the acquisition of Saeed Ajmal on late-season pitches is a major scoop. The one concern is the pre-Ajmal bowling attack which, with the heavy roller back in operation this year, may face some long days in the field. It won’t be easy to follow up a double-winning season, but Hampshire should continue to be a threat in the shorter formats.

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