Man City in contact to sign £50m star compared to both Foden and Gundogan

Manchester City have reportedly made contact to sign a £50m star who has been compared to both Phil Foden and Ilkay Gundogan.

Man City latest as Pep suffers Haaland injury blow

Those behind the scenes at the Etihad appear to have one eye on the summer transfer window, however, Pep Guardiola’s side are looking to salvage their season by winning the FA Cup.

City came from behind to beat Bournemouth on Sunday to set up a semi-final with Nottingham Forest after goals from Omar Marmoush and Erling Haaland.

However, Man City were dealt an injury setback regarding Haaland, who is now set to be out for seven weeks with an ankle problem.

Talking on Haaland’s injury, Guardiola said: “Sometimes there are years that these things happen – it’s happened all season. It could have been different if it was the end of the season [before the Club World Cup]. With all the injuries we have this season, I’m sorry for them and for Erling as well. Hopefully the recovery is as speedy as possible and he can come back.

“We don’t have another player with his skills or specific qualities, but we have to adapt. For many years, we played with different ways up front. It depends on the quality of the players. We are going to try and find a solution.”

Viana's a fan: Man City battling to sign "unbeatable" 6'8 star worth £17m

He could replace Ederson.

ByTom Cunningham Apr 1, 2025

Ahead of the summer, midfield could be where Guardiola and co conduct an overhaul, with the likes for Jack Grealish, Kevin De Bruyne and Gundogan could be on the move. Now, it looks as if the club have made their first moves for a key target.

Man City make contact for £50m AC Milan star Tijjani Reijnders

According to TEAMtalk, Man City have made an enquiry to sign Tijjani Reijnders from AC Milan. The Sky Blues have made contact ‘to understand the conditions of a potential deal’, with reports prior claiming the AC Milan midfielder is valued at £50m and is City’s top target.

The 26-year-old has been starring for AC Milan this season, scoring 13 goals and registering four assists in more than 40 games.

Martin Odegaard

Arsenal

Phil Foden

Man City

Julian Brandt

Borussia Dortmund

Ilkay Gundogan

Man City

James Maddison

Tottenham

As can be seen, he has been compared to Foden, and Gundogan among others and can play as a defensive central or attacking midfielder.

Iconic midfielder, Frank Rijkaard has also been impressed with what he’s seen from Reijnders, saying: “I hope that Reijnders becomes one of the best midfielders in the world, but I sincerely believe he’s already on the right path. I really like his style of play.

“As time goes on, he’s becoming increasingly important for Milan. He can cover all roles in the midfield and shows his generosity: he never holds back from a run for the team and always gives his best.

“With the quality he has, he’s excellent at creating dangerous chances for his teammates and setting up the play well.”

Bumrah's missing No. 2, Hardik's flat homecoming and other reasons why MI flunked IPL 2024

Be it batting, bowling or captaincy, not much has gone to plan this season for the traditional IPL powerhouse

S Sudarshanan16-May-20245:11

Making sense of Mumbai Indians’ summer of discontent

Coming into IPL 2024, Mumbai Indians (MI) had some of the very best India players available to them. There was Rohit Sharma, India’s captain, at the top. They had the No. 1 T20I batter in world cricket, Suryakumar Yadav, although he did miss MI’s first three games owing to fitness issues. In the bowling department they had a fully fit Jasprit Bumrah, who had missed the previous IPL due to injury. And, to cap it all, MI had also traded back into their books Hardik Pandya, India’s premier seam-bowling allrounder.On the back of that strong Indian core, many would have tipped MI to at least make it to the playoffs this time. But they were the first team to be knocked out of IPL 2024, and the wait for a sixth title now extends to four years – the longest they have gone without a title since their first one in 2013.Even before the tournament started, MI had created a stir by abruptly replacing Rohit as captain with Hardik, a move with which several die-hard MI fans were not too pleased. A few good games might have quickly solved that, but it was not to be. So, what has gone wrong for the team that has traditionally been a powerhouse in the IPL, despite boasting a strong squad, team management, and one of the most robust scouting systems going around?Related

Boucher admits off-field noise may have 'clouded' Hardik after MI finish at bottom

Can MI or LSG move from low ebb to full flow?

Mumbai Indians knocked out after SRH demolish LSG

Pollard 'sick and fed up' of people picking on Hardik Pandya

The People vs Hardik Pandya – why, what, and the way out

Hardik’s forgettable homecomingHardik’s first IPL stint with MI – from 2015 to 21 – helped his stocks grow, catapulting him onto the international stage. In 2022, he enhanced his credentials by leading Gujarat Titans (GT) to the IPL trophy in their maiden season, before taking them to a runners-up finish last year. Hardik’s form during those two successful seasons with GT – 833 runs at an average of 37.86 and a strike rate of 133.49, and 11 wickets at an economy of 8.10 – showed he was back to being at his best as an allrounder – and seam-bowling allrounders are always a prized asset in Indian cricket.But Hardik was tested immediately after returning to Mumbai colours. To kick off this season, he was incessantly booed in Ahmedabad when he led MI against his former side, GT, and MI started their season with a loss. The heckling did not stop in his second outing either, when MI played an away game against Sunrisers Hyderabad. And if Hardik expected any respite in front of his home crowd in Mumbai, he was in for a nasty surprise, as he was jeered during MI’s first home game this season.And as the tournament wore on, Hardik’s shortcomings on the field became hard to ignore. Across the first 13 matches, he batted at all positions from Nos. 4 to 7, and had been dismissed trying to hit out before getting set on several occasions. With the ball, Hardik picked up 11 wickets in these games, but at an economy rate close to 11.Has Hardik Pandya, the bowler, been trying too hard to impress?•AFP/Getty ImagesReturning to action after five months out due to an ankle injury he suffered during the ODI World Cup last October, Hardik bowled his full quota of four overs five times in IPL 2024; something he had done only six times across the previous two seasons. This time, Hardik often took the new ball ahead of Bumrah, and among those who have bowled at least nine overs in the powerplay so far this season, only Naveen-ul-Haq, Mitchell Starc and Gerald Coetzee have a worse economy in the phase than Hardik’s 10.55.Some of Hardik’s captaincy calls have also come under the scanner: like holding back Bumrah when SRH were blazing away to a record score, sending Tim David ahead of himself when MI needed 40 runs off 26 balls in their opening match, bowling the last over against Chennai Super Kings only for MS Dhoni to hit him for 20 off four balls, or even throwing Tilak Varma under the bus after a narrow defeat to Delhi Capitals. Pictures of bowlers running to Rohit or Bumrah to consult on field positions, and of a largely reclusive Hardik, when being taken for runs or during wicket celebrations, did not help either.Rohit’s up-and-down seasonThe idea behind the captaincy switch, as explained by head coach Mark Boucher, was to free up Rohit, the batter, after two underwhelming seasons for MI.11:32

Runorder: Captaincy aside, what’s gone wrong for Mumbai this season?

It seemed to have been working for MI after Rohit got off to blazing starts in the first few games. Thanks to him, MI had the second best run rate (10.66) in the powerplay in their first six games. Whether it be left-arm seam, right-arm pace or spin, Rohit was treating the bowlers with disdain, using sweeps, reverse-sweeps and scoops among other shots. In fact, only twice in his IPL career had Rohit scored more off his first 12 balls than the 26 he did in Hyderabad: 37 in April 2015, and 27 in May 2015.Rohit even hit his second IPL century – his first since 2012 – in MI’s loss against CSK, but his form has tapered off since – he averages 8.66 with a strike rate of 88.13 in his last six outings. He was dismissed inside the powerplay in only two of the first seven innings, but has only managed to play out the first six overs in only one game since. Rohit’s loss of form means his overall strike rate of 145.42 – his career best in the IPL – has been reduced to a mere footnote.MI’s bowling woesThink of MI’s overseas bowlers in each of their title-winning seasons: Mitchell Johnson (2013), Lasith Malinga (2013, 2015, 2017 and 2019), Mitchell McClenaghan (2015 and 2017), and Trent Boult (2020). All of them complemented the Indian bowling contingent in MI’s success stories. Once Jason Behrendorff – who picked up 23 wickets last year – was ruled out of this season, MI’s bowling resources took a hit. All of Coetzee, Luke Wood, Kwena Maphaka (a teenager who only rose to prominence in the Under-19 World Cup earlier in the year) and Nuwan Thushara were playing their first IPL, and couldn’t take on the mantle of second seamer behind Bumrah.MI’s collective economy of 10.04 in the first six matches was the worst for any team in IPL 2024. They also had the third-worst average (35.72) in that period, even though they had picked up 33 wickets. Despite that, Bumrah was a class apart in those games with an economy of 6.08 and ten wickets (average 14.60). Coetzee was MI’s next best bowler with nine wickets until then, but conceded runs at over ten an over. Getting Bumrah back this season should have lifted MI’s bowling performance, but they faltered and let teams post tall scores, including SRH’s record-breaking 277.Where has Kumar Kartikeya disappeared to?•BCCIA part of this was also down to the absence of a reliable spinner in their ranks. It took time for MI to back their premier spinner Piyush Chawla, who has been their second-most economical bowler since their seventh outing. MI played Shreyas Gopal and Shams Mulani, and also used the offspin of Mohammad Nabi with little effect, before continuing with Chawla, who has picked up ten wickets in IPL 2024.Their reluctance to try Kumar Kartikeya, who had played eight games and returned five wickets last season, is confounding. He bowls wristspin as well as fingerspin, and picked up eight wickets at an average of 11.87 and an economy of 5.58 in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy 2023, India’s domestic T20 tournament. Kartikeya was regularly among the first at MI’s optional trainings this season, but has failed to make the XI 13 games in.Fluctuating batting fortunesTill their fifth match on April 11, MI’s run rate (10.11) was only marginally less than Kolkata Knight Riders’ (10.45). But since their loss to CSK – their fourth defeat in six matches – MI have been the third-slowest team in the powerplay. They have lost 25 wickets in the first six overs, the second-most for a team this season.Rohit’s form, as already touched upon, has been patchy, and his opening partner Ishan Kishan’s returns have been poor. In MI’s first six matches this season, Kishan and Rohit added four fifty-plus partnerships, including 101 vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru. But in five of the next six games, they did not cross 35.Like his team’s, Ishan Kishan’s season has been forgettable•AFP/Getty ImagesSuryakumar, after being declared fit, returned to hit three fifties and a century in ten innings. But Tim David and Romario Shepherd’s inconsistency, coupled with Hardik’s own poor returns, has meant MI have lacked a reliable finisher.”T20 cricket is about momentum, but we didn’t get that momentum right from the beginning,” Chawla said after the loss against KKR at Eden Gardens. “Sometimes we bowl well and then we end up not batting that well. Likewise, sometimes we bat well and the bowling is not [up to the mark]. It’s not just that we are lacking in one department. As a unit, we have failed in a few games. These things happen, and we have to accept that fact.”MI do have a few positives from the season: Akash Madhwal’s spell against Rajasthan Royals, a couple of 40s from Nehal Wadhera after getting a late look-in, Anshul Kamboj’s debut, and Tilak’s consistency are some of them. But, given how this season has played out, the MI team management is probably glad they have the chance to start afresh at the mega-auction ahead of the next season.

Pakistan's strength is also their weakness in T20Is

The numbers for batters four to eight are impressive, but the top three probably don’t trust them enough

Danyal Rasool26-Aug-20222:15

Babar: ‘Injuries are part of the game, Pakistan’s bench strength is good’

At first glance, Pakistan’s over-reliance on their top three in ODIs appears to bleed over into T20I cricket, too. Not unlike in the 50-over format, top three are responsible for roughly two-thirds – 67.5% – of Pakistan’s runs in T20Is since the start of the 2021 World Cup. As in ODIs, this figure is by some distance the highest among all sides, India’s top three a distant second, responsible for 58.4% of their team’s runs.And there isn’t much evidence of runs coming from further down for Pakistan either. Since the last T20 World Cup, only two players outside the top three have scored 100 runs in the format, and there’s little clarity on the personnel that make up Pakistan’s best middle order. Take that to the start of 2021: no one from the middle order has managed 200 T20I runs. What Fakhar Zaman, Imam-ul-Haq and Babar Azam do for the ODI side, Babar, Mohammad Rizwan and Fakhar do in T20Is.Related

Babar Azam struggling inelegantly? Is this for real?

Top teams 'one step ahead' of Pakistan in T20 batting approach, says chief selector Wasim

Pakistan have more runs in their line-up, but they are refusing to score them

Plan for Pakistan: Open with Fakhar, send Babar or Rizwan at No. 3

The lovey-dovey rivalry between India and Pakistan

Anyone with even a passing interest in Pakistan cricket doesn’t need numbers to know this. Babar’s T20 consistency and Rizwan’s sensational rebirth in the format at the top of the order, combined with Fakhar’s brute force at one-drop are what form the base of a Pakistan T20I innings now. The middle order is unreliable, players picked and dropped after a few games, most likely failing to have any discernible impact. Azam Khan came and went, Khushdil Shah hasn’t really taken to the format, and, perhaps too often, Shadab Khan, Faheem Ashraf, Iftikhar Ahmed and Asif Ali have flattered to deceive internationally. So, naturally, the top three make most of the runs, are top scorers in most games Pakistan win, and have to face most of the overs.That last bit is crucial, and often overlooked. While Babar, Rizwan and Fakhar have scored 67.5% of Pakistan’s T20I runs since the last World Cup, they have faced an incredible 72% of the deliveries. Of course, no other top three has faced even 60% of deliveries internationally, and this is also the largest negative variance – 4.5% – for any top three between runs scored and balls faced in that period. South Africa’s top three at the second least productive, facing 3.5% more balls than the runs they score, but unlike Pakistan, they do leave 51.3% of balls for the middle order to make up the shortfall.Pakistan’s top-order batters rarely allow the middle order in early, and almost never in the powerplay, where the intent has been most notably lacking. Since the start of January 2020, Babar, who has faced more balls as opener than anyone else for Pakistan in this period, has scored at just 6.72 runs per over in powerplays, averaging around 20 off 18 balls. Rizwan scores at 7.20, and while Fakhar is well ahead at 7.80, his powerplay exposure is lower, because he comes in at three. Whether he should open, particular when Pakistan bat first, has been looked at, but those numbers inevitably result in Pakistan leaving most of their aggression for the latter stages of an innings.ESPNcricinfo LtdOne might think the top three are forced into this approach because of the instability lower down, but that might not be quite on point. It’s true there’s a game of musical chairs on there, but whoever gets in there tends to produce the firepower Pakistan invariably need. Surprisingly for a middle order as wobbly as Pakistan’s, in 13 matches since the last World Cup, batters from No. 4 to No. 8 have scored at 152.18, the highest among all T20I sides since then.While Pakistan generally do not begrudge Babar and Rizwan opening in a chase, it can be especially jarring to see Babar using up vast numbers of deliveries in the first innings. For all of Babar’s qualities, he’s not quite proven himself to be the best judge of what a good first-innings score is, and if he has, his ability to bat accordingly is questionable. In all T20s for Pakistan or Karachi Kings since January 2020, Babar’s first-innings strike rate is 123.02. This jumps to 133.42 batting second, with the average ballooning from 36.56 to 61.70.Moving Fakhar up to the top when Pakistan bat first is a statistically sound option: since January 2017, Fakhar’s T20 strike rate as opener is 139.65, the highest among Pakistani openers besides Kamran Akmal, but the solution can extend beyond just the one switch.Curiously, Pakistan’s middle and lower-middle order are more effective when they bat first. Since the last World Cup, Pakistan batters outside the top three manage a strike rate of 161.11 in such situations, the highest once more. South Africa are next at 159.07, but after that, England’s 141.37 is as good as any side has mustered. That number drops to 142.19 when Pakistan chase, higher than all sides bar India, whose middle and lower-middle order are prolific in a chase, striking at 157.79.ESPNcricinfo LtdSo what does that tell us, apart from telling us that Pakistan should try and avoid batting first against India in their Asia Cup games?The way a Pakistan batting unit behaves depending on when they bat means a one-size-fits-all approach cannot be the most efficient way to wring the last run out of their T20I innings. The status quo might well be fine when they chase; it is probably the best way to get the most out of this outfit. But when Pakistan bat first, Babar, and to a lesser extent the other two at the top, simply cannot consume the number of deliveries they do, when statistically the world’s most explosive middle order sits in the dugout, powerless to have the impact on the game the numbers show they can.Perhaps Pakistan’s two most consequential T20I games in the last decade crystallise this side’s batting ability perfectly. Against India in their World Cup’s opening game, they played to their strengths, and there’s arguably no better pair than Babar and Rizwan when chasing a total – especially a below-par one. Against Australia in the semi-final 16 days later, that same reliability became a crutch that hobbled the innings right to the end. Pakistan left runs out there, runs that mattered when Matthew Wade scooped Shaheen Afridi over fine leg 90 minutes later.Babar and Rizwan may have felt justified in their conservatism during that semi-final. If you don’t quite trust your middle order, the value you place on your wicket rises exponentially, especially in key games. It was perhaps reasonable for the openers to be sceptical on that occasion. But, in a format where all sorts of risks need to be taken, lending the middle order that trust is just another one that might be necessary. Because Rizwan and Babar batting together might be a beautiful sight to behold, but when they are setting a target, it can also be a worrying one.

Before Slim turned shady

The stigma of fixing will never go away, but Saleem Malik the batsman mustn’t be forgotten

Osman Samiuddin02-Apr-2020Come to Think of ItYou’re not going to like this, not one bit. To many of you it won’t matter because what you’re about to read happened too long ago. But the world is in a rare pose of reflection – really its first ever. If not now then when to think deeper about, and beyond, accepted wisdoms and established truths: that is the central thrust of this series.Which is how comes the opportunity to remember that before Saleem Malik the fixer there was Saleem Malik the batsman; and that he wasn’t any batsman, he was one, more emphatically than is now recalled, capable of genius.See, you don’t like it. Why remember Malik as anything other than a fixer? Australian players called him the Rat and no one ever outraged much. Such is the stain he left that remembering him as we do is the perfect punishment, more robust than Justice Qayyum’s life ban.And sure. That will stick forever, unlike the ban, now overturned.ALSO READ: Come to Think of It: Was Greg Chappell really a terrible coach for India?But forever needs stories to fill it, so here we are telling the one about when Malik first came to notice, way back when the ’80s began, as the next big thing in Pakistani batting. These days, when we can finally say that fast bowlers come and go but a Babar Azam is forever, we can truly appreciate and understand how big a deal Malik’s arrival must have been.It happened just as one of Pakistan’s most celebrated batting orders was breaking up. Sadiq and Mushtaq Mohammad and Asif Iqbal had gone, Majid Khan was done, and Zaheer Abbas hadn’t long left. Javed Miandad, flourishing, needed company.So landed Malik, a prodigy, with a first-class hundred in his second game, and a star and captain of Pakistan’s Under-19 set-up. A hundred on Test debut – in a makeshift side ripped apart by a rebellion against Miandad’s captaincy – set the seal on this potential.England was a happy hunting ground for Malik. He made close to 1000 Test runs there at over 20 points higher than his overall career batting average•PA PhotosLooking back now he was very much a sportsman of his era. He cut a shapeless figure, ungainly in a very middle-aged, subcontinental-male way. Not avuncular, exactly, but we all know an uncle like him: a little paunchy, a little curvy, a little bottom-heavy.That doesn’t mean he was a liability. On the contrary, he was an outstanding boundary fielder – not in the same way Jonny Bairstow is, but his throws were the work of a sniper, sleek, efficient and lethal. What, after all, do we remember of his contribution to the entire 1992 World Cup other than the throw from deep midwicket to run out Phil DeFreitas? Closer in, check out this catch – it’s 1984; it could be 2024.Bat in hand, waiting for action, the uncle didn’t vanish. But once in play, here was a handsome batsman. The easy drives, the light feet, the rubbery whip of the blade whenever he went square either side, even as small an action as the shuffle to the off when he set up to drive had a pleasurable quality to it.In toto, it could culminate in a range that matched Miandad’s, only it played out on vastly different pitches. Miandad had Sharjah but Malik had Eden Gardens. Imran Khan promoted Abdul Qadir and Manzoor Elahi above Malik in the chase, so frustration and a teensy bit of anger, maybe, drove Malik. Rage could have helped a chase of 78 at over ten an over. But Malik was ice-cold, which, as a response, was much more calculating and complex and compelling than dumb old anger. He went hard at an injured Maninder Singh’s SLA and dealt with the very mediumy pace of Madan Lal and Kapil Dev with the abruptness and lack of decorum that only a 23-year-old can conjure. Plus, a late chop through point off a Kapil yorker wide of off stump, having moved outside of leg stump to create the room, was the future.ALSO READ: Come to Think of It: Were South Africa really unlucky in the 1992 World Cup?Once he got ahead of the rate, he made sure to retain strike over the last couple of overs, picking up doubles and singles. He wasn’t going to waste this. Here was Miandad’s nous in killing the chase, but something altogether more formidable in setting it up.Just as good was another, lesser-recalled gem, the 41-ball 66 in the Nehru Cup semi-final against England. Not just by numbers, in nature both innings were more aughts than ’80s.At another end stand three of the finest, most underappreciated Pakistani Test innings of the era: 99, 82 not out, 84 not out. All three came at Headingley across two Tests when swinging Headingley was a mean little hell for batting. The three innings showcased patience and technique, of course, but also sharp judgement and game awareness, especially the first of them: ground out over a day, alternating between steadying the batting and forging ahead, eventually setting up a famous innings win.In that time only Queen’s Park Oval was tougher to bat at. And Malik’s only Test there? Sixty-six and 30, and the half-century was the only one from either team in the first innings. Khan once implied that Malik was a flat-track bully but Khan was sometimes off on his player assessments, just that we only remember the ones he got right. Malik was anything but.The sweet smell of Sharjah success: Saleem Malik, Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Javed Miandad celebrate with the Austral-Asia Cup trophy in 1990•Ben Radford/Getty ImagesKhan’s ambivalence towards him was curious. Khan loved good body language, that most deceitful quality, which explains a little: Malik was no lion in the field. But Khan also loved men who stood up in crisis, and enough of Malik’s best innings came in those moments, right under Khan’s nose.And somehow Khan rarely factored for one of Malik’s most remarkable innings, when he batted one-handed, his left arm in plaster, against the toughest opponents of them all, West Indies. Forty-one minutes, 32 team runs, and enabling Wasim Akram’s first Test fifty. A reminder not only for Imran but for us that humans are not binary creatures: one can be corruptible but also brave, selfless and committed when situations demand.What Malik did seem to lack was the raw hunger of more driven, consistent players. He could and did go missing, as during the 1992 World Cup, or for the two and a half years and 19 Tests with just three fifties in the mid-’80s. He also ended with a single fifty in his last 13 Test innings.The mood had to strike him, that much is true, and only he controlled when it did. When he became captain, for instance, and was afforded the respect he felt he deserved, he couldn’t stop scoring. Early in his leadership he reaffirmed the depth of his quality, swatting away early-peak Shane Warne (Warne would dismiss him just once in five Tests, across which Malik averaged 71). Less remembered but a true-blue classic was his other 99, as captain, at the Wanderers – another tough venue, against a spiteful pace attack.Captaincy suited him to the extent that it forms one of Pakistan’s great what-ifs – how good might he have been? He took over a team, remember, much like the one he had debuted in, torn apart by factions and rebellions. He inherited one of the game’s spikiest ego clashes, between the two Ws, and massaged it to a degree that both took nearabouts six wickets per Test each under him. Akram – who gravitated to Malik’s charisma, not Miandad, after Khan’s exit – had a better average under no other captain; Waqar Younis averaged better only under Miandad (among captains who led him in more than two Tests). And to think that initially not only were they not talking to each other, they weren’t talking to Malik either because he had assumed the post they most wanted.Captaincy, sadly, was the undoing; all that power and success merely grease for the ride down. And it’s entirely plausible that even if Malik hadn’t succumbed as he did, he might have ended up squeezed out between the two great pairings that overlapped and overshadowed his career: Khan-Miandad and Akram-Younis.That he ensured he’ll never be forgotten is, let’s wager, no consolation. Come to Think of It

Shakib on his illegal action for Surrey: 'I was doing it a little bit intentionally'

Bangladesh allrounder Shakib Al Hasan has revealed that he had been bowling with an illegal action “a little bit intentionally” when he was reported for a suspect action and subsequently suspended after his county stint with Surrey in 2024.Shakib had been suspended from bowling in all competitions organised by the ECB after his action was found illegal at an independent testing at Loughborough University in December last year. As per the ICC’s regulations, his suspension was automatically enforced in international cricket.”I think I was doing it a little bit intentionally because I bowled more than 70 overs [in one match],” Shakib told the podcast. “I never bowled 70 overs in my career in a Test match. I was playing that four-day match for Surrey against Somerset in Taunton. I was so tired.Related

  • 'I am officially not retired from all formats' – Shakib reverses Test and T20I retirement

  • Shakib suspended from bowling in all top-level cricket

  • Shakib suspended from bowling in ECB-run cricket

“I played back-to-back Test matches in Pakistan. We won that series and then I went to play those four-day matches. The only thing I was thinking the umpire could have done was just warn me first, at least. But it is in the rules, so they had the right. I didn’t complain.”I went to do the test, I failed. And then I saw my test. I was like, ‘okay, so these things are happening’. Then I had to train for a couple of weeks so I went back to Surrey again and they were kind enough to help me. I did two sessions and I was back to normal. I was like, ‘it’s so easy’.”Shakib played just one game for Surrey last season and bowled 63.2 overs, split into 33.5 and 29.3 overs across the two innings. He was later cleared to bowl earlier this year after he gave his third bowling assessment test at Loughborough University in the UK. In the meantime he had failed a second bowling test in Chennai, after which the BCB selectors didn’t pick him for the Champions Trophy, even the board had clarified he was available to play as a batter in all forms of domestic and international cricket.

Rock and Roll It Podcast: The fun of watching Rohit and Kohli bat

The crew get together to analyse the recently concluded ODI series between Australia and India

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Oct-20252:03

Chopra: Kohli and Rohit keep adding confidence

Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together to share their joy at watching Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli at their best in Sydney against Australia and the emergence of Harshit Rana and Washington Sundar as all-round options in white-ball cricket.

'Unbelievable' – Luis Enrique shocked by horror challenge on PSG goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier during Monaco defeat

Luis Enrique shared his reaction to a horror challenge on Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier by Lamine Camara. The night ended in frustration and anger in equal measure as the reigning champions fell 1-0 to Monaco on Saturday evening. But the result was overshadowed by a rash early challenge on Chevalier that astonishingly went unpunished by VAR.

Chevalier survives horror challenge

PSG arrived riding the momentum of a breathless 5-3 Champions League win over Tottenham earlier in the week. Yet within the opening quarter-hour, the tone of the night changed dramatically when Monaco midfielder Camara lunged recklessly at Chevalier, catching the goalkeeper flush on the right ankle with vehement force. Referee Clement Turpin brandished only a yellow card, a decision that immediately prompted disbelief from the PSG bench. Chevalier remained on the pitch, rolling in agony as the medical team rushed to him. For a moment, it appeared the 22-year-old’s night, and possibly his season, was over. Shockingly, VAR did not intervene despite replays showing Camara’s studs planting high and hard into the goalkeeper’s ankle. After several minutes of treatment, Chevalier somehow returned to his position between the posts. 

AdvertisementAFPWhat Chevalier and Luis Enrique said

Speaking to , Chevalier admitted the severity of what had unfolded: "As for my ankle, listen… I think everyone saw it… I think my career could have taken a different turn today, and I was very lucky. I didn't dwell on it; it was over. But I think sometimes there are certain actions you have to avoid. Today I just know that I was very lucky and that I'll be able to continue playing football every week."

While Luis Enrique is known for avoiding refereeing debates, he could barely hide his disbelief when questioned about the incident.

"He was very lucky today," he told "I think…I'm not going to say anything more because it's not my job, but it's incredible…Lucas Chevalier was very lucky."

Monaco edge PSG after sustained first-half pressure

Beyond the controversy, the match itself unfolded with Monaco pushing relentlessly in the first half. Chevalier, once recovered, was forced into several interventions as the home side pressed with energy. PSG, by contrast, appeared sluggish and disjointed, a far cry from the impressive attacking performance that had dispatched Tottenham just days earlier. Their passing patterns lacked sharpness, and they repeatedly ceded possession in vulnerable areas. The breakthrough came midway through the second half. In the 68th minute, Takumi Minamino punished PSG’s hesitancy by guiding a precise finish past Chevalier after yet another incisive move from the hosts. 

It was a deserved lead for a Monaco side who had spent much of the match dictating tempo and exposing PSG’s defensive vulnerabilities. With nine minutes left, PSG were handed an unexpected numerical advantage. Monaco defender Thilo Kehrer was dismissed for what Turpin judged as a denial of a clear goalscoring opportunity. Despite a frantic final push in stoppage time, PSG could not find a response. Their late surge was spirited but insufficient, mirroring Chevalier’s post-match assessment of the team’s performance. 

"There were quite a few things that didn't go our way today. We lacked impact, we lost possession a bit silly. I think we weren't at 100 per cent. Monaco were a bit sharper," Chevalier told Ligue 1+. "We pushed hard in the last 10 minutes, but it wasn't enough. We've had a lot of injuries since the start of the season, we're playing a lot of games in quick succession. It's a different season compared to last season."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

AFPTable trouble looms for PSG

Saturday’s defeat marked PSG’s first league loss since falling to Marseille in September, and it could prove particularly costly in the title race. Should Roberto de Zerbi's men win against Toulouse and Lens defeat Angers, PSG could tumble from first to third place in the Ligue 1 standings. With Rennes awaiting them on December 7, Enrique knows that his side cannot afford any more slip ups. Nonetheless, on Saturday, the manager was relieved that his goalkeeper was able to walk out of the stadium, despite being at the receiving end of a horrific challenge. 

لاعب أتلتيك بلباو عن تصفير جماهير برشلونة ضد نيكو ويليامز: كان هادئًا

تحدث لاعب نادي أتلتيك بلباو عن صافرات الاستهجان التي تعرض لها زميله في الفريق نيكو ويليامز، وذلك خلال مواجهة الفريق الباسكي ضد برشلونة أمس السبت بالدوري الإسباني للدرجة الأولى.

برشلونة لعب أمام أتلتيك بلباو لحساب منافسات الجولة الثالثة عشر من بطولة الدوري الإسباني، على ملعب “كامب نو” والذي لعب عليه البارسا لأول مرة هذا الموسم.

وقدم برشلونة عرضًا رائعًا واستطاع أن يحقق الانتصار على بلباو بأربعة أهداف دون مقابل.

لكن المباراة شهدت تعرض نيكو ويليامز لصافرات استهجان من جماهير برشلونة المتواجدة في لقاء الأمس، وذلك بعدما رفض اللاعب التوقيع للبلوجرانا خلال فترة الميركاتو الصيفي الأخير.

وسعى برشلونة بكل ما أوتي من قوة لضم نيكو ويليامز، لكن اللاعب رفض في النهاية التوقيع مع الفريق الكتالوني حيث اختار تجديد عقده مع بلباو في نهاية المطاف.

اقرأ أيضًا.. موندو ديبورتيفو تكشف “حديث الفار” في طرد لاعب أتلتيك بلباو أمام برشلونة

وتحدث إينيجو رويز دي جالاريتا، عن صافرات الاستهجان على نيكو ويليامز، موضحًا أن الأخير قد تعامل مع غضب جماهير برشلونة منه بهدوء.

وقال جالاريتا في تصريحات نقلتها صحيفة “موندو ديبورتيفو”: “كنت أتوقع هذه الأجواء من جماهير برشلونة، ورأيته هادئًا”.

وعن الخسارة ضد برشلونة: “نشعر بخيبة أمل كبيرة، كنا نعلم أنه كان علينا القيام بكل شيء على أكمل وجه، وأنهم لم يكونوا في يوم جيد، علينا أن نستعيد عافيتنا سريعًا لأن لدينا مباراة يوم الثلاثاء”.

ويرى جالاريتا أن بلباو دفع ثمن عدم استغلال الفرص المتاحة له ضد برشلونة إلى أهداف، حيث اختتم: “أي خطأ يعاقب عليه لاعبون من هذا المستوى، بل وأكثر من ذلك”.

Dodgers Pull Off Historic Comeback Against Yankees to Win World Series

The Los Angeles Dodgers have won the 2024 World Series over the New York Yankees, and they did so in historical fashion.

At the start of Game 5 on Wednesday night, it looked promising that the Yankees would push for a Game 6 as they took an early 5–0 lead through the first three innings. They scored three of those runs in the first inning alone thanks to back-to-back home runs from Aaron Judge and Jazz Chisholm Jr.

But, this early lead didn't deter the Dodgers from believing they could still clinch the series. They scored five runs in the fifth inning to tie the game because of various Yankees errors. The Yankees took the lead again in the sixth inning, but then the Dodgers brought in two more runs in the eighth because of two sacrifice flies. They ended up winning 7–6.

The Dodgers' comeback from trailing 5–0 marks the only time an MLB team has clinched the World Series after trailing by at least five runs, per OptaSTATS. This means the Dodgers' comeback on Wednesday night is the biggest in World Series history.

This was the Dodgers' eighth World Series title in franchise history. They last won in 2020.

Worcestershire stumble again despite Allison five-for

Hosts’ top four blown away in evening session as Surrey tighten grip

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay 23-Jun-2025Four late wickets for Surrey saw them take control of the Rothesay County Championship clash at Visit Worcestershire New Road, as Worcestershire ended day two 69 for 4, still trailing by eight-runs.Ben Allison led the way for the hosts, with his 5 for 44 helping restrict Surrey to 291 all-out, Dom Sibley top-scoring with a measured 73.With a lead of 77, Surrey’s seam-bowling attack ensured the day belonged to them with another potent display.Nathan Smith and Matt Fisher collected two wickets apiece, as Worcestershire’s top four were ripped apart in a devastating evening session that put the visitors well in control.Surrey added 40 to their overnight total, but shortly after Ryan Patel had brought up an elegant half-century, Allison made the breakthrough for Worcestershire as he hurried the left-hander with a back of a length delivery that was chipped straight to Jacob Duffy at mid-on.Rory Burns joined Sibley, as the pair continued Surrey’s batting dominance, bringing up their 100 in the 35th over.With Sibley easing his way to a measured 132-ball fifty, Worcestershire’s seamers offered little in the way of opportunities, as lunch arrived with the visitors in total control at 147 for 1.The home side struck twice in quick succession upon resumption, however, when Duffy drew an edge from the bat of Burns for 34, followed up three overs later by the industrious Matthew Waite, who produced a gem of a delivery to see the back of Sam Curran for just 8.Worcestershire had seamer Allison, their standout bowler on the day, to thank for a vital three-wicket burst, that swung the momentum of the afternoon and checked the visitors’ progress.After ending Sibley’s 184-ball knock, he then claimed the wickets of Will Jacks and Mitchell Santner in successive overs, as the home side reduce their opponents to 197 for 6.As a result of Santner’s frustration at his dismissal, Worcestershire were awarded five penalty runs and saw their total rise to 214, with confirmation the New Zealand international had been charged with two separate Level One offences.Dan Lawrence came together with Jordan Clark, as Surrey raced into a lead of 52 when tea was taken. Lawrence continued his fine four-day form, passing fifty early in the evening session, but failed to capitalise as he edged a rising Tom Taylor delivery shortly after the new ball was taken, departing for a well-made 52.Taylor was consistent throughout, claiming more two wickets late on, before Allison returned to complete his five-wicket haul as Surrey were bowled out for 291.With 17 overs left in the day, Smith wasted no time exposing the hosts top-order batting frailties, as he dismissed both Gareth Roderick and Henry Nicholls inside his first two overs.Fisher picked up where he left off in the first innings, nicking two wickets for himself as the top four departed, leaving Worcestershire still short of parity and well behind in the contest.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus