Redbacks chase Tanvir's Twenty20 expertise

South Australia are looking to employ another Pakistani by having Sohail Tanvir involved in their Twenty20 campaign

Cricinfo staff12-Dec-2008
South Australia would like to have Sohail Tanvir operating in tandem with Shaun Tait © AFP
South Australia are looking to employ another Pakistani by having Sohail Tanvir involved in their Twenty20 campaign, but the move depends on his international commitments. Tanvir starred for the Rajasthan Royals in the Indian Premier League earlier this year and if the short-term deal goes through he will step in for Younis Khan, who is helping out the struggling Redbacks in 2007-08.Tanvir, 24, was the most successful bowler in the IPL with 22 wickets and hit the winning runs while batting with Shane Warne in the final. South Australian officials are excited by the prospect of Shaun Tait working in tandem with Tanvir and said the deal was “cheap”.”That was one of the real beauties of the deal … this guy is really coming for the opportunity,” Jamie Cox, South Australia’s high performance manager, told Sportal. “It’s a very, very cheap deal for us. He was a bargain basement price for the IPL and took more wickets than anyone else … we believe he’s quality in this form of the game.”Australia’s domestic Twenty20 competition starts on Boxing Day and Tanvir will be available only if he is not picked in Pakistan’s squad for India’s tour – or the series is cancelled due to security concerns. Tanvir has appeared in two Tests, 27 ODIS and 10 Twenty20 internationals. South Australia are currently bottom of the one-day competition and second last in the Sheffield Shield.

Federal Areas collapse after Shakeel five-for

A round-up of the first day of the third-round matches of the Pentangular Cup

Cricinfo staff06-Nov-2008
Scorecard
Medium-pacer Shakeel-ur-Rehman struck a blow to Federal Areas’ chances of moving up the points table by taking five wickets to trigger a collapse that had the visitors struggling at 228 for 8 at the end of day one in Peshawar. Shakeel removed the top three with only 38 on the board. Usman Saeed, the No.6 batsman, battled it out virtually on his own with a three-and-a-half-hour 73 ensured that Federal Areas did not get bowled out under 150. After Saeed’s fall to Shakeel, Imad Wasim took on the lead role with a cautious 95-ball 34. At stumps he was batting along with Mohammad Aamer (13) and Federal Areas will hope their partnership will take them past 250.
Scorecard
Sind’s decision to field first in Lahore was not a success like NWFP’s was in Peshawar. Punjab’s openers Mohammad Hafeez and Azhar Ali added 157 together before they could be parted. The openers ensured that their side won’t be hit hard by the absence of national players Shoaib Malik, Nasir Jamshed, Salman Butt, Kamran Akmal and Saeed Ajmal, who have been called up to the ODIs against West Indies in Abu Dhabi. Sind certainly missed captain Shahid Afridi, who bowls part-time legspin.Hafeez’s wicket, to Azam Khan, was the only one to fall in the day as Punjab scored at more than three an over. Only one bowler managed to concede less than three an over – Khurram Manzoor whose six overs cost seven runs. Umar Akmal (43) was batting with Azhar at stumps.

Crystal Palace: Fans react to Lukaku absence

Chelsea will be without new signing Romelu Lukaku against Crystal Palace on Saturday afternoon, according to The Athletic.

And, as to be expected, the forward’s expected Stamford Bridge absence has had a lot of Palace fans talking on social media.

The Blues announced the arrival of the Belgium superstar on Thursday evening in a deal worth £97.5m.

He returns to Chelsea after leaving for Everton back in 2014 and has signed a five-year deal with the Champions League winners.

Patrick Vieira will take charge of Palace for the first time competitively against Thomas Tuchel’s side, who look set to be without Lukaku.

David Ornstein suggested that Lukaku’s second Chelsea debut could come against Arsenal on August 22 but he is not available for the opener against Palace.

Palace fans react

The news of Lukaku’s absence against the Eagles caught the attention of these Palace fans on social media. This is what some had to say in reply…

“Thank you god”Credit: @CpfcDan_”Romelu Lukaku won’t be available for Chelsea against Palace this weekend, which is nice.”Credit: @HLTCO”Nice relief, still a tough job”Credit: @andy_lobo”Cheers”Credit: @DSBme2020″Good.”Credit: @joe_cpfc_01″He was scared of being shown up by the king”Credit: @Adam_Palace

In other news: ‘Wow’, ‘Oh boy’ – Lots of Palace fans go wild as ‘massive’ news is confirmed. 

Mishra's six hauls India A back

Amit Mishra, recently called up to India’s Test side against Australia, hauled the A side back with a six-wicket haul before M Vijay extended his form with an unbeaten 76 by stumps on day two in Chennai

Cricinfo staff04-Oct-2008
Scorecard
Amit Mishra, recently called up to India’s Test side against Australia, hauled the A side back with a six-wicket haul before M Vijay extended his form with an unbeaten 76 by stumps on day two in Chennai. New Zealand A, overnight 270 for 3, folded for 315 with Mishra running through the middle and lower orders. India slipped to 96 for 3, with Sourav Ganguly making just 14, but Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara added 66 to take the score to 162 for 3.New Zealand’s collapse, after the openers added 190, was unexpected. The Indian bowlers had toiled on the first day, but enjoyed much success against a brittle middle order. Mishra had first-day figures of 2 for 62, but chipped away to bowl them out for 315. His figures of 6 for 81 gave him his 16th five-wicket haul. Ravindra Jadeja’s left-arm spin yielded the last two wickets in the 120th over.Vijay, who scored 45 and 57 batting at No. 3 in the first Test, opened the innings today and looked on to see India slip to 24 for 2. Sahil Kukreja edged Trent Boult to wicketkeeper Reece Young in the second over and Suresh Raina, the captain, was trapped lwb by Bradely Scott in his very first over, the 10th in the innings. The third wicket came when Ganguly was run out cheaply; he responded late to a call for a single and a direct throw from James Marshall caught him short of the crease at the striker’s end with his bat in the air.In Pujara, Vijay found some stability, and reached his half-century in the 44th over with a flick to the fine leg fence off Nathan McCullum; that also raised India’s 100. Vijay also hit McCullum for two sixes over mid-wicket. Pujara was unbeaten on 49 from 115 balls.

Xavier Marshall and Willett test positive

Xavier Marshall, the West Indies opening batsman, and Tonito Willett, from Leewards, have tested positive in the drug tests conducted during a two-week camp in Antigua in August

Sriram Veera18-Sep-2008
Xavier Marshall: In the dock © Getty Images
Xavier Marshall, the West Indies opening batsman, and Tonito Willett, from Leewards, have tested positive in the drug tests conducted during a two-week camp in Antigua in August. They were among the 32 players named in a provisional Stanford Superstars squad to face England in the Stanford 20/20 for 20, a winner-take-all US$20 million match on November 1.Donald Peters, the chief executive of the West Indies board (WICB), confirmed the news and said action would be taken after advice from the attorneys. “They [the attorneys] are looking into the matter and will advise us on the course of action,” Peters told Cricinfo. “WICB has a zero-tolerance policy on drugs and the matter could come up to the disciplinary committee. We are looking at a time frame of two weeks.”Peters said that the board will take action, if any, on Marshall, as he is a centrally-contracted player, and would let Leewards handle Willett. Marshall was withdrawn from the Stanford squad on September 16 for undisclosed reasons.The drug tests on the Stanford Superstars were carried out by the Caribbean Regional Anti-Doping Organisation (RADO) agency. “We did the drug tests and there were two adverse analytical findings – which is the equivalent to two positive tests,” Dr Adrian Lorde, the chairman of the Caribbean Rado, had told .”We can’t reveal the nature of the substance they tested positive for,” an official with Stanford said.

Tottenham Hotspur: Fans react to Pierluigi Gollini’s arrival

Tottenham Hotspur have completed a deal to sign Pierluigi Gollini on a season-long loan deal from Italian side Atalanta, with a view to a permanent deal. 

Gollini has made 112 appearances for Atalanta’s first-team, featuring on 32 occasions last season.

Spurs had previously confirmed that Paulo Gazzaniga left the club when his contracted reached a conclusion at the end of the 2020/21 campaign.

Therefore, Spurs needed a second-choice goalkeeper to challenge Hugo Lloris, and Gollini has joined on an initial loan with a permanent option after this season.

The Italian is no stranger to English football, having played for Manchester United’s academy teams from 2012-2014, before departing in favour of a move to Hellas Verona.

He then followed that up with a move to Aston Villa two years later, and made 20 appearances for them in total, before signing for Atalanta in 2018.

Plenty of Spurs supporters were quick to take to social media to issue their verdicts on Gollini’s arrival at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Take a look at the best of the reaction from Twitter below….

Spurs fans praise Gollini signing

“Love it, especially the fact it’s a loan move, try before we buy, very smart move for a goalkeeper, hope he does a great job and can fill Hugo’s boots if he leaves next summer, which I imagine he will.”

Credit: @GriffCOYS

“Letsss goooo.”

Credit: @jxmiecoys

“As long as he keeps the Goal Out, I am in for Gollini!”

Credit: @arunspurs

“Wow. A new signing!”

Credit: @Spurs_SpecialK

“He’s here and he’s beautiful.”

Credit: @THFCdylz

“Better than prime Buffon in my book.”

Credit: @harry_lysn

“Future number 1.”

Credit: @GB9IsHere

“The rebuild starts here.”

Credit: @harrison_finnis

Pietersen targets the Ashes

After one victory against South Africa, Kevin Pietersen believes England can win the Ashes next summer

Andrew Miller at The Oval11-Aug-2008
Kevin Pietersen: targeting Australia already © Getty Images
“If we play like we played this week, we’ll beat Australia,” declared Kevin Pietersen, only minutes after becoming the fourth man in the last 30 years to win his first Test as England captain. If that seemed a tad of an over-reaction to a comfortable but unspectacular dead-rubber triumph, then it was merely an extension of the up-and-at-’em attitude that has revived English spirits at the end of a disappointing series. Pietersen has never stood on ceremony at any stage of his career, and this moment of victory was not likely to change that pattern one iota.”This is a very exciting stage, but a starting stage,” he said. “The key is to turn up to every single Test match like we turned up to this one. With the structures and the players we’ve got, the type of attack we’ve had in this game, the way we’ve gone about the game and the way we’ve been up for it every single day, and the emotions that the guys have come out with, it’s not far away from a perfect start. It’s the way we want to play our cricket in the future.”The fact that England have now slipped one place from fourth to fifth in the ICC Test rankings clearly has no bearing on the hyperactive thought-processes that Pietersen has been putting himself through in the week since he assumed the role of England captain. An arduous winter looms in India, followed by a springtime tour of the Caribbean and then a possible home Test series against Sri Lanka (IPL commitments pending). But Pietersen knows full well that there’s only one contest that really captures the public imagination, and as such, he’s wasted no time in firing the first shots of the 2009 Ashes.”I’ve been doing a lot of thinking over the last five days, and I’ve definitely done a bit of thinking about Australia next year,” said Pietersen. “Certainly, a lot more than I would have if I was a player. It’s about getting the structure right for a long amount of time so the players can feel comfortable and know their role, and deliver. I think that’s very important, over the next nine months, for the boys to learn their roles and deliver next year.”Quite what the Australians will make of Pietersen’s long-term ambitions remains to be seen – clearly they won’t consider his hubristic approach to be out of character. Nevertheless, there’s no doubt that England have hit upon a certain something in the course of this contest. The form and fitness of Steve Harmison and Andrew Flintoff means that England’s attack has been stripped bare and reassembled since the start of the summer, with James Anderson finally confident enough to play a starring role in his own right, and Stuart Broad finding his niche as the junior player in a five-man set-up.It is a formation that has the capacity to rattle a few opponents in the coming months, but not even Pietersen, surely, will be kidding himself that he’s found the answer to the England’s post-2005 malaise after one half-decent win. After all, when England last took on South Africa, in the winter of 2004-05, not only did they emerge victorious in a contest that was far more keenly contested than this one, they did so with a team that contained nine of the eleven men who went on to defeat Australia the following summer.How many of the current eleven can feel confident about their futures just now? Andrew Strauss’s first fifty of the series cannot mask another flaccid performance from a player who revived his career against the Kiwis, but who averaged 24 on the last Ashes tour and hasn’t gone big against any senior opponent since the Shoaib-less Pakistanis toured England in 2006. Ian Bell’s form has shrunk away since his 199 at Lord’s, while Tim Ambrose played this match with an expression as hang-dog as if he had already been droppedIn fact, aside from Pietersen, Flintoff and the version of Harmison that turned up at The Oval this week, there’s no-one else who can declare with any certainty that they will be in the team that opens the Ashes at Cardiff next summer. Nevertheless, Pietersen’s confidence was clearly contagious during the contest just gone. He hasn’t got long to formulate a squad that can live up to his ambitions, but his positive and aggressive outlook is a useful starting point.”It’s been a good fun five days, and I’ve got a real happy tiredness,” said Pietersen. “It’s about that excitement at the start, but I want to be a guy who talks to the players and they think: ‘Yeah, he really truly wants me to do well here.’ It’s important to have that relationship with your players and your coach where you really want to perform for each other, and you know they’ll do anything on the planet for you. It’s a recipe for success.”Pietersen was particularly pleased to see the pride and passion come flooding back into England’s game during this match, and for that he reserved a special mention for Harmison, who arguably hasn’t looked as enthused by international cricket since his blood-letting first morning of the 2005 Ashes at Lord’s.”Big Steve came back in after a time out and he was magnificent,” said Pietersen. “I said to Stevey, when I told him he was playing, I want you open, I want you to bowl fast and straight, and bowl like the old Steve Harmison. He said he’d do his best and his best was good enough.”He’s a huge player, absolutely huge, and we’ve seen this week how important he is for us,” said Pietersen. “I’m going to be looking after Steve as best I can, but also looking to get the best out of him as well. I think now he’s experienced international cricket again, which he loves, and with the smile he’s got now, I’m definitely going to get the best out of him.”Such is Pietersen’s confidence in his new-found leadership abilities, he added that he had even been trying to coax Harmison out of his one-day retirement. “It would be lovely to have him coming in first-change with the white ball, but you don’t always get what you want in life,” he said. Compared to that particular ambition, the Ashes might actually be a doddle.

Pundit says Ellis Simms could suit Bolton - Exclusive

Ellis Simms might not have joined Blackpool until the middle of the January window, but ended as the club’s second top goalscorer following some excellent form in their promotion winning campaign in 2020-21.

The 20-year-old striker, who spent the second half of the season on loan from Everton, struck 10 times in just 21 outings for the Seasiders, including two of the three goals in their crucial first leg win at Oxford in the play-offs.

Simms, who ended up missing the play-off final victory over Lincoln through injury, is back at Everton preparing for the new Premier League season under Rafa Benitez.

However, with the Spaniard boasting a host of attacking talent, another EFL loan move could be a likely option for the 20-year-old, who is yet to get a taste of senior action for the Toffees.

Blackpool are already keen on re-signing the highly-rated striker, but the EFL spy exclusively told Football FanCast that the youngster could suit their Lancashire rivals, Bolton:

“He did very well at Blackpool but still needs games and goals to kick on, and a big club like Bolton could benefit from his pace and size.”

Twenty20 could overtake 50-over cricket – Pietersen

Ahead of the first of five one-day internationals against New Zealand on Sunday, Kevin Pietersen believes that Twenty20 could usurp 50-over cricket as the sport’s principle format of one-day cricket

Cricinfo staff14-Jun-2008
Is that Allen on the phone? Kevin Pietersen is excited about the Stanford match in November, but aware of other opportunities that might offer a more guaranteed income © Getty Images
Ahead of the first of five one-day internationals against New Zealand on Sunday, Kevin Pietersen believes that Twenty20 could usurp 50-over cricket as the sport’s principal format of limited-over cricket.”I think it [Twenty20] will be the new form of one-day cricket for sure,” Pietersen said at a press conference at Chester-le-Street, the venue for tomorrow’s ODI. “I reckon in the next couple of years 50 overs is probably going to be something of the past.”His comments were prompted by the reaction to Allen Stanford’s winner-takes-all match in Antigua this November – the event which is threatening to overshadow England’s one-day preparations this summer. Each member of the winning team will take home US$1m (£500,000) but Pietersen, for all his excitement at potentially winning such vast sums of money, said that the Indian Premier League also had a lot to offer.”Will the Stanford deal make it more or less likely I will go to the IPL? That Stanford game, I see it as an absolute bonus for an England player,” he said. “Allen Stanford could have chosen Australia, India, Pakistan, New Zealand, anybody to take part. I see it as an absolute bonus that we’ve been picked. It is very fortunate for the players and the management and for cricket in England.”It will be a great occasion but it is a one-off fixture this year and if we lose, we come home with a tour fee. In contrast, the IPL money is guaranteed in terms of what you do.”The Stanford game we will treat with as high a regard as we can but, if we walk away having lost, then we can say it was just a bonus because he could have chosen anybody.”Pietersen added: “Am I happy with the winner-takes-all situation? There is no point in building it up to be this absolutely incredible game where you have to win. You are guaranteed to lose then. I play like I play every single day. If you play well, play great cricket, entertain, average 50 in forms of the game, your bank balance looks after itself.”You can’t think this is a game that you have to make sure you win to set yourself up for life. No, if you do well over a 10-year period playing for England right now, you will be financially sorted.”Pietersen reiterated just how much Twenty20 had changed in its brief, but unmissable, five-year life.”When it first came in, everyone thought it was just something to go and have some fun with and entertain. But the way the people played it, the way people did slog, the way people have entertained has turned it into a huge, huge business now,” he said.”As we’ve seen by the tournament in India, by what is happening in November, and the World Cup in England next year, it is a totally different kettle of fish now. I haven’t played enough of it to change anything in terms of the way I play. But mentally I have. If I was a fast bowler I would be in the nets every single day, all day perfecting the art of the yorker.”I’d make sure I was the best yorker bowler in the world and then my price would just go through the roof, to know that a captain can turn to you and say ‘bowl me six yorkers, go for six runs’.”

Snape joins England injury toll

SYDNEY, Dec 7 PA – Off-spinner Jeremy Snape today became the latest member of England’s tour squad to be hit by injury.

PA07-Dec-2002SYDNEY, Dec 7 PA – Off-spinner Jeremy Snape today became the latest member of England’s tour squad to be hit by injury.Snape sustained a blow to his right thumb while batting in yesterday’s eight-wickets day-night defeat to NSW at the Sydney Cricket Ground.He went for x-rays this morning which confirmed the bone was broken and he will be sidelined for up to four weeks.

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