Crystal Palace: Butland set to leave

Crystal Palace goalkeeper Jack Butland is set to leave Selhurst Park this summer, according to The Sun journalist Tom Barclay.

What’s the word?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, Tom Barclay said: “If there’s a suitable destination, Jack Butland will probably leave this summer”.

This comes as ahead of Sam Johnstone’s pending arrival at the club on a free transfer.

It was The Sun who reported last month that newly-promoted Bournemouth and Scottish giants Rangers would be interested in signing the Englishman should he be allowed to leave the Eagles.

A move away from the club for Butland isn’t a surprise and it may give him a chance to revitalise his career elsewhere.

Supporters will be delighted

The £35k per week contract that Butland is on can represent a good saving for the club. He appeared just 15 times in all competitions last season and made 30 saves.

It means over the last campaign he cost the club £66.6k per save that he made, and in Johnstone they can get a backup goalkeeper who will be on a lot less money.

Once touted as a future England number one he has never really reached the potential expected of him, he’s not a bad goalkeeper by any means, but he’s not at Premier League level anymore.

Apart from a handful of seasons in the top flight with Stoke City, he hasn’t been a number one choice for a club in the division, and whilst he would make a good back up, the wages he’s on aren’t worth it.

It would also make the most sense for him to move to a club where he will get regular game time which will help prolong his career at the top level.

He would be an asset to any Championship club, with The Sun also reporting that Birmingham City and Middlesbrough are keeping tabs on his future, so it seems he’s not short on offers.

His departure would also give Palace the opportunity to re-invest in an outfield player who will be more of an asset in helping Vieira’s side finish in a higher position next season.

AND in other news: Patrick Vieira can now form “incredible” duo as Crystal Palace land “fabulous talent”…

Tottenham ‘offer’ made as report emerges from Spain

Tottenham Hotspur and by extension transfer chief Fabio Paratici have made an offer for one of Antonio Conte’s transfer targets as news emerges from Spain in the last 48 hours.

The Lowdown: Lilywhites push for more deals…

The signing of Yves Bissouma, preceded by Bosman deals for Ivan Perisic and Fraser Forster, are seemingly not the only pieces of business possible at Spurs before the 2022/23 Premier League season.

It is reliably believed that sporting director Fabio Paratici has his eyes on strengthening at least three more positions as Conte seeks a new right wing-back, a star striker and an assured central defensive upgrade for his back three.

The Latest: Mundo Deportivo share Spurs ‘offer’…

To that effect, Alessandro Bastoni of Inter Milan has been linked throughout this transfer window so far, but reports have now emerged involving another centre-back wanted by Conte.

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According to Mundo Deportivo (via Sport Witness), Barcelona defender Clement Lenglet has received an ‘offer’ from the north Londoners as they eye a possible two-year loan deal.

The Frenchman, who is set to evaluate this approach alongside another one from Marseille, has now scheduled a crunch meeting with his agent ‘by the end of this week’.

The Verdict: Good option?

Despite his lofty £170,000-per-week salary, this move could be viewed as the most economical option overall for Spurs if Barca agree to a two-year loan deal.

Paying no lofty transfer fee, like they would have to for the likes of Bastoni, could save Paratici and Spurs a great deal of finance, but we believe that investing in more quality targets is far more advantageous in the long run.

Lenglet has struggled for a regular starting place at Barca over the last year despite once showing real promise, and he should perhaps come as a fallback option at best.

Big Everton transfer news on Lingard

Everton are a candidate for the signature of Jesse Lingard, according to Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport (via BBC Sport). 

The lowdown

Manchester United officially confirmed on 1 June that Lingard would be leaving the club when his contract expires at the end of the month.

Clubs will now be jostling for the signature of the Englishman, believed to earn £75,000-per-week at Old Trafford.

Lingard is a versatile attacking option, capable of operating on both flanks as well as in central areas.

As a result of ‘previous excesses’ in the transfer market, Frank Lampard does not have a ‘huge’ budget at his disposal this summer to strengthen the squad, and so free transfers may be particularly appealing (via The Athletic).

This has also led to links with Burnley’s James Tarkowski, for whom Everton are believed to be in pole position.

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The latest

The report states that Jose Mourinho would be interested in a potential reunion with Lingard at Roma.

But they’ll have to convince the 29-year-old to overlook Premier League suitors, including Everton and West Ham.

Lingard, of course, spent the latter half of the 2020/21 campaign at The London Stadium, which could give West Ham a key edge.

The verdict

Lingard is the right calibre of player for Everton to pursue.

He boasts 165 games of Premier League experience, scoring 29 goals and providing 17 assists in his top flight career to date.

What’s more, he’s racked up 32 caps for England, the last of which came as recently as October 2021.

Lampard may be a long-term admirer, based on comments he made live on BT Sport in 2018.

“I really like him,” he said. “I think his game’s improved so much.”

With Everton on the trail of both Lingard and Tarkowski, it’s clear that the manager is ready to make the most of Bosman deal opportunities in the coming weeks.

In other news, Frank McAvennie reacts to a potentially significant blow for Everton.

Everton eye a move for Joao Palhinha

Everton are in need of making some big changes at Goodison Park this summer after a troubling season and now a former transfer target has been speculated with a move to Merseyside ahead of the window opening.

What’s the latest?

According to Portuguese news outlet Record (via Sport Witness), Everton are reigniting their interest in Sporting CP midfielder Joao Palhinha this summer.

As per the report, Everton and Leicester City are ‘following the midfielder’ as it was revealed that the player is looking to leave his current club, and he is currently protected by a €60m (£51m) release clause, but the minimum the club would be willing to accept is €25m (£21m).

Miles better than Allan

There is no doubt that improvements must be made at Everton to ensure they don’t find themselves battling relegation next season and upgrading certain key positions will make a huge difference to how they compete in the Premier League next season for a much more comfortable spot in the league table.

When you compare Palhinha to current midfielder Allan who has been linked with a move to Lazio this summer, the Portuguese ace is clearly an upgrade in terms of reliability and ability to look after the ball better when holding possession in the centre of the pitch.

According to Squawka, Palhinha has scored more goals, completed more passes, has a better pass accuracy, made more tackles and has been victorious in more aerial and ground duels than Allan this season in one less league appearance.

The midfielder was hailed “special” by Sporting boss Ruben Amorim in an interview with Record, who told the publication:

“The credit belongs to Palhinha, that grew up that way. I often tell Palhinha that he is very good without the ball and with the ball. More than a tactical coach, I get it in Palhinha’s head that he is a special player.”

With that being said, Lampard will need to make an attractive offer to secure the signing of the 26-year-old midfielder over Leicester and will likely ramp up the interest depending on the situation with Allan when the transfer window opens next week.

AND in other news: Forget Richarlison: Everton eye move for “fantastic” £60k-p/w gem, Lampard loves him

Leeds: Firpo has disasterclass vs City

Leeds United’s quest to remain in the Premier League took a nervy twist on Saturday evening after the Yorkshire outfit were thrashed by league leaders Manchester City at Elland Road.

Jesse Marsch’s side are now sat precariously in the only survival spot above the drop zone, just five points clear of Everton, who hold two games in hand on the Whites – one of which is later this afternoon as they face Frank Lampard’s former club, Chelsea.

That gap could close in half and that’ll only prolong Lees’ relegation fears.

Of course, the Peacocks weren’t expected to see off City in any shape or form but it’s not as if the performance was encouraging whatsoever.

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The defending champions had four different goalscorers and managed triple the number of shots on target in west Yorkshire this weekend.

Rodri headed home Phil Foden’s free-kick before the England international was involved in another set-piece, with Ruben Dias flicking on for Nathan Ake to finish. Gabriel Jesus also got on the scoresheet before veteran substitute Fernandinho finished off a quartet of goals in injury time.

At left-back, Junior Firpo endured another nightmare against top-quality opposition – a recurring theme since his summer move from FC Barcelona.

He was among Leeds’ poorest-rated players by SofaScore, so it’s no wonder the American hooked him off in the 67th minute, having also received a booking just six minutes into the encounter.

And that largely summed up his night against the likes of Foden and Raheem Sterling, who certainly had his number. The Dominican Republic-born defender won only two of nine duels (22%) and was dribbled past a whopping five times, epitomising his struggles.

Against the Citizens earlier in the campaign, WhoScored graded him a 5.31, whilst he has also notched sub-6.5 displays against West Ham (5.97), Manchester United (5.87) and Tottenham Hotspur (6.06).

Once again, he’s proving that he may just not be cut out for the big time in England.

It’s not as if he contributed offensively either, failing to register a single accurate cross or provide a single key pass, also via SofaScore.

During the game, the £55k-per-week liability was slammed by Premier League commentator Andy Townsend, who described him as “woeful” and “silly” for one particularly poor moment during the first half.

As such, it was yet another disastrous outing from the summer arrival and ultimately, one that let Marsch down as he had trusted the left-back to start the contest at Elland Road on Saturday.

AND in other news, Bid planned: Leeds could unearth their new Stuart Dallas in “unbelievable” 18 y/o…

Ben Stokes' epic innings leads England to record-breaking run-chase

Stats highlights from an unbelievable run-chase at Headingley as England levelled the series

S Rajesh25-Aug-20191 – Partnership of more than 76 for the 10th wicket in a fourth-innings Test win. The only other instance of more runs being scored was also in 2019, when Kusal Perera and Vishwa Fernando put together 78 as Sri Lanka recovered from 226 for 9 to reach the victory target of 304 against South Africa in Durban in February this year.359 – The target that England chased down was their highest ever in Test history. Their previous best was 332, way back in 1928 in Melbourne. It’s the joint ninth-highest by any team, and the second-best at Headingley, next only to Australia’s 404 in 1948.ESPNcricinfo Ltd6 – Instances of Australia losing by one wicket, which is nearly 50% of the 14 such results in Test history. No other team has been at the receiving end of such a narrow defeat more than three times. Since 1990, Australia have suffered four one-wicket defeats – the previous three were to Pakistan in 1994, to West Indies in 1999, and to India in 2010. This is England’s fourth such win.67 – England’s first-innings total. There are only three instances of teams scoring fewer runs in an innings, in a Test match they ended up winning, and they were all in the 1880s.2 – Higher scores than Ben Stokes’ unbeaten 135 in fourth-innings wins for England: Mark Butcher scored an unbeaten 173 at the same ground against the same opponents in 2001, and Jack Brown’s 140 in 1895. This is the fourth-highest by a No. 5 batsman in a fourth-innings win, and in three of those four innings, the team eventually won by one wicket.ESPNcricinfo Ltd74 – Runs scored by Stokes after the fall of the ninth England wicket, out of the 76 runs that were scored in the partnership. Jack Leach’s contribution was one run. In terms of balls faced, Stokes played 45 to Leach’s 17.8 – Sixes struck by Stokes, which is the third-highest ever by a batsman in the fourth innings of a Test. Only Nathan Astle (11) and Tim Southee (9) have hit more, but both were in defeats. In a win, the next best is six.

Sri Lanka need to solve the Dilruwan Perera conundrum

By impressing in the role he hasn’t been picked for, the frontline spinner has made his case as a batting allrounder

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Galle28-Jul-2017″I will do whatever the team needs.” It is the most lukewarm answer in cricket. But then, Dilruwan Perera is not a hot-blooded man. If you yelled at him on the street, or cut him off in traffic, he would probably go home and discuss his options with his lawyer.He’s an asset to this team at present – though perhaps not the one they expected him to be. In 2016’s mid-year Galle Test, Dilruwan claimed 10 for 99 and sent the match hurtling to a two-and-a-half day finish, striking almighty terror with his slider – a ball that on the surface is as innocuous as he is, yet on that occasion was like a grenade into the opposition dressing room.Since then, his bowling returns have been more middle-of-the-road than menacing. In seven Tests – five of which have been at home – he has taken 25 wickets at 40.96. In three innings he has gone wicketless, and never has he claimed more than three at a time.He was the fastest Sri Lanka bowler to 50 Test wickets, so there was hope once that if Rangana Herath ever hangs up his extra-elastic Test kit, here is a willing and ready replacement. There was never Herath’s subtlety in Dilruwan’s game, but his bowling was not without its own cunning. He didn’t size batsmen up as quickly or effectively, but in varying his trajectory, drifting the ball both ways, and never over-using his excellent topspinner, Dilruwan had a drawer-full of traps as well.Now the wickets have dried up and he is that annoying selection quandary: the cricketer who keeps performing, but not quite in the discipline he was picked for. He claimed 3 for 159 in the lost Test match against Bangladesh in March, but without his second-innings half-century, Sri Lanka would not have stood a chance in the fourth innings of that match. He sent down 54 overs and took only two wickets against Zimbabwe, but if it were not for his 29 not out in the second innings, Sri Lanka may have stumbled to a shock loss in a year full of hands-in-heads defeats.So what to do? It may be that with his spirited shellacking on the third morning at Galle, he has shown Sri Lanka’s selectors what he is good for. Maybe he is not Herath’s replacement after all – but a different sort of cricketer altogether. With his adventurous cross-bat shots, and his daring trips down the pitch to the spinners, he has, perhaps unwittingly, suggested he can be a balance-giving allrounder who allows four other bowlers to play. Think of him here as a more smiley, less-bearded Moeen Ali of the East.A possible criticism is that he has not yet scored runs consistently for long enough. But have any of Sri Lanka’s batsmen? And chief selector Sanath Jayasuriya should know Dilruwan’s batting pedigree better than most. He opened the batting with him in Dilruwan’s ODI debut in 2007 – a lifetime ago.Moving him up to No. 7 and accommodating a new frontline bowler has several benefits. In the short term, it will see Sri Lanka fill the void left by the injury to Asela Gunaratne. Team management had toyed with playing five frontline bowlers even in the ongoing match, but had decided against it, largely because they expected Gunaratne’s offbreaks to be of use. Now, if they merely draft in Dhananjaya de Silva into that vacated spot, they will be lighter on the bowling front than they have already been proven to be in Galle.If Sri Lanka do not beef up their attack for the second Test at SSC, they will have completely failed to take stock of the current disparity between these teams. In any case, fielders have grassed so many catches in recent months that it is now clear Sri Lanka can’t do with an attack that takes less than 30 wickets in a Test.Maybe they can take a cue too, from their most impressive Test win of the year: against Bangladesh in Galle. On that occasion, Dilruwan had batted at No. 7, and Sri Lanka had won handsomely. Five bowlers will not be required on every pitch, but the three most recent Tests (including the ongoing one) are proof there is a penetration problem. There is an easy fix to this.”I will do whatever the team needs,” was the reply Dilruwan gave when asked if he would be happy with a little extra responsibility with the bat. He doesn’t seem the kind to demand to be promoted up the order. But Sri Lanka might do well to put the option to him, so that at least he and his lawyer can mull it over.

The right decision at the wrong time

No one disputes that Taskin Ahmed’s action is suspect, but Bangladesh will rue that the bowler was not called before the World T20

Sidharth Monga23-Mar-20164:14

Chappell: Taskin, Sunny ban unfair to Bangladesh

Taskin Ahmed has played 27 international matches since his debut in April 2014. He is yet to play a Test, but his pace and bounce are two reasons Bangladesh are hopeful they can move away from being a spin-oriented side.Two of Taskin’s 27 matches were against India in Dhaka, in June 2015. Rod Tucker was one of the on-field umpires in each of those matches. In those two matches, Taskin bowled 11 short balls, five of which were proper bouncers. One of them even got him Shikhar Dhawan’s wicket. Taskin came into the World Twenty20 with no official having ever cast any doubt over his action.Tucker was the standing umpire again in Taskin’s first match at the World T20, against Netherlands in Dharamsala. It was the first international match in India for nearly every Bangladesh player in the team. In that match, Taskin bowled four short balls, but none of them were what you would call a proper bouncer. Yet, at the end of the match, the Bangladesh team management received a report from the match officials that they had concerns over the legality of Taskin’s action; he had played 23 international matches over two years without any suspicion raised over his action.Taskin subsequently underwent an independent assessment in Chennai and, according to a BCB lawyer, the report of that assessment says that three of the nine bouncers that Taskin bowled in a span of three minutes were chucked. Taskin is now not allowed to bowl in international cricket until he gets his action cleared by the ICC.Bangladesh are feeling hard done by. Heath Streak, the Bangladesh bowling coach, says he has studied the footage and does not see any change in Taskin’s action from the Asia Cup or that India series, to this World T20. Chandika Hathurasingha, their coach, said a day after the report was originally filed: “If they [the officials] have a concern about my bowlers, I have a concern about their actions as well. I don’t see anything wrong [with the actions]. They have bowled the same way as the last 12 months. As you said if they have officiated the matches they have been playing, they must have seen something different yesterday. That’s all I can say.”What has especially irked the Bangladesh camp is the timing of this report. What has suddenly gone wrong, they wonder. It is not like the sudden calling of Saeed Ajmal and Sunil Narine, who too had been allowed to bowl for a long time. In their case, there was a certain watershed moment, a clear line drawn by the ICC to say no to illegal actions. Taskin’s case has come up after this turning point, which is why it begs the question, why now?However, the argument questioning how the umpires could know if the bouncer was suspect when Taskin did not even bowl a bouncer is spurious. None of the umpires in the match said that Taskin chucks, or chucks a particular delivery. They only raised a suspicion about the action, which they wanted checked at a proper independent lab. In no way was Taskin stopped from participating in matches until it was proven that the action was indeed illegal under the ICC code.Taskin Ahmed played 23 international matches without any doubt cast over his action•AFPWhat is indeed unfortunate is the timing. Bangladesh, and Taskin, have been preparing for this event for a long time. They prepared those green pitches in Asia Cup because they expected high-quality fast bowling in this event, especially in Dharamsala, which is reputed to be a hard and bouncy pitch. They got this news immediately after the first match. Now they probably wish they knew it earlier, that some umpire had suspected Taskin’s action earlier.We must not for a moment forget that the right call has been made, and that it has been scientifically proven. Even Bangladesh are only contesting the procedures and the timing, not the actual decision. If the action has not changed, and if the umpires earlier did not raise any suspicion, questions need to be asked of those umpires too.One quick look will tell you only a handful of those umpires from the ICC elite panel officiated these matches; there was no elite umpire during the Asia Cup that finished three days before the World T20. After the last World Cup, this World T20 was the first time Taskin bowled in the presence of more than one elite umpire. The decision to report a suspicion is often a collective call. It could perhaps be more than a coincidence that he has been called the first time in a year that he has bowled in front of four elite umpires.To report somebody is a big move. You need the support of your team of umpires. It is possible there was not enough as Taskin played limited-overs cricket only at home, during which you have only one elite umpire, that too in ODIs. You need to be sure to make such a report. Perhaps Tucker did not suspect it enough to make an official report in those two matches. Perhaps he took his time to make up his mind; perhaps for the first time he got a team of umpires that all agreed on Taskin’s action.There are simply not enough elite umpires to stand in every international match. There is a reason why the ones in the elite panel are there. They are also more empowered, more confident. Hence, at a big world event the scrutiny increases. It is still extremely unfortunate for Bangladesh because they deserved to know earlier.Only the umpires who stood in Taskin’s earlier matches can say why they did not raise the suspicion. It is a bit like a few uneventful no-balls going undetected but the one that takes the wicket being replayed and thus called. Had he been called earlier, the bowler might not have missed on that wicket. Had Taskin been suspected earlier, he might have not missed on parts of this World T20.

Sub-par batting shows costing Pakistan

Pakistan have both their selection and batting to get right in a game against a team that is in as much of a hole as they are

Brydon Coverdale in Christchurch20-Feb-20150:53

‘We are not panicking’ – Misbah-ul-Haq

What is a par score in this World Cup? Ask most players and they’ll say something around 300. Since arriving down under in late January, Pakistan have played three ODIs and have been dismissed for 210, 250 and 224. In golf it’s good to be under par. In cricket it’s not. And Pakistan’s batting has been decidedly sub-par in the New Zealand/Australia conditions over the past few weeks.It should be mentioned that Pakistan won both of their World Cup warm-up games, against Bangladesh and England. But they were victories that came from chasing 247 and 251 respectively. To be a force in this tournament, Pakistan will have to be able to score 300-plus. And that will be all the harder while uncertainty surrounds their batting line-up.Pakistan are mercurial in every sense; their selections are as hard to predict as their performances. Some sort of change was required, for opener Mohammad Hafeez was ruled out of the World Cup through injury. But the logical move of replacing him with Nasir Jamshed was ignored, and instead Younis Khan was asked to open for the third time in 262 ODIs.Sarfraz Ahmed kept wicket in their past 10 ODIs before this World Cup, and was third on their run tally in that time. Then he was dropped on the eve of the tournament and Umar Akmal took the gloves. Haris Sohail went from No. 5 to first drop, Sohaib Maqsood came in for his first ODI in four months, and of the top six only Ahmed Shehzad, Misbah-ul-Haq and Umar stayed in their spots.”There’s no real panic with the batting,” Misbah said on the eve of Saturday’s match against West Indies in Christchurch. “Ahmed Shehzad did well in the last game, Umar Akmal and Haris Sohail have been doing well of late. It’s unfortunate that they had one bad game [against India], Haris got bogged down and then out. It’s not like Haris is not reading the ball well or anything; he was playing well and then got out.”There’s no reason to panic. That said, we do have to capitalise on our batting starts and hope that five of six batsmen get into form and get bat on ball so we can get big scores. We’ve discussed this in meetings, the importance of converting starts.”If you look at execution, it’s also pretty fine. Two games ago, Sohaib Maqsood finished a great match [against Bangladesh]. He was practicing hard, was in good nick, got 93. Umar Akmal did well against England, he executed his plans and finished them. It’s just one game against India that he failed. It was unfortunate that these two batsmen missed out there.”Perhaps the panic will set in if Pakistan follow their loss to India with defeat at the hands of West Indies, who opened their tournament by losing to Ireland. The similarities between the two sides are striking: both are without their best bowler due to questions over bowling actions; both have struggled for form in recent months; and both lost their World Cup opening match.”It’s an important game for us and also for West Indies,” Misbah said. “We both need to win this game. So I think both teams will be looking forward to this game, mentally and physically ready for that. If we need to do well in this World Cup this is an important game, and both teams need to win. We know that. Everybody is focused and trying hard.”Pakistan have entered this World Cup without Saeed Ajmal, the No. 1 ODI bowler in the world, and West Indies without Sunil Narine, the No. 2 in the world. But Jason Holder, the West Indies captain, said his side had started to become accustomed to making do without Narine.”He has done tremendously well for us over the years,” Holder said of Narine. “For him to miss any team is a big loss. We’ve just got to move on from that. We have capable players in the likes of Sulieman Benn and Nikita Miller, who are two quality spinners for us as well. It’s all about them getting their opportunity and performing for us.”We both [West Indies and Pakistan] haven’t been playing up to our potential and we’ve lost a few players. It should be a very entertaining game. I guess whoever executes their plans better on the day will come out on top.”

Turmoil turns to rejoicing for emergent Zimbabwe

After financial trouble and player walkouts, Zimbabwe enjoyed a day filled with nothing but joy as they bested a top Test team for the first time since 2001

Firdose Moonda in Harare14-Sep-2013When Tendai Chatara hit Adnan Akmal on the knee roll to strike for Zimbabwe early on the final morning, he ran to fine leg to celebrate. Somewhat bewildered, his team-mates followed.For each of the two wickets he claimed afterwards, they did the same thing. The area of the ground they enjoyed their successes in was not near the supporters’ club stand or the main building. In fact, there were hardly any people there at all.So, what was so special about it that the entire team congregated there as they approached victory, Brendan Taylor was asked after their thrilling 24-run win over Pakistan in the second Test. “I don’t know, you’ll have to ask Tendai,” he said. Andy Waller concurred, adding that he too didn’t know why the wicket-taking glee was on the opposite end of the ground from the change room. The question was asked and Chatara, a shy 22-year-old overawed by media attention, just laughed. “I also don’t know,” he said.It turns out the place he ran towards on instinct is the direction of his hometown, Mutare. “The ghetto,” he called it, when talking much more seriously about how a small-town man felt on making it on the international stage. “Coming from the ghetto to here… it just feels nice to contribute,” he said.A few years ago, the chances of Zimbabwe finding someone like Chatara would have been slim. He is not from one of the main cricket centres – Harare or Bulawayo – does not have the same advantage of going to a traditional cricket school and was considered a “raw talent” until very recently. That Zimbabwe Cricket unearthed and nurtured him and that he put in a match-defining performance, picking up his maiden five-wicket haul, is testament to how the game has changed and even progressed in the years since Zimbabwe last beat a top team.Victory against an opposition other than Bangladesh last came 12 years ago, when Zimbabwe beat India at the same venue. The team that played then and the circumstances they played in are completely different to the one who took the field this time. In 2001, salaries were being paid, the game had yet to undergo the efforts to make it more accessible to the majority and the country was still relatively stable.Fast-forward to the present and Zimbabwe and its cricket have been through significant change. Economic crisis and dollarisation has taken the economy from difficult times to a new kind of security, which has still left many ordinary people struggling to keep up with increased prices. The white-player walkout, transformation and a self-imposed exile from Test cricket left the game in tatters and triggered its slow and painful recovery.Success on their Test comeback in 2011 after six years in exile was quickly overshadowed by five straight defeats in the longest format. The construction towards a competitive team seemed to have unraveled with crushing defeats at the World Twenty20 last year and the ODI series against India. The very fabric of the game itself seemed to have worn thin because of the financial difficulty Zimbabwe Cricket found itself in.The first signs of money problems were brought to the world’s attention through Tatenda Taibu on the Test comeback. The since-retired wicket-keeper said “nothing had changed” in terms of unkept promises. They mounted up more steadily recently.Heath Streak was laid off as bowling coach ahead of the April series against Bangladesh because of a financial concern. And the players who were not centrally contracted wanted to strike because the winter contracts they were being offered were not considered adequate. ZC reached an agreement with everyone except Craig Ervine, who opted for club cricket in Ireland.

A few years ago, the chances of Zimbabwe finding someone like Chatara would have been slim. He is not from one of the main cricket centres – Harare or Bulawayo – and does not have the same advantage of going to a traditional cricket school. That Zimbabwe Cricket unearthed and nurtured him, and that he put in a match-defining performance, is testament to how the game has changed in the years since Zimbabwe last beat a top team

Matters ballooned before this series. Having not seen their July or August salaries, the players formed a union, for the first time in decade and threatened to boycott first the whole tour, then the third ODI, then the Tests, unless paid.Each time, they extended their deadline and eventually ZC showed them the money, at the expense of some staff. Still, they lost Kyle Jarvis to premature retirement and Graeme Cremer and Sean Williams, who did not want to play unless paid. Williams has since committed to Zimbabwean cricket.But if you were at Harare Sports Club (HSC) on Saturday afternoon and you did not know any of this, you could not have suspected it. What you would have seen were a triumphant group of players, tumbling over each other as though there was not a care in the world.At the heart of that, you would have seen Chatara. The man with a five-wicket haul in his fourth Test, surrounded by team-mates, many of whom would not have had the opportunity to play for Zimbabwe before because underlying prejudices would have kept them out.You would also have seen Taylor, the captain who a decade ago decided not to join his compatriots in a walk-out because he was “too young to understand or want to get involved in the politics,” and because he wanted to play international cricket.Taylor’s desire to compete at the highest level is what has kept him in Zimbabwe despite offers from afar like one rumoured to have come from Hampshire. “This is the ultimate,” he has said in previous interviews. This time, it really was.

****

Two of Zimbabwe’s most loyal cricket supporters are a fifty-something year-old white man called Neil and a black man of about half his age, Eddie. Neil has been coming to matches at HSC for as long as many can remember. He does not miss a ball. Neither does Eddie, who travels from his home more than 200 kilometres away for matches in the capital. Often, especially early in the morning, they are the only two supporters in the ground.The largely empty stands have led some to believe cricket is not a popular or marketable game in Zimbabwe. Others think the ticket prices are too steep but at US$2 all ZC can do is open the gates for free – which may not be the worst idea – if any reduction is sought. The truth is that just like elsewhere in the world, Test cricket attendances are dwindling because people have other commitments. That does not mean they aren’t following in some way.As the day grows longer and some of them have hours to spare, they start filtering in. One of the open stands is occupied by the supporters’ club – a vociferous group who break out into popular songs, which those who know Zimbabwean cricket will recognise. , accompanied by saluting to attention as a soldier does, is one of them. chanted when someone is a run or wicket away from a milestone, is another. made only a brief appearance in this match, after Zimbabwe took the ninth wicket and before the last man was run out. When that happened, there was only joy. The players’ huddle, Shingi Masakadza charging down the stairs with the Zimbabwean flag in hand and groups of people who were in the ground celebrating would be some of the lasting image of this win.Afterwards, Eddie waited for the post-match press conferences to end so he could congratulate his team. Neil seemed to have already left. No doubt he would have been overjoyed. He had said, on all the previous days that he wanted nothing more than a Zimbabwean win, especially because he had persisted in coming to support them through everything.The team did a quiet victory lap of the ground, waving and taking photographs with those who remained. They began with the groundstaff, who the umpires had applauded for getting the pitch Test quality in just two and a half days and who often go unnoticed and underpaid despite the hours they put in.In Zimbabwe, cricket is small enough to be about the people who may not command any attention at all in other places. Those who rolled the pitch and cut the grass were among the first to be thanked and to join in the festivities. A fines meeting, a party at the Centurion and all the usual revelries followed.People will talk about this win for years to come. But one gets the sense that tomorrow life will go on. Zimbabwe’s cricketers will put their feet up but could be back in training by Monday. What they will have to work towards is continuing playing a game that’s getting better, more inclusive and more competitive with every passing series. And then one day, they may have even bigger things to celebrate.

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