Swansea City 3-4 Norwich City – Match Review

Norwich came out smiling in a seven goal thriller with Swansea at the Liberty Stadium to extend their unbeaten run to nine games.

Chris Hughton’s men have hit a rich vein of form of late and find themselves just four points shy of a Champions League spot despite sitting 11th in the Premier League table.

The Swans came into the game brimming with confidence after vanquishing Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium last week but were brought back down to Earth on home soil by a vibrant Canaries side.

Despite only scoring five times on their travels Hughton’s charges needed only 16 minutes to make the breakthrough when Steven Whittaker surged into the penalty area and lashed beyond Gerhard Tremmel after exchanging passes with Robert Snodgrass on the right.

That lead was doubled five minutes before half time, Sebastien Bassong popping up to bury head home Grant Holt’s cross. The Norwich striker then got his own name on the scoresheet as he beat Ki Sung-Yeung to nod Snodgrass’ free kick past Tremmel.

Whatever Laudrup said to his players at the interval paid immediate dividends and six minutes after the restart Michu had reduced the deficit  after latching on to Ben Davies’ pass and burying his shot past Mark Bunn.

And nine minutes later there was hope of restoring parity. Nathan Dyer sped past Javier Garrido on the right and his cross found its way to Jonathan De Guzman, who found the net with a powerful volley.

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But their hopes of completing a remarkable comeback was all but ended when Snodgrass bent a wonderful free kick over the wall and past the despairing Tremmel.

Swansea continued to chase and set up a tense finish when Michu headed in De Guzman’s cross. And they were denied an equaliser minutes later when Bunn tipped Itay Shechter’s strike over the bar to ensure the Canaries equalled their best top flight unbeaten run set back in October 1989

Leeds fans worried about Vydra injury update

Leeds fans were getting excited when reports suggested they were moving closer to a deal for Matej Vydra, but Frank Lampard’s latest comments on the striker have got fans worried about another injury prone signing.A report in The Telegraph this weekend claimed Vydra’s switch to Elland Road is edging closer.The Czech international, who scored 21 Championship goals last season, has been heavily linked with an £11m move to Leeds, and his absence from Derby’s training camp in Tenerife has only increased the speculation.According to the Rams’ new manager though, the striker’s absence from the pre-season camp is nothing to do with any impending transfer, and is actually due to injury.[brid autoplay=”true” video=”257599″ player=”12034″ title=”Watch Leeds’ opening fixtures for the 201819 Championship season”]“Vydra has stayed back, he had a small injury and he hasn’t trained properly at all so it was much better for him and the medical team to work back at the training ground,†Lampard said.“He has a week to get himself ready and hopefully then he’ll be ready to join the rest of the lads.â€Leeds fans are still hurting from the infamous January signing of Tyler Roberts, and they’re now starting to worry about signing another injured player.Injuries were a huge factor in last season’s capitulation after Christmas, and it seems to have left a lasting effect on fans, as they’re now turning against the idea of signing Vydra.You can find some of the best Twitter reactions down below…

Player Zone: Wiley Glenn Murray rightly moves into England reckoning

Never the quickest or most athletic of strikers during his younger years, at the age of 34 Glenn Murray is one of the Premier League’s wisest and wiliest old foxes.

The winning goal against Arsenal last weekend was poignantly symptomatic of the Brighton striker’s season; while the critical focus was mostly on how Shkodran Mustafi and Laurent Koscienly failed to handle a largely routine ball into the box, the Gunners pair are by no means the only experienced Premier League centre-backs to underestimate Murray’s netting prowess this season.

Virgil van Dijk, Dejan Lovren, Winston Reid, Steve Cook and even Middlesbrough’s Ben Gibson, whose top flight performances last term earned rave reviews, have all been on the pitch to watch Murray find the net against them this season.

While not all belong to the bracket of truly world-class, most on paper would be expected to contain an ageing front-man with just 79 Premier League appearances under his belt from a whole career in English football.

But Murray’s defining gift remains his niche movement, and it’s a characteristic we’ve often seen from players who have spent significant chunks of their career in the Football League. Dele Alli, Rickie Lambert and Charlie Austin have all demonstrated a seemingly natural positional intelligence in the top flight to suggest its where they should have played their football all along.

Even then though, Murray’s movement is particularly exceptional, and it has played a hand in far more goals than his direct eleven in the top flight. Masterfully timing positive runs, his ability to draw away defenders has oft allowed Jose Izquierdo, Pascal Gross and Anthony Knockaert the space they need to aid Brighton’s survival hopes with goals from midfield as well.

There’s a clear ruggedness about those three aforementioned former non-leaguers too, a readiness if not eagerness to make their area of the pitch a physical battle, and Murray shares that trait as well. Inconceivably expensive Premier League defenders may be taller, stronger and quicker than him, but the Seagulls star always finds a way to hold his ground.

That was evident on Sunday as Murray won five aerial duels and three fouls to vitally bring his team up the pitch while Arsenal attempted to come back from two early concedes. And this isn’t the first instance of the veteran excelling in that manner against such lofty opposition either; during his Crystal Palace days, it was Murray who inspired a shock win over title-chasing Manchester City in 2015.

Making a mockery of Vincent Kompany’s reputation as one of the best and most physical centre-halves in the world, Murray scored the opener, won an incredible 10 aerial duels and seven fouls – probably his greatest performance to date in the Premier League. In both instances, those returns represent exceptional centre-forward play, not only affecting the scoreline but also the match by giving his team real footholds in the final third.

The big question now is whether Murray can once again silence those who underestimate him, amid rumours English football will soon throw another seemingly impossible challenge his way. The Sun claim, at the age of 34, Murray is now being considered for a shock England call-up as Gareth Southgate maps out his squad for coming friendlies with the Netherlands and Italy. He would be the oldest debutant since Kevin Davies got the nod against Montenegro in 2010.

The idea will make some scoff, but based on current form Murray is the leading choice for England’s fourth forward slot at the World Cup, with Harry Kane, Jamie Vardy and Marcus Rashford seemingly nailed on to be part of Southgate’s strikeforce in Russia.

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Admittedly, that’s as much a consequence of the modest form of the many alternatives this season than Murray’s own returns, but the statistics speak for themselves and the only English players to score more top flight goals this term are Kane, Vardy and Raheem Sterling – another player nailed on to be in the squad, if not start the first game, when the summer tournament comes around.

Likewise, the usual suspects have all endured disappointing, disrupted seasons. Andy Carroll, Danny Welbeck, Daniel Sturridge and Jermain Defoe have all suffered too many injury problems and accordingly failed to pick up enough minutes to justifiably take a place in the squad, while Tammy Abraham has run out of steam since being called up to the senior side back in November.

Suddenly, the candidates boil down to players like Charlie Austin and Callum Wilson, who have equally little international experience as Murray and haven’t produced to quite the same levels this season, and the eternally-mooted chaos option, Stoke’s towering 37-year-old Peter Crouch.

So, England fans, if you were in Southgate’s shoes, which striker would you take to Russia as the Three Lions’ fourth choice? Let us know by voting below…

Liverpool newbie may be hindering team-mates, says ex-boss

Former Liverpool chief Roy Evans is concerned that Mario Balotelli’s playing style may be having a negative impact on his team-mates.

The Reds swooped to land the enigmatic Italian in a £16m deal towards the end of the last transfer window as Brendan Rodgers looked to boost his attacking options after the sale of Luis Suarez.

Balotelli arrived with a reputation for his divisive nature off of the pitch and a perceived lack of effort on it, with many questioning the decision to bring him to Anfield.

WANT MORE? >> Liverpool transfer news | Latest transfer news

After six games in the red shirt, the 24-year-old has just one goal to his name – which came against Bulgarian minnows Ludogorets Razgrad – and has been a key member of the Merseysiders’ underperforming first-team.

Now Evans has told talkSPORT that Balotelli’s languid style may be rubbing off on his team-mates:

“He has a way about him on the pitch that doesn’t exactly endear himself to everybody.” he said.

“Suarez was the opposite. He could light the game up and he could bring everybody along with him and they would put the same effort in as Suarez did.

“His [Balotelli’s] style of play and the way he lumbers though a game, maybe that is catching.”

Evans went on to say that Liverpool – who have seven points from their opening six Premier League fixtures – must buck up quickly to make this season a success:

“It is not just about last night’s game. It has been the same for more or less all season, except maybe for the Tottenham game and the Everton game at the weekend,

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“They have got to improve somewhere or it is going to be a poor season for them.”

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Top TEN ‘most influential’ Premier League appointments

With Harry Redknapp taking the QPR job and announcing his intentions of keeping them in the Premier League (despite them only securing four points from their opening 13 games) it has got me thinking about the most influential managerial appointments the Premier League has ever seen.

Of course, Harry Redknapp has worked wonders at other clubs before and he did make it into the top ten, but there are also a couple of surprising choices for you to mull over. The criteria I used to select my most influential ten were their ability to save their club from relegation, the stability they have given their club during their time and/or the success they have achieved during their tenure.

So, ladies and gentleman, without further ado, click on ‘Arry to see the Premier League’s most influential managerial appointments of all time

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Adam Hose 266 sends belated retort to Hampshire

Worcestershire team-mate Jake Libby unbeaten on 137 after 395-run stand for the third wicket

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay29-Jun-2025Worcestershire 456 for 3 (Hose 266, Libby 137*) vs HampshireAdam Hose provided retribution to Hampshire for snubbing him as a youngster by scoring 266 – the highest ever score by a visiting player at Utilita Bowl.Top-order batter Hose played for Hampshire at Under 13 and Under 17 levels, having been born and raised on the Isle of Wight, but never progressed into the professional ranks.He returned with an epic second career Rothesay County Championship hundred during a mammoth 395-run third-wicket stand with acting captain Jake Libby.Libby scored 137 unbeaten runs of his own on a lifeless wicket with a joyless Kookaburra ball as Worcestershire ended day one on 456 for 3.Worcestershire have not had a good time batting this season. They came into the match with the fewest batting bonus points (three), had only passed 300 on three previous occasions – twice in their second innings – and only two centuries had been made by their batters.They also came into this match on the back of a shellacking by Surrey at Visit Worcestershire New Road last week.By the end of the day, they had four more batting points, two more centuries, and well over 100 runs more than they had managed in two innings against the defending champions.Libby, once again leading in place of the injured Brett D’Oliveira, couldn’t wait to bat having won the toss.Despite some morning overheads, the air was warm, the pitch looked flat, and the Kookaburra ball was expected to offer next to no assistance to the bowlers.All that proved correct – and the number of centuries would be doubled by 19:00 BST – but not until Hampshire had a little glint of optimism.New Zealander Henry Nicholls was tested outside his off-stump throughout his runless 12-ball innings, before chasing a wide James Fuller delivery to edge behind.Kashif Ali was punchy in his 44 off 38 balls, and particularly tucked into Scott Currie, before he was lbw stumbling over a straight delivery from Fuller.At 60 for 2, things felt even, but from then, and for the next five-and-a-half hours, it was anything but.The sunbathing crowd – including a gathering of past Hampshire players including Barry Richards and oldest living Hampshire cricketer Dennis Baldry – had just Libby’s stoicism and Hose’s perpetual run scoring to watch.Once Hose found his rhythm, he bypassed each one of Hampshire’s plans with gusto.A short-pitch effort, saw pulls and hooks to the boundary. A defensive idea with an umbrella field saw punchy drives down the ground. Everything Hampshire’s beleaguered bowlers tried resulted in runs for Hose.Other than an incredibly tricky short leg chance on 69, he raced through the milestones – 50 in 74 balls, 100 in 126, 150 in 178, 200 in 208 and 250 in 240.The more runs he got, the harder and further he hit the ball – one of his seven sixes causing injury to a spectator some 10 rows back at long on.Hose was eventually dismissed on 266 – scuffing the ball to gully to give debutant Dom Kelly his first Championship wicket – in the penultimate over of the day.His score surpassed the 243 scored by Phil Jaques for Yorkshire on this ground in 2004, and sat just one run behind Zak Crawley’s marathon for England and John Crawley and Michael Carberry’s triple-centuries in scores by anyone at the Bowl.Hose did play one first-team match for Hampshire, a non-first-class three-day game against Cardiff MCCU – ironically, one of his opponents in that fixture was Libby.With him on this occasion, runs flowed like a tap.Libby isn’t one for showy shots, at his best when he occupies the crease – he has the second longest County Championship innings by minutes to his name to demonstrate his stickability.He offered the Hampshire bowlers even less hope than Hose, scoring at his own pace to reach his second ton of the campaign in 219 deliveries.”It has been a great day,” Hose said. “We have had a tough couple of months from a group and batting perspective so to have a big partnership with Jake and score some runs was a satisfying feeling.”In the past, I have gone into my shell and put a higher price on my wicket as opposed to today, I just saw the ball and reacted with my natural instincts. Fortunately, today it worked.”It was my first double-hundred so it’s cool getting the runs here. It is a long time since I left this club as a teenager, so there isn’t much on that front. It is about trying to put as much pressure on with the bat as we know it could potentially be a tough couple of days with the ball.”

Adelaide Strikers' bowlers do it again to secure back-to-back titles in final thriller

A low-scoring match in front of more than 12,000 spectators produced a gripping finish that went to the last ball

Tristan Lavalette02-Dec-2023Adelaide Strikers 125 for 5 (Wolvaardt 39, McGrath 38, Hancock 3-23) beat Brisbane Heat 122 for 8 (Kerr 30*, Wellington 3-16)Adelaide Strikers claimed back-to-back WBBL titles after their star-studded attack superbly defended a low total to thwart Brisbane Heat in a nerve-jangling final.Strikers had been limited to 125 for 5 at the Adelaide Oval after being shackled by disciplined Heat bowling and inventive captaincy from Jess Jonassen.But on a slow surface under lights, the final was on a knife’s edge when Heat slumped to 62 for 4 after seamer Tahlia McGrath dismissed Mignon du Preez and Laura Harris on consecutive deliveries in the 13th over.Strikers appeared set to rue missed chances to dismiss Amelia Kerr and Charli Knott in the 16th over. But seamer Megan Schutt dismissed Knott and Jonassen as Heat were left needing 13 runs off the final over.Legspinner Amanda-Jade Wellington dismissed Georgia Voll on the third delivery before Mikayla Hinkley hit a first ball six as Heat required five runs off the last two deliveries.But Hinkley fell next ball and Wellington cooly denied Nicola Hancock’s attempts at a match-winning six as a crowd of 12,379 fans erupted in jubilation.Strikers’ remarkable victory thwarted Heat, who were playing their third game in five days. A late season slump had cost them a home final, but third-placed Heat reached the final after beating Sydney Thunder and Perth Scorchers on consecutive days at the WACA.But a well-rested Strikers, who had the week off, finished stronger to clinch a title defence with a 10th win from their last 11 games.Much of the pre-match talk had been centred around Strikers’ strong attack against Heat’s powerful batting line-up. But that battle had to wait after McGrath elected to bat in good batting conditions.Much like during the two finals at the WACA, Heat exploited bounce in the surface with Hancock bowling in-form Katie Mack in the second over.But McGrath countered with a superb cover drive boundary to get off the mark in style as she peeled off a trio of fours in her first nine balls. Her assertiveness ignited opener Laura Wolvaardt, who hit three boundaries in a row off Jonassen capped by a horror misfield in the outfield by Voll.Megan Schutt came to the fore at the death•Getty Images

Strikers recovered to reach 34 for 1 after the powerplay as an intriguing tactical battle was playing out. Six different bowlers were used in as many overs to start the match as Jonassen kept rotating her bowlers in one-over spells in a bid to unsettle the batters.The tactic eventually did the trick as Heat pegged back Strikers before Hancock produced an innings-changing over in the 10th over. She bowled an unrelenting back of a length line which left McGrath rattled after top-edging into her helmet and requiring medical attention.In the last delivery before drinks, Hancock hit the top of McGrath’s off bail after the batter charged down the pitch as Heat gained a stranglehold.Strikers only mustered 54 runs in the last 10 overs with Wolvaardt unable to rediscover her earlier rhythm and she was left frustrated on 39 after being stumped off Jonassen.In a bid for a late rally, Strikers took the power surge but Bridget Patterson fell on the first ball of the 17th over as their innings withered away.Heat had one hand on the title, but needed to get past an attack rated as the WBBL’s best. Opener Grace Harris particularly relished an early boundary against Schutt who she had delivered a barb to in the match’s lead-up.Strikers’ hopes sank when Harris, who ignited Heat in the Perth finals with belligerent batting, was dropped on 13 by Madeline Penna at first slip off returning quick Darcie Brown.But Harris fell shortly later when she holed out after failing to connect on a short delivery from offspinner Jemma Barsby. On a turning surface, Wellington proved a handful and dismissed opener Georgia Redmayne in the eighth over as Strikers clawed back.Heat were unable to get the ball away in the middle overs as the pressure heightened when du Preez and Harris were bowled on consecutive deliveries by McGrath.Having been badly dropped by Mack at deep midwicket in the 16th over, Knott fell shortly after to Schutt as the twists continued until the final ball.

Starc to continue to skip BBL despite being available

Mitchell Starc has confirmed he won’t make himself available for the BBL amid the push for Australia’s multi-format stars to feature in the competition

AAP03-Jul-2022Mitchell Starc has become the first Australian star to confirm he won’t play in this summer’s Big Bash League as negotiations loom on future player availability.This summer shapes as crucial for the competition out of the Covid-19 pandemic, with Cricket Australia desperate to have as much top-line talent playing as often as possible.Australia’s multi-format stars are expected to be available for a sizeable part of it, with January’s one-day series against South Africa set to be cancelled.But that won’t alter Starc’s position, who does not see himself featuring any time soon.The 32-year-old quick last played for the Sydney Sixers in 2014-15, while also forgoing close to $10 million in possible salaries since then.Related

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“I have always enjoyed the BBL when I have played it … but my approach with all franchise cricket hasn’t changed over the last seven years,” Starc told AAP in Galle.”My approach to the IPL, BBL, I have looked at the Australian schedule and wanting to be as fit and well-performed for that as I can. And franchise cricket has taken a back seat.”Starc’s position comes in the midst of a cluttered international schedule.Following the current tour in Sri Lanka, Australia have white-ball series against Zimbabwe, New Zealand, India, England and West Indies as well as a home T20 World Cup.Tests follow against West Indies and South Africa before the BBL window, with a tour of India, an away Ashes and a 50-over World Cup all highlighting next year’s calendar.”The schedule in the next 18 months is ridiculous,” Starc said. “I will always keep Australian cricket front of mind, and then franchise cricket [second].”I also like spending time at home and seeing my wife [Alyssa Healy, who is also often away].”Mitchell Starc hasn’t played in the BBL since 2014•Getty Images

The reluctance of Starc and others could however be challenged in coming years. There will be a push in the next pay negotiations for players to be contracted to a club and participating when not injured or on Australia duties.The current Memoriam of Understanding expires midway through 2023, meaning such a mechanism could be in place for the following summer if agreed upon.It comes amid criticism of the competition’s quality, with CA preparing to defend the league in the Federal Court as the Seven Network try to break from their broadcast deal.As things stand, Usman Khawaja (Brisbane Heat), Mitchell Swepson (Brisbane Heat), Nathan Lyon (Sixers) and Alex Carey (Adelaide Strikers) all have contracts for this summer.Marnus Labuschagne will likely re-sign with Heat and Travis Head has long played for Strikers. Steven Smith will also likely play, happy there is a push for clubs to be able to welcome Australian players into squads after being locked out last summer.Josh Hazlewood played for the Sixers as recent as 2019-20, while Cameron Green skipped last year and Pat Cummins and David Warner have long sat out.CA are confident the overseas player draft will bring pulling power to the competition, luring their first big fish with Faf du Plessis last week.

Virat Kohli: 'The defensive aspect of the game has fallen behind'

Captain remains adamant in his view that there was little wrong with the pitch in Ahmedabad

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Mar-20216:10

Reason for our success is not cribbing about pitches we play on – Virat Kohli

Virat Kohli remains adamant in his view that there was little wrong with the pitch for the pink-ball Test in Ahmedabad, and that the game ended in two days because of poor batting. On the eve of the fourth Test – which will be played at the same venue but with the red ball in daytime – Kohli suggested, in fact, that having to switch constantly between limited-overs cricket and Test cricket has caused defensive techniques to deteriorate.Related

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“Defence is very important,” Kohli said in his pre-match press conference. “From the pattern I’ve seen in Test cricket – take any match, if two batsmen are facing a 45-minute period of difficult bowling, are they able to score 10 runs and survive without offering any chances? I think because of the influence of white-ball cricket, we’re getting results in Test cricket, but we also have this byproduct that defence, which is also a part of the game, is getting compromised.”This is why people say score 300-350 quickly. I don’t think they focus on that grind of four or five sessions these days, probably because they don’t focus on defence so much, because they’re needing to switch formats, and the game is very fast-paced.”I think there is a requirement for skill in playing on spinning tracks, and not necessarily just playing the sweep. You find your own method, and from my point of view, my best solution is a defensive shot, where I know I can defend and the ball won’t go to silly point or short leg, and that’s an aspect of the game that’s fallen behind.”Pitches remained the major theme of his press conference, but Kohli addressed a number of other issues too, including questions relating to a couple of members of India’s squad.Kohli – “I don’t think batsmen focus on that grind of four or five sessions these days, probably because they don’t focus on defence so much”•BCCI

On whether turning tracks are subject to unfair criticism
“There’s always too much noise and too much conversation about spinning tracks. I’m sure that if our media is in a space to contradict those views or present views that say that it is unfair to criticise only spinning tracks, then I think it’ll be a balanced conversation. But the unfortunate bit is that everyone sort of plays along with that narrative and just keeps making it news till the time it is relevant.”A Test match happens, and if we win on day four or five no one says anything, but if a match finishes in two days, everyone pounces on the same issue. It just becomes an issue to talk about. We lost in New Zealand on day three, in 36 overs. I’m sure none of our people as well wrote about the pitch. It was all about how India played badly in New Zealand. And none of the pitches were criticised. No one came and saw how much the pitch was doing, how much the ball was moving, and how much grass there was on the pitches. “On whether the red ball will behave differently on the Motera pitch compared to the pink one
“I don’t understand why the cricket ball, the cricket pitch, all these things are brought into focus. Why don’t we just focus on the fact that the batsmen were just not skilled enough on that pitch to play properly, and it was a bizarre display of batting by both teams in a Test match, and I will continue to maintain that, because I’ve played this game long enough to understand what happens on the cricket field. And it’s not a change in the ball colour or the change in the cricket ball, it’s still round, it still weighs five and a half ounces, so I don’t know what difference it makes suddenly.”The surface in Chennai was different in the [previous] game. This track has more pace than that. You could see with the fast bowlers as well, none of the balls went through on the Chennai track like it did for Ishant in those first couple of overs or for Bumrah as well. So the track in general has a bit more pace, and that’s the result of the clay that’s been laid in on the pitch. So it’s very important to understand these small-little details of the game.”On whether there’s a need for boards to ensure pitches don’t provide undue home advantage
“It would be lovely if you asked us this question on an England/New Zealand/Australia tour. Not when you’ve seen two turning pitches in India, so that question for me is irrelevant at this point of time.”Kohli on Pujara: “He’s a world-class performer, has been for us for a long period of time”•BCCI

On Cheteshwar Pujara being dismissed by left-arm spin in three out of five innings
“The fact of the matter is, till about four years ago, he was criticised for not scoring away from home. He was [spoken of as] only a home-track bully, and only scored in India. Now he’s performing for you everywhere outside of India, and a few innings where every batsman has struggled, barring maybe Rohit and a couple of innings from [others] – Ash (R Ashwin) played well, Jinks (Ajinkya Rahane) got a fifty, I got a couple – it’s not been easy. So if you now start criticising his game at home, then I don’t think that’s fair on him.”He’s a world-class performer, has been for us for a long period of time, and I will keep saying this again and again – along with Jinks, Pujara is our most important Test player, he will continue to be so. Every cricketer, every batsman, faces some sort of challenges in terms of a couple of areas where they might find a need for improvement, that happens to all of us constantly, and he’s a very responsible guy who will first and foremost go into the nets, bats more than anyone else to iron out his flaws, and I’m sure that he’ll keep solidifying his game moving forward, but there’s absolutely no concern whatsoever when it comes to Cheteshwar Pujara. “On Kuldeep Yadav’s limited opportunities
“There’s no issues with skill, there’s no issues with headspace. His game is absolutely precise, bowling better than he’s ever bowled before. [It’s about] combinations. We need to make sure that we cover all facets of the game, and we have our strongest balanced squad on the park. See, if a [Ravindra] Jadeja is playing and you’re talking about a third spinner, then a Kuldeep comes into the picture way more because of Jadeja’s experience with the bat, and the number of times he’s done the job for the team.”Right now we’re going in with Ash, Washy (Washington Sundar) is playing, Axar [Patel] is playing. Washy has scored a few runs, Axar is relatively new to Test cricket, so yes, they can contribute with the bat, but it’s not the same experience as a Jadeja, so your combination becomes different. When a Jadeja comes in you know, you’re assured that he’s responsible, he’s going to do the job for the team, and he knows that he’s done it again and again and again, so you can play a Kuldeep who’s primarily a wristspinning bowler. But yeah, it’s all about combinations. If people are not good enough, they won’t be part of Team India. It’s as simple as that. He’s a very, very skillful bowler, and he’ll always be in consideration to play whatever game is in front of us, purely because of what he brings with the ball, and yeah, his game is as good as it’s ever been.”On whether it’s right for teams to rotate their players in Test cricket
“I feel any format of the game is the right place for rotation. No human being can possibly go on for that many games throughout the year. Everyone needs to find windows of having some time off, having a break, especially with the bubble format, and the kind of systems you have to follow in the bubble, it can get very monotonous, and it’s very difficult to keep yourself excited about small things. I think these are things that need to be considered for as long as we play in the bubble. Outside of that, I think it depends on where you stand physically, more than mentally, but I think till the bubble exists, we need to keep the mental factor in the picture as well, because mental fatigue could be a huge, huge factor – playing within a restricted area, moving around within a restricted area.So yeah, these are things that one needs to be aware of, and hence our bench strength becomes way more important, because if you have guys who are hungry, ready, who read the game well, who understand where the game is heading, and are brave enough to take on opportunities or situations to take the team forward, then you can rotate very easily. You know there are 11 more guys who are ready to win a Test match for India, or a one-dayer or a T20, and that’s exactly what we’re striving towards, and we have a clear roadmap as to where we need to go in the next 4-5 years, so that our transition is not difficult at all – guys are ready, people can take breaks accordingly, as and when it’s required, and yeah, we have a clear plan that we need to move forward with. “

Craig Young and Mark Adair demolish Nigeria to put Ireland in playoffs

Kevin O’Brien smashes 17-ball 32 as Ireland canter to 67-run target in just 6.1 overs

The Report by Peter Della Penna in Abu Dhabi26-Oct-2019Craig Young’s 4 for 13, his T20I career-best returns, and Mark Adair’s 2 for 10 locked up Ireland’s place in the playoffs of the men’s T20 World Cup qualifiers as Nigeria were restricted to 66 for 9 before the target was knocked off with 13.5 overs to spare for an eight-wicket win in Abu Dhabi.Ireland, who pulled off their quickest T20 chase on the day, might even top Group B, but need Jersey to upset Oman on Sunday to produce a tie at 4-2 at the top of the table, with the automatic berth for the group winner at the T20 World Cup decided on net run-rate.Gareth Delany and Adair made the early inroads for Ireland after Nigeria decided to bat first at Sheikh Zayed Stadium. A googly from Delany bowled Daniel Akejun in the second over before a run out off Delany’s bowling got Ireland their second, Sulaimon Runsewe sent packing by George Dockrell. Adair claimed Daniel Gim in the fifth prodding away from his body for an edge behind to make it 13 for 3.Nigeria crawled to 33 for 4 by the halfway stage before Young made his first strike, bowling Chimezie Onwuzulike after he was late into a drive. His second came in the 17th when Isaac Okpe was fooled by a slower ball to be the bowled. Two more fell in the 19th when Sylvester Okpe became the third batsman to have his stumps knocked back by Young and Vincent Adewoye skied a slog to cover where Dockrell took a catch.With Ireland keen to lift their net run-rate above Oman to keep the door open to finish atop the group, Paul Stirling and Kevin O’Brien attacked throughout the Powerplay.Stirling made 11 before he edged behind driving hard at Okpe in the third over but O’Brien kept clearing the infield for six boundaries in his 32 off 17 balls before he fell in the sixth, bowled by Akejun backing away to drive over cover. Delany and Adair teamed to knock off the final 13 runs with the winning runs coming via three leg-byes.Nigeria have a final chance at a consolation win over Hong Kong on Sunday.