'Didn't have a good season' – How Mohammed Kudus' move to Tottenham came about as West Ham chief Karren Brady explains end to cold war with Spurs

West Ham vice-chair Karren Brady has explained why the club were willing to offload Mohammed Kudus to rivals Tottenham in the summer transfer window.

Kudus left West Ham to join SpursBrady speaks about summer transferNew signing already shining at TottenhamFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Kudus swapped West Ham for Tottenham this summer in a transfer worth around £55 million ($75m). He has signed a six-year deal with Thomas Frank's side and is the first player to make the move from West Ham to Spurs since Scott Parker back in 2011.

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Kudus has already made an impact in north London. He bagged two assists on Saturday as Tottenham opened up their campaign with a 3-0 win over Burnley. In contrast, West Ham slumped to a 3-0 defeat to newly-promoted Sunderland. Brady has now lifted the lid on West Ham's decision to let Kudus go and says he didn't particularly impress for her club last season.

WHAT BRADY SAID

She told Sunday Edition: "It's always difficult to lose players that you want to keep. But the financial restraints and the PSR and all the rules and regulations in football mean that you have to do some trading. That's just the way it is. All clubs are having to do it. You're either restricted on what you can buy because you have to be careful of the financial rules or you have to sell to try and buy. So that was the decision that was made. [Kudus] didn't have a particularly good season for West Ham last year by his own standards. So we looked to move on."

Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR KUDUS?

Kudus will be hoping to maintain his strong start to life on Spurs on Saturday against Manchester City. Tottenham then face Bournemouth before a clash with Kudus' former team West Ham on September 13.

Man City 2025-26 Season Preview: Pep Guardiola's side are desperate to take their title back but are they good enough any more?

The Cityzens have refreshed their squad but doubts remain over their ability to finish top of an ever-more competitive pile

Manchester City fans used to sing "City are back, whoa, whoa" when the team's fortunes began to look up after a period in the doldrums but the chant has been heard less and less amid the seemingly never-ending cycle of success of the last 12 years. However, last year's disappointing season, which Erling Haaland called "horrific" and "boring", has seen the motto return.

It was how the club marketed their recent open training session, and if Pep Guardiola's side get off to a good start this season you can bet those three words will reverberate around the Etihad Stadium and in away sections. There is certainly a huge desire among City players to make a statement after last season, when they finished outside the top two for the first time since 2017 and also failed to win a trophy for the first time in eight years.

"Definitely, I think everyone wants to make up for last season, we all want to come to our best and winning titles," said Phil Foden. "We have got all the experience and we have done it before. That’s a positive when you have done it before, you know how to do it and what it takes so hopefully we can get back there."

But have City really strengthened enough to get back to what they used to be?

Getty Images SportMood around the Etihad

Despite all the success they have had over the last 12 years, City fans are naturally pessimistic and the general feeling is that regaining their title will be extremely difficult. The drop-off from last season is still fresh in the memory and the competition has never been more fierce. 

Although some exciting new recruits have arrived, they pale in comparison to the scale of the influx of top talent at Liverpool, while Arsenal have been growing more consistent and have at last added a top striker to their ranks with Viktor Gyokeres. It is hard to imagine that City will not miss Kevin De Bruyne's ability to conjure something out of nothing and how well they do will also inevitably rest on whether Rodri returns to his best, which is far from guaranteed after suffering such a brutal injury last year and then hurting his groin in June.

The mood among players, though, is clear. They have not forgotten what happened last season and the only way to make things better is to stage a resurgence. "There's a lot of guilt among the players, in the manager, in everyone for not doing better last season," said new captain Bernardo Silva. "A team with our experience, with our quality, even with the injuries, we cannot go down as easily as we did. We should have done better to overcome this situation. About competing for the title, we didn't even give it a try."

But the Portuguese midfielder, who could be heading into the final stage of his nine-year career with City as he runs down his contract, also stressed that things will be different. "I think emotional-wise we're definitely back. In terms of being hungry again, we're back."

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City's new sporting director Hugo Viana has certainly not been shy about making his presence felt since switching over from Sporting CP to replace Txiki Begiristain. The Portuguese has made five signings in the summer to the tune of £153 million ($206m), after Begiristain bowed out of his final transfer window in January by splurging £180m.

Tijjani Reijnders, who joined from AC Milan for £46m, is an energetic box-to-box merchant who looks set to score many goals. Rayan Ait-Nouri, a smart £31m buy from Wolves, will make the team much more threatening out wide even if he might lead to them ceding possession more often. 

Rayan Cherki has a licence to thrill but his uneven career progression since making his debut for Lyon aged 16 invites some caution. He felt like a slightly underwhelming successor to Kevin De Bruyne after he left following a golden decade at the club and later joined Napoli as a free agent. There is little risk with Cherki though as he only cost £30m.

City have bought two new goalkeepers in third-choice Marcus Bettinelli from Chelsea and James Trafford, who has rejoined the club from Burnley for £27m. Trafford has vowed to battle Ederson for the No. 1 jersey, although there is still a chance that the Brazilian departs for Galatasaray and talks taking place with Paris Saint-Germain over Gianluigi Donnarumma. Norwegian teenager Sverre Nypan's £12.5m switch from Rosenborg has flown under the radar, largely because he is expected to be sent out on loan right away.
As well as De Bruyne's departure, it has been something of the end of an era for City's treble winners as Jack Grealish has moved to Everton on loan while Kyle Walker has also departed, for Burnley after a mixed loan spell at AC Milan. James McAtee is expected to also leave permanently for Nottingham Forest, bringing in £30m in pure profit as an academy graduate. 

Yan Couto and Maximo Perrone have made permanent moves to Borussia Dortmund and Como respectively after spending last season on loan. January arrival Vitor Reis has gone on loan to Girona while Juma Bah, who is yet to play for City, has gone out on loan to Nice after previously playing for Lens. Goalkeeper Scott Carson has left City after four years in which he made just two appearances. Savinho could yet join the exodus after Tottenham opened talks with City over the Brazilian winger.

Getty ImagesPre-season performances

City have had highly unusual preparations for the coming season due to their participation in the Club World Cup in June. They treated the rebooted tournament a bit like a pre-season tour, with Guardiola rotating his side between matches and still seeing City top their group by winning three games. But their campaign came crashing down in the last 16 when Joao Cancelo's Al-Hilal beat them 4-3 in an extra-time thriller.

City's early exit to the SPL side was embarrassing given they were one of the favourites to win the competition while Rodri picking up a groin injury – which derailed his progress after missing almost the entire season with a torn cruciate ligament – rubbed salt into the wounds. The silver lining was that they got to take their break earlier and had an extra two weeks to prepare for the campaign than if they had reached the final. 

Guardiola's side only returned to training on July 28 and the only glimpse fans have had of them was in their opening training session and in their friendly against Serie B side Palermo, who also belong to the CFC stable. They easily beat the Italians 3-0, with Reijnders playing a starring role and netting twice after a first-half strike from Erling Haaland. The Norwegian scored in four of the five matches, firing another ominous warning to defences ahead of the new campaign.

Jeremy Doku looked lethal during the Club World Cup while Ait-Nouri impressed too. Foden also took a step back towards his best in the U.S., scoring three times and getting an assist despite only starting one match. But an ankle knock in training prevented him from facing Palermo and could lead to him missing the opener at Wolves along with Rodri and Mateo Kovacic.

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Guardiola admitted last season that he had delayed overhauling his squad out of loyalty to the players who had won so much with him only to admit the error of his ways. He has also revealed that feeling a sense of responsibility for the team's problems last years is what motivated him to sign a two-year contract last November, explaining: "I didn't want to let the club down."

There is not a single City fan who does not believe Guardiola is still the right man for the job and it is worth remembering that the year after that drab 2016-17 campaign, the Catalan's first in England, City swept to the title by amassing 100 points. And the last time they surrendered their Premier League crown, in 2020, they ended up going on a historical winning streak of four consecutive titles. 

And yet there is also a sense that Guardiola is exhausted and on the brink of burn out. Remember how he scratched his head so hard that it left him with scars during the 3-3 draw with Feyenoord. He underwent surgery in 2023 to treat a back problem that he had suffered from for 12 years although he stressed in a recent eye-opening interview with that the most important thing is his mentality, saying "the mind is everything". 

It was a little bit concerning, then, to hear him also say: "The job of a coach, and I'm not just talking about myself, but all my colleagues, is a 24/7 one. Otherwise, you can't do it. The weight on your shoulders is enormous. You have a responsibility to a lot of people who put their trust in you: the players, the president, the sporting director. It's that fear of letting them down that drives me."

Guardiola is constantly evolving and it will be intriguing to see whether the arrival of Ait-Nouri makes him embrace high-flying full-backs again after moving towards inverted, more narrow full-backs. How he seeks to get the best out of Haaland will be another fascinating subplot, particularly with a new cast of players brought in to help feed the Norwegian goal machine.

The head coach has freshened up his team of support staff, recruiting Jurgen Klopp's former number two Pep Lijnders and another former Liverpool employee in set-piece specialist James French. Former City defender Kolo Toure has also joined as an assistant coach.

Former Australia fast bowler Frank Misson dies aged 85

Misson played five Tests for Australia between in 1960-61 and was a pioneer of physical fitness in cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Sep-2024Former Australia and New South Wales fast bowler Frank Misson has passed away at the age of 85.Misson played five Tests across the famous 1960-61 home series against the West Indies and the 1961 Ashes tour to England but his Test career was cut short by an Achilles injury. He took 16 wickets at 38.50 including a career best 4 for 58 against West Indies in Melbourne.He played 71 first-class matches, mostly for New South Wales, and finished with 177 first-class wickets at 31.13 in a short career that spanned from 1958 to 1964.Misson was a stellar athlete in his youth, training with legendary Australian athletics middle distance coach Percy Cerutty who famously coached Australia’s Herb Elliott to Olympic gold and a world record in the 1500m in Rome in 1960.Misson carried that fitness and athletics background into his cricket career, bursting onto the scene to take six wickets as a 20-year-old for NSW on Sheffield Shield debut in the last match of the 1958-59 season. At the end of the 1959-60 Shield season Misson was selected in an Australian second XI that toured New Zealand and he took 17 wickets at 12.47.The following summer he made his Test debut against the West Indies in the second Test in Melbourne that followed the famous tied Test in Brisbane.Misson played two more Tests in the five-match series before being selected on the 1961 Ashes tour. Former Australian captain Ian Chappell wrote about Misson’s incredible fitness regime to prepare for the tour.”The 1961 Australian team travelled to England by boat, but Misson was not to be denied his training regime,” Chappell wrote. “As he ran laps of the deck, some of the less physically minded players sitting in the bar saw Misson flash past the window. Perhaps embarrassed by Misson’s zealous workouts, they decided to complicate his exercise regime by placing deck chairs in his path. When Misson hurdled the first set of obstacles and did the same to yet another layer of chairs, the bar rats relented and left him to train in peace.”Misson played the first two Tests of the Ashes series but an Achilles injury caused him issues for the remainder of the tour and he did not play another Test match.Cricket NSW chief executive Lee Germon paid tribute to Misson following his passing.”We pass on our sincerest condolences to Frank’s family and friends, especially all of those that played with him as part of the NSW Men’s Team and the Australian Men’s Team,” Germon said.”Frank’s career was cut short by injury, which was ironic considering the focus he had on health, diet and fitness in an era where sports science was not very prevalent.”His five Test caps are recognition of his talent and determination and there is little doubt that if it wasn’t for injury he would have played many more times for his state and country.”Misson’s attitude towards cricket fitness would have a lasting legacy on Australian cricket with his son David Misson becoming the fitness advisor for the Australia men’s team between 1998 and 2000 as well as with Cricket New South Wales in the early 2000s.

49ers not messing: Rangers advancing free transfer to sign 29 y/o defender

After confirming their takeover, the 49ers are now reportedly advancing their efforts to land their first signing of the summer at Rangers in the form of an in-demand defender.

49ers complete Rangers takeover

It’s been a long time coming, but Rangers have finally confirmed the news that a consortium of investors led by Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises has completed an official takeover. The new owners, as confirmed on Rangers’ official website, have committed to investing £20m into the club which will be subject to shareholder approval next month.

49ers chief Paraag Marathe shared his excitement about getting started at Ibox, saying: “At 49ers Enterprises, we have built a track record of sporting and business success, but our driving motivation is our deep connection to the clubs and communities we serve.

A great Cerny replacement: Rangers looking to sign "incredible" new forward

Rangers could sign an impressive replacement for Vaclav Cerny.

By
Ben Gray

May 30, 2025

“We are excited to join Andrew and our other consortium of investors in a new era for this iconic club, and we are determined to build something that supporters can be proud of for years to come.

Cavenagh added onto that by saying: “We are deeply grateful for the trust placed in us by the Rangers Board, shareholders, staff, and supporters. This club’s history and traditions speak for themselves, but history doesn’t win matches.

“We know that the true way to honour the club’s heritage will be to drive performance. Our focus is simple: elevate performance, deliver results, and bring Rangers back to where it belongs – at the top.”

At the start of a new era, the first task that the 49ers must complete is clear. Rangers need a new manager. Names such as Davide Ancelotti have found themselves linked on that front in recent weeks, but the path that new owners go down remains to be seen.

Meanwhile, the 49ers have also already reportedly turned their focus towards securing the first incoming of a new era and one that could arrive at a bargain price when the summer transfer window swings open.

49ers advancing Toure transfer for Rangers

According to Africa Foot, as relayed by Sport Witness, the 49ers are now advancing a free transfer to sign Almamy Toure on a free transfer for Rangers. The Kaiserslautern centre-back is set to leave the 2. Bundesliga club at the end of his current deal this summer and could be on his way to Scotland as a result.

An experienced defender at 29 years old and a full Mali international, Rangers are not alone in the race to sign Toure. The veteran centre-back also reportedly has interest from Italian club Genoa, Turkish side Trabzonspor and America’s Philadelphia Union.

Almamy Toure for Kaiserslaughten.

Amid such interest, it would be an impressive first move from the 49ers if they were to beat others around Europe to a key defensive reinforcement. Toure’s arrival would also hand whoever takes to the dugout next an ideal start in pursuit of building a side capable of catching Celtic in the Scottish Premiership.

Malinga, Pollard, Dhoni, Watson: who is the IPL's all-time MVP?

Can you pit allrounders against specialist batsmen and bowlers? The debate rages on

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jun-2020Rabbit HolesDeivarayan Muthu, sub-editor: Hello fellas. In an ideal world, it would have been Kings XI v Sunrisers Hyderabad this evening, and we would have been approaching the playoffs. Instead, we’re looking back at the IPLs past. Who is your MVP? Bombs away.Gaurav Sundararaman (aka G-Stats), senior stats analyst: MS Dhoni, obviously! End of conversation.Muthu: ): Longevity, consistency, performance under pressure, impact in key matches, multi-dimensionality. What sort of team is he playing in? Dependency on him? Accolades: Man-of-the-Match and trophy wins.Lonely at the top: everyone’s favourite IPL captain can’t cut the MVP list•BCCIMuthu: Makes sense. My top priority is consistency, followed by the ability to handle pressure – because it’s such a fickle format, it doesn’t allow one to be consistent.Sundararaman: Exactly. It’s very hard to be consistent in this format and easy to get found out with technology, etc. But have you guys decided who your MVP is, or do you have a few names in mind? I know mine!Roller: I found it so difficult to narrow it down to one. I can throw a whole load of names at you, but I keep second-guessing. I don’t think there is a single player that fulfills every criterion I want them to.Muthu: I’ve had a few prominent names in mind, but can’t nail down just one, because they bring varied skill-sets. Dhoni, Mali, Sunil Narine, Pollard are sitting at the top of the (unranked) list for me. Oh, and Andre Russell.Roller: My top five were David Warner, Narine, Pollard, Dhoni and Malinga. I’ll add a couple of names as honourable mentions in Harbhajan Singh and Suresh Raina – especially for longevity, consistency and impact in knockout games.Sundararaman: None of you have mentioned my guy yet.Muthu: No Virat Kohli, sorry.Sundararaman: Well, Kohli has been amazing, but somehow I never see the India Kohli and the RCB Kohli as the same. He plays with slightly less intensity for RCB and that is understandable. Maybe that reflects in his performances. So all of us agree, no Chris Gayle and no Kohli then?Muthu: Absolutely agree, but I’d give extra points to Pollard, Russell and to MS for the tough job of dealing with the old ball.Sundararaman: How can you guys not consider Shane Watson! Sorry, I can’t continue this conversation without him. This is the IPL’s MVP. Never forget the early years. In IPL fantasy games, Shane Watson was always everyone’s captain! (). Here’s fun fact No. 1: I have put a 500-run qualification just to satisfy all of you, and so that your contenders even make the table. Five hundred runs in 12 seasons is what the Tamil actor Rajnikanth will call a “jujube”.

Muthu: Which also reminds me of sportswriter Vithushan Ehantharajah’s Watto appreciation tweet. He was crazy good for Rajasthan Royals and nearly won back-to-back titles for CSK.Roller: Nice. I couldn’t believe how high he was on the all-time wickets list – maybe there’s a bit of recency bias creeping in because we don’t see him bowl much anymore. But he’s 17th, with an economy rate below eight, and has bowled his fair share of “tough” overs too. Watson’s record with the pressure on is mad.

Sundararaman: Glad you guys are warming up. []Roller: He gets such a rough time in England because of the lbw rubbish. Averages 40-plus in the Ashes and one of the great all-time white-ball allrounders and yet people over here think he’s a joke!Sundararaman: In knockout matches, he was amazing. Do you remember this game? Delhi were dominant in this IPL, and he killed it in the semi-final – scored 52 off 29 balls and took three top-order wickets for ten runs. He won two Player-of-the-Tournament awards in 2008 and 2013, and his worst IPL performance was in 2016 and 2017, when he was with RCB, and we all know what happens to players who get trapped in that failure vortex.Roller: Village run-out of [Mohammad] Asif at the end of that vid. Glory days of Pakistan players in the IPL. Am I allowed to say that? But hold up. We need to wait a minute on the Watson love-in. (I don’t think he’s ever had this much affection from the media at once.) If we’re looking at consistency, longevity, performances in big games, then there’s someone who beats him on importance to his team: I present to you, Lasith Malinga.Sundararaman: Malinga is a great shout, but he was actually Mumbai Indians’ bowling mentor in 2018. He was out of the reckoning after some really poor seasons. He just bowled that good ball in last year’s final to make us believe he is still awesome. I think over the last four-five years, MI have been more reliant on Jasprit Bumrah than Malinga.Watto is love: can bat, can bowl, can win matches and hearts•BCCIRoller: Obviously he’s faded a bit, but that last ball in 2019 adds to his legend. And there are some unbelievable seasons: if you remember, he bowls half his overs at the death.Muthu: I think Mali has been brilliant in finals, especially. He also broke CSK’s top order – that inswinging yorker to Hussey in the 2013 final. He got Dhoni in the 2015 final. In 2017 he still bowled a super-tight spell in the middle. And that killer yorker in 2019. And he does a top job at the death. You overpitch a yorker, it’s a full toss; you underpitch it, it’s a half-volley. And the bats these days…Roller: There’s a great stat in this Jarrod Kimber piece from 2017 – at the time, Mali’s full toss went for 7.18 runs per over with an average of 18.5. His full toss! He’s still one of the all-time greats when he doesn’t even land it.Sundararaman: But do you think that his impact was greater than Pollard’s or Watto’s or even Narine’s for that matter?Muthu: In comparison to Pollard and Watto – those two have another skill too, which creates greater impact, but makes it so hard to nail down just one player. But if you take bowling alone, you have got to give it to Malinga.

Roller: There’s the hidden impact too, of teams having to attack other bowlers and accelerate earlier because they know they’ll get 15 off Malinga’s last two overs if they’re lucky. If you had taken him out of that MI attack between 2009 and 2015, they would have been a completely different team.Anyway, I’m getting distracted watching Pollard’s catches. Can we talk about him for a bit too?Sundararaman: Yeah, what a catch…Roller: This is another favourite.Muthu: Gayle and Warner are cool, but dealing with the old ball is a different business altogether. So, Pollard over the other two for me. And in all those finals, he has been excellent. That 2013 innings tops it.Roller: He’s also had to reinvent himself to a certain extent. Remember the 2010 final when MI kept moving him down the order because they didn’t want him to face spin? Nowadays he is almost as good at playing spin as pace. Last year Pollard was 90 runs off 58 balls against spin with two dismissals. And 49 off 35 against legspin specifically, with one dismissal.Muthu: True, these days everyone matches him up with spin and R Ashwin largely bowls carrom balls to him, but Pollard finds a way to get away.Sundararaman: I think he makes a strong case for MVP as well – on his sheer impact in the field and with the bat. His bowling is a huge let-down, though. He has some good performances with the ball in the CPL, but not so much in the IPL.Roller: Did you guys watch the Mumbai Indians documentary on Netflix? Obviously there’s a certain amount of PR etc, but I think that showed how important Pollard is as a presence too – the intangible stuff about his influence and leadership. Would be so easy as a senior player to throw the toys out of the pram after getting dropped, but he just got on with it.Sundararaman: We have not even started discussing the Universe Boss!Roller: Haha, shall we do him next?No words needed: Pollard’s IPL record speaks for itself•BCCISundararaman: Gayle’s a superb player but he somehow hardly turned up during the important games. The one game they needed him to fire in was the 2011 final and he failed.Muthu: Growing up, I loved the antics of DJ Bravo. Super fun for the TV audience.Roller: I loved all that stuff growing up too: Pollard putting the tape over his mouth after being reprimanded following an argument with Gayle.Sundararaman: () And the fight with Mitchell Starc. If we are looking at an off-field MVP, we can give the trophy to the Universe Boss.Roller: Bravo is worth a mention, for sure, but I don’t think there can be a case for him ahead of Malinga, for example. And I agree on Gayle – obviously an unbelievable batsman and probably the GOAT in all T20, but IPL specifically? Needs some knockout performances for that. Even the season he got MVP, he made zero off three balls in the final.Muthu: AB de Villiers, for that matter, didn’t quite turn up in the big games, like Pollard, Watto and Mali did.Sundararaman: I think we have nailed it down to Pollard, Watto and Mali now. Sorry Dhoni, if we had to pick an MVC (Most Valuable Captain), we wouldn’t even be having this discussion.Roller: Actually, can I make the case for Narine quickly?Muthu: Yes, please. Is there any other spinner who can bowl in the powerplay, middle and death? (Leaving out Rashid Khan since he hasn’t been around long enough to win the MVP title.)Sundararaman: Narine 2012 was wow! Kolkata Knight Riders won because of him, even though he got tonked in both the 2012 and 2014 finals. Narine made every KKR match a 16-over game. No one used to even attack him.Muthu: Absolutely. KKR have had this thing for mystery spinners, but Narine is a class apart. I barely remember anyone lining up Narine, apart from Hardik Pandya. Unhittable lengths, usually.Sundararaman: is yet to score a boundary off Narine, by the way.Roller: In 2012, when he had only played 16 games, KKR spotted him and were happy to pay big money even past their circuit-breaker price. Straight into the team, MVP in his first year – 24 wickets at an ER of 5.5. And since then, I don’t think anyone has come close, in terms of economy rate. Plus, since 2017 his batting has been so valuable for them!He moves in mysterious ways: if only Sunil Narine had a few more wickets in knockouts•BCCISundararaman: Yeah, his batting was a key reason why he is valued so high. Killed matches in the Powerplay with both bat and ball.Roller: Sadly, though, knockouts are going to count against him: four wickets in the eight knockout games he’s played just isn’t going to cut it, if we’re being this ruthless on Gayle and AB, for example. Best spinner in IPL history chucked onto the scrapheap along with those two.Sundararaman: Also, what about David Warner? My favourite batsmen in the IPL. MVB, for sure. This is the Warner innings. If you have not seen it, please watch. What a guy! Remarkable consistency and can switch gears.Roller: Warner since he joined Sunrisers: one IPL win (as captain), three orange caps, average 55(!), strikes at 147, and faces more than 30 balls per innings. Shows how reliant they have been on himMuthu: And he takes the bulk of the pressure. SRH batting = top three. Warner is also among the few top-order batsmen who are as fluent against the old ball.Sundararaman: Also, there are very, very few players who score more than 400 runs every season. Warner is one of them. He has no major weakness, can play spin and pace well, can hit sixes, can bat through.Roller: This is an aside and probably doesn’t show much, but I’m interested to know what you guys think. Among the guys with 100-plus appearances, Warner has a win-loss ratio of 0.850 – won 57, lost 67, 35th on the list!Sundararaman: He played for Delhi. What do you expect?Muthu: Incredibly consistent batsman, but his overall impact pales in comparison to Pollard and Watson. And I’d put Malinga over Warner too.Sundararaman: Is it even right to compare a player who has just one or two skills to someone who has multiple? Cricket has this unique problem.No bull: 400 runs every season, captained his team to a win, three orange caps, strike rate of 147 – why is he not on the list again?•BCCIMuthu: I’d mentioned the same previously. It’s so difficult to nail down just one player.Roller: Oh, also, we have to justify not mentioning Rohit, or his fans will go crazy – in 17 knockout games, he’s made 229 runs at a strike rate of 103.61 with one fifty.Sundararaman: Let’s rank the three that are left. For me, Watto is No. 1 (three skills) Pollard is No. 2 (two skills) and Mali is No. 3 (one skill).Roller: 1 Pollard, 2 Malinga, 3 Watson.Muthu: For me, 1 Pollard, 2 Watto, 3 Malinga. Again, so very difficult to compare bowlers to allrounders.Sundararaman: So Malinga is not No. 1 anywhere. It is now between Pollard and Watson.Roller: We both picked Pollard at No. 1, Gaurav! We’ll both vote for him again, no doubt. Also, can’t find Watson’s name on this list – of most title wins.

Sundararaman: That is a team statistic! In that case, you’ve got to pick Rohit as MVP. MI v CSK here also.Muthu: Having said that, Pollard’s contributions in finals have been so very crucial. And on the fielding front, he would gulp down Watson.Roller: We can leave it open-ended to an extent, right?Sundararaman: Yeah, I think that is best.Roller: And let our readers vote Dhoni or Kohli for No. 1, no doubt… ()Sundararaman: Pollard and Watson… Super Over it is.Sundararaman: MVPs are hard to pick, and ever harder in the IPL. That we have narrowed it down to two guys is an achievement.Muthu: Mouth-watering. Jimmy Neesham to call it. (Sorry, Neesh.)Sundararaman: Watson won a Super Over on boundary count once, by the way.Muthu: Still feeling hard done by about Malinga, but yes, can’t quite match up a gun bowler to two gun allrounders.Roller: Gaurav is just auditioning to be the next guest on Watson’s lockdown podcast.Sundararaman: Before I end, I have a quiz question for both of you. Who is the only overseas cricketer to score a century and take a hat-trick in the history of the IPL? Not in the same match, but overall.Roller: () Shane Watson?Sundararaman: Congrats, Matt. Thanks guys! Signing off.Rabbit Holes

'Tall Paul' Walter could make BBL return to Brisbane Heat

The left-arm seamer took 17 wickets in last season’s competition and has full availability

Andrew McGlashan23-Aug-2024Allrounder Paul Walter, who was a key figure in Brisbane Heat’s BBL title success last season, could be in line for a return to the competition after he was confirmed among the latest batch of nominations for next month’s draft.Walter, a left-arm seamer and hard-hitting batter, became a cult hero for Heat as he claimed 17 wickets, celebrating with a trademark aeroplane each time, and was named in the team of the tournament voted for by the eight head coaches.Related

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  • Ollie Pope signs for Adelaide Strikers, Akeal Hosein joins Sydney Sixers

Heat have retention rights for Walter should they want to bring him back and another team tries to select him. A key factor is he has full availability including the finals and he would again seem a good fit for them after supplementing their varied attack which includes Michael Neser, Xavier Bartlett, Spencer Johnson plus spin twins Matt Kuhnemann and Mitchell Swepson.”I think we’ve got the best bowling unit in the competition,” he told ESPNcricinfo during last season’s campaign. “I feel like I complement the rest of the attack quite well and we’ve been good at managing games. Kuhny and Sweppo have bowled so well through the middle that teams have come hard at me, which is probably what you want with my style of bowling.”I’ve worked a lot on my defensive bowling, trying to figure out how to get batters off strike and trying to keep the ball away from the shorter pockets. I normally bowl the overs where the right-handers are hitting to the short leg side, so I’ve had to get quite clever with getting them to hit to the other side of the ground. I do a lot of work off the field figuring out what I’m going to do in different situations.”English cricketers dominated the list of names released on Friday although most only have availability for between six and nine games. England have a Test series in New Zealand that finishes three days after the BBL begins and then have a limited-overs tour of India starting on January 22 next year. A significant number of players also have ILT20 or SA20 deals.However, some will likely attract interest including Olly Stone, Dan Lawrence, Jordan Cox and Joe Clarke. Legspinner Rehan Ahmed, who was initially drafted by Sydney Sixers last season before withdrawing when he was selected to tour West Indies, has again nominated.Pakistan allrounder Imad Wasim, who Melbourne Stars have retention rights for, has full availability as does slingy fast bowler Zaman Khan who played for Sydney Thunder last season.England players are also strongly represented in the latest WBBL nominations. Dani Gibson, who played a defining role in the Hundred final last week and earned praise from captain Heather Knight, impressed for champions Adelaide Strikers last season striking at 147.43 in the middle order and claiming ten wickets. She is currently down as having full availability although England have a T20I series against South Africa which overlaps with the WBBL finals.”We saw the game she played at Lord’s, a reverse-sweep to go and win the game against Australia last year, and that’s the sort of mindset that we want in that England side: the willingness to take risks, take the game on and express what your talent, and Dani epitomises that,” Knight said.South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt, who was announced among the initial batch of nominations and has been a regular for Strikers, now has availability of six to nine games rather than the entire tournament.Strikers in the WBBL are the only club yet to name a pre-draft signing although they are expected to fill that spot next week. Each club across BBL and WBBL can sign one player ahead of the draft. In the draft, a club can use their retention option once and only if they have not already selected the player in the relevant round.

Current BBL nominations by retention clubs

Adelaide Strikers: Adam Hose, Jamie Overton, David Payne
Brisbane Heat: Paul Walter, Tom Banton
Hobart Hurricanes: Corey Anderson, Sam Hain
Melbourne Renegades: Joe Clarke, Jordan Cox, Mujeeb Ur Rahman
Melbourne Stars: Dan Lawrence, Imad Wasim, Liam Dawson, Olly Stone, Usama Mir, Haris Rauf
Perth Scorchers: Zak Crawley, Stephen Eskinazi, Laurie Evans, Tymal Mills
Sydney Sixers: Izharulhuq Naveed, Rehan Ahmed, James Vince
Sydney Thunder: Alex Hales, Zaman Khan, Tom Kohler-Cadmore
Nominations with no retention club: Jason Roy, Lockie Ferguson, Shadab Khan, Shamar Joseph

Current WBBL nominations by retention clubs

Adelaide Strikers: Dani Gibson, Georgia Adams, Laura Wolvaardt
Brisbane Heat: Bess Heath
Hobart Hurricanes: Shabnim Ismail, Bryony Smith
Melbourne Renegades: Eve Jones, Harmanpreet Kaur
Melbourne Stars: Alice Capsey, Sophia Dunkley
Perth Scorchers: Amy Jones, Lauren Winfield-Hill, Danni Wyatt
Sydney Sixers: Suzie Bates, Sophie Ecclestone, Jess Kerr, Chloe Tryon, Linsey Smith
Sydney Thunder: Heather Knight
Nominations with no retention club: Deepti Sharma, Jemimah Rodrigues

Saif Hassan, Bangladesh's best-kept long-format secret

Coaches who knew of his immense talent kept quiet about it – he had to stay focused on first-class cricket

Mohammad Isam07-Feb-2020Saif Hassan’s development into a Test cricketer, in a country increasingly obsessed with the shorter formats, has the feel of a top-secret project. The story goes that at age-group levels, Hassan took long-format matches very seriously. As he grew older, batting for long periods became his thing. The captains and coaches he played for encouraged him to continue to bat his way because, in a country where nearly every batsman wants to hit fours and sixes, Hassan’s approach helped stabilise batting line-ups.On his first tour with the Bangladesh Under-17 team, he scored 96 and 72 in three-day games against Madhya Pradesh Under-17 at the Holkar Stadium in Indore. He spent six hours and 14 minutes, and four hours and 20 minutes batting, respectively, during those innings. Then when he batted with caution in the 2016 Under-19 World Cup, people called him “slow”. Some doubted whether he even had any shots. But Hassan was just following the coach’s orders to be at the anchor at one end, giving big-hitters Pinak Ghosh and Najmul Hossain Shanto the chance to go after bowling attacks.Naturally, Hassan missed out on his first opportunity at big-money cricket in Bangladesh – the 2018-19 BPL – when, despite impressive numbers in domestic cricket, he wasn’t picked by any of the franchises. His worth as a batsman was known to many coaches, but they kept quiet about him, hoping that he kept his interest in the longest format. No one really wanted to change his mindset. Lest he suddenly found the shorter versions more enticing.Hassan used that time away from the BPL well. The long hours he spent in the nets during that tournament helped him become the highest run-scorer in that season’s Dhaka Premier League, the one-day competition so revered in the Bangladesh domestic cricket.Given this background, it is no coincidence that Hassan’s first senior call-up, in November 2019, was to the Bangladesh Test side for the tour of India. Usually the Bangladesh selectors tend to give youngsters a T20I or ODI series for their first tour. Hassan was deemed likely to play the second Test, in Kolkata, but he injured his hand while taking a diving catch at gully, to see off Cheteshwar Pujara, as a substitute fielder in the first Test.Once recovered from the injury, he finally made his BPL debut, for Khulna Tigers. More recently – and more significantly – he played a first-class game in which he batted five and a half hours to make 58. In the same game, Tamim Iqbal, the player he will likely partner at the top of the order on his Bangladesh debut, made a record breaking 334 not out. There must have been a lesson or two for young Hassan from the accomplished opener. Later, Hassan said that it is his childhood dream to open the batting with him.Patience in age-group cricket, four years in top-flight domestic cricket, two double-hundreds in first-class cricket with an average over 45, a history of helping sides out of trouble both against the new and old ball, against pace and spin… it is now pretty clear where 21-year-old Hassan stands as a cricketer.Coach Mizanur Rahman, who has worked with Hassan at age-group and club level, says that he has prepared well over the years to be where he is today.

“Hard work pays off, everyone around me says this. I like to practise on my own, so I usually stay back after the team leaves to bat a bit longer”Saif Hassan

“He is ready for Test cricket,” Rahman says. “I think he is more Test-ready than some of his peers.”Saif is patient as a batsman. He has shown this quality in many competitions. He was apprehensive about playing shots when he first arrived in the Under-19 team but, with time, he gained skills. Now he has improved by playing a lot of first-class cricket.”Hassan points out that, despite the popular opinion on him, he has been working on his batting for all three formats – it was after all in the one-day format Dhaka Premier League where he made 814 runs at 62.61 following his BPL snub. He carried that form into his time with Bangladesh A, impressing during a four-day competition in Bengaluru, as well as on a tour of Sri Lanka last month.”I worked hard during the BPL last year as I wasn’t picked by any of the franchises,” Hassan told ESPNcricinfo a few days after his call-up to the national side. “I worked on areas outside my comfort zone. It gave me a good preparation for the Dhaka Premier League with Babul [Mizanur Rahman] sir. I used to come to the academy and bat for long hours in the nets.”I didn’t set a big target in the DPL last season. I just took it match by match, thinking that every match is important. I did the same when I played for Bangladesh A. I think any match can change my life.”Hassan got into cricket only after returning to Bangladesh from Saudi Arabia, where his father was employed. Once he was enrolled in a school in Bangladesh, it was time to play cricket.”I used to play a little in Saudi Arabia, but I started to take training seriously at the Dhanmondi Cricket Academy. I played third-division qualifying matches for the club. I try to go there every time I am free and bat for long hours.”Hassan, who then moved to the Indoor Cricket Academy, credits his parents for letting him play rather than asking him to put all his focus on academics as most parents do in Dhaka. “When I started practising in DCA, there were many better cricketers than me,” he says. “[But] my parents constantly supported me. They were never a barrier to my cricket dreams.”Hassan is known in cricketing circles for how he puts in extra work after training sessions. “Hard work pays off, everyone around me says this. I like to practise on my own, so I usually stay back after the team leaves to bat a bit longer.”Bigger tests await Hassan in the days ahead. But, his unique career path so far suggests that he has resolve and the skills to handle them, whatever they may be.

Everton emerge as shock contenders to sign £30,000-a-week Liverpool ace

As The Friedkin Group look to send shockwaves throughout the Premier League in their first summer in charge at Everton, the Toffees have reportedly joined the race to sign a young English talent.

Everton transformed under David Moyes

As if those at Goodison Park have gone back in time to the days of Leon Osman and Steven Pienaar, Everton have been a side transformed under David Moyes, who is thriving in his second stint in charge. The experienced manager returned with the club battling relegation once again but, since his arrival, has turned Everton into a side performing at the level needed to qualify for European football if they continue into next term.

After arguably his most impressive victory back in charge of the Toffees yet – a 1-0 victory over Nottingham Forest – Moyes told reporters: “I have got to say it was a great goal but thoroughly deserved. It certainly merited a win and I thought we played very well, when you come to a team sitting third in the Premier League and the semi-final of the FA Cup. I think if anyone was going to score, it was us.

“I have had a lot of games and sometimes football can go that way for you. I am getting a brilliant response from the supporters and the players but I am also calm enough to know it could change. Today we have put on a good show and I am proud of how the players are performing. We are trying to make small steps every week.”

He won't start again: Everton's £40k-p/w star looks finished under Moyes

Everton are undergoing a series of changes with David Moyes back at the wheel.

ByAngus Sinclair Apr 15, 2025

Those in Merseyside will be hoping that their recent run is only the sign of things to come before they potentially launch one of the most unexpected moves of the summer transfer window.

Everton join race to sign Jarell Quansah

According to Caught Offside, Everton have now emerged as shock contenders to sign Jarell Quansah from Merseyside rivals Liverpool this summer. The young defender has endured a tough season under Arne Slot having done plenty to impress Jurgen Klopp in the last campaign. Now, he could be heading for the exit door.

It’s not just Everton interested in his signature either. Joining the Toffees, Newcastle United’s interest has been well-documented and now Brentford, Bournemouth, Borussia Dortmund and Bayer Leverkusen have also reportedly joined the race. Amid such interest, Everton would be landing a major coup by signing the £30k-a-week defender, especialy considering the reputation of the German duo for transforming British talents abroad.

Jarell Quansah for Liverpool

An England international, the 22-year-old earned plenty of praise from Klopp last season, who told reporters after handing the defender his debut: “I have to say he did really well. He was good.

“In possession as well he was calm. It was like we had just met in the car park before the game with the organisation in the first-half. But he played really well. In such a disorganised team like we were in the first half, he was the one who looked alright. It was a statement and he is really happy at the moment.”

Naib after historic win: 'Thank god we at last beat Australia'

Captain Rashid Khan said a World Cup victory over Australia was something they had missed in the last two years

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jun-2024

Gulbadin Naib is carried on his shoulders by Afghanistan’s bowling coach Hamid Hassan•ICC/Getty Images

Gulbadin Naib, who orchestrated Afghanistan’s historic win against Australia, was a figure of relief when he collected his Player-of-the-Match award for his spell of 4 for 20. Drenched in sweat while sporting a beaming smile, he held the award while soaking in the feeling of “at last” beating Australia.”We were waiting [for this] for a long time. It’s a great moment not just for me but for my nation and my people,” Naib said at the presentation. “[It is a] big achievement for our cricket. I have no words to say but thanks to the fans for supporting our career and cricket journey. It’s a great teamwork, we worked hard for the last two months and the result is in front of you.”Thank god we at last beat Australia. It’s a great achievement for our cricket in Afghanistan. If you look at history of our cricket, it is not much. Last 10 years, we achieved a lot of goals. This is a big achievement.”Related

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Australia’s fourth-wicket pair of Marcus Stoinis and Glenn Maxwell were threatening to take the match away from Afghanistan in the 149 chase, when captain Rashid Khan turned to Naib for his eighth bowling option. Naib picked a wicket off his third delivery, removing Stoinis for 11. Bowling four overs straight, he then dismissed Tim David in this next over and then got the prized wicket of Maxwell, for 59, in the 14th to all but end Australia’s hopes.Naib thanked Rashid for trusting him in the crunch moments of the game and further said Afghanistan’s “journey starts now”.The win was sweeter for Afghanistan, who dealt with a heartbreak against the same opponents at the ODI World Cup last year. With Australia on 91 for 7, a one-legged Maxwell, battling severe cramps, took them to a stunning win with an unbeaten double-century.Naib expressed relief at the result in Kingstown that opened up Super Eight Group 1 standings.”We played very good cricket and in the first round we beat New Zealand,” he said. “Then [to beat] Australia is not easy. They are a world champion team and it is a big achievement for our cricket. We can carry this to the next level.”Our journey starts now. We are very lucky to have such a staff and management.”

Rashid Khan: ‘It’s something we missed in last two years’

After being asked to bat, Afghanistan were given a strong platform with an opening stand of 118 between Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Ibrahim Zadran before they lost 6 for 23 with Pat Cummins picking up yet another hat-trick. Afghanistan were only able to post 148 for 6.Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Ibrahim Zadran put on another strong opening stand•AFP/Getty Images

Rashid said they were confident of defending anything over 130, adding the importance of having many allrounders in the team.”The thought was although we didn’t finish as well as we would have liked to, but this is how this wicket is,” Rashid said at the presentation. “The more important thing was that the opening partnership gave us the best start. That let us get to a total we had in mind. We all watched two games before, and on this wicket anything 130-plus we said we were capable of defending. We keep calm and have that belief.”The beauty of this team is having too many allrounders gives you options. As a captain, it makes it easy.”Beating Australia is a “great feeling” and will make Afghanistan fans “proud”, Rashid said.”It’s a massive win for us as a team and as a nation,” he said. “In the World Cup, beating champions is a great feeling. It’s something we missed in last two years – in 2023 World Cup and also in 2022 in Australia where we lacked some runs.”It is so much important for people at home and for everyone all over the world where Afghans are there. They were badly missing this win. I am sure they would be proud of this and would have enjoyed the game. It is just the beginning for us, big game next and we have all the chances of making the semis.”

Robinson, Bashir recalled for Ranchi Test, Wood and Rehan miss out

Ollie Robinson and Shoaib Bashir will play the fourth Test against India as England roll the dice in this must-win game on a cracked Ranchi pitch. The pair, who will replace Mark Wood and Rehan Ahmed, are the only changes from the 434-run defeat against India in Rajkot, which leaves England 2-1 down, desperate to keep this five-match series alive.Robinson will play his first Test in India, returning to the side for the first time since suffering a back spasm in the first innings of the third Ashes Test last July, which was also his last competitive match. He will line up alongside James Anderson, who pulled up well after bowling 38 overs in the third Test at Rajkot, with match figures of 1 for 139.Somerset offspinner Bashir has also been chosen ahead of Rehan, who is the team’s second-highest wicket-taker with 11 wickets at 44 from three matches. The 19-year-old Rehan has bowled valiantly, but found himself targeted by India’s batters – primarily Yashasvi Jaiswal – in the second innings at Rajkot, returning 1 for 108 from 25 overs.The decision to opt for the high-actioned finger-spin of Bashir rather than stick with Rehan’s wrist-spin reflects England’s impression of what Stokes described as an “interesting” surface, which they believe will contribute to a fast-moving, spin-friendly game. Surrey’s Dan Lawrence was also considered for Bashir’s spot, offering part-time off-spin while reinforcing the batting.Instead, Bashir will join Tom Hartley and Joe Root as a slow-bowling trio. Bashir made his debut in the second Test at Visakhapatnam, taking 3 for 138 and 1 for 58 in the match, after visa issues forced him to miss the series opener in Hyderabad.”We do like to look at the pitch two days out and one day out, because that’s how we like to pick our XIs,” Stokes explained of Bashir’s selection. “You want to give yourself some idea or some indication about what XI you think is going to give you the best chance. Looking at that, I think there is going to be assistance for spin, but I think also it looks like someone like Bash, who releases the ball from such a high release point, the extra bounce that he gets we feel is going to bring us more into the game.”Ollie Robinson has been recalled as Rehan Ahmed sits out the fourth Test•Gareth Copley / Getty

This will be Robinson’s 20th cap, and his selection is a show of faith in the 30-year-old. Despite 76 dismissals at an average of 22.21, he has constantly faced questions about his fitness and ability to bowl multiple spells across the full duration of a Test match, at a consistently challenging pace. Having worked hard to improve his fitness over the last nine months, he has the chance to restate his worth as a Test bowler when England need him most.”I’m really excited for him to get his go,” Stokes said. “He’s been an incredible professional, the way in which he’s operated. Not playing the first three games is extremely disappointing, especially for someone who has played such a vital role over the past two years. The way he kept everything going, going and going through the obvious disappointment of not playing is a great way to operate. Now the chance is here. He has done everything he has needed to and I’m really looking forward to seeing him out on the park again.”He will play alongside the veteran Anderson, who had been considered as one of the likelier bowlers to make way, following his heavy workload in Rajkot and the short turnaround between matches. He currently has six wickets at 35.83 in his two appearances to date. But Stokes has backed the 41-year-old, who is currently sitting on 696 career dismissals, to lead the line once more.”If you’re a young fast bowler, Jimmy Anderson is the one person who you want as your role model. Not only the amount of wickets he’s got but the fact he can keep going at his age. Backing a very high-workload Test match in five days, being fit and raring to go, and feeling as fresh as a fiddle. Jimmy’s wickets, his longevity and his age, he’s an unbelievable role model to all young kids out there who want to be a fast bowler when they grow up.”The way in which over the last two years he’s introduced new ways of operating; you’ve seen him commit to bowling bouncers, bowling around the wicket to right-handers, use his skills when the conditions need that. Even saying he’s approaching 700 Test wickets as a fast bowler is incredible. I think he’ll know that, but I don’t think that will be at the top of his mind for this week, just because of where we’re at in the series.”England: 1⁠ Zak ⁠Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Tom Hartley, 9 Ollie Robinson, 10 James Anderson, 11 Shoaib Bashir

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