Man Utd want to sign gem loved by Frank Lampard as part of INEOS strategy

Manchester United will hope to strategise for the long-term under INEOS and could now be set to up their pursuit of a talented teenager who may arrive at Old Trafford.

Manchester United's long-held relationship with developing talent

Whether it be integrating graduates from Carrington or buying young talent before developing them into first-team stars, the Red Devils have a long history of promoting prodigious assets and it is something that has characterized the backbone of the club.

Since 1937, Manchester United’s proud record of having an academy player present in every matchday squad has never faded, though it has been at risk one too many times under Ruben Amorim.

Either way, the Red Devils have made a concerted effort to recruit youngsters of late, with Sekou Kone and Diego Leon examples of investments for the future.

JJ Gabriel and Chido Obi Martin are also highly promising Red Devils’ talents, while Ayden Heaven’s emergence since joining from Arsenal has saw the defender make several first-team appearances.

Ultimately, the aim is to build a pipeline of future senior stars under INEOS, easing pressure on the club to buy players and, in turn, reducing the impact that PSR regulations will have on their ability to spend.

"Can't cope" – Paul Scholes slams incapable Man Utd trio ahead of Liverpool game

The Red Devils legend has given a scathing assessment.

By
Tom Cunningham

Oct 19, 2025

Years under the Glazers resulted in mounting debt, but there is now a feeling that sustainability is achievable with the correct measures put in place in Manchester, albeit this process will take time and patience.

Expectation to claim results at Old Trafford will always be paramount. However, seeing a plan in place will afford the club more patience as they aim to get back among the Premier League elite.

With that in mind, Manchester United have a new talent on their mind who has plenty of promise and could come in to strengthen the ranks at youth level.

Man Utd eyeing move for Coventry City youngster George Shephard

According to The Daily Mail, Manchester United are eyeing a move for Coventry City youngster George Shephard, who is already loved by Frank Lampard as he was on the bench for the Championship outfit in their victory over Blackburn Rovers on Saturday.

This follows an impressive string of performances for their Under-21 side, offering recognition for displays as he remains someone who could be fast-tracked into the senior set-up on a more regular basis.

Predominantly used on the right flank or as an attacking midfielder, Shephard is yet to sign professional forms at Coventry and his situation has alerted a number of clubs, including Manchester United.

Now, it remains to be seen whether the prospect of developing at Carrington would appeal to him as he looks to make a mark in senior football. Most young players would jump at the chance, so it will be intriguing to see if he makes the jump.

Four Lads reveal "biggest fear" emerging at Rangers – not Thelwell or Stewart

Four Lads Had A Dream have named their “biggest fear” at Rangers after another disappointing result in Europe this week.

Rangers fans want Thelwell and Stewart out

Gers supporters will have been hoping for a new manager bounce from Danny Rohl on Thursday, but instead, another woeful performance saw their team lose 3-0 away to Brann in the Europa League.

The pressure is building on sporting director Kevin Thelwell and CEO Patrick Stewart coming under fire, with Heart & Hand Podcast’s David Edgar calling for them to be relieved of their duties.

It is a sorry situation at Rangers, with Rohl coming in with so much to deal with, and Ally McCoist calling this his nadir as a fan on Friday.

“Last night is probably as depressed as I have been during this whole debacle, because I actually feel for the manager.I don’t know what he is going to do. He might improve them in terms of a little bit of organisation – set plays, you can do all that, bits and pieces, but I do not think there is anywhere near the level of improvement in that team that will even be required to get them up the league domestically, to tell you the gospel truth.”

"Biggest fear" at Rangers revealed

Writing on X, Four Lads Had A Dream claimed that Andrew Cavenagh is also a huge issue alongside Thelwell and Stewart at Rangers, due to him being blinded by the current problems surrounding them.

“We are in a really bad position, every game is a lottery & sadly not in our favour. Ally summed it up, we look like a team of young kids. He was also spot on when he said recruitment was horrendous. I fear more ‘nights/afternoons’ like tonight, which was painfully embarrassing.

“The spotlight continues to shine on the running of the club, those that have overseen this position and those heading up recruitment on and off the pitch taking us here. Yes Patrick and Kevin that means you. The biggest fear, Andrew Cavanagh is so entrenched he doesn’t see it either. “That’s wider than tonight. But tonight is in indication of exactly where they have taken us.”

Each Rangers fan will have their own person in mind when it comes to who is most to blame for the ongoing woes at Ibrox, but Cavenagh is clearly doing an unsatisfactory job as chairman.

Worse than Antman: Rohl must drop Rangers flop who's "nowhere near ready"

Glasgow Rangers manager Danny Rohl should drop this flop who was even worse than Oliver Antman.

ByDan Emery Oct 24, 2025

Some would like to see him depart, as well as Thelwell and Stewart, allowing the Gers to start from fresh, and it is hard to argue his corner right now.

Brewers Place Star Pitcher Brandon Woodruff on IL Before Postseason Run

The Milwaukee Brewers, the No. 1 team in baseball, received some unfortunate news on Sunday ahead of the final week of the regular season. Star pitcher Brandon Woodruff landed on the 15-day injured list with a right lat strain.

The IL designation goes back to Sept. 18, meaning Woodruff would first become available for the Brewers in the NLDS when that starts up on Saturday, Oct. 4. That would likely be the Brewers' expected first game in the postseason anyway as they will get a bye in the wild-card series as long as they hold onto the top spot.

It's been an injury-riddled 2025 season for the two-time All-Star. After missing the entire 2024 season while recovering from right shoulder surgery, Woodruff didn't make his 2025 debut until July 6. In May, he paused his rehab minor league assignment with an ankle injury. Then, when he was in the midst of his rehabilitation minor league return in June, he was hit on the elbow by a line drive, which in turn kept him out for another month.

Through 12 starts this season, Woodruff posted a 3.20 ERA over 64.2 innings pitched. He has 83 strikeouts and had 23 earned runs against him.

الأهلي يعلن تفاصيل إصابة أفشة وكريم فؤاد

أعلن الدكتور أحمد جاب الله، طبيب الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالنادي الأهلي، أن كريم فؤاد لاعب الفريق، سيخضع لفحص طبي جديد عقب العودة من قطر ونهاية المشاركة في بطولة كأس العرب.

وأوضح جاب الله في تصريحات للموقع الرسمي للأهلي، أن الجهاز الطبي سيحدد برنامج العلاج الطبيعي للاعب والتأهيل الخاص بالفترة المقبلة، بناء على فحص تطورات حالته.

وكان كريم فؤاد قد تعرض للإصابة بجزع في الرباط الصليبي وجزع في الرباط الداخلي للركبة خلال مشاركته في البطولة.

طالع | هدف الأهلي.. فشل مفاوضات الرجاء لتجديد عقد بلعمري

وخضع كريم فؤاد لتدريبات علاجية في قطر عقب الإصابة، فيما يبدأ استكمال فقرات العلاج الطبيعي على هامش تدريبات الفريق بداية من الغد.

كما أشار جاب الله، إلى أن محمد مجدي أفشة اشتكى من آلام في عضلة السمانة، عقب مشاركته في مباراة المنتخب الوطني ومنتخب الأردن ببطولة كأس العرب.

وكشف أن اللاعب سيخضع لفحص طبي على هامش مران الفريق غدًا، للاطمئنان على حالته، وتحديد برنامج العلاج الطبيعي والتأهيل المناسب.

ويواصل الأهلي تدريباته بمدينة نصر استعدادًا لخوض مباراة إنبي التي تجمع الفريقين مساء الجمعة القادم، ضمن منافسات بطولة كأس عاصمة مصر.

Fans Call on Dodgers to Sign V From BTS After K-Pop Star's Impressive First Pitch

Every member of the Dodgers bullpen was put on notice Monday night when K-Pop star V from the blockbuster boy band BTS threw a surprisingly epic first pitch at Los Angeles's game vs. the Reds.

The left-handed pitch—which was deemed a strike—sent stan Twitter (as it is still colloquially known) into a frenzy, as surprised Dodgers fans, meanwhile, called on the front office to sign him.

MLB's initial post has an eye-watering 72,000 retweets. That's the power of the BTS Army, baby.

Take a look at that reaction below:

Oscar, do Shanghai Port, se aproxima de acerto com gigante brasileiro

MatériaMais Notícias

Segundo apurações da ‘Revista Colorada’, Oscar, jogador do Shanghai Port, da China, está cada vez mais próximo do Flamengo e equipes já avançaram negociações. O atleta tem vínculo com o bicampeão da Superliga Chinesa até novembro de 2024.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

 O meia de 32 anos já tinha acerto verbal desde dezembro de 2023, mas não conseguiu a liberação do time chinês. Agora próximo do final do contrato, Marcos Braz, vice-presidente de futebol do Flamengo, tentará de vez a contratação do meia. Ambos têm uma excelente relação, além de possuir o aval de Tite, técnico do rubro-negro, o que impulsiona ainda mais a negociação.

➡️ A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta e tá na mão!

Além do clube carioca, Eduardo Coudet, técnico do Internacional, falou sobre o desejo de trazer o jogador, após a partida contra o São Luiz, pelo Campeonato Gaúcho, e acredita que o ex-colorado pode reforçar o clube.

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– Eu quero trazer ele. Não estou tão errado em buscar. Já falei com o empresário que quero o Oscar. É o mesmo do Thiago Maia, já não me aguenta mais. Me pedem que eu não fale, mas às vezes falo demais – afirmou Coudet.

Oscar chegou no Shanghai na temporada 2016/17 e atuou em 216 partidas, além de marcar 63 gols e dar 114 assistências.

Tudo sobre

FlamengoInternacionalOscar

MLB Suspends Mariners' Victor Robles for Throwing Bat at Pitcher in Wild Ejection

Seattle Mariners outfielder Victor Robles was playing for the team's Triple-A affiliates in Tacoma during a rehab assignment over the weekend, when he was hit by a pitch that ran up and inside on him.

Robles was irate, and in retaliation he launched his bat in the direction of the pitcher's mound and had to be held back by teammates and the home plate umpire as he attempted to escalate the situation further. Robles then threw some snacks from the dugout onto the field before making his way to the locker room.

As a result of his bonkers outburst, MLB issued a 10-game suspension to the veteran outfielder on Tuesday. Robles is expected to appeal the suspension. The suspension will be served in MLB, so he'll be docked 10 games once he's eligible to return from IL.

Robles has since issued an apology for his actions.

There's some history behind his irate response, however. The pitcher on the mound was Joey Estes, and he'd already plunked Robles with a pitch earlier in the series. In fact, Robles was hit twice in his first game of the rehab appearance, though only once by Estes. He was then hit again in the first plate appearance of the very next game. Finally, in the third game of the series, Robles was once again hit by Estes, though it was ruled a swing because his bat came around. He lined out in that at-bat, and then came to the plate again in the third inning. For the fifth time in three games––and the third time by Estes in that span––Robles was hit by a pitch from Estes.

All of that, is what sparked his incredibly frustrated and aggressive response to being hit, again, by Estes.

Robles has just been trying to work his way back to Seattle after missing most of the season with an injury. Finally on his rehab assignment after being out since April, the last thing he wants is to suffer an injury at the plate. It's not hard to see why he was so enraged, though his response was certainly still extreme.

Ranking MLB Strength of Schedules as Playoff Races Heat Up

The dog days of summer have come and gone and as the temperature in some parts of the globe begins to gradually drop, the temperature in MLB is rising. Division and wild card races are running hot as the calendar prepares to flip from August to September and contenders move ever closer towards solidifying playoff spots. The playoff picture in MLB is beginning to take shape but there is much still to decide. Can the defending champion Dodgers hold off a furious second-half push from the Padres to win the National League West division title? Can the Astros do the same against a surging Mariners club?

The final month of the regular season will provide the answers to these questions and more. But before all that, it's worth taking a look at the remaining schedules of each contender. Who has the toughest remaining schedule? Who has the easiest path?

Ranking MLB Contenders' Strength of Schedules

The following contending teams are ranked in order from easiest schedule to hardest schedule, in terms of opponent winning percentage.

Team

Strength of Schedule

Philadelphia Phillies

.493

New York Mets

.494

Detroit Tigers

.495

Kansas City Royals

.495

Houston Astros

.496

Cleveland Guardians

.497

Los Angeles Dodgers

.497

Milwaukee Brewers

.497

Cincinnati Reds

.498

Texas Rangers

.499

Toronto Blue Jays

.501

Boston Red Sox

.502

San Diego Padres

.503

Seattle Mariners

.505

New York Yankees

.506

Chicago Cubs

.506

Now, let's take a deeper dive into each team's schedule in the divisional and wild card races.

American League East

Toronto Blue Jays

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st in AL East
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 99.7%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. NYY Sept. 5-7, vs. BOS Sept. 23-25

Toronto will be battle-tested in the final month, as four of its final nine series will be against teams currently in the postseason picture.

Boston Red Sox

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st AL Wild Card
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 94.6%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. NYY Sept. 12-14, vs. TOR Sept. 23-25

Boston has it slightly easier than Toronto, as just three of its final nine series are against playoff teams. Six straight games against the Blue Jays and first-place Tigers to end the season is certainly a gauntlet, though.

New York Yankees

  • Position in Playoff Race: 2nd AL Wild
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 98.1%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. TOR Sept. 5-7, vs. BOS Sept. 12-14

One thing is for sure: the Yankees will find out what they're made of in the season's last month. From Sept. 2 to the 14th, the Yankees, respectively, face the Astros, Blue Jays, Tigers and Red Sox. Blue Jays and Tigers and Red Sox, oh my!

American League West

Houston Astros

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st in AL West
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 90.8%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. SEA Sept. 19-21

The late-September series against the Mariners very well could decide the division. But games against the Yankees, two series against the Rangers and games against the Blue Jays loom large as well.

Seattle Mariners

  • Position in Playoff Race: 3rd AL Wild Card
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 90.4%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. HOU Sept. 19-21

The Mariners' sneaky-tough schedule peaks in the season's final week with a pivotal series against the Astros and a test against the defending-champion Dodgers sandwiched around a series against the lowly Rockies.

American League Wild Card Race

Kansas City Royals

  • Position in Playoff Race: 4th in AL Wild Card chase
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 14.6%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. SEA Sept. 16-18

Kansas City has played its way back into the AL Wild Card race and will have a chance to at least cause mayhem with matchups against the Tigers, Guardians, Phillies, Mariners and Blue Jays in September.

Texas Rangers

  • Position in Playoff Race: 5th in AL Wild Card chase
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 7.3%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. HOU Sept. 5-7, 15-17

Even after losing ace Nathan Eovaldi to a rotator cuff strain, the math still says the Rangers have a chance to make the postseason. And six games against the Astros in September give the 2023 World Series champs a chance to take destiny into its own hands.

Cleveland Guardians

  • Position in Playoff Race: 6th in AL Wild Card chase
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 3.8%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. SEA Aug. 29-31, vs. KC Sept. 8-11, vs. TEX Sept. 26-28

The Guardians have had a nightmarish August but are still in the running for the AL Wild Card. Worst case, they muck up the plans of playoff-caliber teams like the Mariners and Red Sox. Best case, they take their nearly 4 percent playoff odds and make something crazy happen.

National League East

Philadelphia Phillies

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st in NL East
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 99.8%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. MIL Sept. 1-4, vs. NYM Sept. 8-11, vs. LAD Sept. 15-17

Despite a three-game sweep at the hands of the Mets, the Phillies remain in the driver's seat for the NL East title. But four straight games against the Amazin's in mid-September could widen their lead or make this race very interesting.

New York Mets

  • Position in Playoff Race: 3rd NL Wild Card
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 96.6%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. PHI Sept. 8-11, vs. SD Sept. 16-18, vs. CHC Sept. 23-25

The Mets can take one last shot at the division when they take on the Phillies later in September. But games against the Padres and Cubs present a chance for the Mets to rise up the standings and potentially secure home-field advantage for a Wild Card series should they end up as the first Wild Card.

National League West

Los Angeles Dodgers

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st in NL West
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 100%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. PHI Sept. 15-17, vs. SEA Sept. 26-28

As they look to hold into first place in the NL West, the Dodgers will benefit from a schedule that will see them play just two of their last nine series against current playoff teams.

San Diego Padres

  • Position in Playoff Race: 2nd NL Wild Card
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 99.5%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. CIN Sept. 8-10, vs. NYM Sept. 16-18

The Padres don't have it as easy as the Dodgers, even though they do get to play the Rockies seven times in September. Games against the Reds and Mets will be pivotal for San Diego's standing in the Wild Card race, as well as its chances of catching Los Angeles.

National League Wild Card Race

Chicago Cubs

  • Position in Playoff Race: 1st NL Wild Card
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 99.5%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. CIN Sept. 18-21, vs. NYM Sept. 23-25

While the Cubs still have an outside shot at the NL Central title, their most likely path to the postseason is through the wild card, in which they currently hold homefield advantage for a potential series.

Cincinnati Reds

  • Position in Playoff Race: 4th in NL Wild Card chase
  • Fangraphs Playoff Odds: 3.5%
  • Biggest Remaining Matchups: vs. NYM Sept. 5-7, vs. SD Sept. 8-10, vs. CHC Sept. 18-21

The Reds have a golden opportunity to increase their playoff odds with September series against the Mets, Padres and Cubs, each of whom is ahead of them in the NL Wild card standings.

Strength of schedules and playoff odds are subject to change. Here are the latest, up-to-date strength of schedules and playoff odds.

How are cricketers keeping fit in lockdown?

Some players have been affected more than others, and some have been more creative than the rest

Matt Roller and Danyal Rasool19-May-2020It is 5:30am. The birds are chirping more than usual, and the air, in a city whose population now exceeds ten million, is markedly fresher than it was until recently. In the heart of Chennai, R Ashwin, who has just woken up, is keen to enjoy the dawning day. Along with his younger daughter, an early riser like him, he heads up to the terrace.Their terrace doubles as a home fitness centre and an organic garden. While his daughter listens to music, Ashwin gets to work on the cycling machine and weights. By the time they are done, his wife and older daughter are up. With his parents also living in the same house, loneliness is unlikely to afflict Ashwin. Life in confinement has been, in his own words, “idyllic”.Not everyone is coping in lockdown with that sort of level-headedness. Nor do most cricketers have the resources to maintain the kind of fitness their job demands.In Pakistan, strength and conditioning coach Yasir Malik speaks about the challenges of keeping on top of players’ online fitness tests. “We needed a system that not only gauged their fitness levels,” Malik says, “but took into account the limited resources of the players, something that’s a problem for many of our players. That means limitations in terms of access to quality gym equipment, good training facilities and even the diet they need to follow. Above all, we need to ascertain whatever system we bring in ensures they maintain the professionalism that would be necessary in ordinary fitness tests.”In England, confirmation of a start date for the resumption of cricket cannot come soon enough. “Ideally we would want anywhere between four to six weeks’ training, but it depends a bit on the format we go into,” explains Rob Ahmun, the ECB’s strength and conditioning lead. “In Test cricket, if we’re looking at the bowlers, for example, it will take anywhere between six to eight weeks to build up enough volume in their bowling loads before they’re appropriately prepped to go and play. They can’t go from nothing to bowling 40 overs in a two-week period – that’s going to be a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t have that end goal, then you feel like the training is a bit aimless, a bit pointless. You don’t know how to time that intensity as well”James Anderson

“At the same time, T20 poses a challenge because the intensity is so much higher: we know from our GPS data that players sprint more frequently [in T20], that the distances of their sprints are longer, and the time between their sprints is a lot less. You can’t have a two-week build-up period between sprinting once or twice a week to playing in a T20I – the jump is too high.”Players who were hoping to return from injury face setbacks. In England’s case, Rory Burns and Jofra Archer were looking to play early-season County Championship fixtures to ease themselves back towards fitness. Instead, they have both been left frustrated.”We need Jofra to be back bowling again, so as soon as we get the nod, we can start building up his bowling loads,” Ahmun says. “For Rory with his ankle, we need to progress his running to get up towards match intensity. It’s definitely posed a challenge – when we set rehab schedules and timetables, we factor in a building period of playing second-team cricket and being gradually exposed to the demands of international cricket, so that we know when they come back, they’re ready not just to play but to perform. There’s a big difference between the two.”ALSO READ: Space constraints could hamper Indian players’ training – John GlosterEquipment has been a problem for some cricketers. At one extreme, Andre Russell has been able to use the nets and bowling machine in his back garden to keep in shape, regularly posting Instragam videos of his training sessions with close friend Jermaine Blackwood. At the other, England batsman Keaton Jennings – often used as a medium-pace option in county cricket – found himself unable to follow the bowling drills given to him: he has no cricket or tennis balls in his apartment in Manchester. “I’ve scoured the house and I don’t have any tennis balls, only golf balls,” Jennings told the Lancashire Hot Pod. “I’ll have to get a potato out or something.”These constraints are magnified depending on lockdown restrictions, which vary significantly in different parts of the world. In the UK, for example, an hour of outdoor exercise a day had been permitted, allowing for runs outdoors; this has since been relaxed to unlimited exercise. But in India, the public were ordered to stay at home without exception. In Pakistan, parks and recreational centres across the country have been closed. While that is no major concern for players with home gyms or outdoor space, it is difficult for those stuck in small apartments.0:40

The PCB’s online fitness tests

“The physical constraints that the Indian players are now having seems to be a lot greater than that of the guys in say, South Africa, Australia or the UK, because space is an incredible constraint here,” Rajasthan Royals physio John Gloster told ESPNcricinfo in March. “I’ve seen some fantastic footage coming out of the players in the UK where they’re in their own gyms and they’ve got lots of space, and I think the Indian boys are going to be perhaps at a physical disadvantage there.”In England, most counties managed to split equipment from their gyms to their squad before the lockdown was imposed, but with the vast majority of players now on furlough, their contact with their clubs has been limited. Instead, the onus is on the individual knowing that they will be expected to be in shape when they arrive for the first day of training, whenever that may be: at Leicestershire, for example, players have been told that the start-of-season fitness tests will take place on their first day back.For centrally contracted players, resuming training will typically involve a day or two at the National Performance Centre at Loughborough, but that will be difficult to achieve while adhering to social-distancing guidelines. Instead, it is hoped that one-on-one sessions at county grounds might be possible before the end of May.ALSO READ: Video fitness tests for locked-down Pakistan playersIn Pakistan, meanwhile, the PCB wants to ensure centrally contracted players are able to have their fitness monitored over the lockdown. Players are being tested via video chat services and scheduled phone calls.”We observe six players at any one time,” Malik said to the PCB website. Players are told what the technique of the push-ups, sit-ups and other exercises needs to be; they meet international standards. We carry out a number of other tests – chin-ups, standing broad jumps, burpees, Bulgarian squats, reverse planks and the rest. For the yo-yo test, if someone can get to a park, well and good. If that is not an option, then they can use the street in front of their house. If that’s not convenient, they can use their roof. The monitoring equipment we have will take into account all these factors. The ultimate target is to make someone run.”The home-remedy feel to these stopgap solutions sits somewhat awkwardly with the high-performance culture of modern cricket. When the PCB conducted fitness tests on April 18, Sohaib Maqsood’s had to be interrupted when the glass top of a table shattered and pierced his knee. While it is unclear what precipitated the accident, it isn’t surprising that it happened to Maqsood rather than Russell or Ashwin.

“They can’t go from nothing to bowling 40 overs in a two-week period – that’s going to be a recipe for disaster”Rob Ahmun, England strength and conditioning lead

Even within the Pakistan side, there will be enormous variation in the inconvenience players face. A few weeks ago, Babar Azam posted a video of him working out in a room that appeared to have been designated specifically as his workout space. It is hard to imagine, say, Naseem Shah, having similar access to equipment and physical space at this nascent stage of his career.Physiotherapist Andrew Leipus, who worked with the Indian national side, as well as a number of T20 franchises, made the point in starker terms. “I saw a picture on Facebook of Chris Lynn training in his garage, and he looks sensational,” he says. “He’s training very, very hard, but there are guys in smaller towns in Pakistan, and they won’t have anywhere near those facilities. This is happening all around the cricketing world, make no mistake. The guys who have access to high-quality sports science, sports medicine and support staff are probably going to be better off than those who don’t.”Despite the limitations, Leipus points out, “the ability to communicate has never been better, with WhatsApp, Skype and Zoom calls. It’s not ideal. But everybody’s in the same position at the moment. The main concern is that guys don’t drift and become Netflix couch potatoes. They’ve got to maintain a certain level of fitness. It doesn’t have to be specific to cricket. Athletes train very hard to achieve a certain level of fitness in strength, flexibility, aerobic endurance, all those parameters. You take the stimulus away and the body, being a very, very lazy machine, will drop off to the next level of stimulus, which is nothing.”Players fail fitness tests even when access to facilities isn’t a problem. Stress injuries, which strength and conditioning coaches spend their careers trying to reduce, continue to happen, often because a player may not have hit the fitness goals their coaches expect of them. Not all cricketers are similarly wired; some need a coach constantly in their ear, and it is easy to imagine those players emerging from lockdown significantly less primed for elite competition.”The research tells us if you can do one or two high-intensity training sessions a week – and that could be anything from shuttle runs down your driveway or a stationary bike – you are doing well,” says Leipus. “If they’ve got a pool, they could do sprints in the water. You can do body-weight exercises like squats or lunges, and do lots of reps.Some cricketers, like Ollie Pope, have turned their garages into ad hoc workout spaces•Getty Images”That’s only half the battle, though. The other half is when they do come back, they should ramp up their training gradually. They mustn’t overdo it. That spike in stress or load to the body will put you at very high risk of getting injuries. Those that don’t have the more contemporary sports-science controls and advice, or access to guys who can help programme their return workloads, you’re going to see a spike in soft-tissue injuries. Hamstrings, shoulders, calves, and lower back problems.”* * *”I’m someone who needs aims and guidelines for my mind, to motivate me,” Stuart Broad told James Anderson in a recent Instagram Live Chat.”If you don’t have that end goal, then you feel like the training is a bit aimless, a bit pointless,” Anderson replied. “You don’t know how to time that intensity, as well.””I just bought off Amazon a little net – not a cricket net, just a little net to put by the hedge, but I don’t know whether to keep bowling a little bit,” Broad continued.ALSO READ: England set to resume training as ECB lay groundwork for West Indies Tests”At 21 or 22, if we went eight weeks without bowling, it probably wouldn’t be an issue. But I just feel at my age, our age, if I go six or seven weeks without getting the load through the bones in the body, I just don’t know how I’ll react when I want to get bowling again… I’m trying to tick over as much as I can, so that if we get a nod this summer to bowl and train together as a group, I don’t feel way behind. Although whatever anyone does, we know that it’s going to take a few weeks to get anywhere near match fitness, because bowling is such a unique thing.”The absence of a clear start date has been a common challenge. After the IPL’s initial postponement by a month, players were unsure how likely the tournament was to go ahead, yet they felt that had to train towards that date. Even as it became clear that it would be pushed back further, players felt the need to state publicly that they were training for a mid-April start – though they privately admitted that was not the case.”Goal-setting is critical in sports psychology,” says Leipus. “And if you don’t know what that end goal is, it’s very hard to set those small goals on the way to a big goal.

“The main concern is that guys don’t drift and become Netflix couch potatoes. They’ve got to maintain a certain level of fitness. It doesn’t have to be specific to cricket”Andrew Leipus, physiotherapist

“I do think it’s worth saying these guys earn millions of dollars so I would just tell them to suck it up. That’s their job; they have to do their training every day, and they have to listen to their sports staff. They can set smaller goals. There’s an opportunity to work on weaknesses. Say one guy’s got a weakness with regards to shoulder strength. The fitness trainer can say, ‘We’re going to test you in four weeks, and get you up to the requisite parameters.'”There is one positive aspect to the lockdown: rest. The most recent edition of the ‘s global workload survey found that Joe Root had played 81 days of international cricket between October 2018 and September 2019; several others spent well over two months on the field for their countries. Including domestic cricket, Marnus Labuschagne spent 129 days on the pitch out of 365, and plenty of the balance training or travelling. Only three weeks into the lockdown, Virat Kohli said to Kevin Pietersen on their Instagram Live chat that he had never spent so long in the same place as his wife Anushka Sharma.”If you look at some of the England guys,” say Ahmun, “they would have got back from Sri Lanka [the tour was postponed mid-way in March] and then gone straight out to the IPL, and if they weren’t in the Test team, they’d have been in the PSL after the white-ball series in South Africa [in February]. For some of them, this is probably the biggest break that they’ve had for a number of years. We will get some benefits from that, from the mental perspective, of not having to get up and play at the highest level every morning, and spending time with families instead. Any kind of break that they get is a bit of a blessing in disguise.”Players have used the break to find ways to lighten the mood of their training. Ben Stokes and Paul Collingwood – England’s assistant coach – spent the early weeks of lockdown filming their attempts to beat each other in the “Bring Sally Up” challenge, which involves slow press-ups in time with the lyrics of the Moby song “Flower”. Collingwood took an early lead, but Stokes had soon managed to get through the full three and a half minutes.

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Mayank Agarwal’s partner Aashita has accompanied him in home workouts, while Jos Buttler’s wife Louise had half of his England team-mates joining her pilates classes on Instagram in the early weeks of the lockdown. Scotland keeper-batsman Matthew Cross’ golf trick shots and Somerset legspinner Max Waller’s teabag challenges might be less relevant to their fitness regimes, but have continued to keep their hand-eye coordination active.The flip side of this break, though, is that when cricket does return, the calendar will be busier than ever. New Zealand, for example, faced a jammed summer schedule even before Covid-19, with five Tests, nine ODIs and 18 T20Is, plus the T20 World Cup, between October 2020 and March 2021. Throw in the possibility of a delayed tour of Europe and the Caribbean immediately after, and there will not be a moment’s rest.This further raises the risk of fatigue injuries. “When everything opens up, everyone will want to train every day,” Leipus worries. “And the body’s just not going to be able to recover in time to adapt to those new loads because it doesn’t have the fitness.”With different countries currently at varying stages of the pandemic, the only guarantee is that uncertainty is here for the foreseeable future. While in England, Prime Minister Boris Johnson believes the peak of the pandemic has passed, the numbers have been rising in India, which remains in cautious lockdown.The deep-rooted inequalities in world cricket are only likely to be exacerbated by the pandemic, but it remains important not to lose sight of a bigger picture that is as grim as it is unpredictable. Ashwin may have a lot more use for his terrace and Russell his bowling machine, while Jennings continues to scramble for cricket balls, and cricketers in Pakistan look for empty side-streets and abandoned rooftops they can use.

Was Shoaib Akhtar's talent overshadowed by his sagas?

He was an almost one-of-a-kind bowler, who heightened the effect of raw pace to a degree rarely seen at the highest level of the game

Karthik Krishnaswamy05-Aug-2020Come to Think of it, we bring new perspectives to bear on received cricket wisdom. This week: was Shoaib Akhtar undervalued?There’s a fairly widely held strand of public opinion that would view Shoaib Akhtar as a wasted talent. It isn’t just armchair fans who might think this – just look at his ESPNcricinfo profile.”But that he will end his career an ‘if only’ or a ‘coulda been’ is the great tragedy,” it says, fairly high up. “He had it all and he blew it.” It ends with these lines: “So much so that what he did on the field had long ago ceased to matter and has been eclipsed by his scrapes off the field. For any sportsman, that is a damning indictment.”There are reasons to feel this way, of course, and the profile lists them succinctly: “doubts about his action, ball-tampering offences, beating up his own team-mates, courtroom battles against his board, long bans and heavier fines, serious career-threatening injuries and most damagingly, doping charges.”None of this is untrue, and that list doesn’t even include the time Akhtar’s board sent out a press release explaining his absence from a squad, and, rather than reach for one of a thousand bland corporate euphemisms, spelled out the exact nature and location of the skin condition that was keeping him out.Akhtar’s post-retirement public persona has done little to burnish his legacy. At the time of writing, he’s in the news for claiming that he turned down a lucrative county contract with Nottinghamshire so that he could fight in the Kargil War. He… what? Yeah.But hard as it seems, it’s actually possible to disentangle all that from the thing that really matters, and properly appreciate Akhtar for the magnificent cricketer he was.There was the pace, of course, and it was a strange and magical coincidence that he came along at the exact historical moment when bowling speeds were first being measured and displayed on live TV as a matter of course. You didn’t just know he was quick; you knew he was quicker than anyone else, probably ever.It was also Akhtar’s fate that another purveyor of extreme pace, Brett Lee, came along at pretty much the same time. For the first two or three years of this millennium, the two of them pushed themselves, each other, and the limits of the human body to bowl faster and faster still.The pace race was thrilling to witness, but in a WWE sort of way, bordering on silliness and fetishising pace for pace’s sake. Watch the five balls that this video packages in ascending order of speed. Are they, as claimed, the five fastest deliveries in cricket history? Who knows. Do they make the batsmen cower in fear? Not particularly, and the quickest of them, bowled by Akhtar to Nick Knight during the 2003 World Cup, clocking 161.3kph, is nudged routinely to midwicket.In the race to be the fastest bowler, one of these two purveyors of pace lost out•Hamish Blair/Getty ImagesPace is pace, , but it’s how you use it that counts. The pace race had an inevitable intertwining effect on the careers of Akhtar and Lee, but in doing so, it did one of them a considerable disservice. One was fast and hard-working and a fine first change behind Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie. The other was fast and scary, utterly impossible to take your eyes off, and utterly unplayable on his day.Akhtar was the superior bowler, unarguably, but even a surface reading of their Test numbers would tell you as much. The point isn’t that Akhtar was better than Lee. It’s that he was an almost one-of-a-kind bowler who heightened the effect of raw pace to a degree rarely seen at the highest level of the game.There was, of course, the effect on the spectators, achieved via that run-up, that exaggerated sideways leap and javelin-thrower wind-up, the theatrics between deliveries – occasionally during his run-up – and even that hair. But all that would have come to nothing without his effect on batsmen.When Akhtar was fully switched on, in rhythm, and at his physical peak, the pace was almost all he needed to have that effect. Pace aimed with thrilling directness at the base of the stumps. It sounds simple, but there’s a reason why only a tiny fraction of other bowlers have ever really pulled it off – or even attempted it – on a regular basis. Bowling yorkers at high pace takes a lot out of your body, and there isn’t a whole lot of margin for error. Get it wrong and it’s a lot of energy expended, and probably a lot of runs conceded, with little left in the tank for the rest of the day’s exertions.ALSO READ: The sound of Shoaib (2015) Akhtar’s genius lay in being able to beat the very best batsmen with that direct, route-one method. I mean, come on. Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar in the space of two balls? Ricky Ponting, both Waughs and Adam Gilchrist in the space of 11?In between, there were six wickets in Lahore, which sent New Zealand crashing to 73 all out on a pitch where Pakistan had made 643. Only once has a bigger first-innings lead been secured by a team bowling second, and that happened in a timeless Test.Watch those wickets again: bowled, bowled, bowled, bowled, lbw, bowled; four pinpoint yorkers, the other two balls also full enough to just about fall under that classification, all of them beating the batsman for pace, with little or no reverse in play – New Zealand’s innings only lasted 30.2 overs. This was the definition of taking the conditions out of the equation, and few did it as well as Akhtar.There might even be a way to measure this.When Akhtar took wickets, he took them quickly, as have the other four names on the table below. Vernon Philander and Dale Steyn have run through numerous teams, the latter in all conditions; Stuart Broad routinely goes on inspired bursts of wicket-taking; and Andy Caddick was a memorable blow-hot, blow-cold performer.

But it’s one thing to run through teams on helpful tracks or when there’s support from the other end, and another to do it on your own. Shiva Jayaraman from ESPNcricinfo’s stats team has come up with an ingenious way to separate one from the other, and Akhtar finds a place in this next table too. His strike rate, in innings where he took four or more wickets, was more than three times better than the collective strike rate of his bowling colleagues. It puts him second behind Ray Lindwall in the all-time list.

It’s an imperfect measure, of course, penalising bowlers who are part of better and deeper bowling attacks, but it says something that in the Tests where Akhtar burst through the opposition at the rate of a wicket every 23 balls, Pakistan’s other bowlers took one every 75 balls. When other bowlers struggled, he often found a way.At his peak the pace was often enough, but bowling that fast took a lot out of him, physically and mentally, as he revealed to Sidharth Monga in this fascinating interview five years ago. “I used to crawl to my bathroom every day of my career,” he said. “I used to limp out of my bed. I can’t remember a day I didn’t have pain in my knees for the last 18 years.”Akhtar knew he needed other tricks apart from pace, and he certainly had them: swing, seam – look at this ball to Chris Gayle, in Sharjah of all places – the use of angles, the ability to manipulate batsmen with his lengths. Watch him bowl Matthew Hayden from around the wicket here. The late swing is a joy in itself, but what you won’t see is the short balls he bowled before this ball, to push Hayden back and stop him from stepping out of his crease as he did time and again to fast bowlers.ALSO READ: ‘You have to be mad to be a fast bowler’ (2015)Then there was the Akhtar slower ball. No bowler has ever delivered this variation with a bigger drop-off in speed from their stock ball, and he bowled it with no discernible change in arm action. England, fresh off an Ashes victory they still haven’t stopped talking about, had no answer to it during their 2005-06 tour of Pakistan. Akhtar bowled many quicker spells through his career, but few approached this one in Lahore for the bafflement he caused. You want to watch this, but maybe not if you’re Michael Vaughan, Ian Bell, or Liam Plunkett.That Test match was Akhtar’s 39th. He only played seven more, the last of them on an India tour in 2007, where he outbowled most of his colleagues on largely unhelpful pitches. The skills hadn’t gone away but the body was uncooperative. He continued playing ODIs, sporadically, until the 2011 World Cup, and that was that.Forty-six Tests. Umar Gul, the perennially crocked Umar Gul, played 47.Even with all his injuries, Akhtar could have probably squeezed in a few more, what with all the bans and disciplinary troubles. But it’s a marvel, come to think of it, that he left himself enough room to squeeze in all those spells, and leave us with all those memories.Come to Think of it

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