Canterbury loss sets up exciting last round

The results from the Plunket shield games that ended on March 24, 2017 meant that three teams go into the final league matches with a chance to win the title

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Mar-2017Canterbury fluffed the chance to seal the Plunket Shield with one round of fixtures to spare, as they failed to defend 346 against Central Districts, succumbing to a four-wicket defeat in Nelson.An outright win would have wrapped up the title for Canterbury, and Peter Fulton appeared to set them on course with a first-innings hundred, taking them to 388. Adam Milne took 3 for 36 for Central Districts, his first wickets since his return from injury­, in the third match of his comeback. Central Districts batsman Will Young then responded with a hundred of his own, making it his second consecutive Plunket shield century. However, only one other player -­ George Worker with 72 -­ managed over 40 and Central Districts were bowled out for 315, trailing by 73, with Ed Nuttall starring with the ball taking 4 for 49.Cole McConchie followed up his 70 from the first innings with 131 in the second, and Canterbury declared at 273 for 8, meaning they needed to bowl the opposition out for under 346 to secure the Plunket Shield. But contributions from a number of Central Districts batsmen, led by a sedate 109 from Jesse Ryder, thwarted Canterbury as they slumped to a four-wicket defeat, taking the three-way race to the title to the final round of matches.Northern Districts, the third team in the title race, ­kept their hopes alive with a nine-wicket victory over Wellington in Mount Maunganui. They were in control from the start, as a five-for from offspinner Joe Walker skittled Wellington for 151, with Fraser Colson (66) the only one offering meaningful resistance. Peter Younghusband’s five-for meant Northern Districts could muster only 262, with eight of the eleven batsmen reaching double figures, and take a 111-run lead.Wellington opener Michael Papps was the only one who ensured his bowlers would have something to bowl at, scoring 160 off his side’s 269 runs, including an 89-run tenth-wicket partnership that set Northern Districts a target of 159. However, it was a target that never troubled them ­despite the early loss of Henry Cooper as unbeaten half centuries from Dean Brownlie (76) and Bharat Popli (75) took Northern Districts home by nine wickets to set up a grandstand finish to the Plunket Shield.Colin Munro’s rich form since being dropped from the New Zealand ODI squad continued as his third first-class hundred in as many games took Auckland to an eight-wicket victory over Otago in the Plunket Shield.After being put in to bat, Otago’s innings was a tale of several players getting starts with no one able to kick on. Five of their top seven batsmen were dismissed between 31 and 50 as the innings was wrapped up for 282. Auckland fast bowler Lockie Ferguson was the most successful, picking up five wickets in the innings and eight in the match.It was a delicately poised game for the first two innings, with Munro’s century helping Auckland to a 22-run lead, but a disastrous morning session on the third day for Otago had them slipping to 59 for 7. Anaru Kitchen rescued his side from falling for an embarrassingly low total with an explosive 101-ball 108, which pushed Otago to 205 and set Auckland a target of 184 for victory.Auckland made light work of what could have been a tricky chase with openers Michael Guptill-Bunce and Robert O’Donnell putting on a 61-run partnership at more than five an over. After their departure, Glenn Phillips (59 off 43) and Rob Nicol raced to victory with an unbeaten 96-run partnership in 12.2 overs and finished the match with a day to spare.Defending champions Auckland were tied at first place with Canterbury, who could pull ahead if they win their on-going bout with Central Districts.

Australian coaches help USA players sharpen 'game sense'

Ahead of their WCL Division Three tournament in Uganda, head coach Pubudu Dassanayake took the assistance of top Australian coaches to sharpen players’ skills in USA’s bid for promotion to Division Two

Peter Della Penna25-Apr-2017In a bid to reverse the curse of Division Three, the USA team’s preparations for their upcoming tournament in Uganda have been kicked up a notch with the help of several Australian coaches, including New South Wales assistant Beau Casson. It is a boost that USA players hope will finally get them over the hump and into Division Two for the first time since the ICC began the World Cricket League system in 2007.”It’s been great to tinker with some of the players and make slight technical adjustments, but there’s been a major emphasis on tactical awareness and particularly ‘game sense’ and when to execute certain deliveries depending on what the situation demands,” Casson told ESPNcricinfo during USA’s recent preparation camp in Texas. “That’s an area that I think there’s going to be incredible growth within this playing group because there’s skill there, but being able to identify certain situations in the game is very important.”A lack of tactical nous has been a key reason why USA has failed in three prior attempts to progress out of Division Three despite the talent at their disposal. In 2004, USA was in the top tier of Associates and qualified for that year’s Champions Trophy in England. A 10th place finish at the ICC Trophy in 2005 saw them reclassified into Division Three when the World Cricket League structure was unveiled for 2007, but when the ICC suspended the USA Cricket Association that year, one of the penalties handed down was a relegation from Division Three to Division Five.In their first attempt after gaining back-to-back promotions to move up from Division Five in 2010, USA opened the 2011 WCL Division Three tournament with a thumping seven-wicket win over current ODI nation Hong Kong before a calamitous series of results saw them relegated to Division Four. Back in Division Three in April 2013, they began 3-0 in Bermuda including a big win over current WCL Championship side Nepal before stumbling on the final two days of group play against Uganda and Bermuda. Another confident start against Bermuda at Division Three in 2014 in Malaysia spiraled out of control, resulting in relegation once more.Fresh talent not scarred by the memories of prior Division Three debacles has been drafted into the squad for the Uganda tour, including left-arm spinner Nosthush Kenjige. After a stint training with the Knights franchise in South Africa under coach Nicky Boje earlier this year, Kenjige says the time spent in Texas this month with Casson as well as Tasmania high-performance manager Richard Allanby further elevated his ‘game sense’ to get ready for a crucial tournament.”It’s just been priceless just because the kind of expertise and knowledge that these two coaches have,” Kenjige said. “They’ve played for international sides and they’ve been coaching around the world. So just to have them around and looking at you bowl, and then they’ve also been helping me in different scenarios with the field, with the tactical part of it and also the technical part of the bowling side. So it’s just been gold.”Peter Anderson worked extensively with USA’s wicketkeepers, including this golf ball catching exercise•Peter Della PennaFielding expert Trevor Penney is on USA’s staff for Division Three as an assistant coach alongside head coach Pubudu Dassanayake, but former Queensland wicketkeeper and current Cayman Islands coach Peter Anderson was brought to the Texas camp as a consultant specifically to work with USA’s wicketkeepers. Akeem Dodson said the brief time with Anderson was a bonus ahead of Division Three.”That kind of experience, it’s all you’ve been waiting for all your life as a professional athlete,” Dodson said of Anderson. “Not only the drive but the wherewithal to implement his own personality onto the way he teaches things. There’s so many different drills he had put together, things you could tell he did himself and now he’s passing on to you.”One drill Dodson did with Anderson was a rapid reflex exercise in which golf balls were hit from two feet away that needed to be snatched barehanded, then tennis balls, before advancing to cricket balls. The progression is intended to make each step easier for game action.”I didn’t find it too weird,” Dodson said. “I’ve heard golf ball practice is very good for your reflexes because it pings off very fast, then tennis ball for the touch and then those two things going together it makes the cricket ball easier to catch. Going through those progressive drills opens your eyes and you see and feel technically the things you’ve been doing wrong, and by the time you get to the cricket balls you’re not dropping any of them. It’s like you flip a switch.”Meeting him, working with him and having the chance to talk with him, he’s learned from some of the best and been around the best. It’s that kind of people that you want to keep close to you and build off of. The wealth of experience that he comes with is unfathomable almost and just to be able to have him here along with us and working with us is a great pleasure.”Anderson has formerly headed the Afghanistan national academy from 2014 to 2016 and also coached Papua New Guinea at the 2014 World Cup Qualifier where they secured ODI status. He believes, from his observations in Texas, that USA has the squad right now to be a Division One Associate.”They have a lot of talent but they have to go back home and reinforce what they’ve learnt,” Anderson said. “The intensity I’ve seen, I think they’re starting to understand what’s required to go to the next level and I think these guys will climb fairly quickly. They’ve got a good nucleus of players together. The biggest challenge is that it’s such a big place, they have to go back [home] and take ownership to work on their own game.”The talent I’ve seen, it won’t be long before they’re in the top leagues in my opinion. Playing against those teams, the hardest challenge is working their way up the ladder. I’ve coached two of those teams and there’s no doubt they have the talent to be there, it’s just a matter of getting consistency and working hard on their games. I expect them to go to Uganda and do very well and within 18 months I think they’ll challenge Papua New Guinea and some of those other countries.”

Man United Could Sign ‘Monster’ McTominay Upgrade

Manchester United have already bolstered their midfield presence with the signing of Mason Mount and now a fresh update has emerged on the club's pursuit of another target for the centre of the pitch.

Who are Man United looking to buy?

According to Football Transfers, Erik ten Hag has made Fiorentina midfielder Sofyan Amrabat his main target for Man United's midfield rebuild this summer.

As per the report, the Red Devils are set to action a move for the Serie A star once they have completed deals for Andre Onana and Rasmus Hojlund, with the Man United boss keen on Amrabat to fit into a double pivot system next season and it is claimed that he could sign him for a fee of around just £20m.

How good is Sofyan Amrabat?

There are many areas of the squad that Ten Hag is looking to add quality and depth into ahead of the new campaign starting next month and right now, it's safe to say that the priority is hugely focused on completing a deal for a goalkeeper.

David De Gea confirmed his departure from Old Trafford yesterday after being embroiled in back-and-forth negotiations with the club about a new contract, however, that ship has now sailed and snapping up the services of Onana is looking the most likely outcome.

In terms of outgoings, there is a lot of speculation surrounding the futures of Fred and Scott McTominay with the latter attracting interest from Roma and Brighton and Hove Albion according to reports this week.

As a result, the signing of Amrabat could be a great opportunity for the former Ajax manager to seal an upgrade on McTominay.

When comparing the Moroccan titan's output last season to McTominay last season, Amrabat comfortably outperformed his positional competitor in several key midfield attributes.

Indeed, he had a more successful pass completion (88.8% v 82.2%), posted more shot-creating actions per 90 (1.98 v 1.78), registered a higher number of successful take-ons (70.6% v 50%), progressive passes (176 v 33) and finally from a defensive midfielder, more all-important ball recoveries (157 v 78), despite playing only four more league games.

sofyan-amrabat-premier-league-transfers-liverpool

The 26-year-old – who was dubbed a "monster" by broadcaster Carlo Garganese – clearly demonstrates far more ability in winning back the ball and playing killer passes to the attacking third than the Man United dud, so it would make perfect sense for Amrabat to accompany Casemiro in the deep-lying roles of midfield next season.

In fact, according to WhoScored, no Man United midfielder had a better pass completion rate than the Fiorentina dynamo last season or delivered more long balls, whilst only Casemiro averaged more passes per 90, which is a testament to the quality that Amrabat can bring to Man United next season.

With that being said, if Man United can complete a deal for Amrabat it could significantly improve the midfield presence at Old Trafford next season and would add great quality in their pursuit of competing for more trophies and dominating English football once again.

Leeds Could Sign "Electric" £40k-p/w Raphinha Heir

Leeds United have endured a slow start to the summer, with the cloud placed over them by the impending takeover stuttering their transfer business.

Daniel Farke's appointment was even halted until recently, although the German has since begun his work at Elland Road after a delayed announcement.

Having given the rest of the Championship a head start in this summer window, now is surely the time for the Whites to get their business underway in the hopes it can propel them towards an instant Premier League return.

The hope will be that they can emulate some of their recent heroes in the market, by acting shrewdly to bring a new age of heroes into Elland Road.

In recent memory, few stand out as much as their mercurial Brazilian winger Raphinha. Brought in from Ligue 1, the 26-year-old quickly established himself as an imperative figure in Yorkshire, with his trickery, speed and clinical finishing capturing the imagination.

Therefore, after one stellar personal campaign had helped retain their top-flight status, his exit to Barcelona came as no surprise.

Now, with the links to Emmanuel Dennis persisting, this Nigerian forward could prove to be the newest star ready to take the mantle as the main figure at the club.

Is Emmanuel Dennis any good?

Although game time has been limited for the 25-year-old since moving to Nottingham Forest, his time at Watford stands as enough proof to suggest that he could thrive once again if given the game time.

After all, his period at Vicarage Road saw him heralded as their main outlet, with his 2020/21 season meriting ten goals and six assists despite falling to relegation. It could be argued that this unfortunate end to the year even makes his efforts even more impressive.

Such form even led journalist Josh Bunting to laud him at the time, taking to Twitter: "Emmanuel Dennis has been one of the most underrated players outside of Watford fans this season, he’s been a very good addition. 4 goals and 5 assists in 11 Premier League games should be being spoken about much more. Today he was absolutely electric from the start to finish."

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That makes his six starts in the league last term all the more disappointing, as a classic case of a wasted opportunity in a move that promised much.

Seeking pastures new should come as no surprise, and as a striker who has often preferred to feature on the left to cut inside on his right foot, this inversion draws further comparisons with former favourite and right-footed left winger Raphinha.

In his final year in Yorkshire, his 11 goals and three assists marked a fine return in the Premier League.

The fact that both of these attackers starred for such relegation-threatened sides, with Dennis arguably out-performing the Brazil international with his respective season, speaks volumes for how Forest's out-of-favour livewire could emulate and even improve upon Raphinha's period at Elland Road.

Farke will be craving that key figure with which to spearhead his new reign at Leeds, and given their financial situation and the options available on the market, there are arguably few better than the £40k-per-week star.

Afghanistan crumble under pace barrage, West Indies clinch series

Afghanistan lost their trial by pace and the second T20 to West Indies by 29 runs in a shortened game at Basseterre

The Report by Varun Shetty03-Jun-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsChadwick Walton’s cameo at the top gave West Indies the momentum straightway•AFPWest Indies clinched the T20 series with a game to go, brushing Afghanistan aside for the second night in a row. With a combination of Samuel Badree’s discipline and the pace of Jerome Taylor and Kesrick Williams, the hosts struck thrice inside four overs in Afghanistan’s chase of 123, setting the tone for a comfortable defense.The target was revised, adjusted to amplify West Indies’ 112 for 3 in 15 overs, after rain took away nearly two hours from the fixture. Evin Lewis and Marlon Samuels got starts after wicketkeeper-batsman Chadwick Walton had powered West Indies in the Powerplay. Rashid Khan, Karim Janat and Gulbadin Naib, though, reversed the advantage with strong performances with the ball.Afghanistan’s chase was a scattered display of anxiety against pace and hare-brained running – perhaps the two were correlated. They slipped to 19 for 3 quickly and the recovery never came. Captain Carlos Brathwaite, who had chipped away at the lower-middle order, took the final catch to notch up a series win.West Indies begin brightlyChadwick Walton led the charge with four pulled boundaries as Afghanistan’s new-ball duo insisted on bowling short at him. Having forced the early introduction of Amir Hamza, Walton clubbed a full delivery from the left-arm spinner onto the roof over long-off.A mix-up between the openers should have resulted in the run-out of Evin Lewis, who responded slowly as Walton tried to pinch a single in front of square leg; it ended with a bad throw, as well as a bad collision at the non-strikers end when Lewis ran into Samiullah Shenwari. The resultant stoppage disturbed Walton’s momentum, and he holed out to long-on next ball. But when Lewis stepped out to Nabi immediately after to smash him over long-off, West Indies were destined for a solid start. They made 52 for 1 in the Powerplay.Rashid, Naib tidy upWest Indies looked like they had one plan against Rashid Khan – to play him out. By the time Ashgar Stanikzai brought the legspinner on, West Indies were cruising at 71 for 1 in eight overs. Rashid hit his signature line, at the stumps, and pushed them through quickly to cut out any heaves across the line. Both Lewis and Marlon Samuels prodded from the back foot with minimal impact; Rashid snuck in tidy figures of 2-0-4-0. In between his two overs, Lewis had holed out to deep midwicket.After the match was reduced to 15 overs, Gulbadin Naib brought out a top spell, bowling seven dot balls in his two overs and going for just ten, with the wicket of Samuels.Fire in BasseterreSix-and-out, four-and-out, six-and-out. Naib, Noor Ali Zadran and Stanikzai finished their respective innings in similar fashion. It was an accurate representation of Afghanistan’s chase – a cycle of long periods of strangulation with the occasional release.The chase started with a typically tight over from Badree, which went for only one. Taylor shared the new ball and chose to begin from around the wicket. His first short ball was met with a swipe across the line by Naib. What should have been a simple catch for Sunil Narine at long-off almost turned into a spectacular catch by Brathwaite running back from mid-on. Badree had Naib in the next over.This was followed by a brutish over from Williams where the default shot was now set to awkward fend. Noor Ali didn’t conform, and for his rebellion he got a four before being cramped on a hook that lobbed up for short fine leg. Shenwari feathered one to Walton first ball. There was nearly a third wicket that over – but Mohammad Nabi’s glance off the hips landed short of Taylor.

Tottenham Ready "Bid" For "Immense" £13m Andersen Alternative

Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly ready to step up their interest in Fulham defender, Tosin Adarabioyo, with the Lilywhites continuing their search to find new centre-back additions ahead of next season.

What's the latest on Adarabioyo to Tottenham?

According to respected journalist, Alasdair Gold, the north Londoners are seemingly set to make an offer for the 25-year-old, with the one-time Manchester City man believed to be open to the idea of making the move to N17.

Writing on Twitter, the transfer insider revealed: "Also understand there is a growing expectation Spurs will make a bid for Fulham's Tosin Adarabioyo as one CB arrival. The 25-year-old is believed to be keen on the move and Spurs have shown a lot of interest in him. Again, they can't hang around though."

In his attached piece for football.london, Gold reveals that Spurs will have to move quickly due to the rival interest in the 6 foot 5 colossus, with the former England youth international potentially set to be available for around €15m (£13m) after entering the final year of his contract at Craven Cottage.

How good is Tosin Adarabioyo?

As Gold's report also noted, Tottenham are also believed to be keen on Crystal Palace star Joachim Andersen as another centre-back target, albeit with prior speculation suggesting that the Denmark international could command a rather hefty fee of around £50m this summer.

Crystal Palace's Joachim Andersen

The signing of Adarabioyo, therefore, on a cut-price deal could prove to be a dream alternative to the 27-year-old, with the Cottagers' ace said to be statistically and stylistically similar to Andersen, according to FBref.

With the Palace man also a towering figure at 6 foot 4, the pair are both unsurprisingly able to put their impressive physical stature to good use, with Andersen ranking in the top 16% among those in his position in Europe's top five leagues for aerial duels won, while Adarabioyo is only just behind as he ranks in the top 24% in that regard.

While neither man is likely to carry the ball out from the back, as both Adarabioyo and Andersen racked up just 16 progressive carries in the league in 2022/23, that's not to suggest that they aren't comfortable on the ball, having recorded 95 and 105 progressive passes, respectively, last term.

To put that into perspective, current Tottenham man, Cristian Romero notably recorded 19 progressive carries and 92 progressive passes last season, with that a similar record to Ange Postecoglou's two reported targets.

The duo also enjoyed a similar record defensively in 2022/23, with the Fulham man averaging 2.2 tackles and interceptions per game from his 25 league outings, while his Palace counterpart averaged 2.1 for that same metric – albeit with neither man coming close to Romero's average of 4.1.

For Postecoglou to snap up either Andersen or Adarabioyo would seemingly be a wise move due to their proven ability in the Premier League, although if forced to choose between the two, the attractive nature of the latter man's price tag could make him a more worthwhile option.

Previously dubbed "immense" by Tony Mowbray during his time on loan at Blackburn Rovers in the past, the Manchester-born rock has no doubt warranted a high-profile summer switch, having previously been unable to make his mark at the Etihad, where he made just eight first-team outings.

A second chance at an 'elite' outfit like Spurs could now be on the horizon, albeit with Postecoglou and co – as Gold suggested – needing to act swiftly if they are to get their man.

Lamb's youthful purpose is positive for Warwickshire

Matthew Lamb’s controlled half-century was a positive sign for Warwickshire as they wait impatiently for talented youngsters to feed into an ageing side

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jul-2017
ScorecardMatt Lamb brought some youth to Edgbaston’s green pastures•Getty ImagesWarwickshire’s struggles tend to be blamed on the age factor. Theirs has been moving in only one direction for a number of years with the first eleven often consisting almost entirely of players over 30. It is not the only factor in their decline but it is clearly significant.It is not out of sentiment, of course, that so many seniors have kept their places. The fact is that few of the younger players at Edgbaston have been good enough to force them out. Warwickshire’s academy is long established but the last graduate, so to speak, to do enough to earn a county cap was Chris Woakes, who is now 28.Woakes is an all-rounder. The last specialist batsman to emerge from the academy and win a county cap – Ian Westwood – retired last week, less than three weeks short of his 35th birthday.Given the enormous number of people in Warwickshire’s catchment area it is a depressing state of affairs, illustrated only too starkly by the recruitment of all-rounder Will Rhodes, who will join the staff next season. Rhodes, 22, used to captain Yorkshire’s academy but cannot get in their first team.Bringing down the average age of the Warwickshire side is one of many tasks Ashley Giles agreed to take on when he returned to Edgbaston during the winter. He will be encouraged, therefore, that Matt Lamb was good enough to mark his home Championship debut with a half-century.Lamb, a 20-year-old right-handed batsman from Wolverhampton who went to school in Bromsgrove and has been playing club cricket for Barnt Green since he was a junior, was a late choice for this match, called up as a replacement for Ian Bell, who has an elbow injury.There are no bigger boots to fill – figuratively speaking, at least – in this Warwickshire side. Yet Lamb met the challenge impressively, showing patience initially and then, when responsibility fell on him for a while to hold Warwickshire’s innings together, a good measure of composure.Coming in at 86 for 3 when Sam Hain pushed at one from Ryan Higgins to be caught behind. He was off the mark with a single off his first ball but remained in single figures for more than an hour, content to leave Jonathan Trott to keep the scoreboard moving.Things changed when Trott was out, lobbing an easy return catch to Tom Helm when he completely mistimed a pull. Lamb could have panicked but instead had the confidence to take the initiative himself as Tim Ambrose joined him, pulling Helm for his first boundary and following up with a couple more.The pitch was a good deal easier than the raging turner he had encountered on his first-class debut at Taunton last year, yet it was one that Middlesex felt might offer them enough to merit bowling first and while their attack was missing both England call-up Toby Roland-Jones and Steven Finn, who pulled out with back spasms, it was hardly lightweight.Lamb soon lost Ambrose, leg before playing back to Higgins, which left him as the last specialist batsman, yet he was unfazed, going on to complete his half-century off 119 balls with his fifth boundary, before coming unstuck against the off-spinner, Ollie Rayner, who lured him into stretching a little for a ball outside off-stump, which he edged to slip.There are, in fact, three academy products in this eleven, the others being Andy Umeed, who made his second first-class hundred last week against Lancashire, a match in which the right-arm seamer George Panayi took 3 for 41 on debut. Others have flattered to deceive here but there is some cause for optimism, at least.Lamb’s was not the innings of the day. That honour went to Rikki Clarke, who will be 36 in September, whose 83, including nine fours and a six off Rayner, took Warwickshire to a third batting point before he was leg before to a full delivery from James Harris to what became the last ball of the day.As well as losing Finn and Roland-Jones from their bowling, Middlesex made a change at the top of their batting order, where Nick Gubbins, leading run scorer in last season’s title-winning side, is the man to give way to the returning Sam Robson.

Balbirnie's double-ton, Rankin's five-for lift Ireland to top

Andy Balbirnie’s maiden three-figure score in first-class cricket, and Boyd Rankin’s five-wicket haul gave Ireland a 102-run first-innings lead, and the extra points, in their drawn Intercontinental Cup match

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Aug-2017
ScorecardAndy Balbirnie led a strong first-innings batting performance from Ireland’s top-order•Getty Images/SportsfileAndy Balbirnie’s unbeaten double century – his first three-figure score in first-class cricket – and Boyd Rankin’s five-wicket haul gave Ireland a 102-run first-innings lead, and, as a result, extra points, in their drawn Intercontinental Cup match against Netherlands in Malahide. The nine points Ireland took from this game helped them move past Afghanistan to first place on the points table, while Netherlands remained at no. 3.Balbirnie’s 205 not out, after Netherlands captain Peter Borren decided to give Ireland first use of the surface, headlined a strong batting performance from Ireland’s top-order that enabled them to amass 477 for 6. Balbirnie consolidated on a solid start given by the Ireland openers, Ed Joyce and William Porterfield, who put on 75. The stand ended with Joyce’s dismissal for 43, but Porterfield raised a half-century and added 67 for the second wicket with Balbirnie.The double-centurion was ably supported by John Anderson, who made 74 and added 183 with him for the third wicket – the best partnership of the innings – and wicketkeeper Gary Wilson, who chipped in with 39. Wilson’s dismissal triggered a brief slide where Ireland lost three wickets for 16 runs, but Jacob Mulder arrested the slide by adding an unbeaten 60 runs with Balbirnie for the seventh wicket before Porterfield called his batsmen back in. Netherlands’ new-ball bowler Shane Snater took five wickets – his first in first-class cricket, in his second match.Rankin’s effort then limited Netherlands to 375, despite a late surge from Max O’Dowd (106) and Logan van Beek, who put on 160 for the seventh wicket to lift Netherlands from 149 for 6, after Ben Cooper’s fighting half-century. O’Dowd and van Beek then repaired the damage and took the score past 300, with O’Dowd scoring his maiden first-class century. O’Dowd and van Beek were dismissed by Rankin, who ended with 5 for 49.Balbirnie again played a vital hand in the Ireland second innings, his 113-run second-wicket stand with his captain Porterfield offsetting the early loss of Ed Joyce. There was a brief rush of wickets again, as Ireland went from 125 for 1 to 139 for 4, but the 87-run stand between Kevin O’Brien and Porterfield stretched the overall lead past 300. Porterfield eventually fell for 108; O’Brien made 58 off 49 balls, before being run out and Ireland declared shortly thereafter, on 240 for 7, with their lead at 342.Netherlands lost Wesley Barresi off the third ball of their second innings, trapped lbw by Murtagh for 0. Stephan Myburgh then unleashed a brisk 85 off 98 balls to steady them, and dominated a second-wicket partnership of 107 with Daniel ter Braak, who contributed just 23. Myburgh was caught behind off Jacob Mulder, and Saqib Zulfiqar fell soon after to leave Netherlands 126 for 4. Ben Cooper (37 not out) and Borren (25 not out) then saw them through to stumps with an unbroken 60-run stand.

West Ham Could Sign £8m Sensation To Replace Scamacca

West Ham United are reportedly interested in AC Milan forward Divock Origi, as David Moyes looks to bring in reinforcements this summer.

The Irons must get to work quickly on replenishing their squad ahead of the new season, in the bid to avoid another relegation-threatened campaign.

With the financial boost of £105m from the sale of Declan Rice, Moyes must ensure to recruit smart and fast this window.

Could West Ham sign Divock Origi?

As reported by transfer expert Dean Jones, via GIVEMESPORT, the Hammers are eyeing a move for former Liverpool striker Origi.

Read the latest West Ham transfer news HERE…

Valued at €9m (£8m) by Football Transfers, the 28-year-old could be the perfect signing for Moyes to chase, as reinforced by Jones:

“Origi would be an option and West Ham have had interest in both him and Armando Broja for such a long time it feels like one of them eventually pulls on the shirt.

“Players at different ends of their career, it feels like, but Origi is still only 28 and if he could find consistency in terms of form and fitness I really think he would be a decent signing.”

How good is Divock Origi?

Hailed for his time at Liverpool for scoring some of the most crucial goals in the club’s history, the Belgian was a reliable call for backup at Anfield, as he took the passenger seat for the entirety of his time on Merseyside.

Snatched by AC Milan at the expiration of his contract with the Reds last summer, the move brought the forward’s eight-year association with the club to an end after arriving in the Premier League at 19 from Lille in 2014.

With a Champions League and Premier League medal under his belt, the 28-year-old could now face a reunion with the league in which he made his name, as Moyes and the Hammers eye a new striker.

Praised as being a “real handful” by scout Antonio Mango, the Belgian could be the perfect replacement for current forward Gianluca Scamacca, who according to Football Insider ‘won't play for West Ham again.'

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The Italian’s move last summer was highly anticipated after he netted 16 goals in Serie A for Sassuolo in the 2021/22 campaign.

Things, however, have not gone to plan for the 24-year-old in east London, making only 11 starts in the Premier League and scoring three times in claret and blue, with a return to Italy on the cards after one year in England.

With Scamacca’s departure pending, a swoop for Origi could be a smart move for Moyes, who could obtain a Premier League-proven forward with an incentive to get back to his scoring ways after a lacklustre season with AC Milan.

For Liverpool, the Belgian netted 41 goals in 175 appearances, where he was more than often brought on as a substitute as a reliable asset for one of the top teams in Europe.

Based on his numbers over the past year, the 28-year-old showed he could be a more lively option to the departing Iron’s forward, as the former Anfield ace averaged 2.21 progressive carries to the Italian’s 1.26 per 90, via FBref.

Despite the quality of Scamacca being undoubtable, a trade for a player proven in England could be the perfect switch for West Ham at this moment in time.

Honours even as Rabada rocks England with late strike

An absorbing day of Test-match cut and thrust finished with honours more or less even but with South Africa over-flowing with belief, thanks to a searing yorker from the final ball of Kagiso Rabada’s day

The Report by Andrew Miller04-Aug-20171:57

Kimber: Lack of big scores could come back to bite England

England 260 for 6 (Stokes 58, Root 52) v South Africa
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAn absorbing day of Test-match cut and thrust finished with honours more or less even but with South Africa over-flowing with belief, thanks to a searing yorker from the final ball of Kagiso Rabada’s day that burst through the defences of England’s top-scorer and most potent threat, Ben Stokes. His stumps were splayed to bring to an end a 65-run stand for the sixth wicket with Jonny Bairstow and bring to the crease the nightwatchman, Toby Roland-Jones, who loitered at the non-striker’s end without facing a delivery as England closed on 260 for 6.Each of England’s top six made starts, including the captain Joe Root, who went past 5000 runs in the course of his 52 – an innings which also equalled John Edrich’s England record of ten consecutive matches with at least a half-century. But, as a testing morning session under slate-grey skies gave way to perfect sun-kissed batting conditions in the afternoon, England’s recent propensity to squander solid positions with reckless intent threatened once again to destabilise their series prospects.It had been a testing decision for Root to bat first after winning the toss. After several days of the most stereotypically grim Mancunian weather imaginable, the suspicion lingered that the surface, though ostensibly dry, could hardly have avoided absorbing a considerable amount of moisture in its preparation. And sure enough, England found the going tough from the outset, even in the absence of the one South Africa bowler most likely to have thrived in the seam-and-swing conditions.

105 Innings taken by Joe Root to score 5000 Test runs, the fifth-fastest by an England batsman, behind Jack Hobbs, Wally Hammond, Ken Barrington and Len Hutton. Root also became the third-youngest ever to score 5000 Test runs, behind Sachin Tendulkar and Alastair Cook.
10 Consecutive fifties for Root in Tests – the joint-highest for England in Tests. Root equalled John Edrich, who set his record between 1969 and 1971. The overall record is held by AB de Villiers, with fifties in 12 consecutive matches.
100 Wicketkeeping dismissals for Quinton De Kock in Tests – the fourth wicketkeeper from South Africa to this feat. De Kock reached 100 dismissals in his 23rd Test, equalling Mark Boucher’s South Africa record. Adam Gilchrist set the overall mark in his 22nd Test.

After battling through illness in the third Test at The Oval, Vernon Philander succumbed to a back spasm on the eve of the match, as did another valued member of their fast-bowling stocks, Chris Morris – whose pace and aggression had been instrumental in their second-Test fightback at Trent Bridge last month.However, Morne Morkel and Rabada set South Africa’s example with the new ball, hammering out an edge-threatening line and length to England’s brace of left-handed openers, before Duanne Olivier provided pace, enthusiasm and the odd unplayable delivery in a lively return to the ranks. The undersung hero, however, was the left-arm spinner, Keshav Maharaj, who churned out 29 overs from the Brian Statham End to allow his quicker counterparts to stay fresh and threatening in rotation from the newly anointed James Anderson End.Keaton Jennings, whose 48 in the second innings at The Oval had been a streaky but valuable reminder of his battling qualities, once again failed to dispel the gathering doubts about his Test aptitude with a battling but unfulfilled innings of 17 from 37 balls. He could, and perhaps should, have been dismissed by his fourth ball of the match, a lollipopping inside-edge onto the pad flap that Rabada couldn’t gather in his followthrough but that short leg would have swallowed, but was instead lured forward by a sharp lifter outside off by Olivier, for Quinton de Kock to take the catch that ended an opening stand of 35.Alastair Cook, true to his phlegmatic approach, was tested time and again in the channel outside off, particularly by the superb and largely luckless Morkel, but managed, through a combination of skill, luck and judgment, to guide England to a digestible lunch at 67 for 1. His most productive scoring area, unusually for the first morning of a Test match, was straight down the ground, where he twice placed fractionally overpitched deliveries from Morkel and Olivier with dead-eyed timing.Cook did have one moment of discomfort against the sharp pace of Rabada, who hurried him on the pull as he combated a round-the-wicket bouncer, and gloved a top-edge over the keeper’s head for four. But it was the spin of Maharaj that made the next big breakthrough, half an hour after the resumption. Warming to a spell that would span the entire session, his relentless accuracy on and around the blockhole, allied to a hint of spin and natural variation, lured Cook into the indiscretion that the seamers had been unable to tempt.Harnessing the breeze across the ground, Maharaj drifted the ball past an urgent drive for de Kock to gather a thin edge behind the stumps. Cook was gone for 46 from 103 balls, an innings that almost precisely represented both his career average (46.18) and strike rate (46.77). Distinctly average by his standards, therefore, but a cut above what most other players would have produced in such conditions.Ben Stokes made a fifty but fell in the penultimate over of the day•Getty ImagesAs if to prove the point, four overs ticked by without addition to the score before Tom Westley too was extracted – his 29 echoing his 25 in his debut innings at The Oval last week, in that it had showcased a Test-worthy technique and temperament, but had been cut short before it had fully formed. This time the executioner was Rabada, and in dramatic style. Cranking himself up to full pace and ferocity, he burst a lifting delivery off the edge and into the outstretched right mitt of de Kock.A brilliant dismissal though it was, de Kock had arguably made up in athleticism and hang-time what he had lacked in his initial footwork, as he dived fully to his right to gather the flying edge. It was a suspicion that would be reinforced in jaw-dropping style three overs after tea, when he failed to react as Morne Morkel found Root’s edge with a lifter that couldn’t have passed his motionless gloves by more than a foot.De Kock’s crestfallen expression brought to mind that of Mark Boucher after dropping Nasser Hussain at Trent Bridge in 1998. And, as Root ground through to his fifty from 91 balls, South Africa might have feared it would be equally ruinous to their series prospects. And yet, on 52, and with a lazy afternoon of accumulation yawning in front of him, he galloped down the pitch to Olivier and fell lbw to a one-day waft through midwicket.By that stage, Malan had been and gone, having played his part in a fourth-wicket stand of 52 with Root, before succumbing to another moment of impetuosity with four minutes of the afternoon session remaining. He might have departed first ball, as he whooshed into a nervy and hard-handed drive to an exocet from Rabada outside off. But, having steadied his nerves and remembered his arena, he was suckered by a change of angle from Morkel, who had switched his line to the left-hander from round the wicket to over.Suddenly balls that had been bearing into Malan’s body were being dangled across his bows, and it was too much of a temptation for a man whose first international innings had been 78 from 44 balls. Du Plessis took the chance in his breadbasket, and Malan stalked from the field, swishing his bat in annoyance.The evening session, therefore, was reserved for England’s middle-order pairing of Stokes and Bairstow – the most prolific partnership of the Trevor Bayliss era, and architects of that 399-run stand in Cape Town 18 months ago. This was a performance far removed from that batsman’s benefit game, however, and both men were obliged to ride their luck despite occasionally breezy moments of accumulation.Bairstow, on 4, was given not out, out and not out again by a combination of Kumar Dharmasena and the TV umpire, Joel Wilson, after an inside-edge off Maharaj was adjudged to have fallen millimetres short of Dean Elgar at slip. And Stokes, his face reddening in keeping with his mood as he gritted his teeth in the day’s closing overs, exacerbated Morkel’s lack of luck by edging his fifth delivery with the second new ball clean through the unposted third slip. Undeterred, he punched Rabada down the ground to bring up his fifty from 89 balls, to allow England to reclaim the upper hand.But, with stumps approaching, Rabada cranked up his aggro in one last-ditch bid for a breakthrough. Stokes picked off two boundaries in a high-octane finale, including a rushed pull that flew through at a catchable height through fine leg. But he had no answer to the yorker, and South Africa reached the close with their ambitions still very much intact.

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