Billy Gilmour could join Everton on loan

Everton securing the signing of Chelsea midfielder Billy Gilmour on loan would ‘suit all parties’, according to journalist Paul Brown.

The Lowdown: Tricky loan spell

The 20-year-old spent the 2021/22 campaign on loan in the Premier League with Norwich City.

Whilst the Scotland international made 24 top-flight appearances for the Norfolk club, he came under fire for a number of his performances.

Gilmour was singled out by some travelling Canaries fans for his display during Norwich’s 3-0 pummeling at the hands of Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park in late December, with manager Dean Smith later coming out and defending the youngster.

The Latest: Brown’s claim on Gilmour

90min have reported that another loan move for Gilmour is on the cards, with Fulham, Bournemouth, and Rangers all named as possible destinations for the 2022/23 season.

However, with Frank Lampard now in full flow with the Toffees, Brown believes that a move to Everton could be perfect for the young Scotsman.

Speaking with GiveMeSport, the Daily Star journalist claimed: “I think if Chelsea were to allow him on loan again, I suspect they would quite like him to go and play for Lampard because they know Lampard will look after him.

“And I think even if he doesn’t play every game, he would be an asset, so that seems like a move that would suit all parties to me.”

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/everton-news-5/” title=”Everton news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Verdict: Good move for all

Former Rangers striker Kenny Miller hailed the 20-year-old during their time together at the Glasgow club, claiming that Gilmour is a “special talent”.

Whilst in charge at Chelsea, Lampard was also full of praise for the youngster. Dubbing him an “outstanding” player, the current Toffees manager handed the Scotland gem 17 senior appearances for the west London outfit, two of which came in the Champions League.

Therefore, despite an underwhelming spell at Norwich, a loan move to Everton could revitalise Gilmour’s career in the Premier League, particularly with a trusted, familiar face in Lampard to guide him along.

In other news: Frank McAvennie has reacted to this behind-the-scenes Everton development

Joyce drops huge Liverpool team news claim

Liverpool midfield pair Fabinho and Thiago are looking likely to feature in the Champions League final, reliable journalist Paul Joyce has confirmed.

The Lowdown: Liverpool face Madrid in Paris

Jurgen Klopp’s men face a gargantuan match on Saturday evening, as they take on Real Madrid in Paris in what is undoubtedly club football’s biggest game.

Liverpool are looking to win a seventh European Cup in their history, while most of these players are aiming to taste Champions League glory for the second time.

Fabinho and Thiago have been injury doubts in the lead-up to the game but a huge update has emerged regarding their involvement at the Stade de France.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-liverpool-transfer-news-34/” title=”Latest Liverpool transfer news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=“none”]

The Latest: Joyce drops big team news claim

Taking to Twitter on before the match, Joyce confirmed Klopp’s comments over the duo, a hugely positive update.

“Jurgen Klopp says ‘it looks good’ on the fitness of both Thiago Alcantara and Fabinho ahead of the CL final.”

James Pearce of The Athletic had said earlier in the week that Thiago’s fitness in particular is ‘massive’.

Liverpool’s Greatest European Nights! Click here to OWN yours now!

The Verdict: Massive boost for Reds

The importance of both Fabinho and Thiago cannot be underplayed, with the pair arguably the difference between Liverpool securing glory or not.

The control and quality that they bring to the midfield are priceless – their record together is outstanding, too – and without them, the likes of Toni Kroos and Luka Modric could dominate proceedings.

It feels highly likely that Fabinho will start, having trained for most of the week, and while Thiago could be on the substitutes’ bench, Klopp’s words certainly suggest that he too could even be involved from the off.

In other news, one Liverpool player has hinted at a summer exit. Find out who it is here.

Sunderland transfer news on Bellingham

Sunderland are interested in Birmingham City starlet Jobe Bellingham, the younger brother of Borussia Dortmund’s Jude Bellingham. 

The lowdown

The younger Bellingham still plays for Birmingham City, where his sibling made also made his breakthrough. Dortmund agreed a fee that could rise beyond £30million to recruit Jude from St Andrew’s, and the Blues even retired the player’s number 22 shirt.

Jobe, 16, made his Championship debut against Preston in January and also played the final half-hour on the last day of the season against Blackburn Rovers.

An attacking midfielder who can also play out wide, he too has been linked with Dortmund.

The latest

The Daily Mail’s Craig Hope broke the transfer news on Monday as Sunderland ‘explore [an] ambitious move’ for Bellingham.

They apparently ‘invited’ the player and his family to the Stadium of Light for a ‘recent home game’.

Hope stresses that Sunderland will win have to win promotion to the Championship for the deal to be viable.

The verdict

Bellingham’s first-team chances have been limited, but he’s underlined his potential at youth level.

He’s scored five goals in nine matches in the Under-18 Premier League, and that’s helped to earn him 13 appearances at Under-23 level, as well as eight caps for England’s U17s. (via Transfermarkt).

Tellingly, he’s already valued at £450,000 even though he’s still so young and has barely featured at the senior level.

Can Sunderland compete if top clubs like Dortmund are sniffing around too? Well, they may have a key advantage.

As Hope points out, sporting director Kristjaan Speakman was previously the academy director at Birmingham and enjoys a close relationship with the player’s parents – Mark and Denise Bellingham – given the role he played in Jude’s development.

Sunderland hope that this connection will be key.

In other news, The Black Cats risk losing this key figure. 

Varun Chakravarthy ready for second coming at Kolkata Knight Riders

From being taken apart by Sunil Narine to bowling alongside him, the mystery spinner’s career has come full circle

Deivarayan Muthu20-Dec-2019Who writes your scripts, Varun Chakravarthy? The 28-year old Tamil Nadu mystery spinner hit paydirt in the IPL auction for a second successive year, emerging as the highest-paid uncapped Indian, with Kolkata Knight Riders shelling out INR 4 crore (USD 563,000 approx.) for his seven variations. At last year’s auction, he was the joint-highest-paid player overall, earning INR 8.4 crore, 42 times his base price of INR 20 lakh.Varun played a solitary game for Kings XI Punjab in IPL 2019, before a finger fracture sidelined him for a lengthy period. Varun hasn’t played competitive cricket since; he had only resumed training “two-three months back.”It would not have been surprising if nobody wanted him for IPL 2020. However, Knight Riders outbid Royal Challengers Bangalore and got him on board. In fact, Varun himself didn’t see that coming, although he had bowled at the Knight Riders nets last year and had the franchise furiously bidding for him even in 2018.ALSO READ – Decoding the mystery: Who is Varun Chakravarthy“I didn’t expect to be picked at all this year,” Varun tells ESPNcricinfo a day after the auction. “I was just watching the auction alone yesterday in Chennai (in contrast to watching the madness unfold with his entire family in his hometown Thanjavur last year). My parents were in my hometown this time.”I was watching the auction with a little bit of hope that I’ll be picked and I’m thankful to DK [Dinesh Karthik] and Abhishek Nayar [Knight Riders mentor] for showing confidence in me. [I’m happy]. I’ve spoken to my parents and sister, and they’re pleased for me too.”Varun Chakravarthy was the highest-paid uncapped Indian at the IPL 2020 auction•ESPNcricinfo LtdThings weren’t as rosy for Varun during his IPL debut, against Knight Riders in Kolkata. He had a harsh initiation, leaking 25 runs in his first over, the worst start for an IPL debutant. Varun then hurt his finger and was ruled out of IPL 2019.In IPL 2020, he will return to Eden Gardens as a Knight Rider. He could potentially bowl in tandem with Sunil Narine, who had whacked Varun for three sixes and a four in that 25-run over. A few months before that match-up, Varun had been bowling with Narine at the Knight Riders nets and had even impressed Narine’s spin coach Carl Crowe, who is also part of the franchise’s support staff.Varun’s career has had more twists and turns than a whodunit. He was a wicketkeeper-batsman until 17. Then, after being rejected multiple times in age-group cricket, he took up an architecture degree and then worked as a freelancer. But he got bored of it and turned into a mystery spinner.More fun facts: before he burst into the 20-over Tamil Nadu Premier League (TNPL), Varun had made a brief appearance in a Tamil movie called , starring actor Vishnu Vishal, who was R Ashwin’s first club captain.In his first IPL season, Varun got to play alongside Ashwin. Now he has a chance to exchange notes with mystery spinner, Narine. After Knight Riders scooped up Varun, their CEO Venky Mysore said he “kind of reminds” the franchise of a young Narine, when they’d first picked him for IPL 2012.”Personally, I’d learnt a lot from R Ashwin at Punjab,” Varun says. “Working with Narine, I just want to learn whatever I can from him. I’m just like a student in front of somebody like Narine.”Sunil Narine took 25 runs off Varun Chakravarthy’s first over in the IPL•BCCIVarun had attracted the attention of the IPL talents scouts during TNPL 2018, when Michael Hussey, one of the TV commentators, singled him out as an exciting talent. All told, Varun bowled 40 overs in TNPL 2018, of which 125 balls were dots. His economy rate of 4.7 was the best among bowlers who bowled at least 15 overs.Varun was slated to make his return from injury in TNPL 2019, but things didn’t go according to plan. He was merely part of the Madurai Panthers squad earlier this year, but didn’t get to play a game. Since then Varun has enrolled himself into Primal Patterns, where most of the top-tier Tamil Nadu cricketers work out under Shanker Basu, the former India trainer.”I’ve been working hard on my fitness with Basu sir,” Varun says. “For the past two-three months, I’ve had one session a day. We’ve been working on gymming and strengthening. I’ve also started playing a few low-key games and I’m confident of bowling the googlies and carrom balls again. I’m still training and preparing to come back.”Varun also reckons that he’s in a better space to deal with the immense pressure that the IPL brings, having had a brief crack at it before.”I’ve lost hope many times over the last few months, but I’ve managed to train and get better,” he says. “The previous experience [with Kings XI] has helped me grow as a player and person, but now I need to focus on what’s in hand. I’m preparing for the next IPL and I hope it’ll be a fresh start for me at KKR.”

Who's Adam Milne's most prized wicket?

And what is the strangest talent he possesses?

Interview by Jack Wilson21-Oct-2017You are one of the quickest bowlers on the planet – so how old were you when you first hit a batsman in the head?
I think I was around 15 when I first hit another lad. I don’t think I got properly quick until I was 18, so a few years after that.Who was your fast-bowling idol growing up?
Shane Bond, as far as New Zealand goes, was one of the best. I always used to enjoy the way he played the game when I was a kid. Then there’s two others I really admire – Jacques Kallis and Jimmy Anderson.Whose wicket do you prize the most among those you have taken?
It would have to be Kumar Sangakarra. I got him caught behind in my second ODI. I’ll remember that forever.Talk us through the best ball you have ever bowled.
It was in a domestic game against Otago and I was bowling to Michael Bracewell, a left-handed batter. I gave him a big awayswinger first ball, which started outside leg and took the top of off. That was pretty sweet.Which batsman of the past would you love to have bowled to?
Can’t it just be anyone who would give their wicket away? () There’s so many legends of the game with incredible talent. It would have been tough to bowl at Sachin Tendulkar and I never got the pleasure of doing that. The same goes with Brian Lara and Jacques Kallis. I’ll pick any one of those three.Who is the best captain you have ever played under?
God, that’s a tough one. You’re throwing me under the bus here! Brendon McCullum was fantastic to play for during the period where we reached the World Cup final in 2015. But now we have Kane Williamson and he’s very, very good too, and goes about what he does it in a slightly different way. I’ve massively enjoyed playing under both of those.What are the differences in captaincy styles of those two?
Brendon was quite extravagant and liked his different ploys and tactics. Kane is more unassuming as a person than Baz – but he’s equally as tactical and a good thinker.The New Zealand squad are lined up for a 100 metre race. Who’s going to win?
Guppy would be up there. He’s got some good pace. He’d probably win it.And who’d be last?
There’d be a battle for that one between Ish Sodhi and Jeet Raval. One of those two.Who is the last at the bar to buy a round of drinks?
That would be Trent Boult.

Brendon was quite extravagant and liked his different ploys and tactics. Kane is more unassuming as a person than Baz – but he’s equally as tactical and a good thinker

Who has the worst dress sense?
A lot of us dress the same. Maybe it’s me?! Okay, I’ll go with Jimmy Neesham.Who is the most naturally talented team-mate you have played with?
There’s just so many in our New Zealand team. We’ve got a bunch of massively talented guys and some incredibly hard workers too. Kane, for example, is incredibly skilful and he works so hard at his game too. I can’t pick out one.A catch goes up for New Zealand to win the World Cup. Who do you want under it?
Martin Guptill. He’s a very good fielder and he’s got a big of set of mitts. I’d be pretty confident if it was him.You have six balls to bowl at one stump. How many times do you hit?
I’ll go with two.What’s the strangest talent you have?

I like to do a bit of beatbox-boxing. I think I’m all right at it but my missus disagrees – she tells me I’m no good.If you could have any one superpower, which would you choose?
I’d like to be able to fly.What is your one guilty pleasure?
Chocolate. And biscuits. I’m a sucker for either of those two. We’ll go with one and combine them – chocolate biscuits.If you could be a professional in any other sport, what would it be?
Basketball. I played in my last year at school and I used to love it.

'Everything changes now'

How BCCI and state association officials reacted to the Supreme Court of India accepting most of the Lodha Committee recommendations

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jul-2016

Niranjan Shah

On BCCI and state association office bearers having to retire at 70 (Shah is over the age cap): “Disappointing, but we respect the Supreme Court’s verdict. We will see [about voluntarily resigning]. First, we will have to go through the judgement. Not now [we haven’t convened a meeting of the Saurashtra Cricket Association]. First, let the BCCI convene their meeting, and then we will see how it affects the state associations. I think in two-three days everybody [in the state associations] will start meeting. The board has to meet immediately, there is no doubt about it. I can be a member of the BCCI if my association allows me.On one-state, one-vote (Saurashtra is one of three full-member associations from Gujarat): It means we will vote in rotation [with Gujarat and Baroda] once every three years. I have not gone through all these details. I think we are not barred in participation, organisation and subsidy. What is important is you are full member and for the next two years you become an associate member. You have done so much for cricket, so, yes, disappointed. It’s a small matter [who the voting cycle begins with]. We three associations [from Gujarat] won’t have any problem on this. We don’t know. First let BCCI structure things. Everything changes now.

Ganga Raju

On his position being in jeopardy due to his dual positions in the BCCI and ACA, and being over the age cap: If we are not there somebody else is there to take care. It’s not run by a single individual, and we have back-up people who can take the association forward. I don’t think Andhra Cricket Association will have a problem even if I am not there. ACA is in such a position that nobody is indispensable. Our help will be there to the institution and whoever runs it. I think meetings are to be conducted [by the BCCI] and judgement has to be looked into. Either way it doesn’t really matter. If we are allowed to [hold the positions], we do it. If not we have something else to do. And we can guide the people. We may not be office bearers but we can always look into [how] things are going on.On voluntarily stepping down from either position: When Supreme Court gives an order, we will have to follow it. We cannot comment on the judgement. If we disqualify ourselves [in the eyes of the] Supreme Court, we are ready to step down. Once Supreme Court has asked us, we have to conduct a meeting and find an alternative. If somebody resigns, we have to call for a meeting and then nominate somebody for those positions. Nomination, normally, is unanimous, but if there is an election [needed], then we conduct it.

Ajay Shirke

On the choice between state and BCCI: “I have always said that I have no fascination for designations. If somebody wants, they can take away both posts from me,” he told PTI. “But if you ask me, I feel at this juncture, the board needs me more than my state association. I am a person who will not run away from my responsibilities unless the members ask me to do so.”

McCullum's dream turns to nightmare

New Zealand poor opening and the stubborn bails among the plays of the day from the World Cup final

Sharda Ugra at the MCG29-Mar-2015The opening
The man who had asked New Zealand to dream big, had a nightmare start. Mitchell Starc showed why he is the undeniable bowler of the tournament, aided no doubt by Brendon McCullum’s desire to instantly stamp himself all over the match. McCullum had a mighty swing first ball and missed it altogether. He had a mightly charge off the second, with the ball following him like a deranged stalker. Off the third, it tailed in, McCullum’s bat came down and his off stump departed. So did Starc in a different direction, chased by delirious team-mates. The G raised itself to a roar. New Zealand 1 for 1.The 1-2
Entering into the batting Powerplay, James Faulkner, Australia’s heavy impact man, stopped New Zealand hearts with a brutal 1-2. First ball of the 35th, Ross Taylor tried to drive a Faulkner slower ball, but nicked it towards Brad Haddin who rolled back years to snap it up. Two balls later, Corey Anderson, New Zealand’s wannabe James Faulkner, was yorked. After a steadying 111-run partnership between Taylor and Grant Elliott, New Zealand went from 150 for 3 to 150 for 5. The last five were to add just 23, and Faulkner’s 1-2 set it off.The brain-fade
An insouciant straight six off his first ball, a creatively carted three over extra cover and Tim Southee looked ready for some freaky hitting. What he will be left with instead is the memory of being the non-striker at the centre of a run-out. Glenn Maxwell, he of the dead-eye, who had fielded the ball, whirled around from short leg and knocked down the stumps with Southee backing up too far. There wasn’t a lot of ground for Southee to cover, but it was enough for Maxwell. Bullseye.The near-missRemove Steven Smith who is Australia’s one-man rescue mission in all formats, and every team believes they are foot in the door. New Zealand’s night turned morose when they got the ball past him and onto his stumps but still didn’t dislodge. The bails that is. Matt Henry got Smith to play awkwardly across on the backfoot and had the ball trickle onto the stumps. Henry threw up his arms, in celebration, Smith whirled around to check where the ball had gone. It had struck the stumps gently and didn’t shift the bails. Heads clutched at all around, including the batsman.The showstopperMichael Clarke is Showbizz in Australian cricket green and gold. He arrived at the crease, immediately surrounded by New Zealand fielders, blocking, leaving and trying to keep out of trouble against Henry, Southee and Trent Boult who smelt an opening. Then after 18 balls of being Mr Stoic, he could hold it back no longer. This was his last night in ODI cricket, this was the New Zealand bowling with very little behind them. Henry went full and wide and Clarke threw his bat at it, nicking one overslips to a vacant boundary.

Cook proves his worth as a leader

Forcing heart and nerve and sinew, Alastair Cook showed a precious ability to fight even when hope was fading, providing an example of the character and courage required in his team

George Dobell at the WACA14-Dec-20130:00

Michael Carberry defends Kevin Pietersen

England may well relinquish the Ashes in the next couple of days but they will, metaphorically at least, have to be prised from Alastair Cook’s grasp.He failed in the end, but Cook produced a gallant performance on the second day in Perth. His struggle was obvious: like a runner with a limp or a boat with a leak, he was never secure and often painfully uncomfortable. He was battling not just the heat – at one stage a spectator fried an egg on the top of an advertising hoarding – but a disciplined bowling attack and, most of all, his own technique.Like most batsmen, when Cook is in form, the runs flow and batting appears a simple business. But here, unsure where his off stump was and struggling with his balance, it felt as if each run had to be carved out of granite.Yet, through grim determination and a surfeit of obduracy, he recorded his highest Test score since May and his highest score in eight successive Ashes Tests. When he couldn’t run he walked; when he couldn’t walk he crawled. It was an innings as low in style and as high in substance as Cook has played for some time.Those watching the highlights – and from a batting perspective there really weren’t many – may see only a somewhat loose cut to end his innings. Cook will spend much of the night – perhaps much of the next few weeks and months – regretting the thick, top edge that ended his resistance. It wasn’t beautiful and it was the second time this series he has fallen in such fashion.But what the highlights will not convey is the struggle that led up to the false stroke. They will not convey the three-and-a-half hours of fight that preceded it, the wonderfully consistent bowling that induced the false shot, the burden of a situation in which Cook knew that his team were desperately in need of a performance to sustain any hope in this series and that, sans Jonathan Trott, they are horribly overly reliant upon a few senior players for their scores. Somehow, over recent weeks, England seem to have gained the tail of a Diplodocus.Carberry sympathetic to Pietersen

Michael Carberry defended Kevin Pietersen and praised the patience of the Australian bowlers after England were forced to work hard for their runs on the second day in Perth.
Pietersen was caught at mid-on attempting a pull stroke to leave England struggling to reach parity with Australia in their first innings on a wicket that is expected to deteriorate later in the match.
But while the stroke may have looked an unnecessary risk in the circumstances, Carberry was sympathetic to Pietersen’s intentions.
“We’re out there to score runs and Kevin is a positive player,” Carberry said. “That’s what has made him successful over a long career. He does things that not many of us can and it’s a shot many of us have seen him play time and again and hit the ball out of the ground.
“It’s disappointing for him and us but we want people to play how they play naturally and I wouldn’t want Kevin to leave that shot in the locker.
“Ideally we would have liked to lose fewer wickets. But Australia bowled very well and were very patient. That’s what pressure does. They shut down the scoring at times and we know that, when that happens, wickets are likely to follow.
“It was a good scrap and we’re still in the hunt.”

There will be those who suggest that Ashes defeat should spell the end of Cook’s time as captain. Those, presumably, who have forgotten Cook’s achievement in reintegrating Kevin Pietersen into his side and leading them to success in India little more than a year ago. Those who when pressed can’t think of a better option as captain.But you might equally argue that Cook proved his worth as a leader in this innings. That he forced heart and nerve and sinew to serve long after they had gone. That he showed a precious ability to fight even when hope was fading. That, with men wilting around him and worn out tools, he provided an example of the character and courage required in his team. Anyone can lead a winning side. It takes courage to lead a struggling one.Whether Cook has the same durability as captain as he does as a batsman remains to be seen. But here, despite being beaten more often than a punch bag in a boxer’s gym, he survived through a mixture of grit and that phlegmatic attitude that enables him to shrug off setbacks that would make others lose their composure. It was not, perhaps, quite as dramatic as Brian Close taking blow after blow from the West Indies fast bowlers on his body, but there was an inherent bravery on display in the face of an unequal battle, nevertheless.It has been stated before that there is something of the cockroach in Cook’s batting and the suspicion remains that, the morning after a nuclear holocaust, Cook would be there, quietly marking his guard and waiting for the bowler, as the first survivors peeked around their curtains.Alastair Cook showed admirable heart and desire, battling his current deficiencies•Getty ImagesCertainly he shrugged off several near-misses here. He was drawn into a push outside off stump before he had scored – a result of his current insecurity around off stump – he was dropped on 3 – a desperately tough chance, but the result of playing across his front pad having fallen to the off side – and was later lured into an attempted hook off Mitchell Johnson that he was lucky to miss.It is sometimes overlooked, but Cook is often the man who provides the foundations upon which others build more eye-catching innings of their own. So it was Cook who was at the other end when Pietersen played that remarkable innings in Mumbai, Cook who laid the platform ahead of Pietersen’s remarkable innings in Colombo and Cook who contributed the century in Ahmedabad that showed his team how to prosper in such conditions. While he is at the crease England always have hope.But once he departed, England’s resistance creaked. Pietersen soon followed, having played with uncharacteristic restraint, taking 15 balls to get off the mark – a record for Pietersen in Tests – and 44 balls to hit his first boundary. Again, the shot that brought his departure will not flatter him taken out of context, but Pietersen showed no lack of fight or application. Like his long-serving colleagues – the likes of Trott, Cook, Graeme Swann and James Anderson – Pietersen looks jaded and weary.But the effort and passion shouldn’t be questioned when a lack of fight from England has been most galling at times this series. On this occasion, they fought and came second. There’s no disgrace in that.

Ponting's absence affecting Australia's energy

Australia’s inconsistency in the CB series and their listlessness in the second final cannot be put down solely to Ponting’s absence. But, as Mickey Arthur, says it is difficult to replicate Ponting’s intensity

Daniel Brettig07-Mar-2012Dare it be said that 17 days after the national selectors deemed it the right time for Ricky Ponting to move on the Australian one-day team is missing him? Perhaps not his batting, which had offered nothing in his final five innings, but certainly his dressing-room influence, energy, drive and focus.While Michael Clarke and Shane Watson seek to establish their leadership axis on the eve of the West Indies tour, the team around them has looked listless in the field since the 30th over of the first CB series final, in Brisbane. Clarke’s face has looked sterner in the past 48 hours than at almost any stage of his captaincy so far, and Watson’s anger when a concerted caught-behind appeal was refused in Adelaide on Tuesday night was obvious to all. This team must now work out who will lift them out of their fast-onset slumber.”I said when I took over the captaincy there were going to be some challenges and this is probably one of them,” Clarke said after the first final. “We’re playing against a very good team full of confidence, and we have to play our best cricket and turn things around very quickly to win the third final. But it is 1-1 in this finals series, so I don’t think we’re doing that badly, that’s for sure. I’m confident the boys will get out there in a couple of days and play our best cricket.”Both Clarke and Watson have their own problems to confront. Clarke is now sidelined by a serious hamstring strain, and will be out of action for about a month. In a trice the team has lost its best batsman and most capable leader. Watson must assume the mantle in Clarke’s absence, as he fights to re-establish himself after a three-month injury layoff. While his bowling has been sound since his return, Watson is battling for timing and rhythm with the bat.Under them is a team that is confronting its first significant flat spot for some time. With the exceptions of stormy Test matches in Cape Town and Hobart, the team led by Clarke has been operating on a steady upward curve for almost 12 months. Limited-overs series wins in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and South Africa, coupled with steadily improving Test results, have demonstrated plenty of discipline, focus and the desire to improve. Ponting was a part of all those squads.In his absence this series, Australia have performed passably, have alternated wins with losses, and have now struck a particularly poor phase in the field. Bowlers are struggling to maintain their line and length, fielders are proving sloppy, and even Clarke’s usually sharp judgement has been questionable at times – note his angry slap of the turf after positioning only one slip for James Pattinson’s outswing in the second final.”We’re giving away too much width more than anything else,” Clarke said of his bowlers. “We’re getting a little bit of swing but we’re giving good players width, and you can’t afford to do that on good batting pitches like that [Adelaide]. We’ve got to be more disciplined with our areas, I said that the other night [in the first final] and unfortunately once again we didn’t execute anywhere near as well as we would have liked. But it’s all facets contributing to the loss: our fielding was sloppy and we were probably 40 runs short of the total we wanted on that pitch, with fairly small square boundaries.”Australia’s coach Mickey Arthur is in no doubt that Ponting has left a significant gap in the team. Ponting’s relentless pursuit of fitness, success and consistency often left him as the last man on the field at training, long after younger and fresher legs had been exhausted. Arthur said Michael and David Hussey had filled some of the breach, while David Warner also acted as a source of energy, and runs.”We’ve certainly asked for other guys to take on that mantle and the guys have tried to step up,” Arthur said. “But you don’t replace that intent, that ability to execute his [Ponting’s] all-round [game], that aura that Ricky had in the dressing room, you never replace that easily. But it is a team in change now and the other guys need to step up to the plate.”I’ve certainly seen Michael Hussey stand up a little bit, David Hussey has stood up a little bit, and we’re hoping Davey Warner stands up as well, and certainly with his form he’s taken that mantle on properly.”The difficulties faced by the Australian team towards the end of a long and demanding summer – it is set to continue in the West Indies – go beyond the decision to jettison Ponting. But it is significant that the downturn has accompanied his absence. Watson, Clarke and the selectors are now aware of precisely how much was lost with Ponting’s removal. It will be a major step for the team if they can conjure the right result without him in the third final.Edited by Dustin Silgardo

The perfect tango

A rapidly maturing Pandey plus a relaxed Dravid equals a near-perfect chase

Sriram Veera at the Wanderers23-May-2009In the end discipline prevailed over flair. The only really tense spell in the chase came when Muttiah Muralitharan operated. On either side of his spell there was such calm, composure and skill from Royal Challengers Bangalore, led by Rahul Dravid and Manish Pandey, that the victory seemed almost a formality if they held their head. And they did.Pandey seems to have grown a year in a couple of nights, from the time he made that hundred. Dravid, it seems, has lost a few years since the IPL’s first edition. It was a perfect tango between a rapidly maturing Pandey and a relaxed Dravid. What stood out was the absence of the mid-pitch conference between the veteran and the novice. When Dravid joined Pandey one expected there would be moments where Dravid would guide the youngster through constant chit-chat to kill the adrenalin rushes. Sure there were talks, but there wasn’t anything visually dramatic. There was no need either: Pandey was eerily cool and in control.The start set the trend. Albie Morkel got his deliveries to curve away in the air, but Pandey showed class. It’s risky to foist such an adjective upon one so young, on somebody who has just played two fine innings at this level, but it was unmistakable tonight. He waited that extra second for the swing to play out before threading two pretty square-drives through point. It was in direct contrast to how he started in his last knock.On Thursday he started off with a few big hits, which came with a touch of desperation in them, to give himself some breathing space. Understandably the pressure on him to deliver was more then. Understandably he was yet to find himself at this level. Cricketers often talk about how one innings can turn things around. Things seem to have turned around for Pandey.What caught the eye was how late he played. There was a delightful late-cut off Manpreet Gony, and a lovely little battle with Shadab Jakati, who actually bowled really well to Pandey, despite what his figures show. Time and again he slowed it up, hoping the youngster would go hard at him. Pandey refused to take the bait. He was made to wait by the bowler, and he waited. There were several little taps past cover before he won that contest with a forcing shot off the back foot to the cover boundary. Jakati was taken off.In the meanwhile Dravid was just being Dravid. Rock solid. A wicket at that time could have set the cat among the pigeons. He not only made sure it didn’t happen but kept the runs coming too. The outstanding shot was his signature classy on-drive. It wasn’t a bad delivery from Morkel who landed it on a length and on the stumps. Dravid leaned forward fully, and wristed it gorgeously through wide mid-on, uncorking his wrist – as is his wont – in an exaggerated fashion at the completion of the stroke.From unpredictable to classy, Manish Pandey seems to have grown a year in two nights•Associated PressAll along Dhoni had delayed the entry of his trumpcard Muttiah Muralitharan. Perhaps he left it for a bit too late. You knew Chennai Super King’s only chance was Murali. And he bowled beautifully. It was a fascinating phase as he did his utmost to strangle Bangalore. It was the only time the Bangalore fans in the crowd got edgy. At the grass banks, they oohed and aahed. In the middle Chennai fielders repeatedly cleared their throats to appeal.Matthew Hayden, at first slip, and Dhoni, at leg slip, defined appealing. Blood-curling cries, the full arch of the body and the extension of arms right behind over their bodies. Murali screamed as well. The tension was palpable, and indicative of their desperation and their state of mind. They knew this was the last and the only dice. Simon Taufel remained impassive, though, till he finally lifted his finger to send Dravid back.It was here, at this moment, where the game paused for a brief while. The Chennai section of the crowd was finding themselves. It was here that Bangalore showed how far they had come through in confidence levels. Virat Kohli and Ross Taylor don’t generally need an invitation to go for their shots, but the clinical fashion in which they hunted down the remaining runs must have given a lot of heart to Kumble.The bowling must have already given him great joy. Though Kumble didn’t do anything magical tonight, the rest of the pack stood up to be counted. Again it wasn’t anything sensational; there were no magical balls but simple old-school discipline. Chennai ended up at least 30 runs short and it made the difference in the end. Bangalore against Deccan in the final. Who would have thought?

Game
Register
Service
Bonus