Spurs: Sarr is failing to impress on loan

It is easy to see why Tottenham Hotspur decided to splash a considerable amount of money on the signing of Pape Matar Sarr last summer – €18m (£15m), to be exact – as the defensive midfielder highly impressed in his breakthrough campaign with FC Metz last season.

Indeed, over his 22 Ligue 1 appearances last time out, the £18m-rated youngster bagged three goals, as well as made an average of 1.2 interceptions, two tackles, completed 36 passes and won 5.1 duels per game.

These returns saw the 19-year-old earn an extremely impressive seasonal SofaScore match rating of 7.03, ranking him as Metz’s sixth-best performer in the top flight of French football – playing a key role in his side securing a very respectable 10th place finish in the division.

However, following his summer switch to Spurs – who subsequently loaned the Senegal international back to the Ligue 1 side – Sarr’s form has rather worryingly faltered.

Indeed, over his 24 Ligue 1 outings in the current campaign – only 15 of which have come as starts – the £11k-per-week youngster has so far scored one goal, registered one assist and created one big chance for his teammates, in addition to making an average of 0.6 interceptions, 1.2 tackles, 25.8 passes and winning 3.7 duels per fixture – all of which are down on the same metrics the previous season.

These returns have seen the player who Fabio Paratici dubbed “one of the most talented in Europe” and a “great signing” average a disappointing SofaScore match rating of 6.70, ranking him as Metz’s joint 18th-best player in the league this time out.

As such, while there is undoubtedly still a great deal of time in which the young midfielder can improve, considering his drop off in performance this year, in addition to the fact that Spurs have now have Antonio Conte at the helm – a manager who very much likes to have a say in his club’s signings – Paratici’s decision to spend a considerable amount of money on Sarr could well have already proven to be something of a mistake on the part of the sporting director.

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Indeed, while Tanguy Ndombele’s record-breaking £63m signing was not the Italian’s doing, there are already worrying similarities between the deal for the France international and the one for Sarr – with the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium faithful undoubtedly hoping the 19-year-old will not go on to follow the same path as the £120k-per-week flop.

AND in other news: “Incredibly deadly”, “Robben-esque”: Paratici plotting Spurs swoop for £36m-rated ace

Delhi fight back as TN waste a solid start

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M Vijay and Abhinav Mukund added 127 for the first wicket, but Tamil Nadu collapsed thereafter to finish the first day at 250 for 9 © Cricinfo Ltd

Tamil Nadu lost nine wickets for 123 runs at the Chepauk as Delhi made a spirited fightback after the openers had added 127. Chetanya Nanda triggered the collapse with three wickets in 13 deliveries, while Rajat Bhatia and Pradeep Sangwan followed up on the act with two wickets apiece.Earlier M Vijay and Abhinav Mukund had given Tamil Nadu yet another good start as they made Delhi wait for 39 overs for the first breakthrough. The half-centuries the two scored were Vijay’s third and Mukund’s fourth score in excess of 50 this season. But after the first wicket, the highest partnership Tamil Nadu managed was 28 runs for the sixth wicket.
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Piyush Chawla and Tanmay Srivastava missed maiden centuries as Uttar Pradesh finished the first day in Hyderabad at 293 for 6. After Tanmay lost his opening partner Rohit Prakash in the first over, he anchored the first half of UP’s innings. He shared stands worth 61 and 80 with Suresh Raina and Mohammad Kaif respectively and then became part of a mini middle-order collapse as 141 for 2 became 168 for 5. He scored 81, three less than his previous best.Chawla and Amir Khan stemmed the collapse and added 112 for the sixth wicket, Chawla taking charge and scoring a career-best 82 off 130 balls. Amir, the sedate partner, ended the day unbeaten on 44 off 119 deliveries.
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Bengal bowled Andhra out for 121 at Eden Gardens to give themselves a hope of getting a bonus point and avoiding relegation. They ended the day at 46 for 1, 75 behind Andhra. Rana Chowdhary, the left-arm medium bowler playing his second match, took four wickets in 6.2 overs to rattle the Andhra batsmen. Ranadeb Bose took three wickets and SS Paul chipped in with two.Andhra’s batting never got going as the 39-run eighth-wicket stand was the highest partnership, and B Sumanth, the No. 7, was the top-scorer with 30.
ScorecardIn a relegation face-off match, Himachal Pradesh wasted a good start to lose nine wickets for 121 runs and get bowled out for 280 against Rajasthan in Dharamsala. Before the collapse, Mukesh Sharma and Hemant Dogra had kept Rajasthan completely out of the game with a 127-run second-wicket stand. Mukesh went on to score his first first-class century, but saw the rest of the batsmen fall at the other end. Mukhesh, 101, was the ninth wicket to fall. Dogra scored his personal best with 71.Shamsher Singh dismissed the two of them, while Mohammad Aslam and Sumit Mathur took three wickets apiece for Rajasthan.Karnataka 2 for 0 trail Maharashtra 276 (Khadiwale 96, Mohan 51, Vinay Kumar 4-66) by 274 runs
Scorecard Maharashtra, who looked well placed for a big total against Karnataka, collapsed to be bowled out for 276 in Ratnagiri. From 210 for 3, they lost the last seven wickets for 66, as Harshad Khadiwale missed out on his second century of the season. A quick half-century by Dhruv Mohan took Maharashtra to the eventual 276.Maharashtra had made six changes to their side; three of the in-coming players being debutants, while Hrishikesh Kanitkar, Sairaj Bahutule, Salil Agharkar and Kedar Jadhav were dropped.For Karnataka, D Vinay Kumar and NC Aiyappa did most of the damage, taking four and three wickets respectively.
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Led by the dour Shitanshu Kotak and fluent Cheteshwar Pujara, Saurashtra ground the Mumbai bowlers and lost only two wickets for 202 on the first day at the Wankhede Stadium. To make matters worse for Mumbai, none of the two was done with by stumps: Kotak was unbeaten on 73, Pujara on 61.Kotak came in to bat in the fourth over of the day and spent an even six hours in the middle. Pujara, the leading run-getter in Ranji trophy so far, crossed fifty for sixth time in the season and is six short of 800 runs from the season.Mumbai employed seven bowlers, but only Murtuza Hussain met success, ending the day with figures of 2 for 32 from 19 overs.
ScorecardThe Baroda lower order recovered well after Orissa, led by Basanth Mohanty, had reduced them to 81 for 6. They ended the day at 241 for 9, thanks to useful contributions from Pinal Shah, Abhimanyu Chauhan, Sankalp Vohra and Sumit Singh.Shah and Chauhan started the comeback with a 55-run seventh-wicket partnership. After Chauhan fell for 35, Rajesh Pawar fell quickly too, but Shah and Vohra added 27 for the ninth wicket. Shah got out for 44. The unbeaten last-wicket partnership of 71 between Vohra and Sumit was Baroda’s highest. Vohra ended the day on 45, and Singh, the No. 11, on 29. These are career-best scores for Chauhan, Vohra and Sumit.For Orissa Basanth Mohanty continued his impressive first season with 4 for 55.

India edge past despite Chanderpaul's masterclass

India 338 for 3 (Ganguly 98, Gambhir 69, Dhoni 62*, Dravid 54*) beat West Indies 324 for 8 (Chanderpaul 149*) by 14 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Risk without recklessness symbolised Sourav Ganguly’s spectacular comeback © Getty Images

Sourav Ganguly followed up his impressive Test comeback with a spectacular return to one-dayers, but even his outstanding 98 was overshadowed by a stunning unbeaten 149 by Shivnarine Chanderpaul as the Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground saw the most number of runs ever scored in a one-day international in India. On a belter of a pitch, India rode on Ganguly’s knock and a late fourish to pile up a gigantic 338 for 3. That seemed to be way beyond West Indies’ reach, till Chanderpaul turned it on towards the end. Even his blistering strokeplay wasn’t quite enough, though, as West Indies finished on 324 for 8, allowing India to sneak through by 14 runs.On a day when boundaries rained from start to finish, India were the early aggressors. Ganguly smashed 98 from 109 deliveries, and with Gautam Gambhir in spectacular form as well, the new opening combination put a rollicking 144 for the opening wicket – the first century partnership for India in ODIs for close to nine months. Sachin Tendulkar, walking in at No.3, showed the creativity he could offer in the middle overs, while Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Rahul Dravid provided a lustrous polish at the end of the innings, pillaging 119 off the last 11.5 overs and erecting an awesome skyscraper.That skyscraper, though, was in serious danger of crumbling as West Indies put together an inspired run-chase. Requiring more than a run a ball, they got off to a frenetic start too, as Chris Gayle and Chanderpaul added 80 in less than 13 overs. Like the two left-handers who opened for India, Gayle and Chanderpaul complemented each other with their contrasting styles. While Gayle was all brute force, freeing his arms against some wayward bowling, Chanderpaul resorted to touch, cannily finding the angles. Gayle had two let-offs – on 2 and 12, both off Sreesanth – and he made the Indians pay for their lapses, swinging through the line and creaming boundaries almost at will.Subsequently, Harbhajan Singh’s double-strike pegged them back and following Gayle’s dismissal things slowed down considerably for them, reaching 139 for 2 at the 25-over stage. Chanderpaul was methodical and sly in his run-gathering. He glided Zaheer wide of first slip, top-edged Harbhajan over the same fielder, pulled Ajit Agarkar for six over square leg, pushed, tapped and burrowed. He didn’t try anything silly when India didn’t enforce the Power Plays – between the 10th and 14th over – but cashed in when the field was up soon after. He lost a couple of partners – Gayle was foxed by an offbreak from Harbhajan while Runako Morton had no clue against a doosra – but brought up his half-century in 52 balls and kept his side in the contest.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul combined sly accumulation with blistering strokeplay © Getty Images

Earlier, India got the start they needed. Gambhir set the ball rolling with a salvo of boundaries early on and was especially severe on Jerome Taylor’s wide offerings. He didn’t miss out on anything wide and, once he’d gauged the true nature of the surface, even endeavored to pull the short ones.The story of the morning, especially when one considers what went before, was Ganguly. Returning to the one-day side after a gap of 15 months, he didn’t take long to find his groove. Displaying divine touches when he slashed through the off side, and showing no fear in charging down the track, he rattled West Indies. The shot with which he brought up his half-century encapsulated the mood: with an important landmark ahead and a chance to strengthen his case, he walked down the track to Daren Powell and smote him over extra-cover for a six. Risk without recklessness seemed to be the motif for the day.He was commanding against spin – whacking Gayle and Samuels straight over their heads – and showed enough energy when he ran between the wickets. He was always on the look out for a single but his eagerness led to his dismissal, falling two short of his first century in close to four years. Chancing Dwayne Smith’s arm at short midwicket, he was caught napping against a direct hit. The packed stands applauded his fine effort and one banner in particular – “The Tiger’s back” – said all that was needed.What eventually made the difference was the 71 runs in the last five overs, with both Dhoni and Dravid going ballistic. Dwayne Bravo’s slower deliveries proved effective initially but Dhoni soon teed off with a muscular approach that few can match. He jumped down the track to the fast bowlers and stung with an array of unorthodox slogging. Dravid, at the other end, was more delicate in approach but as deadly in execution. His three sixes were like flowers transforming into grenades – one over cover required just one hand – and the contrasting styles completely put off the bowlers. The stage was set for an interesting denouement and though the West Indies responded bravely India just had too many runs on board to seal their success.However, India’s slow over-rate marred the victory as the players were individually penalised 5% of their match fees. Dravid, on the other hand, copped a higher 10% fine.

India canter to 10-wicket win

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Rumeli Dhar prepares to launch a boundary during her 48-ball 54 © Getty Images

India sauntered to an easy 10-wicket win against Pakistan in the Asia Cup as they warmed-up for Wednesday’s final against Sri Lanka in style. As throughout the tournament the Pakistan batting struggled to post any sort of target against a well-drilled Indian attack before Mithali Raj and Rumeli Dhar knocked off the runs inside 18 overs.Pakistan opted to try and post a defendable total but were soon in familiar trouble as the top order were skittled. Sajjida Shah resisted for 65 balls before falling to Varsha Rapheal, who bowled here 10 overs for 22. However, that appeared expensive compared to Devika Palshikar, who finished with the remarkable figures of 3 for 12 from her full complement of overs. Sana Mir produced a brave attempt to edge Pakistan towards three figures with a battling 27, which included three boundaries.But the Indian batting has produced consistent performances throughout the Asia Cup and this time Raj and Dhar eased along at five an over to make short work of the target. Dhar was especially impressive, striking eight fours and a six in her 48-ball 54.Despite losing all their group matches the Pakistan captain, Sana Javed, was still optimistic about the progress her team was making. “We are newcomers to women’s cricket and gained a lot of experience despite losing all four matches.”

Shoaib signs off with a sigh

Hamstrung: Shoaib Akhtar’s tour was interrupted by injuries© Getty Images

Shoaib Akhtar flew out of Australia yesterday to end an eventful, occasionally destructive and often disruptive tour expecting more nightmares about bowling to Justin Langer. Shoaib, who was ordered home after suffering a left hamstring tear at the Gabba last Wednesday, was impressed by Langer’s series return of 390 runs, but disappointed by the lack of bowling support from his team-mates.”Justin said before the start of the tour he had nightmares about me," Shoaib told the Daily Telegraph. "After bowling to him I can say I now have nightmares about him. He is easily Australia’s toughest batsman. He is unbelievably determined. Damien Martyn is under-rated and much improved but Langer is the best.”Shoaib told the paper he deserved credit for his bowling, which peaked with 5 for 99 in the first innings at Perth and included 11 Test wickets. “It was just me up against seven batsmen who are all capable of scoring 200 each," he said. "It was very tough. It is hard trying to bowl at 155km/h all the time. You do get niggles. It’s like driving a Ferrari. After every few laps you have to get it serviced."Waqar Younis, who has spent the summer watching as a television commentator, said Shoaib "sometimes likes talking it up more than bowling". “There was no spirit in the bowling," Waqar told the Sydney Morning Herald. "You are supposed to take pride when you bowl for your country. They looked better when Shoaib was bowling his heart out early, but that all stopped with injuries. Pakistan don’t need an unfit Shoaib Akhtar." Waqar said without Shoaib the attack was like a club side’s bowling.

Di Venuto and Marsh lead Tasmania to victory

Tasmania 276 (Marsh 68, Mason 58, MacGill 5-79) and 4 for 386 (Di Venuto 174*, Marsh 107*) beat New South Wales 5 for 453 dec and 8 for 208 dec (Mail 107*) by six wickets
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Dan Marsh celebrates Tasmania’s remarkable victory
© Getty Images

Michael Di Venuto smashed an unbeaten 174 to lead Tasmania to a thrilling six-wicket victory against New South Wales at The Bellerive Oval.Di Venuto and Dan Marsh, who scored 107 not out, shared an unbroken 220-run partnership to guide their team to 4 for 386 in front of a small crowd, which included Tasmania’s new Governor, Richard Butler.Di Venuto, the Man of the Match, smacked 18 fours and one six in his innings, and he was well-supported by Marsh, who hit 10 boundaries. Tasmania’s successful run-chase was the 11th most successful in domestic first-class cricket history, and they did it with over two overs to spare.”We have had some good run chase victories before, so there was belief there,” Marsh said. “We knew it was going to be hard work and we had to play the game of our lives, but it turned out like that.”Steve Waugh, NSW’s captain, praised Tasmania’s performance on a wicket that offered few opportunities for bowlers. “We gave it our best shot,” Waugh said.”I’ve got no complaints with our bowlers. We toiled away pretty hard. We thought there would be some chances at some stage, but they just didn’t happen.Full credit for the way they played, they batted very well.”NSW, who led by 177 after the first innings, had the upper hand as Tasmania resumed their second innings on 1 for 26. The target of 386 looked a daunting task when Jamie Cox was out seven minutes into the first session, lbw to leg Stuart MacGill for 18.But Di Venuto proved inspirational for the Tasmania, who finished last season with the wooden spoon. His third-wicket partnership with Shane Watson (42) delivered 103 vital runs as he went from strength to strength.Watson, meanwhile, failed to replicate his century against South Australia at Bellerive earlier this month and was caught by Mark Waugh in the slips off MacGill’s third ball after lunch.Tasmania picked up six points for the win, mnaking them joint leaders of the table with NSW.

Mark Vermeulen – Biography

FULL NAME: Mark Andrew Vermeulen
BORN: 2 March 1979, at Harare
MAJOR TEAMS: Mashonaland (1997/98); CFX Academy (1998/99), Matabeleland(1999/2000 to date). Present club side: MacDonald Club (Bulawayo)
KNOWN AS: Mark Vermeulen
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Off Break Bowler
OCCUPATION: Professional cricketer
FIRST-CLASS DEBUT: Mashonaland A v Matabeleland, at Bulawayo AthleticClub, 23-25 October 1997
TEST DEBUT: Still awaited
ODI DEBUT: 21 October 2000, v Sri Lanka, at Sharjah
BIOGRAPHY (updated January 2002)Mark Vermeulen, former Zimbabwe Under-19 captain, is generally regarded as one of Zimbabwe’s most promising young batsmen. At present he still needs consistency and a tightening of his technique, but he has shown himself as a man who can take responsibility in a crisis and build big hundreds.Unusually for a white Zimbabwean player, Mark has little family background in cricket, although he does have an uncle on his mother’s side who is involved in administration in Matabeleland. Coming from an affluent family, though, he has been able to overcome this problem with enough money to help him along financially, attending sound cricketing schools and by his own application and determination.Mark was a regular but not a particularly dedicated player until, he says, he was in Form Two at high school, when in the first game of the season he scored a century for the first time, and this was the turning point in his life. From then on, he has never wanted to follow any other career but one in cricket. "It became like a disease that caught me and never wanted to let go," he smiles.He first played the game at St John’s Preparatory School in Harare, getting into the school colts team at the age of about ten. He started as a wicket-keeper, taking over in his second match after the regular keeper had a poor match, and also opening the batting. In his next two years, in the school first team, he began to bowl off-spin as well. Strangely he does not remember playing cricket before then at home like most young Zimbabwean white players do; he played a bit of tennis, but when he became keen on cricket he turned the family tennis court into an indoor cricket centre, complete with a bowling machine.He did well enough in the school team to be selected for the Harare Schools team in the primary schools cricket week, scoring a number of forties but getting no further due to the limited-over nature of the matches, and taking wickets in every match. In one game against Springvale School near Marondera, he took seven wickets for 11 runs, which remains the best bowling performance of his career. He did well enough to be selected for the national Under-13 team, the Partridges, mainly as an off-spinner, although he opened the batting as well.When he went to Prince Edward High School he began keeping wicket again, and was appointed captain of the side as well. "Those first three years were really brilliant, captaining the side. It was fun and the team spirit was excellent at Prince Edward," he said. "The black guys there really enjoy their cricket and the facilities are all there, and I think the headmaster Clive Barnes is fantastic." He admits that they had a good team, losing only about three matches in three years, and including players like David Mutendera.In Form Two there came that match against Lomagundi School when he scored 127 not out, opening the batting, which changed his direction in life. He usually opened at high school, which he still likes to do in one-day cricket, but prefers number three in the longer matches. When he went into the first team in Form Four, they already had a wicket-keeper so Mark started bowling again. His batting still dominated, though, as he scored a century in his fourth match, the first century for the school first team for about five years. His time in the first team also included a school tour to England, when he averaged 45.In 1996 Mark was involved in an unhappy incident that could have had a serious effect on his future career. He returned from the tour to England to find his reputation had gone ahead of him and that the word had gone round other schools that they had to get Mark Vermeulen out quickly if they wanted to win the game. He felt that some of the masters of opposing teams were unfairly giving him out as the opposition’s leading batsman, and on this occasion he got a big bottom edge from his bat on to his pad, yet was given out lbw. Something snapped; he felt he had again been cheated out and he pulled all the stumps out of the ground as he stormed off to the pavilion.This was an uncharacteristic lapse, as Mark is normally philosophical and able to handle his dismissals and failures, but it had serious repercussions. He was suspended from school and dropped from the Mashonaland Schools team. Fortunately he had a strong supporter in Mr Bill Flower, father of Test players Andy and Grant. When nobody else would support Mark, Bill took it upon himself to speak in Mark’s favour to the people involved and earned him another chance the following year.Mark feels that Bill has had a greater influence on his career than any other individual. "I owe a lot of respect to Mr Flower," he says. "He’s come round to my house and given me private lessons. He’s really been a fantastic man for the psychological as well as technique, and he’s been a great help to my game."Mark had a run of bad form that resulted in his failing to gain selection for the national Under-15 team, but regained his place for the national schools side. He spent two years in that team, as captain in his final year, and three years in the national Under-19 team, the final two as captain, which included the Under-19 World Cup in South Africa. During that time he toured England in 1997, when his opponents included Ben Hollioake, and scored 50 in the first unofficial Test at Edgbaston and 134 in the second at Northampton.The following season he led the Zimbabwe team to the Under-19 World Cup, when they were placed in the only group of four to contain three Test-playing nations, West Indies and Australia also being in the group. They lost to Australia, Mark scoring a dashing 69, but beat Papua-New Guinea, with Mark scoring 112 off 84 balls. Then came the crucial match against the West Indies, with the winner to go through to the Super League. After a flying start chasing 235 to win, Mark scored 63 to help his team to a five-wicket victory with about five overs to spare, and this he names as the greatest moment of his career to date. This made him the leading run-scorer in the preliminary round of the competition. Unfortunately Zimbabwe lost all their Super League matches due to the failure of the top-order batsmen, including Mark.Mark first started playing club cricket at the age of 14, obliged to join Old Hararians as he was a Prince Edward pupil. He continued there until the incident with the umpire, when the club said they had to back the school and refused to play him any longer. He moved to Old Georgians for two seasons, playing mainly for the second team with only an occasional first-team game as they had a very strong batting side. He made some big centuries for the second team, but when he turned 18 he decided to move again to Harare Sports Club where there was a vacancy for an opening batsman.He played his first match for the Sports Club third team, but John Traicos, who had already been giving him some coaching, saw him playing and was so impressed that he had him promoted to the first team for the next match. He began batting at six or seven, though, but the following season they gave him a chance as opener against Old Georgians, when he scored 107 and became a fixture there.After leaving school Mark was not interested in following any career apart from cricket. He has been over to England to play club cricket each year, although he was available for only half of the 2000 season as the Zimbabwe A tour of Sri Lanka cut across the English season.In 1997 his English experience came with the national Under-19 team, and the following year he played for Alderley Edge in Cheshire, a wealthy club, and in 1999 for Betley in the North Staffordshire league. He became the first club professional to score 1000 runs in a season for them.In 1999 he had a year at the Zimbabwe Cricket Academy, and for 2000 and 2001 was posted, as part of his three-year contract, to Matabeleland, where he plays and coaches, staying with an uncle. His Under-19 captaincy experience stood him in good stead, as he was immediately appointed captain of a young Matabeleland Logan Cup team. He has also played for the Zimbabwe B team, but he acknowledges the debt he owes to his parents for their support throughout his career, including financial.Mark intends to make cricket his permanent career, and even when he eventually finishes playing wants to go into coaching or administration; he does not visualize himself as a person who can do an office job or sit behind a desk all day. He realizes that to have an international career behind him would be a great help."With sport these days there are no short cuts," Mark says. "You have to put in a lot of effort and a lot of work if you want to get to the top level, and that’s basically what I’ve been trying to do for the last three or four years that I’ve been out of school."Playing for the Zimbabwe Board XI against Border in the UCBSA Bowl competition during the 1999/2000 season he scored 143, batting at number three, in his first Board match of the season. He had suffered a poor start to the club season, apart from an 84 against Queens, an attack that included Heath Streak, Henry Olonga and Pommie Mbangwa. Then came a two-month period when league cricket in Harare almost came to a standstill because of visiting international teams, and he lost momentum. He was therefore overlooked for the Board XI, but had a lucky break when injuries to others and national call-ups led to the selectors recalling him. He is a player who needs to play regularly to maintain his best form, and finds that difficult with only one league match every weekend during the Zimbabwe season.Mark’s highest career score is 197, scored out of a total of 292 for Matabeleland against Midlands during 1999/2000. This was not only his maiden first-class century; it was worth 67.46 per cent of his team’s total, a record for cricket in Zimbabwe. In a weak team, though, a second-innings failure led to a narrow defeat. In the four-match programme he scored 438 runs for Matabeleland at an average of 62.57, finishing with an unbeaten 103 in the drawn match against the Academy.Selected for the Zimbabwe A tour to Sri Lanka, Mark began superbly, with 152 in the opening first-class match against a Sri Lankan Board XI. His tour was interrupted by injury, though, and he did not each fifty again. After the tour he went to England again, to play for Benwall and Wallbottle in Newcastle during the second half of the season. Despite his restricted season, only one player in that league scored more than his 720 runs at an average of 60, and he scored four centuries.He returned to play against New Zealand in a warm-up match, without success, but was selected to go to Sharjah with the national team. He probably only played in the first match, against Sri Lanka, because Alistair Campbell had been suspended, and he admits that his 22 as an opener was too slow for one-day cricket. He has not been selected for the national team again, but has been a regular for the Zimbabwe Board XI, scoring a century against North West opening the batting. In the one-day matches he scored 57 against Border.He feels he is batting better in one-day cricket now, generally at number three or four. He scored only his second first-league century, 125 off 124 balls for his new club MacDonald Club in Bulawayo against Alexandra Sports Club, four or five years after his first. In the Logan Cup he recorded another big century, 180 against Midlands again. He enjoyed his time in Bulawayo but returned to his parents’ home in Harare after his contract with Matabeleland expired at the end of 2001, where he has all the facilities he needs to work at his game. He played in England again during 2001 with success, scoring over 1000 runs at an average of 60 in 17 matches, including three hundreds. This time he was playing for Fordhouses, just outside Wolverhampton, in the Birmingham League.He returned to Zimbabwe and enjoyed mixed fortunes. He scored 120 for the Zimbabwe Board XI against North West in the one-day match and did reasonably well on the Zimbabwe A tour of Kwekwe, while being disappointed not to turn several fifties into big centuries. He suffered a run of poor umpiring decisions, though, which frustrated him. His usual policy has been to walk when he knows he is out, believing the umpires will respect his reputation, but gave it up for a while, only to find out that he got even more bad decisions then. He has now decided to walk again."Basically all I want to do is to play for my country," he says. "That has been my goal since I was ten or twelve years old. I’m just going to look to keep nice and fit, and keep getting scores on the board so the selectors recognize me. That’s the only way to do it and it’s the right way to select teams: if you perform on the field, you get picked."Mark is basically an attacking batsman who likes to get on with the game, although at first-class level he is still finding his way. Despite being over six foot tall, he plays more off the back than the front foot and prefers bowling short of a length. The hook, pull and cut are his most profitable strokes, but he can also drive off either foot. He likes to dominate the bowling: "I think if you go out there to bat and you’re not going to dominate the bowling you might as well stay in the pavilion. You have to go out there and show who’s the boss."He is also a man for big scores and is bitterly disappointed when he fails to turn fifties into hundreds. "Anything between 50 and 99 I don’t like at all," he says. "My belief is that once you get past 50 you have to carry it on to 100. Most of my first-class centuries have been over 150." He prefers to hit boundaries and in Matabeleland has a reputation for his dislike of running between wickets. However, he has realized his need to rotate the strike more, especially in difficult conditions, and will be working on that aspect of his game.In the field Mark is a specialist slip fielder, preferring the first slip position. He began his 1999 season fielding in the covers, but in about the fifth week his team needed one wicket to win and two overs left and he was brought in to third slip. The batsman snicked a ball that Mark could see would fall short of second slip, so he dived across and caught it just off the ground. After that he became a regular at first slip for them.*** Toughest opponents: "I’ve played against the Aussies and I found Glenn McGrath was pretty tricky! He gets it nice and straight and nips it both ways, so you can’t really leave it because he can nip it back and trap you lbw or bowled, so you have to play a shot. He also has one that goes the other way, so you’re always in danger of edging it to the slips. He gets it to the right area so you can’t really get on the front foot and drive, and it’s not short enough to hook or cut. To me he’s been the toughest bowler I’ve faced so far in my career. The only way to counteract him is to use your feet, and in Test cricket you can’t really do that against a bowler of his pace. In one-day cricket you can get away with it because he can’t bowl bouncers."I’ve also faced Brett Lee, but he’s very much a two-length bowler, either a bouncer or a yorker. Because he has genuine pace you’re going to struggle to play the pull shot, so you just have to play with a straight bat and get your ones and twos, and when he tries the yorker you can drive."*** Best friends in cricket: Doug Marillier and Neil Ferreira. "We get along very well, different characters all three so we make a good combination when we get together. We have a lot of fun together when we go out, and we were all at the Academy together last year. We enjoy playing ten-pin bowling and a bit of golf here and there. I think that’s probably why they sent us to three different provinces this year!"*** Immediate ambitions: "To do very well in this Logan Cup. I have to work hard and try to get myself a maiden first-class century, and then off to Sri Lanka for six weeks starting in the middle of April. Hopefully they will give me a chance in the side, because since I made that 143 they haven’t actually played me. It’s four-day cricket, so there are opportunities not only to get hundreds but to get double-hundreds."*** Views on cricket: "I’m trying to push in Zimbabwe, trying to make Logan Cup cricket four-day cricket as well; in three-day cricket you’re really struggling to get a result, unless you do what our two sides have done [in the Matabeleland-Manicaland match] and get both sides bowled out in one day. If you make first-class cricket over four days, as it should be and as it is in most countries round the world, then you give batsmen the chance to get not only hundreds but double-hundreds. It also gives the bowlers the opportunity to bowl to a player without having to rush to bowl teams out."Also we have got to play each other home and away. Playing each team once is not quite enough. That gives you ten first-class games in a season, and with a final eleven. This is the only place you learn, because in club cricket, the one-day game, anyone on their day can pull off something special, whereas out here it’s a lot tougher, fields are set to good bowling, and if you bowl well you get wickets and if you bat well and work hard you score runs."You can’t believe how much Logan Cup has improved from last year (1999/2000) to this year. Last year when I played for Matabeleland there were two guys, myself and Dion Ebrahim, who were fulltime cricketers. This year there are only two or three who are not on ZCU contracts. Already in one year it has improved, quadrupled the number of fulltime cricketers. Next year, when all the present Academy players go to different provinces, every single player in every province will be a fulltime player, so there’s no excuse next season for there not to be four-day cricket, home and away, ten games of four-day cricket."I think we need to get more cricket being played in Zimbabwe. When I go over to England and play in a league, and there are 300 leagues in England, there are 26 league games in one season and 12 cup games, 36 to 38 cricket matches. I counted how many league fixtures there are in Zimbabwe this season and there are only 17 in six months, which is not really good enough. I’m trying to get into the national side, and playing only four or five first-class matches a year makes it difficult."All I hope for Zimbabwe cricket is that the people keep coming and supporting us. Whenever I go out there, I’m going out with 100 per cent commitment and I’m just looking to play my best. All we need is a bit of support and I’m sure things will go right. We need to work hard, especially at the highest level of international cricket. We’ve got everything going for us – beautiful weather and conditions. I think Zimbabwe is a great country and we just need the people to believe in us."We need more publicity about domestic cricket. That’s one thing that’s lacking. I’m sure that if more people knew about the Logan Cup more people would come. But there is not much said and it’s not publicized properly."The good thing about the Logan Cup this year is that you are playing with the national players and after the game you can have chats with them and they can help you a hell of a lot. Basically cricket, and most sports, is learning, and the only way you can learn is out in the middle. That’s why more of these games would make up-and-coming players better, because you have national bowlers who will figure you out, and after the game they will say, `Hey, you should have rotated the strike’ or `You could have left those balls outside off stump’ and all those little things. You store them in your mind and that’s how you become a much better cricketer."*** Most difficult opponents played so far: "Glenn McGrath as a quick bowler is very difficult. He gets very close to the stumps, making you play the ball all the time, and he seams it both ways. Not very often does he bowl you a bad ball; it’s always on a good length, no half-volleys, and he’ll bowl you the odd short one at pace. I think he’s been the most difficult bowler to face."The quickest bowler for me has been Brett Lee, who came here for the Australian Academy. We played them at Alexandra Sports Club, and he showed in the recent World Series that he’s actually the quickest bowler in the world. As a spinner I didn’t get to face Shane Warne when they came, but I did face Anil Kumble two seasons ago, and I feel that he’s the best spinner I’ve faced."*** Other sports played: "I play the odd round of golf if I get the opportunity; I might knock a tennis ball around, but really it’s 100% cricket. I work on fitness and strength at the gym every morning, usually, practise for a couple of hours a day and then coach in the afternoon, as I’ve been doing in Bulawayo this year."I used to throw the javelin at school; I was the national javelin champion at Under-15 level, and my older brother also throws the javelin, so it’s been in my family. My dad still holds the record at Falcon College. I played rugby at junior school for the first team, but once I went to senior school I only played it to make up time in the winter season. From Form Two it was just cricket."*** Interests outside cricket: "I enjoy most ball sports; I like to hit a golf ball. That feel of hitting a ball sweetly is why I enjoy cricket so much, hitting it off the middle of the bat, the timing of the ball. I study cricket, watching the greats such as Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara on video; I can just sit and watch them all day long, even if they’re blocking the ball – there’s so much class and style, it’s fantastic to watch. That’s what I spend a lot of my time doing, studying the great players, trying to make myself a better cricketer.”

Sinhalese Sports Club saunter into semi finals

The Sinhalese Sports Club defeated Police Sports Club by eight wickets to secure their place in the semi-finals next weekend. SSC won the match with ease. They bowled out Police SC for just 112 in 36.2 overs before knocking off a Duckworth Lewis adjusted target of 111 in just 16 overs.The start of the match was delayed due to overnight rain. Play finally began at 11.15am and the scheduled overs were then reduced to 44. However, Duckworth Lewis was introduced after a bizarre interruption in play. Not because of rain or bad light, but because at 1am, a Sri Lankan army helicopter landed on the outfield and held up play for 60 minutes.SSC won the toss and had no hesitation in putting the Police into bat. There batsmen never settled against the SSC bowling attacking. Dilhara Fernando continued his impressive early season form with two for 14, the erstwhile campaigner, Pramodya Wickramasinghe, chipped in with two wickets for 10 runs and Tilan Samaraweera picked up two wickets with his off spin.The only Police batsmen to linger long at the crease were Thamara Aberathne, who scored 22, and Nihal Zoysa, who top scored with 27.SSC began their run chase in attacking fashion. Once again Avishka Gunawardene was in swashbuckling form. He added 46 runs for the first wicket with Upeka Fernando, his contribution being 26 from just 21 balls, including one six and three fours.Marvan Attapattu joined Fernando at the fall of Gunawardene’s wicket. It was Upeka Fernando though who stole the show. He was a delight to watch and scored 40 runs from only 33 balls. When he was dismissed Mahela Jayawardene (19) and Attapattu (22) guided SSC to the victory target.

Spurs: Gold drops Skipp contract claim

Alasdair Gold has dropped a promising update on the future of Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Oliver Skipp.

What’s the talk?

In a recent article for football.london, the Tottenham correspondent revealed that Fabio Paratici’s discussions with the 21-year-old regarding a new deal are believed to be nearing a conclusion – something that would see the England U21 international earn a significant pay rise, as well as securing his long-term future at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

In his report, Gold wrote: “There is at least one big boost for the midfielder and the club as football.london understands that discussions over a bumper new deal for the talented 21-year-old are nearing a positive conclusion following his impressive breakthrough season.”

Supporters will be buzzing

Considering just how impressive Skipp has been for Spurs this season, the news that the club are close to securing a new deal for the defensive midfielder is sure to have left supporters buzzing.

Indeed, over his 18 Premier League appearances in the current campaign, the £18m-rated youngster has been in fantastic form for Antonio Conte’s side, making an average of 0.7 interceptions, 1.8 tackles, 42.3 passes and winning 3.6 duels – at a success rate of 54% – per game.

These returns have seen the £24k-per-week sensation average a SofaScore match rating of 6.81, ranking him as Tottenham’s joint 15th-best performer in the top flight – a highly impressive feat considering this is his first full season at the top of the English game.

Furthermore, the 52-year-old Italian coach is clearly a huge fan of the midfielder, with Conte stating of Skipp earlier this season:

“This player is very young. He has really a lot of space for improvement. He played with great intensity, great passion, with heart, with soul. I think it was important because, for me, he doesn’t care if he’s only 21-years-old, who deserves to play.

“I think that the present and the future depends on him. If he wants to become a top midfielder, he could become a top midfielder – but he has to continue to work. He has this will, this desire to become an important player for Tottenham and for the present and for the future.”

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As such, it is clear for all to see that Skipp putting pen to paper on a new contract would be a fantastic outcome for the club, as the 21-year-old would very much appear to be the base on which the Tottenham midfield will be built upon for many a year to come.

And in other news: Better than Kane: 95-touch dynamo proved THFC “are more complete” with him in the team

Cuba denied participation in Stanford 20/20

Cuba will not be playing in the 2008 Stanford 20/20 because of a political embargo, the competition’s board of directors has announced.The United States embargo against Cuba means that organisations and American citizens such as Allen Stanford have to make application to, and receive special permission from the US Government to conduct any type of activity with Cuba. Stanford’s application was denied but now he plans to ask the US government to reconsider for future tournaments.”We have been anxious to include the entire Caribbean in the Stanford 20/20 Cricket Tournament and I am extremely disappointed that Cuba will not be able to play,” said Stanford. “Stanford 20/20 is requesting that the denial from the United States Government be reconsidered and we are exploring every option to secure their future participation.”The news disappointed Cuba, who have been training intensely for what was to be their first official tournament outside their country. Cuba was scheduled to play in the first match against St. Maarten on Friday, January 25 but their opposition will now get a bye.

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